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Tupac Amaru Shakur, " I'm Loosing It...We MUST Unite!"
Showing posts with label Blavity News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blavity News. Show all posts

Thursday, July 16, 2020

New Mobile Billboards Target Republican Senate Leaders To Demand Stronger COVID-19 Relief For Women

A coalition of organizations is displaying mobile billboards with stories of women impacted by the coronavirus pandemic demanding senators to pass a COVID-19 relief bill with expansive and inclusive economic benefits.

The billboards focus on women working on the front lines of the COVID-19 crisis with an emphasis on Black and Latinx women overrepresented in low paying jobs, subsequently placing them and their families at higher risk for infection, according to a release sent to Blavity. 

The billboards are targeting Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Senate Republican leaders who they say failed to take action on additional and much needed COVID-19 relief. 

“Women and their families are the essential core of the workforce, yet, despite incredible need, have been left out in the cold by a Senate that has failed to do its fundamental job: act on behalf of its people,” We Demand More Coalition said.

“Women who are historically and systematically marginalized are disproportionately bearing the impact of this virus, while being left out and left behind by their leadership," they added.

More than half of essential workers are women and they also make up the majority of healthcare staff infected by the coronavirus.

According to a study conducted by LeanIn.Org and SurveyMonkey, Black women are nearly twice as likely as white men to report they've been laid off, furloughed or had either their hours or pay reduced because of the pandemic.

Women were also more likely to report they wouldn't be able to pay for their necessities for more than a month if they lost their income.

Additionally, trans women are experiencing high levels of unemployment and delays in medical care as they continue to battle transphobia and transmisogyny in the workplace. 

With women bearing the brunt of the pandemic and its effects, the coalition is hoping that by calling out specific senators, the next relief package will include economic relief for women and their families, stronger healthcare access, strengthened state governments and resources to ensure safe and fair elections. 

Although previous relief packages have included unemployment benefits, investments in public health and relief to small businesses, the coalition says this is only a fraction of the public's needs.

The billboards will be intentionally placed in the home states of McConnell, Thom Tillis, John Cornyn, Joni Ernst, Cory Gardner, Martha McSally, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler. They will also display the number of We Demand More petition signatures from the targeted senator's state, the time elapsed since the House passed the HEROES Act and a message demanding they pass additional COVID-19 relief.

The mobile billboards will arrive in Washington D.C. on July 20, the same day senators are expected to return to the hill. 



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Monday, July 6, 2020

On The 168th Anniversary Of Frederick Douglass' Pivotal Speech About The 4th Of July, His Statue Was Destroyed

A statue of Frederick Douglass in New York was torn down this weekend as millions celebrated one of the abolitionist's greatest speeches, according to CBS News. 

The statue in Rochester, New York, was ripped off of its base and thrown into the nearby Genesee River gorge. The famous memorial was built in Maplewood Park, which is located along a route of the underground railroad that Douglass and Harriet Tubman used to transport enslaved people to free states or Canada. 

Authorities told the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle that the statue was destroyed on Sunday, which was the 168th anniversary of a now-famous speech Douglass gave in Rochester. 

Douglass is lauded on Independence Day for his "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July" speech, which he gave on July 5, 1852. In the speech, he explained what the holiday means to Black people in the United States and criticized abolitionists at the time for celebrating the day while people were still enslaved. The speech was recently remade by the Movement for Black Lives with actors the likes of Daveed Diggs performing the recitation as Blavity previously reported. 

The Democrat & Chronicle spoke with Carvin Eison, who helped bring this statue of Douglass and others to the historic city.

"It's particularly painful that it happened at this time. It's really sad because here in Rochester the statue of Frederick Douglass has always been a face of good," said Eison.

"Is this some type of retaliation because of the national fever over Confederate monuments right now? Very disappointing, it's beyond disappointing. I feel (we should) put a monument back here immediately so whoever did this knows that we are not going to be deterred from what our objective is, and our objective is to continually celebrate Frederick Douglass," Eison later told WROC.

