Showing posts with label Baltimore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baltimore. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

How peculiar - Obama suddenly is almost silent on Chicago Police Murder of Black Man

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After inflaming racial tensions by condemning police treatment of Blacks in Ferguson and Baltimore on television and in the media, suddenly Obama uses Facebook

Here was the lead news story today, from Chicago, the number one city in America in murders in 2014 and for several years.


Journalist Brandon Smith, left, and activist William Calloway talk to reporters Thursday, Nov. 19, 2015, after a Cook County judge ordered the Chicago Police Department to release a video of an officer fatally shooting 17-year-old Laquan McDonald on Nov. 25, in Chicago. The video is said to show the officer shooting McDonald 16 times in October 2014. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

ABC News

By don babwin and jason keyser, associated press
CHICAGO — Nov 25, 2015, 1:54 AM ET

Officer Charged With Murder in Teen's Death

A white Chicago police officer who shot a black teenager 16 times last year was charged with first-degree murder Tuesday, hours before the city released a video of the killing that many people fear could spark unrest.

City officials and community leaders have been bracing for the release of the dash-cam video, fearing the kind of turmoil that occurred in cities such as Baltimore and Ferguson, Missouri, after young black men were slain by police or died in police custody.

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Obama goes from press conferences and television interviews to condemn police actions to just posting in his new Facebook account saying he is "deeply disturbed" by what happened!  Now wait a minute, this time there is no doubt the event was unjustified, an abuse of power, and an excessive use of a firearm and Obama is only "deeply disturbed."


Perhaps the media is protecting him from the real story.  Chicago, of course, is Obama's home.  The Mayor of Chicago is Obama's former Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.  Not only was Rahm his right hand man, he was also the top fund raiser for the Obama campaigns because of his relationship as an executive in Goldman Sachs before he went to work for Obama.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein and Warren Buffett

The year-long lack of action by the prosecutor in Chicago and the brutal and senseless killing by firing sixteen shots into the victim, who was high on PCP at the time, were about as conclusive of evidence as possible.

A video from a camera mounted on a Police car was suppressed by the Chicago authorities, and only came to light when a judge order the release, which happened today, a year later.  It showed sixteen shots in fifteen seconds.


The City of Chicago seemed to try to minimize the impact of any evidence and keep the whole case out of the media while Rahm Emanuel ran and got re-elected as Mayor during the past year by paying $5 million in hush money, before any charges were even filed.

Maybe it is about time a federal investigation of the role Emanuel had in withholding the video and paying off the family should be investigate.  You might add to that investigate why Obama nearly ignored commenting on this racial incident after being all over the news on all previous incidents.


It seems awfully like a cover-up in Obama's hometown.  Emanuel won a run off for mayor just last April after none of the five candidates were able to get 50% of the vote.  Strange how the liberal media is selectively silent when it comes to our president.

Here is what he had to say about police actions before the incident happened in his hometown.
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President Obama's Facebook post says he's "deeply disturbed" by video showing teen shot by Chicago police officer.  November 25, 2015

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The Washington Times

Obama says Michael Brown’s death in Ferguson ‘stains the heart of black children’

By Dave Boyer - The Washington Times - Sunday, September 28, 2014

President Obama said the shooting death of a black teen by a white police officer last month in Ferguson, Missouri, exposed the racial divide in the American justice system that “stains the heart of black children.”

Speaking at the annual Congressional Black Caucus Foundation dinner in Washington on Saturday night, Mr. Obama said the death of Michael Brown “awakened our nation” to a reality that black citizens already understood.


“In too many communities around the country, a gulf of mistrust exists between local residents and law enforcement,” Mr. Obama said. “Too many young men of color feel targeted by law enforcement — guilty of walking while black or driving while black, judged by stereotypes that fuel fear and resentment and hopelessness.”



Mediaite

Obama on Baltimore: ‘No Dispute’ Men of Color Disproportionately Targeted by Police
by Tina Nguyen | 4:08 pm, May 4th, 2015


And that sense of unfairness and of powerlessness, of people not hearing their voices, that’s helped fuel some of the protests we’ve seen in places like Baltimore and Ferguson and right here in New York. The catalyst of those protests were the tragic deaths of young men and a feeling that law is not always applied evenly in this country. In too many places in this country, black boys and black men, Latino boys, Latino men — they experience being treated differently by law enforcement. In stops and in arrests and in charges and in incarcerations. The statistics are clear up and down the criminal justice system. There’s no dispute.


