Official Protest Thread...

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
Missouri Event:



“Black Girls Are Magical” a call to action and empowerment series. This movement holds the purpose to encourage young women to reach beyond the restrictions of their race and nationality to the moon and stars that their hearts desire. Young women will be encouraged through empowering speakers, performers, and open dialog to discuss solutions to issues that affect them currently. This powerful event will host young women from St. Louis’s middle and high schools. Bridging the gap between city and county, economic status and school culture. With the hopes of igniting fresh leaders to take our city to new heights.
So come join us for entertainment, food, and overall empowerment! Through this event we hope to unify our black girls and come up with solutions to the topics that restrict us from being 'MAGIC'.



GIRLS AGES: 13 - 18 PLEASE JOIN US!!
PLEASE NOTE: NO Tickets can be purchased at the door the day of the event. ALL tickets must be purchased in advance.



For questions, please contact Zahria at 314-443-1068
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member



So you’ve finally made it to the other side of #woke. Welcome! Don’t you wish you had a guide, somewhat like Neo had in The Matrix, to gently rouse you from your slumber? A Trinity to make staying woke less terrible? You’re woke…now what? Or, you’ve been woke, but no one took the time to explain how to be “conscious” without alienating everyone else. I’m late, but I’m writing this short guide to help all “woke” people be better humans.

Why are so many “woke” people so obnoxious?
I think most people wake up to the truth via clanging emergency siren. Woke people are some of the most annoying folks to be around. Cranky, impossible to satisfy, snappy, just like me when Bean wakes me up two minutes before my alarm rings. That must be why, when they encounter other people who still seem sleepy, they smugly smack them the rest of the way into being woke. So now everybody is irritated. I’ve come to realize that knowing the truth about oppression is not fun. It’s actually rather burdensome.

Being woke isn’t necessarily about recruiting others to join your cause, but in a lot of cases, it is. We always need more people to stand for justice. But we often make horrible ambassadors. The most common trait of being woke is unfortunately not compassion…it’s condescension. It’s almost as if learning how awful the world can be slowly makes us equally insufferable. Woke describes your awareness. It’s not a character trait. You can still be an a**hole no one likes, despite your stellar understanding of neo-colonialism.

As someone who neither proudly claims to be “woke,” nor denies it, I think we can do better. This isn’t a call for a kinder, gentler “liberal” treatment of “conservatives” or a denouncement of punching alt-right, neo-Nazi skinheads. (I can’t throw a fade, anyway. I have no dog in that fight.) I’m not even laying down rules of engagement. Maybe you’re team #NoNewFriends. That’s fine. But frankly, if we want to even keep the friends we have, we have to love them more than we love being right. We have to #StayWoke responsibly.

1. Realize that #StayingWoke means staying humble sometimes, too.
Woke people think they know everything about everything. And they can’t wait until you know they know. The world is not a “woker than thou” pissing contest and you are not R. Kelly. If you are only as informed about oppression today as you were last year, then you have room for improvement. Acknowledging that you can learn something else means adopting a sense of humility woke people avoid. You are smart. But you don’t have all the answers for our liberation. There is more than one path forward.


Humility also includes the way you treat people who just learned something. “Oh, you didn’t know that? Welcome to America. #BeenWoke.” But being woke is not so much of an arrival as it is a spectrum. Other people may not possess your level of awareness. And that’s okay. You don’t have to be smug about what you know. You don’t have to rejoice in other people’s disillusionment just because you’re a miserable f***.

2. Shutting the f*** up is free.
I learned this bit of wisdom on Twitter. Tweeters usually apply it to people who say something completely out of line. There can be a point at which your insistence on staying woke in any context becomes insupportable. For example, if a person is mourning a friend or family member who passed away from cancer, don’t post on their status talking about “not eating right.” OMG, stop. Do what your mama always–or should have–told you: “If you can’t say anything nice, STFU, for Pete’s sake!” Being quiet costs you nothing. Exercising some empathy and compassion might take more thought than rattling off an obesity statistic, but it’s arguably more valuable. Help or hush.

