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

cole phelps

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These white people tryna exact their "final solution" on us...
then its time to go "hatian" on them
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loyola llothta

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This is the same government we expect to uphold our rights.....

THE FBI TRIES TO BRIBE MALCOLM X

The FBI visits Malcolm X in 1964. Malcolm knew that they were coming so he hid a tape recorder under his couch. The agents identify themselves as Beckwith and Fulton from the New York office of the FBI. A transcript of the meeting can by found in John Henrik Clarke's "Malcolm X: The Man and His Times".

Aware that he was being forced out of the NOI, the FBI moved in, trying to get information from Malcolm about the NOI and its membership. Although not the best sound quality, you can clearly hear them offering Malcolm X money and offering to eliminate people for him. He declines the offer.




Every black person in America should watch this

Everything he said was right and relevant today. From Muslim *bom*ing, law enforcements..etc

Dropping jewels for vintage blqk and the new ones
 

88m3

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Judge To Ferguson Police: You Can’t Arrest Protesters For Standing Still
BY NICOLE FLATOW POSTED ON OCTOBER 7, 2014 AT 2:17 PM

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CREDIT: AP PHOTO/TOM GANNAM

More than a month after Michael Brown was shot dead, protesters are still waiting for the grand jury to decide whether it will indict Darren Wilson.

But the first court ruling has been issued telling police to stand down when it comes to dealing with protesters. U.S. District Judge Catherine D. Perry held Monday that police can’t force protesters to “keep moving” — what some have dubbed the “five second rule.”

Police have developed a practice that prohibits protesters or others in protest zones from standing still. The upshot of this policy has been that even protesters who are peacefully praying, holding public gatherings, reporting the news, and informing others of their rights have been corralled into assembly lines and told they will be arrested if they don’t “keep moving.” Officers have also threatened protesters for walking too slowly, or who walk back and forth within a limited space. And they have followed through on those threats. After one individual was arrested under the policy, citing a “failure to disperse,” an officer told an NBC News reporter: “He was supposed to keep moving, just as you’re supposed to keep moving.”

The net effect, Judge Perry concluded, was that it prevented protesters from exercising their right to “peacefully assemble on the sidewalk.”

“The rule provided no notice to citizens of what conduct was unlawful, and its enforcement was entirely arbitrary and left to the unfettered discretion of the officers on the street,” Perry held. She issued a preliminary injunction, meaning police must halt their practice pending a permanent ruling.

Plaintiff Mustafa Abdullah works for the American Civil Liberties Union, and part of his job is to talk to protesters about their rights and how to avoid arrest. On his first attempt to get an injunction against the “keep moving” practice, Judge Perry denied the request, because officers said they had designated particular areas where protesters could stay in place and gather. But after that ruling, Abdullah was told by multiple officials that they knew of no such safe protest zone. Eventually, a “Protester Assembly Zone” was established, but it was isolated from the restrooms, water access, and the media stage. And protesters continued to tweet that they were being threatened with arrest while standing in that designated area if they did not keep moving, or did not move after standing still for five seconds — quickly and in one continual direction, in some instances.

Perry held on the second motion that the policy violated protesters’ First Amendment and due process rights because it was not targeted at individuals who were committing crimes or engaging in violent acts, or even crowds with some individuals committing those offenses.

“Vague rules that are applied in a haphazard fashion tend to increase community tension,”said Tony Rothert, legal director of the ACLU of Missouri.

Hundreds of protesters and journalists have been arrested since Brown was shot, some injust the past few days for “failure to disperse.”

http://thinkprogress.org/sports/201...-at-ferguson-protesters-outside-playoff-game/
 

cole phelps

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Its not stopping... its going to continue to get worse. Get ready for massacres...all this stuff is going to be child's play compared to what's coming.
do you think this could be the beginning of the end for white supremacy though??
 

Huey Shootin

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do you think this could be the beginning of the end for white supremacy though??
If blacks fight back, white America will lose. It really is that simple. And they know this. :shaq2: The vast majority of white America is not built like that. Most of them have been bred to be weak. Conversely, most of black America is empowered by the will to fight white supremacy because of what we and past generations have endured. Just because whites outgun us does not mean they can win. That is a dangerous misconception we need to distance ourselves from. Whites in the big cities depend on systemic racism to keep us down. They are not built like southern and Midwestern cacs. They will lose almost immediately when we rise up.
 

loyola llothta

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Yamiche Alcindor ‏@Yamiche 22m22 minutes ago

HUGE change in #Ferguson voter registration numbers. Director of Elections now say only 128 ppl registered to vote since shooting NOT 3,287.
 

loyola llothta

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http://mobile.reuters.com/article/id...41007?irpc=932


Exclusive: Missouri police plan for possible riots if Brown cop not charged

By Tim Reid

FERGUSON MISSOURI (Reuters) - Missouri authorities are drawing up contingency plans and seeking intelligence from U.S. police departments on out-of-state agitators, fearing that fresh riots could erupt if a grand jury does not indict a white officer for killing a black teen.

The plans are being thrashed out in meetings being held two to three times a week, according to people who have attended them. The FBI said it was also involved in the discussions.

Details of the meetings and intelligence sharing by Missouri police agencies and their counterparts in other parts of the country have not been reported before.

The grand jury is expected to decide next month whether to bring criminal charges against police officer Darren Wilson, who shot dead Michael Brown, 18, on Aug. 9 in Ferguson, Missouri.