The statue suffered significant damage to its base and to the hand of the figure. Eison said it will need to be entirely replaced because of how much vandalism was done to the statue. 

After escaping slavery, Douglass lived in Rochester for 30 years, and he is buried there. There are other statues in the area commemorating his legacy, and he became the first Black person in the United States honored with a statue.

This is not the first time one of the statues has been vandalized in the town. In 2018, the town erected 13 statues commemorating Douglass in honor of his 200th birthday, including the one that was torn down on Sunday. That year, two white college students damaged one of the statues and allegedly yelled slurs as they did it, according to the Democrat & Chronicle. 

The tragic situation is now being turned into a political football by President Donald Trump, his son and other Republican politicians. No one has been implicated in the crime, but the president and other Republican leaders have said it is part of an "anarchist" plot to destroy all statues, including memorials to Confederate leaders and slave owners. 

Former NAACP President Cornell William Brooks had a different view of the situation, calling it retaliation for current efforts to remove Confederate statues.  

CBS News journalist Wesley Lowery noted that Black statues and memorials are routinely destroyed and vandalized by white supremacists. As Blavity previously reported, a memorial to Emmett Till is shot at so often that it had to be made bulletproof. 

"I’m very confused by folks who, upon hearing that a Frederick Douglass statue has been vandalized, think 'must be left wing protesters!' I mean, I guess that could have been it. But also, you all know black monuments are defaced all the time, right? Typically not by lefties. Looking forward to learning about how cancel culture has gone too far when the historic markers commemorating Emmett Till are shot up this year - as they seem to be every year," Lowery wrote on Twitter. 




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Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Plane Banner Which Circulated Through Downtown Louisville Reminded Louisville Breonna Taylor Was 'Essential'

A plane banner flew over downtown Louisville, Kentucky, to remind all who saw that the city's police department took the life of someone whose work had been deemed essential amid the COVID-19 pandemic when they killed 26-year-old Breonna Taylor

On June 13, exactly three months after her killing, a plane flew over downtown Louisville with an attached banner reading: "BREONNA WAS ESSENTIAL. DEFUND LMPD" according to WDRB. For over an hour, the plane circled the downtown area. 

The banner was courtesy of UltraViolet, a nonprofit geared toward ending sexism; Color of Change, a racial justice group; and Black Lives Matter Louisville. 

Taylor was killed during a botched raid when three officers from the Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) entered her apartment while she and boyfriend Kenneth Walker were sleeping and fired 22 shots. Eight of those bullets struck the 26-year-old.

"Breonna was an essential member of the Louisville community, an essential worker, and her life mattered," UltraViolet Executive Director Shaunna Thomas said in a statement obtained by WDRB. "We stand in solidarity with her family, and friends and are working in conjunction with Black Lives Matter Louisville activists who are demanding justice for her death, to keep up the pressure on all responsible parties."

Nationwide protests calling for charges to be brought against the officers involved have yet to cease since the fateful incident. Additionally, celebrities have been using their platforms to demand that Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron take action in formally bringing charges against Jonathan Mattingly, Myles Cosgrove and Brett Hankison. BeyoncΓ© penned a letter to the 34-year-old, as Blavity previously reported.

"With every death of a Black person at the hands of the police, there are two real tragedies: the death itself, and the inaction and delays that follow it," a portion of the letter reads. "This is your chance to end that pattern. Take swift and decisive action in charging the officers."

Regarding the rhetoric surrounding calls to defund the police, Louisville resident Greg Tichenor, who watched the banner fly through the city, explained to WLKY what the term means to him.

"People are scared of that term. Defund the police. But really, it's taking a system that's not working right now and looking at redirecting some money toward things that will help things in the long haul," Tichenor said.

While two officers remain on administrative duty, on Friday, Detective Hankison was officially relieved of his duties, Mayor Greg Fischer revealed. In a letter addressed to Hankison, Police Chief Robert Schroeder explained the decision. 

"The result of your action seriously impedes the Department's goal of providing the citizens of our city with the most professional law enforcement agency possible. I cannot tolerate this type of conduct by any member of the Louisville Metro Police Department. Your conduct demands your termination,” he said.