3. Take some time for frivolity. Allow others that time, too.
Every waking moment doesn’t have to be conscious. If someone is talking about football or a soap opera or a pop culture moment, don’t swoop in on their break from stress and start yipping about “distractions.” You are distracting me from my self-care, bruh. I don’t quiz you on Frantz Fanon while you’re fanboying about the Marvel Cinematic Universe, do I? No, I let you drool all over T’Challa’s vibranium chestplate in peace. Stop demanding that others #staywoke on your schedule. It’s inhumane to expect people to focus on pain and suffering 24/7…especially when you can’t even do it yourself.

And if you aren’t giving yourself respite from politics, social justice, and oppressive histories, then you should. It’s good for your mental health, and for everyone else’s around you, too. Go get some joy so we can enjoy the freedom we fight for.

4. If your freedom hinges on another group’s oppression, you aren’t all the way woke.
I understand why people get offended at the pejorative use of the word “hotep.” However, I also understand how that word earned its negative connotation. Hotep as a diss would not exist if so many woke people did not routinely step over other groups in their quest for liberation. You can’t claim woke and exclude women’s rights. Black LGBTQ people have shown up for every major modern (American) freedom movement without having that same courtesy extended to them by other “woke” people.


If we are to rescue hotep from hashtag infamy, we have to live that peace in more ways. Otherwise, it’s just an old Egyptian word whose original context you helped kill.

5. You can’t “save” everybody. But your politics should.
The world is becoming more woke by the minute. But you also have to realize that not everyone will come to the same understanding as you. (Even that sounds condescending, sheesh!) Every debate isn’t worth it. Learn when to avoid a futile, unproductive shouting match. Everyone will not come to your conclusions, no matter how much you present your evidence. That’s frustrating as hell. I know. Even if they don’t agree with your stance, even if you can’t stand them, the liberation you fight for has to be for them, too. Just disengage them rhetorically.

6. Stop asking people to die for a revolution you won’t break a nail for.
Okay, I get it. You’re super-revolutionary, über-committed to the cause. Malcolm over Martin, all day. You’re cynical about everyone else’s reticence to put literal skin in the game. “Ya’ll some fake revolutionaries. Too scared to bust back when they shoot us first. You not really about that life,” you tweet safely from your Rooms To Go couch in the suburbs. Sir. Ma’am. Point that finger back at yourself. You’re really mad that folks don’t want to put their lives in jeopardy? Why don’t you volunteer yourself to be the modern Crispus Attucks? Lead by example. Or, maybe you could stop pretending to not understand why people would hesitate to die. Martyrdom always looks better on other people, huh?

TL;DR? Don’t be a wokehole.
Notice I’m not calling for anyone to stop being angry. I think almost anything that brings you awareness of injustice will make you angry. That’s completely human. I’m also not asking you to make the whole world love you. I would never call for people to do the superhuman work of being ingratiating to those who hate your very identity.

But the rampant a**holery in the name of being woke is completely avoidable. (Unless that’s just your personality. In which case, you already know why people don’t like you.) Your newfound knowledge is power. And with great power, as Uncle Ben said, comes great responsibility. I love that we’re all becoming aware of our respective privilege and oppression. But what good is staying woke if you push away the people who matter to you?

What do think about staying woke in this current climate?


http://www.trulytafakari.com/how-to-stay-woke-without-making-everyone-hate-you/
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
Cellphone Video Shows Anaheim Struggle Between 13-Year-Old Boy and Off-Duty LAPD Officer Who Fired Weapon; Officer on Administrative Leave

http://ktla.com/2017/02/22/cellphon...y-and-off-duty-lapd-officer-who-fired-weapon/

Vid @ sourcelink^^^

Cellphone video captured a physical struggle between an off-duty LAPD officer and a 13-year-old boy that led to the officer firing his weapon and the teen in Anaheim police custody.


