Driving while Black

Samuel Dubose was laid to rest today in Cincinnati. He was fatally shot by a campus policeman who stopped him for a missing front license plate. After Sandra Bland’s murder for changing lanes without signaling, it may appear routine traffic stops are becoming fatal for Blacks. In fact, the term “driving while Black” has long been used to describe harassment & racial profiling. Cars with Black drivers are stopped, the occupants searched, the cars torn apart in a search for drugs, & there are often charges for trivial offenses.

As I described in a 1992 article: “In one such incident, a young man was forced to lie on the ground in a puddle of urine while being frisked, another required to pull down his pants & underwear, others held in headlocks, & subjected to intrusive body searches, including a pat down of the genitals. This is harassment; this is police brutality under the guise of the war on drugs. There is also an alarmingly high incidence nationally of young Blacks being murdered during these police actions. In dozens of cases in almost 25 cities, police have assaulted or murdered Black youths, including several unarmed men shot in the back, a detainee shot while removing keys from his pocket, & a five-year-old boy. The policeman who shot the child used as his defense the fact that he had just read an article about “kids who kill” & was acquitted.”

What’s going on here, now for decades, is major assaults on the Bill of Rights in the Black community–most notably probable cause & search & seizure provisions. This highlights that “an injury to one is an injury to all” is not just a sentimental mantra but an iron law of social transformation. The majority of people believed media that Black teens were out of control, that swat team policing was necessary, & let the Black community stand alone against often martial law conditions. And now the Bill of Rights is in jeopardy for all of us. We either smarten up or we go down together.

Obama in Kenya

Kenya little boys walking (Thomas Mukoya:Reuters) July 29 2015

It was distressing to see the repressive Kenyan regime gussying up kids & draping them in American flags for Obama’s recent visit. It’s an attempt to persuade the young that the US has only benign intent in Africa, rather than economic & military control that will make life unbearable for working people.

Such persuasion apparently doesn’t work very well since university students have had many confrontations with riot police on their campuses–on occasions, protesters were chased into classrooms & bombarded with tear gas.

Where there is resistance to repression, there is hope. Where there is such humanity as these small boys (walking home from school in Kogelo) there is not only hope but necessity for the success of those who stand against tyranny.

Activists around the world need to join forces in solidarity with Kenyan activists demanding “US hands off Africa!”

(Photo by Thomas Mukoya/Reuters)

Half-assed reporting on the refugee crisis in the Mediterranean

Syrian & Afghan refugees at Lesbos (Santi Palacios:AP) July 28 2015

Photojournalism now is focusing on the thousands of Syrians, Afghans, Pakistanis, & Palestinians coming through Greece on their way to northern European countries. The stories are wrenching even though Greece has temporarily opened its borders. With the Troika firmly in control in Greece, that policy is likely to change back to conform with the barbarism of European Union (EU) policy.

What’s troubling is the complete lack of reports on refugees from Libya to Italy. That is the route where most of the drownings were happening & where the EU has now launched a naval assault on “human traffickers.” Right-wing publications have even fabricated an ISIS scare with headlines like “ISIS in Libya: overrun Europe with immigrants & ‘turn it into hell’.”

A few months ago, there were an estimated 500,000 African refugees in Libya waiting to cross to Italy. There were reports of naval ships from different European countries already in the Mediterranean along with helicopters & aerial surveillance. So what’s going on? Where are the refugees? Have they ceased crossing? Did they turn around & go back home? Has the EU shut down operations so they can no longer cross? Hasn’t a single news service tried to find out what’s going on?

This photo is Syrian & Afghan refugees landing at Lesbos.

Immigration is a human right. Open the damn borders.

(Photo by Santi Palacios/AP)

Protests in Guadalajara over Ayotzinapa 43

Mexico

This young man in Guadalajara, Mexico is protesting the disappearance of the 43 students from Ayotzinapa teachers college last September. The Mexican government, which sicced their military on the students, has declared the case closed. The families are refusing that verdict & believe their kids are being held in secret prisons. It’s one of the most important political battles in Mexico since in the past several years, over 30,000 people have been disappeared.

What’s remarkable about the protesters in Guadalajara is their defiance since Mexico is essentially occupied by its own military & bold, public political resistance like this is punishable–by disappearance.

Our deepest respect & solidarity with these activists.

(Photo by Hector Guerrero/AFP/Getty Images)

To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee: a review

If anyone is looking for a fiction recommendation, “To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee is a remarkable book. It’s set in the US south in the 1930s & is about a white lawyer defending a Black man falsely accused of raping a white woman. It isn’t really of the white savior genre, like “Huckleberry Finn” by Mark Twain. Outside of a Black maid & caregiver & the courtroom appearance of the accused man, Black characters don’t figure in the story, reflecting the insular nature of segregation–not just then, but now.

Atticus Finch, the lawyer, is a high-principled fellow but not really the central character in the book. The narrator is his small daughter who portrays events from the perspective of a child. In many ways it’s as much a coming of age story as it is about the ugly insularities & criminality of Jim Crow (the US form of apartheid).

It’s filled with rich characters & portrays small town life in a way I think is probably universal & not particular to US or southern culture. I likely wouldn’t have read the book but it was on the agenda in my book club at the library. All of us–& it is a very thoughtful, insightful group of readers–loved the book. So if you’re looking for a quick & what is called “gripping” read, consider “To Kill a Mockingbird.”