CNN
Obama: 'No excuse' for violence in Baltimore

By Eric Bradner, CNN
Updated 5:08 PM ET, Tue April 28, 2015

The growing violence in Baltimore, just 40 miles from the White House, represents another challenge for the Obama administration in addressing racial unrest across the country. Since the police killing of an unarmed teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, last summer, the administration has worked to acknowledge deep frustrations in minority communities while also supporting law enforcement.

Obama said he spoke with Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake and Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan on Monday. Attorney General Loretta Lynch, who was sworn in Monday, said the Justice Department is investigating Gray's death.


Just hours after she was sworn in, Lynch was at the White House on Monday evening meeting with Obama to discuss the violent protests unfolding in Baltimore. She said she will send Vanita Gupta, the head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, and Ronald Davis, director of Community Oriented Policing Services, to Baltimore "in the coming days" to meet with religious and community leaders.

Federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms arson investigators are aiding local authorities in investigating 60 fires — 10 structure fires like a CVS and a nursing home construction site, the others vehicles — in Baltimore on Monday night.

The White House sent three representatives to Baltimore on Monday for Gray's funeral: Broderick Johnson, a native of the city and the chairman of the My Brother's Keeper Task Force; Heather Foster, an adviser in the White House Office of Public Engagement; and Elias Alcantara, the associate director of the Office of Intergovernmental Affairs.
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Friday, May 01, 2015

America in Flames - A New Reality or Revisiting the Past

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 We Shall Overcome

The pictures and videos on television could almost move one to tears.  Little towns and big cities are going up in flames over the death of yet another Black man at the hands of the police.

No doubt, there is discrimination between races.  Then there is discrimination within races.  Then there is discrimination between nationalities within a race.  Throw in language, wealth, religion, income, memberships, schools, and health care discrimination, all within the same race, and you start to get the picture.

However, even though we are not equal in all the areas I mentioned, to name just a few, our Declaration of Independence and Constitution guarantee us equal opportunity, and to have equal protection under the law.


We are free to pursue whatever our hearts desire as long as we respect the right of everyone else to do the same.

Unfortunately, much of the freedom and equality incorporated into our Founding documents was a framework for the future of our nation and did not even exist when the documents became law.

Foresight, intuition, premonition, prophecy, common sense, and good luck are all vital elements in the drafting of constitutional documents that must guide a nation far into the future.  Ours worked pretty well most of the 239 years we have been here.


However, since humans are the only life form capable of excessive greed, obsessed with physical and psychological possession, and intoxicated with the thirst for control, we hit occasional speed bumps on the road to perfection.

The scenes of Baltimore in flames, seems like the typical fictional show we see every day on television.  I suppose it is certainly the best of the reality shows, which conveniently blend fact and fiction blurring the lines between.


Here are some observations from a concerned citizen, me.

No doubt, our television and social media fan the flames of dissent with 24/7 coverage, cameras in the faces of everyone, their failure to be honest about "live" news footage versus incessant reruns of the same fires, force or criminal behavior, and their inability to verify most of what they are told by on-the-scene witnesses.


Last night I watched the same building burn down over 25 times and they never mentioned it was a rerun.  They have "Breaking" News Alerts of stuff that happened the night before.  Reporters take sides when caught up in the emotion of the scene and stop being objective.

So yes, the media certainly fans the flames of dissent.

The media, government officials, consultants, and activists all gravitate to the spotlight when such violence breaks out.  Then they proceed to say some rather stupid things.  When all these mouthpieces for the public speak their piece, a lot of time has elapsed and the result is a different result than the peace they claimed to advocate.

Another thing that bothers me is when we have 45 million Blacks in America, why is the Reverend Al Sharpton the only spokesperson for all 45 million people.  I know some incredibly articulate and intelligent Black people who could say something meaningful and hopeful to those caught in the middle of riots.  Surely, we can do better than just ask Al.