Cellphone video recorded by a witness shows an altercation between an off-duty LAPD officer, right, and teens in Anaheim on Feb. 22, 2017.

The incident happened around 2:40 p.m. Tuesday near Euclid Street and West Palais Road, close to Loara High School, according to the Anaheim Police Department.

Anaheim police said that they were called to the scene where an off-duty Los Angeles Police Department officer had discharged his firearm and was detaining a 13-year-old.

"The confrontation began over ongoing issues with juveniles walking across the officer's property," Anaheim police said in an updated statement issued Wednesday, after cellphone video of the altercation was posted on YouTube.

The boy "is alleged to have threatened to shoot the off-duty officer," Anaheim police said. That account is disputed in the video by the boy himself and by the boy's parents.

No one was struck by the gunfire, and the officer admitted firing the weapon, police said.

The officer was not arrested, but the 13-year-old boy and another 15-year-old boy were.

The officer was placed on administrative leave, according to an LAPD statement issued Wednesday night.

KTLA published a story about the incident Tuesday night, prompting the father of the 13-year-old to contact the station with the family’s side of the story.

The boy’s mother, who did not want to be identified, went to visit her son at the Theo Lacy detention facility in Orange Wednesday. She came outside with her son, who had been released, saying she was told the Orange County District Attorney's Office had rejected charges.

“I still fear for our lives, for him living right down the street from us,” she said, tearing up. “Him being an officer.”

The DA's office would not confirm if charges were rejected; a spokeswoman said the office cannot comment on juvenile cases.

Anaheim police said LAPD is conducting a “concurrent/administrative investigation.”

Investigators from the Office of the Inspector General will be reviewing the video, officials said.

The father supplied a link to a nearly nine-minute YouTube video of the confrontation in which the teen can be heard making claims that the officer got upset with a girl who was walking on his lawn, and the boy came to the girl’s defense, prompting the confrontation.

The cellphone video shows a boy and off-duty officer physically struggling with each other on the sidewalk in a residential area. More than a dozen people, mostly apparent teens, are present.

The bald LAPD officer wears a plaid shirt and sunglasses. He appears to be grabbing the front of the boy’s black hoodie as several of the gathered teens say “Let him go.”

An older man with a long beard and a crutch says “Hey, Kevin,” at one point, apparently addressing the officer. Later in the video, the man apparently calls 911 to report the gunfire, saying the off-duty officer is his son.

In the video, as the sweatshirt-wearing teen and the off-duty officer struggle, the teen seems to taunt the officer, saying, “He tried to hit me in my nuts. That’s like a little pussy move, punch a kid in the nuts.”

The audio is difficult to understand, but the officer appears to say, “Because you’ve been resisting this whole time.”

“No, I wasn’t. You tackled me first. I didn’t do anything to hurt you,” the teen says. “All I said was, ‘Respect the girl,’ because you said, ‘Get out of my property.’”

The officer responds that the teen had said he was going to shoot him, and the teen denies that, saying, “I didn’t say that. Why you lying? I said, 'I’m going to sue you.'”

Then the pair tell each other to “get your hands off me.”

“I’m only like 13,” the teen says.


Cellphone video recorded by a witness shows a teen apparently striking at an off-duty LAPD officer as the officer holds onto another teen in the hedge on Feb. 22, 2017.

After a couple minutes, a young man comes up to the struggling pair, apparently trying to separate them. Then another boy with a red backpack runs into the threesome, pushing the officer into and over a low hedge. At that moment, the teen who tried to separate the officer and the 13-year-old appeared to strike the officer in the head area.

In a matter of seconds, the officer, with one hand still on the 13-year-old, reaches into his waistband and pulls out a handgun.

The person recording the video backs away, and the view of the confrontation is temporarily blocked.

A single gunshot is heard.