Filipino activists fiercely battle riot police

Quezon City ((REUTERS:Erik De Castro)) July 28 2015

Filipino activists are a constant inspiration & model of toughness; we’ve seen them grab water cannons from riot police & turn them on the cops. Over & over, we’ve seen them do pitched battle with riot police & bulldozers sent to forcibly evict them from slums. There isn’t a US politician who arrives in Manila without antiwar protesters out demanding ‘US military out of the Philippines’. Here they’re taking sticks after riot cops trying to stop them from marching to the congress in Quezon City (a section of metro Manila) where president Benigno Aquino is delivering his state of the nation address. Their placard is translated as “Increase the salary of workers, lower down the prices of goods.”

Quezon City is a frequent site of street battles between slum dwellers & police since it has been targeted for massive infrastructure & gentrification projects, including upscale shopping malls, telecommunications centers, high-rise luxury apartments, hotels.

The Philippines played a major role in the Vietnam War by providing air bases & ports for the US military. They were closed in the 1990s–leaving behind an estimated 52,000 children fathered by US soldiers during the decades the US navy & air force had the bases. Many of the kids were abandoned by their mothers & became street children; most were raised in extreme poverty by family or guardians & suffered intense discrimination as “Amerasians.”

Because the US military administered prostitution at the Filipino bases, the women who worked as “bar girls” (a demeaning term) sued the Pentagon in the 1990s. It’s uncertain what happened to that suit (it likely didn’t go far) but there are initiatives by women in other countries with US bases, including South Korea & Japan, challenging US military policies that create such social disruption & human suffering. Those initiatives need to be supported & encouraged since the re-militarization of the Philippines & re-opening of the bases will bring the same social catastrophes. Opposing that is not just for Filipino activists but for antiwar activists in the US & around the world.

Our deepest respect & fullest respect for Filipino activists.

(Photo by Erik De Castro/Reuters)

Media doesn’t always lie but it never tells the truth about Palestine

Gaza power outage (Mohammed Saber:EPA) July 28 2015

The Guardian-UK caption to this beautiful photo is a classic–another case of media not always outright lying but never telling the truth about Palestinians & Israel:

“Four-year-old Haifa Al Atawna looks out from the window of her family’s destroyed house after nightfall during a power outage in Al Shejaeiya neighbourhood. Residents of Gaza, home to 1.8 million people, have been experiencing up to 18 hours of electricity outage a day for the past two weeks due to fuel & power shortages.”

The full truth is the Shejaeiya neighborhood was bombed to smithereens by Israel this time last year & little is left but cement rubble. Since Israel won’t allow rebuilding, people are living in that rubble which shifts & is dangerous. The fuel shortages are caused by the Israeli blockade & the power outage by the bombing of the only power plant in Gaza. And anyway, even if they had fuel & power, how would they use it in a pile of cement rubble!?

No wonder people feel the Palestinian conflict with Israel is too daunting to understand & too intractable to be resolved. You can’t make sense out of lies, half truths, & outright gibberish. But the truth is now out & justice won’t be stopped.

Build the hell out of the economic, cultural, & academic boycott of Israel & demand no military aid to Israel.

(Photo by Mohammed Saber/EPA)

Another “scuffle” when Israeli soldiers assault Palestinian woman

Scuffle

This is another one of those encounters media is calling a “scuffle” with Palestinian women at Al-Aqsa Mosque yesterday. Can you imagine how it would be reported if over a dozen Palestinian men were assaulting an Israeli woman!? But since Israeli soldiers don’t hesitate to assault Palestinian children, why should they make an exception for women?

Israeli police reports on the conflict at Al-Aqsa said masked Palestinian “rioters” stockpiled explosives & weapons in the mosque to use against Jewish worshippers at the Wailing Wall. How were they going to get them from the mosque to the Wailing Wall plaza? In fact, how did they stockpile those weapons & how were they going to get at them to use against “worshippers” since men under 50 aren’t allowed inside the mosque? And why do they show photos of women without masks being assaulted by border police but no masked “rioters”?

It’s one thing for the Israeli government to pass this baloney off as fact but it’s quite another that media would report it like the gospel truth when it’s so transparently foolish.

It has to be said that when the Israeli military condones & encourages this kind of human rights misconduct, they are opening up Israeli civilian society to all sorts of problems when soldiers are demobilized. Mental health issues & social dysfunction involving violence become routine. You don’t transition from this kind of violence to being model citizens content with parenting & gardening. That’s the price paid for militarism evident in crime statistics associated with veterans certainly in the US & likely all over the world.

Build the economic, cultural, & academic boycott of Israel & demand “No military aid to Israel.”

(Photo by Mahmoud Illean/AP)

Veloso & Gil sing for Israeli apartheid & shoot their human rights reputation to hell

Two jesters & a war criminal July 27 2015

It’s one thing that Caetano Veloso & Gilberto Gil defied the Palestinian call to honor the cultural boycott of Israel by performing there. They proved themselves lowlife jesters for apartheid & disgraced themselves by posing with Shimon Peres, the former president & terrorist.

It’s another thing entirely they try to play Palestinians & the BDS movement for fools by visiting Susiya in the West Bank & making statements about how “Israeli militarism should be used as a defense, never as a means of attack & oppression of the Palestinian people.” Who the hell do they think they’re kidding!? The only thing missing was a touching moment of prayer at the apartheid wall. Note they did not go to Gaza.

Once you breach the cordon sanitaire around apartheid, it’s all over but the shame.

(Photo is the two jesters with the terrorist)