I wonder if the media is too young to remember all the times this has happened before, even in our lifetimes.  They act as if they never saw such a sight before.  Expecting them to do research might be out of the question.  Assuming they know history is even more absurd.

I am a Baby Boomer, in high school at the beginning of the 1960's.  By the end of that one decade, there were Civil Rights riots, Academic Freedom riots, anti-war riots, riots over the use of drugs, riots when political leaders were assassinated, and riots after students were killed in other riots.


We had marches and massive protests against everything.

When I went to college, I knew I would be going to war in Vietnam.  So, I joined the Reserve Officers Training Program (ROTC), at the University of Arizona in order to be ready to face death.

One day, bricks came crashing through the ROTC headquarters building as over 1,000 students stormed the place to protest the war and draft.  My classmates were in the crowd.

Later in the '60's I worked for the mayor in Omaha, Nebraska when there were riots again with college students over tuition and curriculum and race riots after the killing of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  After the death of Dr. King, the nation was in flames from Los Angeles to New York.


There were more race riots in Omaha when a policeman was lured to a suitcase bomb and killed by Black Panthers.  For a time it was a toss up whether you were safer in the neighborhoods where the stores were on fire, than you would be outside the riot zone where vigilantes in trucks cruised around looking for potential victims to get even.

Hatred can be a powerful thing.

When I joined the Office of the President and then Congress in 1973, the Wounded Knee takeover by the AIM Native American movement flared up on the Pine Ridge Sioux reservation.  This time there was fighting between the tribal council and traditional leaders and AIM took over the site of the original Wounded Knee massacre in 1890.  Before it ended an FBI agent was killed and U.S. Marshal was paralyzed from the waist down, both worked out of the same federal building where I worked.

Ironically, there is a thread common in most of these incidents.  The most serious involve the destruction of property and deaths, which typified those involving race relations.  Race riots were the most destructive, because there was a willingness to destroy the very places needed to serve the low income.


The same is true today.  Nothing has changed much in the past fifty years.

Many of the years from 1964 to 1975, I worked for the government.  In my career, I worked for mayors, city councils, county boards, governors, House members, Senate members, and the Executive Office of the President.  I worked for the administrative branch, legislative branch, and occasionally for the judicial branch of government, and often worked in the campaign operations.

My role was strategy and policy development and implementation.  In short, I identified the need, developed a solution, and determined how to get it done.  I made things work that helped people.

When I started out in government, President Lyndon Johnson had signed and implemented the Civil Rights Act and Economic Opportunity Act, the latter of which became the core of his War on Poverty.

I was fortunate to work with a number of agencies on programs like the National Alliance of Businessmen jobs program, Keep America Beautiful efforts, and so called poverty programs such as Head Start, Legal Services for the poor, and many others.


Back then, like now, there was virtually no hope for most young, Black teenagers.  If they did not finish high school there was a better than 50% chance of spending most of your life in jail.  Teen unemployment was through the roof while the drug culture was sweeping through the ghettos.

For the next several years I learned of the world of the forgotten or invisible Americans and it would take me to areas like Chicago, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Indianapolis, Falls River, MA, Albuquerque, and searching for ways to protect programs, understand the problems, and work to develop solutions.

There were times I was the only white person in meetings with hundreds of Blacks but I was determined to learn what to do to help the urban communities.  We tried many things, some worked, and some did not.  Then we determined which programs were too corrupt or too ineffective and had another battle trying to get rid of them.

People forget we spent billions and billions of dollars on poverty, jobs, job training, economic development, housing, education, health care, food, and criminal justice reform during the 1960's and 1970's.  Some programs worked great like Head Start.  Others worked great but were controversial like legal services.  There were many efforts to eliminate all the programs, as the Vietnam War grew ever larger across the ocean.


With over five million Americans sent to fight in Vietnam, 1.3 million causalities, and 58,209 dying there was pressure to transfer massive amounts of money to defense spending.  The competition for money was great among the different interests.