The officer can be seen pulling the teen over the hedge as the person recording and other witnesses run away from the scene. Kneeling over the teen, the officer appears to tell the older man with the crutch to call 911.

The teen then gets up and says, “You shot me, you put a gun to my face.”

The older man can be heard saying into a cellphone, “My son shot his gun because they’ve got about 15 people.”

The young witnesses can be heard heckling the officer and the older man, disputing what the older man is saying on the phone. A helicopter arrives overhead, drowning out the audio.

About 5 minutes into the video, a police patrol car pulls up and the off-duty officer can be heard yelling to the arriving Anaheim officers. The two Anaheim officers approach the pair. One officer appears to put handcuffs on the teen, while the LAPD officer, hands up, is walked across a driveway by another officer.

The Anaheim officer appears to take the handgun of the LAPD officer’s back pocket or waistband. Then the LAPD officer and the Anaheim officer can be seen conversing in a neighboring home’s front yard.

Meanwhile, a handful of teens are sitting on the curb next to the Anaheim officers’ car. More police arrive and the video soon ends.

Anaheim police said the 13-year-old was arrested on suspicion of making criminal threats and battery, and the 15-year-old on suspicion of assault and battery. The older teen was released to his parents, Anaheim police said Wednesday.

The LAPD officer, who has not been identified, is cooperating with the Anaheim homicide detail investigation, according to the Anaheim police news release.

Anaheim police investigators were seen Wednesday afternoon knocking on doors in the neighborhood where the altercation occurred.

Standing with his mom outside the jail facility Wednesday, the 13-year-old again said the incident started with the off-duty officer yelling at one girl.

"I said, 'Hey, that's not how you treat a lady,'" the boy said. "And then he came at me. ... He hit me. I ran to the street to run away from him, and he got me. He tried to trip me and then he kicked me in my testicles."

The boy again said he told the officer he was going to "sue him," not "shoot" him.

The boy's mother said the family had retained an attorney.

The video of the altercation and gunfire has more than 18,000 views on YouTube as of midday Wednesday. Later in the afternoon, it has been removed "for violating YouTube's Community Guidelines."

In an email Wednesday, Anaheim police Sgt. Daron Wyatt said: "We are aware of numerous videos being posted on YouTube and other internet sites. We cannot authenticate the validity of these videos as they were not recorded or posted by APD. However, they do appear to depict portions of the incident in question."

On Wednesday night Anaheim Mayor Tom Tait said the city is committed to a thorough investigation.

"Like many in the community, I've seen the video and I'm very concerned about what it shows," Tait said in a released statement. "Anaheim is committed to a full and impartial investigation. Our city will move forward without delay."

Activists were protesting near the location of the altercation on Wednesday night.
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member


Newsflash: America is not the post-racial utopia some thought it was just because we elected Barack Obama twice. Of course, to those of us who have been paying attention, that’s about as surprising as saying water is wet—especially given that we have greatly diminished the legacy of electing our first black president by electing the Mandarin Manchurian Candidate right afterward.

Still, it’s worth noting that we have a long way to go when it comes to race—especially because racial disparities continue to be present in education, health care, wealth and income and especially in the criminal justice system.

A recent study on race and wrongful convictions in the US, found that black people are seven times more likely to be wrongly convicted of murder than whites. Blacks are also 3.5 times more likely to be convicted of sexual assault and 12 times more likely to be convicted of drug crimes.


“African Americans are only 13% of the American population but a majority of innocent defendants wrongfully convicted of crimes and later exonerated,” the researchers write. “They constitute 47% of the 1,900 exonerations listed in the National Registry of Exonerations (as of October 2016), and the great majority of more than 1,800 additional innocent defendants who were framed and convicted of crimes in 15 large-scale police scandals and later cleared in ‘group exonerations.”


Additionally, when it comes to murders, the study showed that innocent blacks are also more likely to spend time in prison before they are exonerated and are more likely to have had cases involving police misconduct.