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Georgia State Legislature Passes Historic Hate Crime Bill

The Georgia legislature passed a hate crime bill on Tuesday which, pending legal review, will head to Governor Brian Kemp's office to be officially signed into law.

According to The Atlantic Journal-Constitution, House Bill 426 would permit elevated criminal consequences against individuals who harass others based on their race, gender, sexual orientation, national origin, religion, or physical or mental disability. Should said individual be found guilty of carrying out a hate-fueled crime, they'll spend six to 12 months behind bars for a misdemeanor and at least two years if it's a felony. Fines of $5,000 will also be imposed.

"This is a defining moment for Georgia," Republican House Speaker David Ralston said about the historic legislation.

The bill was passed with a vote of 47-6 in the Senate and 127-8 in the House.

The Georgia Democrats echoed Speaker Ralston's sentiments with remarks of their own.

"We are thrilled that this [hate crimes] law has finally passed after years of advocacy, but let's be clear — we will not forget that this bill only came to light after 14 years of delays under Republican leadership, the murder of black men before our eyes, and the pain of marginalized communities across our state," they said in a statement obtained by CBS News.

Although nationwide protests have picked up since the Memorial Day killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers, earlier this year, a Georgia town was the scene of a heinous crime which to most, had glaring racial implications.

Unarmed Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery was killed in Brunswick when two white residents, who claimed they were making a "citizen's arrest," shot him on February 23. The father and son said they believed Arbery resembled a suspect in a string of neighborhood burglaries. Since that day, all three gentleman involved, including a man who recorded the 25-year-old's death, have been charged with murder, as Blavity previously reported. 

On May 11, Arbery would have celebrated his 26th birthday. 


Arbery's mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones urged the state to pass a hate crime bill June 9 in a New York Times video op-ed.

"To me, this was clearly a hate crime,” Cooper-Jones said. "If Georgia had a hate crime law, Ahmaud’s killers could face additional sentences for murdering my son for the color of his skin.

"As we can see in the protests about George Floyd, Ahmaud is just one of the many black lives that has been lost due to hatred," she added. "Ahmaud wasn't killed because he was doing a crime. So, why would he have been targeted, if it wasn't just for hate?"

The measure arrives amid another devastating occasion: the funeral services for Rayshard Brooks, one of the latest victims of police brutality. On June 12, Brooks was gunned down by Atlanta police in the parking lot of a Wendy's. On June 16, Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance-Bottoms announced a slew of administrative orders geared toward modifying the use of force within the city's police department. The following day, former officer Garrett Rolfe was formally charged with felony murder, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and nine other indictments for his actions in Brooks' death.



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This Petition Is Calling For High Schools To Introduce AP Courses On Black History And African Civilization

Many current and former Black students within the U.S. have come to realize they did not have the most well-rounded syllabus when it comes to Black history and a new petition aims to address it. 

The Change.org petition from the AP for All Initiative and addressed to the College Board, is calling for high schools to develop lesson plans focused on Black history and African civilization. It's already garnered nearly 7,000 signatures as of press time.

"We stand in solidarity for the demand of College Board to respectfully honor Black culture and accurately depict the experience of Black people across the diaspora through a culturally responsive framework in the form of two (2) new AP courses: AP African Civilizations and AP African American History written by a committee of experts, inclusive of Black educators, with the knowledge and passion for these subjects," a portion of the Create Advanced Placement Courses on African Civilizations and African American History initiative reads.

AP For All is a product of New York City's Equity and Excellence For All agenda which seeks to implement more AP courses within schools.

The first course, AP African Civilizations, seeks to "provide an understanding of the African experience throughout history with a general overview of centers of African Civilization from antiquity through contemporary times."

The second seminar, AP African American History, explains that students will "learn the vast history that begins with the rich legacy of African Kingdoms, the Atlantic Slave Trade, resistance and triumph in America, to the onward movement of resilience in today's Civil Rights era."