Sometimes, seemingly good projects like low-income high-rise housing in the ghetto in time failed miserably, and by the 1980's we spent millions of dollars to get rid of what did not work.  We faced that in Jersey City when I worked for the governor of New Jersey and it took several years to tear down a series of dilapidated high rises where drug dealing, prostitution, gangs, and other elements of the dark side flourished.

In the end, the programs most controversial or ones that did not work were eliminated first, and as poverty lost out to law enforcement, wars, and financial affairs of the public, even the good programs were cutback.

Many people cared, tried to help out, and even contributed to major milestones in the war on poverty, and some were even White.


One was a friend of mine from Shenandoah, Iowa.  In my opinion there were two great brother acts from that little town in Southwestern Iowa, the Everly Brothers (Don and Phil), and the Offenburger brothers, Dan, Tom, and Chuck.

Dan Offenburger was a close friend and we both showed up in Omaha, Nebraska in around 1968.  Dan was a graduate of Creighton University in Omaha and worked for the school rising from intramural director to Athletic Director and pulling off the miracle of landing Willis Reed, NBA superstar with the Knicks, as head basketball coach for the Creighton Blue Jays.

From my position in the Mayor's Office and the fact one of the mayors I worked for was a Creighton graduate, we were deeply involved in anything to help the Jesuits.  As I progressed into being a newspaper reporter for the Omaha World Herald then working for congress and the office of the president, we would meet often at the Omaha Press Club.


Dan had two brothers he never stopped talking about, Chuck, who was a near legendary writer and columnist for my favorite newspaper, the Des Moines Register, and Tom, who had recently resigned (1966) from being the Chicago Bureau chief for U.S. News and World Report.  Tom left one of the great jobs in journalism to become the press secretary for Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., when America was about to go up in flames.

Because on my work with programs intended to break the cycle of poverty, Dan introduced me to his brother, who would go on from working with Dr. King, to working for and with the Reverend Ralph Abernathy, Andrew Young for more than a decade, and  the wife of Dr. King, Coretta Scott King.

Andrew Young would later travel to Shenandoah, Iowa to deliver the eulogy for Tom.  Young called him a highly revered man and said Tom "interpreted the Civil Rights Movement," turning "a hostile press into seekers of the truth."


After the murder of his boss in April of 1968, riots swept the nation, primarily in black urban areas. At least 110 cities experienced violence and destruction in the next few days, resulting in roughly $50 million in damage. Of the 39 people who died, 34 were black. The worst riots were in Chicago, Baltimore and Washington, D.C. Over 22,000 federal troops and 34,000 national guard were sent to aid local police -- the largest ever called to deal with domestic civil disturbance. In many cities, the devastation was so great that it left a permanent scar, which is still evident, decades later.

In Baltimore, the 1968 riots cost six people their lives, injured 700, and destroyed about 1,000 small businesses.  People burned down their own infrastructure and their own neighborhoods.

It was the worst social unrest in America since the Civil War.


Just two months earlier Tom had drafted a letter articulating the need for the King non-violent movement, a letter approved by Dr. King.  In the letter, Tom said frustrations were growing across the nation because of the failure of our government and society to start meaningful, massive assaults against economic exploitation and racial injustice.

Tom asked the question do you think our nation can escape violence by the continued suppression of poor people.  He outlined the goals of Dr. King in seeking decent jobs and income for all people, and help rebuilding the slums.   

On April 4, 1968, the assassination of Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., Tom's close friend and boss, took place when Dr. King was age 39.

We have an opportunity to build on history.  Unlike previous occasions, we must address the issues Tom raised of economic exploitation and racial injustice.  We must finally finish the war on poverty by learning from our experience, creating new solutions, and maintaining the fight long after the media has stopped reporting.


Once upon a time America was not afraid to make mistakes when it came to the good of the people.  That spirit, courage, and faith must live in people, all people, and then yes, We Shall Overcome.

By the way, We Shall Overcome, those are the words inscribed on the gravestone of Tom Offenburger.  He was a white journalist, friend, and press secretary of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Tom was the man who interpreted the Civil Rights movement to the "hostile" press of America.  His life proved that we all must care about the plight of the poor.  His work proved we all have different ways to contribute to such a worthy cause.   

{Note photos are from the riots of 1967 Detroit and nationwide in 1968.}

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