“The convictions that led to murder exonerations with black defendants were 22% more likely to include misconduct by police officers than those with white defendants.”


“Exonerations of innocent murder defendants take longer if the defendant is black, 14.2 years on average, than if he is white, 11.2 years. For death row exonerations in the Registry the average delays and the difference by race are larger, 16 years for black defendants and 12 years for whites.”


And not surprisingly, there are similar findings related to sexual assault and drug crimes.

“Judging from exonerations, a black prisoner serving time for sexual assault is three and-a-half times more likely to be innocent than a white sexual assault convict. The major cause for this huge racial disparity appears to be the high danger of mistaken eyewitness identification by white victims in violent crimes with black assailants.” [...]


“The best national evidence on drug use shows that African Americans and whites use illegal drugs at about the same rate. Nonetheless, African Americans are about five times as likely to go to prison for drug possession as whites — and judging from exonerations, innocent black people are about 12 times more likely to be convicted of drug crimes than innocent white people.”


This information suggests a rather bleak future when it comes to reforming the criminal justice system and improving the lives of black Americans, whose communities have been devastated by mass incarceration. What’s worse is that the future is set only to become bleaker as this administration plans to double down on “law and order” in the inner cities (read: black and brown communities). And with Jeff Sessions as America’s Top Cop, Lady Justice is not only not blind, she has 20/20 vision and will be taking aim at black folks for the next four years.

For more information, please watch 13th, Ava DuVernay’s spectacular documentary on mass incarceration, which is available on Netflix.




http://www.dailykos.com/story/2017/...re-likely-to-be-wrongly-convicted-than-whites
 

Entrepronegro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
http://www.okayplayer.com/news/big-sean-raises-100000-for-flint-water-crisis.html

Big Sean Raises $100,000 For Flint Water Crisis
Big-Sean-Raises-100000-For-Flint-Water-Crisis-715x402.jpeg


Big Sean has raised $100,000 for residents of Flint, Michigan, as they continue to not have access to clean water.

During an appearance on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, the rapper and fellow Michigan native not only talked about his forthcoming album I decided, but raising money for Flint through his Sean Anderson Foundation.

“I just know it’s not even close to being over. In that situation, I feel like, it wasn’t a natural disaster. It’s something that should’ve been prevented and could’ve been prevented,” Sean said. “So it’s just disgusting to think about the damages that these families and even kids have to go through with the lead poisoning.”

During the interview Sean also revealed that his mother had experienced lead poisoning, but was able to reverse its effects through “holistic care and homeopathic remedies.”

Along with donating money to the resident of Flint, Sean also got the Flint Chosen Choir to be a part of I Decided. The ensemble is featured on “Bigger Than Me,” the last track on the album.

“Once you hear it, you’ll see why I wanted them to be on that,” he said. “But I was just happy to have Flint be a part of my album in that way, as well.”

According to a recent report from AP News, the lead levels in Flint’s water has fallen below the federal limit, but the city is still working to treat the water.

“The remarkable improvement in water quality over the past year is a testament to all levels of government working together and the resilient people of Flint helping us help them through participation in the flushing programs,”Republican Gov. Rick Snyder said in a statement. “There is still more work to do in Flint, and I remain committed to helping the residents recover and restore their city.”

(There is a vid of the interview at the sourcelink above...)
Big Sean is a good dude, I applaud him for his contribution and concern for the issue in Flint.
 

Entrepronegro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
https://thsppl.com/dear-black-men-y...e-not-pro-black-woman-49079dc68d7b#.og09s4hvu


Dear Black Men
You Are Not Pro-Black If You Are Not Pro Black Women

It’s just that simple.
Over the past few days I have gotten into heated arguments with men who have presented and positioned themselves as Pro-Black, yet they find themselves incapable of standing against a Black man who has repeatedly violated Black women.

