Ferguson police execute an unarmed 17 yr old boy (Update: Ferguson police chief to resign 3/19)

JayYoung314

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hey guys is there a way i can search the thread for just images ??? im trying to see how many pictures of rally's i can find across the world for mike brown, specifically the biggest or most impressive ones. im trying to make a compilation. thanks guys i really appreciate it
 

Poitier

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Negrophobia: Michael Brown, Eric Garner, and America’s Fear of Black People

Aug. 29, 2014

ferguson11.jpg

Demonstrators march down West Florissant during a peaceful march in reaction to the shooting of Michael Brown, near Ferguson, Mio., Aug. 18, 2014.Lucas Jackson—Reuters
Phobias are extreme aversions embedded deep in our psyches, activated when we come face-to-face with the thing we fear. Some people are afraid of black people.

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by Taboola

Phobias are lethal. This summer’s series of prominent killings of unarmed Black men, Michael Brown being the most covered, have forced me to come to terms with my own fear: I am an arachnophobe.

A few nights ago, I noticed a dark spot in my periphery. Suddenly it twitched. My stomach dropped. The dark spot was a five-inch spider, looking as if it had muscle and bone. There was no possible way I could sleep soundly until the behemoth was neutralized. I scrambled to find a shoe, then swung it with all my might. With a clap of thunder, the big dark enemy was no more; flattened to a wall stencil. Relief.


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Phobias are extreme aversions. They are embedded deep in our psyches, activated when we come face-to-face with the thing we fear. For me, spiders trigger overreactions. For others, it can be people.

Black people.

Before there was Michael Brown, there was Eric Garner, a dark spot in the periphery of the NYPD—a trigger for their phobia. There was no possible way they could patrol confidently that day without assurance the behemoth was neutralized.

Garner’s 400-pound anatomy forms an object of AmericanNegrophobia: the unjustified fear of black people. Studies show that Black people, particularly Black men, are the group most feared by White adults. Negrophobia fuels the triangular system of oppression that keeps people of color pinned into hapless ghettos between the pillars of militarized police, starved inner-city schools, and voracious prisons. And this summer there weren’t only Garner and Brown; there were John Crawford, and Ezell Ford, and many others who will not be eulogized in the media.

Even the most well-intentioned people sometimes have difficulty avoiding discourses that reinforce problematic notions of Black physicality. A few months ago, I got into a conversation with a mentor of mine, a Stanford administrator. This individual told a story of a visit to a penitentiary where there was a stellar performance of Shakespeare’s Othello by a cast of inmates. My mentor’s description of the lead, a brawny African-American male convict, will always fascinate me. In this person’s words, the thespian was a “large, beautiful, intimidating Black man.”

This stream of modifiers—large, beautiful, and intimidating—is normally reserved for majestic, predatory beasts like tigers, bears, or dragons. It describes something both appealing and appalling, but not typically a human. You can see classic buck and brute tropes echoed in various corners of modern popular culture. These types of perceptions of historically marginalized groups can, in the wrong circumstances, foment phobias—and dangerous overreactions.

But misperception is nothing new. The bestial depiction, and treatment, of Black people follows a linear history from the times of pickaninny children to the current United States president.

I hate to think this is what the police see when they approach any unarmed Black person—a predator that has escaped captivity and must be tranquilized before he or she wreaks havoc. And yet. An officer quelling Ferguson protests can be heard screaming on live television, “Bring it, all you f****** animals!” to the predominantly Black demonstrators.

Back to the spider once more: my perception of the fear and the ability of that spider to actually produce the threat I have mentally assigned it were completely disproportionate. It was just me spooking myself into fury. Phobic people hyperbolize a threat that is not actually present, and trip themselves into aggression. We as Americans must learn to see each other properly and not through the lens of phobia.

This is a plea to those officers who are unflinching in the gravest of dangers, whose courage is forged in the crucible of our nation’s worst emergencies, yet who lose all composure when facing the grimace of a Black man. The concept of diversity, like Eric Garner, is large, beautiful, and sometimes intimidating. America will only be America once we learn how to fully appreciate it, not fear it. One day, I hope, we won’t see our fellow humans as dark spots.

Brandon Hill is a junior at Stanford University, studying political science and African & African American Studies. Raised in Eden Prairie, Minnesota, he has interned for the White House and UNICEF.

They are making all kinds of excuses :dead:
 

Nefflum nigga

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Grand jury secret bullshyt, who knows what evidence The DA presenting. Prolly wont know anything new no time soon

prolly won't hear shyt until end of this month.

everybody around here preparing for the revolution., if they don't convict him this shyt gon be heavy. way worse than the rioting...
 

NotaPAWG

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also, where are people getting this info that people are ONLY just marching and protesting?

tariq? he brings up a lot of good points, i won't lie. but he's been questioning and criticizing people in STL who are doing GROUND work, building and organzing a plan. getting things together, when he was there for like a day or two. that's why people in STL, and women seem to have a problem with him.

people are doing more than just marching. there is organization, planning and panels being held.
 
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NatiboyB

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also, where are people getting this info that people are ONLY just marching and protesting?

tariq? he brings up a lot of good points, i won't lie. but he's been questioning and criticizing people in STL who are doing GROUND work, building and organzing a plan. getting things together, when he was there for like a day or two. that's why people in STL, and women seem to have a problem with him.

people are doing more than just marching. there is organization, planning and panels being held.


He simply made a statement....He didn't say that there wasn't good work being done...But nah the prayer circles and marches aren't whats needed...Women of course will have an issue with him especially Feminist...He even has admitted on multiple occasions that there are a lot of people down in STL doing good work.
 

Poitier

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also, where are people getting this info that people are ONLY just marching and protesting?

tariq? he brings up a lot of good points. but he's been questioning and criticizing people in STL who are doing GROUND work, building and organizing a plan asking them for "receipts". it's patronizing and demeaning to those who are building there, when he was there for like a day or two. that's why people in STL and people who been there for weeks building seem to have a problem with him. he flew out there for a day or so when media was heavily there, threw antonion french a check, published a picture of that check online, left and then starting questioning people down there building.

people are doing more than just marching. there is organization, planning and panels being held.

My problem is the myopic view of some in Ferguson. This is bigger than them. Blacks in every city need to be organizing, mobilizing and using economics to our benefit. This was a wakeup call for a lot of Blacks but Tariq been preaching this.
 
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