While there are plenty of studies geared toward an understanding of French, German, Italian and Chinese languages and culture, AP For All, the creators of this campaign, argued that Black scholars with African roots are not being taught about their history and influence in the classroom. A failure to deny these essential teachings to students could possibly have long-term consequences, such as lack of preparedness when they eventually enroll in undergraduate studies. 

A January 2020 report from The Education Trust showed that during the 2015-2016 school year, Black students made up approximately 15% of high school students nationwide, but only 9% of those were registered in Advanced Placement curriculums. Currently, just eight states and the District of Columbia demand that grade schools provide AP coursework. Should this initiative pass, then more Black students nationwide will have a beneficial incentive to sign up for these classes.  

The petition comes as global protests over the killing of George Floyd has spurred countless calls for reform within and outside of the justice system. 

You can sign the petition here



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Monday, June 22, 2020

Activist Flames White School Board Member, Says She Was Shopping During Hearing About Ridding Of Homage To Confederate General

Over the weekend, the East Baton Rouge Parish School Board decided to change the name of a local school dedicated to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee after Baton Rouge activist Gary Chambers Jr. gave an impassioned speech that was caught on camera.

Video of the speech has now been seen by millions, leading to praise of Chambers' verbal takedown of the homage to Lee and thus echoing the sentiments of many Black Americans forced to see Confederate monuments, flags or emblems in their cities and towns.

At a school board meeting on Thursday, Chambers wasted no time in criticizing the board for ignoring the concerns of the local community, saying Republican school board member Connie Bernard was shopping online during the meeting. 

“I had intended to get up here and talk about how racist Robert E. Lee was, but I’m going to talk about you, Connie. Sitting over there shopping while we’re talking about Robert E. Lee. This is a picture of you shopping while we’re talking about racism and history in this country," Chambers said while holding up a photo of Bernard.

"You should walk out of here and resign and never come back because you are the example of racism in this community. You are horrible,” he added, also referencing comments Bernard made defending Lee and the Confederacy.

In a Monday morning interview with MSNBC's Morning Joe, Chambers explained that he was already frustrated that it took this long for the board to decide on changing the school's name, considering the area has a majority Black population. 

But it also enraged him that the concerns of the Black community were being ignored by the board's white members, who could not even spend an hour listening to their concerns.

"You can look at all of the streets around Lee High School are named after Confederate generals ... when you go to a local school board meeting, what you saw in that video is really a reflection of what Black America is dealing with as it relates to white America," he said on Monday. 

“You have Black folks speaking up passionately about what they feel, while you have a school board member, a representative of the people, a Republican, who’s sitting there scrolling on the internet while people are expressing their concerns,” Chambers told the show's hosts.

Lee High School will be changing its name, but a decision has not been made on what its new name will be, NBC News reported. One of the best parts of Chambers' speech was the list of local Black heroes who he said deserve to have their names on buildings, as they "were on the right side of history."

Bernard has since apologized for defending Lee in a statement to local news outlet The Advocate.

"My comments last week about the naming of Lee High School were insensitive, have caused pain for others, and have led people to believe I am an enemy of people of color, and I am deeply sorry.”

Despite the photos and witnesses who saw her shopping during the meeting, Bernard denied the allegations, telling The Advocate that it was simply a pop-up that came up on her screen. 

Her comments prompted Chambers to reiterate during his MSNBC interview that "until Connie Bernard is off the East Baton Rouge Parish School Board, we still have work to do.”



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Thursday, June 18, 2020

Day Of Release Encourages Black Creatives To Unite In Sharing Projects They've Held On To And Create Anew

In the midst of constantly advocating for justice on behalf of Black victims of police brutality, it's important that every once in a while, activists take some well-deserved time and unwind from those daily stresses. While not everyone has the luxury of completely detaching themselves from such pressures, one movement is encouraging that action in a collective manner — and its results are bound to be life-changing.