1*EFSqK3j5t0PNKAFSjvlFAA.jpeg

Image captured by Kwesi Abbensetts
There is something inherently wrong with your Pro-Blackness if it is a gendered Pro-Blackness incapable of taking stances that improve the position of Black women.
There’s no Huey P. Newton in your philosophy if your main concerns are a caricature of everything the men and women who constituted the real Black Panther Party stood for.

There’s no way you can announce to the world that you are Pro-Black, yet blatantly cling to misogyny, uphold rape culture and mimic a White patriarchal system, which seeks to keep Black women underneath your boots.

1*jFJEqR_jBBwlwSpqTJdr5Q.jpeg

Image captured by Kwesi Abbensetts
That’s
not
Pro-Black.
That
is
Black
Patriarchy.

Look around you when there is a violation of your human rights as Black men. Who is there to lead the marches and the protests and the rallies on behalf of Black men everywhere? Without a doubt it is Black women who have stood up and protested and protected Black men’s lives in this country. Why is it that we cannot return the favor? Why are we so intent on dogging Black women and insisting that those women are only out to ruin The Black Man? What you’re saying when you say things like that is that Black women are not to be trusted. That their worth and their lives are only useful when they are propping up the agenda of a Black man.

This is not any iota of what it means to be Pro-Black. Pro-Black means you fight for your people. All of your people. Not just Black men, not just straight Black men, not just Black men you think are upstanding and productive members of society, but all of your people.

1*XquQVzzZUZMY0IK16fCNzQ.jpeg

Image captured by Kwesi Abbensetts
You are not Pro-Black if you erase Black women who are feminists from the conversation by telling them that feminism destroys the Black family unit.
Pick up a book. Google bell hooks. Google Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche. Google something scholarly. Something with the letters .edu behind it.

Google: Critical Black Feminist Thought.
Read those texts, absorb those texts. Listen to what your sisters are trying to tell you about being a Black woman in America. Hear their pain and think deeply about what you can do to help alleviate that. Do what you can to help them navigate social spaces a little bit easier. Do not erase them from existence because you don’t like hearing women say that they don’t need men. Truth is they don’t. They don’t. If anything we need them. We need their strength, we need their vibrancy, we need their softness, but most of all we need their support.

1*f49MDN-b0JrdAxN7aoU50Q.jpeg

Image captured by Kwesi Abbensetts
Without Black women,
where are Black men?
That’s a question that every so-called
Black man
needs to ask himself daily.

He also needs to ask himself, what do Black women need me to do, need me to say, need me to become so that we both may improve our lots in this American pecking order that wants to put us both at the bottom rung? Those are the things that are needed, that are necessary. I never want to see a Black man questioning whether a Black woman is really here for the race again. Because Black women have been here for the entire race and will continue to do so because that’s what Black women do. They fight. They stand. They make themselves known.

1*NS_gpy_lnZn5DbyVjauUmQ.jpeg

Image captured by Kwesi Abbensetts
Black women are on the front lines of the fight every day, suffering in silence, suffering in plain sight.
And I get it, our concerns may be more overt — it may seem like more of us are dying at the hands of police officers, but so are Black women. Black women and girls are also at more of a risk of slipping through the cracks of the American academic system. Black women are institutionalized at higher rates than Black men.

1*fo1n9vZ6gtlbDRZ2P6Hj7Q.jpeg

Image captured by Kwesi Abbensetts
Black women are stigmatized by the larger society at every turn. Shouldn’t we be trying to ease their burdens instead of questioning their motives?
But I guess it’s not an issue until it hits home. I guess the rape and the silencing of Black women by powerful men is not a problem unless it is your wife, your daughter, your friend.

Understand this, Black men. It should not take someone you know being brutalized for you to wake up and realize that these women do not deserve to be treated like insurgent agents when a narrative you do not like ceases being a narrative and starts being the truth. We need each other in this crazy world, and it is past time that Pro-Black started meaning more than Pro Black Man.