In differing accounts, police have said Brown struggled with Wilson before the fatal shots were fired. But some witnesses say Brown held up his hands and was surrendering when he was shot multiple times in the head and chest.

If charges are not brought against Wilson, police fear an outbreak of violence not just in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, but across the greater metropolitan area and even in other U.S. cities, according to St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar and others involved in the planning meetings.

James Knowles, the Ferguson mayor who has been attending the meetings, told Reuters the fear is that if violence is triggered by the grand jury decision, "the unrest is going to be far beyond the city of Ferguson."

Brown's killing sparked days of protests in Ferguson in August and looting that caused millions of dollars of property damage. Police were sharply criticized for what was seen as a heavy handed response to the protests, firing tear gas and arresting hundreds of people.

Protestors and civil rights groups say Brown's death is part of a national epidemic in which a disproportionately high number of unarmed black men are fatally shot by white police officers, an allegation police deny.

Missouri law enforcement officials have been in contact with police chiefs in Los Angeles, New York, Florida and Cincinnati, Ohio as they prepare for the grand jury decision, Belmar said.

Of the 227 people arrested between Aug. 10 and Sept. 9 in connection with protests over Brown's death, 36 were from outside Missouri, including seven from New York, 12 from Illinois and five from California, according to arrest records provided by the St. Louis county police.

"We know outside groups visited us in August. We are expecting that different people will come in from outside the St. Louis area," if the grand jury decides not to indict Wilson, Belmar said.

One focus of the meetings has been on how to respond in the event of riots, the police chief said. Police faced a public backlash when they initially deployed armored carriers and carried military-style assault rifles after Brown's shooting.

Representatives of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, St. Louis County Police, St. Louis city police and Ferguson police have been attending the meetings, Belmar said. The top FBI official in St Louis, Agent William Woods, attended a strategy meeting last week, said St Louis FBI spokeswoman Rebecca Wu.

Plans have not been finalized. It was announced last week that the St. Louis County Police will take the lead from the tiny Ferguson force in patrolling the city's streets.

SIMMERING ANGER

The contingency planning comes as black and white residents of Ferguson, a city fraught with racial tensions and simmering anger after Brown's death, brace for the grand jury decision.

The nine white and three black jurors have heard evidence from dozens of witnesses, including Wilson, who has been under police protection at an undisclosed location since the shooting, said Bob McCulloch, the chief St. Louis county prosecutor overseeing the grand jury proceedings.

Police and elected officials are meeting regularly with multi-racial citizen groups in a bid to improve community relations, tackle concerns about police discrimination, and avoid the turmoil that followed Brown's shooting. Civil unrest is still the "worst case scenario", Knowles said.

Yet on the ground, many African Americans in Ferguson have little faith in the grand jury process and expect Wilson will not be charged. It is rare for a U.S. police officer to face criminal charges after shooting a citizen in the line of duty.

"I do believe if Darren Wilson is not indicted you will see a lot of carnage ... There is a lot of explosive energy," said Tef Poe, one of the protest leaders, sitting in a makeshift office close to where Brown was shot. On a wall sits an array of "to do" notes, top of which reads: "Find Darren Wilson".

Poe, a rapper, was born and raised in St. Louis. His real name is Kareem Jackson.

Protesters continue to demonstrate outside Ferguson police station each night, and are still frequently arrested. They say they are victims of intimidation and harassment by officers.

The St. Louis County police said until they took charge of security on Friday, arrests were the responsibility of Ferguson police and referred calls the Ferguson police department. Ferguson police did not respond to requests for comment.
 

3rdWorld

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do you think this could be the beginning of the end for white supremacy though??

White supremacy is a state of mind. In other words it is essentially inherent, and something like that doesn't disappear it in fact begins to raise its head more and more as we are seeing.
What should happen is this should embolden and awaken the sleeping. Theres no way NewBlacks etc can pretend and ignore the outright racism being displayed.
 

loyola llothta

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do you think this could be the beginning of the end for white supremacy though??
For me cac's get scared when we step up and care about ourselves and our community. If we can knowledge self.Love our people. Have unity. Have solidarity. Standing on black pride for our ppl and fight back we got this shyt

But that will be the first stage tho. You have to change the mindset but white supremacy will always be there
 

loyola llothta

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Ga. Cops Who Blew Off Toddler's Face With Grenade Won't Be Charged

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Late Monday afternoon, a Habersham County, Ga. grand jury announced that no charges will be filed against the Georgia law enforcement officers who threw a stun grenade into a crib, severely disfiguring a nineteen-month-old boy's face, during a botched drug raid in May.

Toddler Severely Burned After Grenade Lands in Crib During Police Raid

A 19-month-old boy was critically injured by a grenade in a police raid of a suspected drug…Read more


From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:Nineteen-month-old Bounkham "Bou Bou" Phonesavanh's nose was detached from his face after a stun grenade landed in his playpen during the raid, carried out by a Habersham SWAT team in May. According to an incident report obtained from the Habersham sheriff's office, deputies were told to anticipate a cache of weapons and armed guards at the home.
No drugs or weapons were found in the home, and the suspect, Wanis Thonetheva, was arrested later at another house, with only a small amount of methamphetamine in his possession.
Habersham County has refused to pay for Phonesavanh's medical care, saying in August that "it would be in violation of the law for it to do so."



Source: http://gawker.com/ga-cops-who-blew-o...t-b-1643268744
 
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