1*75PQML4q6nypJxj-YhLGJQ.jpeg

Image captured by Kwesi Abbensetts
It
is
time
that
Pro-Black
means
Pro
Black Everybody.



Great article. I agree with it.

I been in a relationship with my Pro Black African girlfriend for 3 years now, I met her while visiting my dad's family in Ghana. She is the best thing that ever happen to me, she's down to earth, she's a go getter, smart, loyal, caring, natural, beautiful and she love me unconditionally. I may not be completely Pro Black since I do have a white mother, but I support black people that are Pro Black.
 

Camille

Kitchen Wench #TeamQuaid
Staff member
Why the Crisis of Missing Black Girls Needs More Attention Than It’s Getting
[Opinion] The media and criminal justice system is failing to put the focus on the issue that it deserves. But why is that?


by La’Tasha D. Mayes, March 24, 2017

Black-Girl-Caro-603x377.jpg

Thinkstock

An academic study analyzed news coverage of missing children and found that only 20 percent of reported stories focused on missing Black children. This, despite the fact that Black children account for 33 percent of total missing children cases. In other words, missing Black youth are grossly underreported in the news. For missing girls, it’s even worse. When Black girls go missing, far too many people don’t know or don’t care.

Consistently, Black teen girls are disproportionately reported missing from their homes and communities, and when they go missing, the disparity in coverage compared to missing White teens is shameful. Black girls’ lives matter. Our girls deserve protection and support, but our society seems content to ignore them at best and dehumanize them at worst.

We see this regularly in Pittsburgh, where I live. When this happens, my organization posts the information on our social media networks using the hashtag #BlackGirlMissing. This community-driven effort is often what returns girls home safely to their family and community with minimal reporting from the media and limited support from the police in those critical first 48 hours.

The same disquieting trend was recently reported in Washington, D.C., with 10 Black and Latina teen girls who have gone missing in the past few months. In most cases, we don’t know whether these young women have run away from home, were abducted, subjected to violence, funneled into the sex industry — put simply, the proper alarm bells are not being rung, and not nearly enough is being done to ensure these girls are brought back to their homes and to safety.

This is a nationwide problem. As of 2014, 64,000 Black women were missing across the U.S. That’s a highly disproportionate rate within the total number of missing persons reports. You’d think we’d hear the stories of 64,000 missing women on the news — yet, we don’t.

There is a connection between the frequency with which Black women disappear and the cycle of criminalization and incarceration of Black women and girls. By ignoring or underreporting their stories, the media is failing these girls. But so is the criminal justice system.

The second an opportunity emerges to punish Black girls, legal authorities seize it and push Black girls out of school, into the criminal justice system as Dr. Monique W. Morris discusses in her book, Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools. We’re routinely punished for such everyday behaviors as driving our cars, standing on the sidewalk and browsing in stores; instead of showing us empathy and prioritizing alternatives to incarceration, authorities are quick to criminalize our behavior.

Look at Bresha Meadows in Ohio. After enduring years of physical harm from her abusive father, Bresha finally stood up to him in self-defense as he threatened to kill her mother and siblings. At the age of 14, Bresha saved her family members’ lives. But instead of finding trauma-aware, culturally competent care for her as a survivor of abuse, police incarcerated her in juvenile detention and charged her with aggravated murder. No matter the circumstances of Black girls’ lives, we are consistently disregarded and dehumanized by the media and by law enforcement.

The media and criminal justice system should respect, protect and trust Black women and girls — instead of unjustly persecuting us. The media and the criminal justice system should function as tools to support our girls, not as systems that repeatedly fail them. Demanding proper support from formal structures can start at the grassroots level: When we hear of a Black girl who has disappeared, use #BlackGirlMissing to amplify her story. Listening to Black women sometimes means interrogating why they’re not speaking, why their voice has gone silent.

http://www.ebony.com/news-views/missing-black-girls#axzz4cIKWAepT
 
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