Believing there can be a cosmic shift within everyone's path should they participate at the same time on the same day, creative professionals Sarah Springer and Cela Sutton created A Day of Release, a campaign meant to protect your mind, body and spirit. Scheduled for this Saturday, which is the day of Summer Solstice, creatives and activists nationwide are encouraged to share an individual piece of work they’ve been holding back in an intentional act of expression and release. The collective sharing will serve as a metaphor for letting go while encouraging shared growth. Not exactly a meet-up, this event is instead a designated moment -- 12pm PT/ 3p ET for participants to collectively release the work we've been holding onto via social media through the official #ADayofRelease hashtag. 

The event will come a day after Juneteenth, the annual commemoration of the ending of slavery in the United States. 

Blavity spoke with Cela and Sarah and picked their brains on the decision-making process behind this day as well as their goals for this movement moving forward.

Blavity: How did this idea come to life?

Sarah: The idea for A Day of Release started when I began thinking more and more about what was holding me back personally as a creative and journalist and how freeing myself to finally let go could allow for something new.

Then I started to really think about how something like this could impact my community and especially if we did it at the same time. I'm a huge believer in energy, and especially collective energy, so I thought if we could do this together maybe this could allow for an actual cosmic shift. It was something that was on my mind, and I met with Cela and told her a little bit about it, which was really exciting because it was clear that she was someone who not only got the idea, but that it would really resonate with. 

Cela: When I met Sarah and she told me about her idea of allowing ourselves to release whatever is it we need to make room for new energy, I was so excited because at that time I probably had 10 to15 ideas and concepts in various stages that needed to come to fruition.  I pride myself on being creative and an idea machine, but I've not seen enough of them cross the finish line. I’m also a true believer in energies and spirituality and really felt that energetically it could be so powerful to do this together. And just as Sarah said, for that cosmic shift to happen ... would literally release any burden I felt or any type of fear of rejection or of judgments or of not being good enough. The pain of not feeling good enough is what I've really struggled with for some time now.  

Blavity: Why the decision to make this June 20? What about the solstice makes this a special day?

CS: So we decided to have this on June 20 because it's actually Summer Solstice, and for us, that day represents a cosmic shift in our world, in our universe energetically, and we thought it would be so powerful to be able to individually release something that collectively we're all doing together on a day that represents change, a day that represents something new, a day that represents growth. ... Even more importantly, it’s the day after Juneteenth. June 19 represented our ancestors' release from slavery, release from bondage and release from the decades of senseless brutality that they had suffered from. This year, June 20 serves as a release of all the dreams our foremothers and fathers had coming to fruition, coming to light and gives us courage to show the world what we are really made of: magic.   

SS: The significance of doing this at the same time on the same day together is the power of collective energy and us really centering and focusing on ourselves and the new path that we can create together. The significance of that and the symbolism of letting go is something that we feel is really really important for our community. I think this time it's very, very significant for us because I feel that there is no turning back -- we've seen historically time and time again the cyclical impacts that oppression has had on our communities and our mental health and our physical health. It's just really important for us to remember that — on this significant day and the days that come after that. This is our time and if we don't do it now then when? 

Blavity: Cela, I know that Juneteenth has a historical significance in your family's life. How does that resonate with you and your work with A Day of Release?

CS: I realized Juneteenth was incredibly significant for my family specifically because my family comes from Galveston, Texas, where Juneteenth started because it is the place where the last remaining slaves worked. They were not told that they were free, and my grandmother was born in 1907, which means that I easily have great great grandparents or family in that generation that were among those slaves, and that just really hit me today. The significance of us doing this the day after Juneteenth, where we literally are asking people to use their imaginations to create a world that they don't see. ... We don't see the world that we want to be in yet. We don't see the lives that way yet. ... That's something that we are choosing to claim, but it's not our reality, it's not the present.

Blavity: Finally, how important is letting go in the process of self-care, mental health, healing and moving forward? 

SS: It's so important that we let go in the process of trying to heal, which adds to our self-care, which adds to the improvement of our mental health and essentially moving forward because not only does it allow us to create space for new things, but it takes off that heavy coat, that burden, that heaviness that comes with being Black in America.

CS: Self-love is an act of defiance, rebellion and revolution. We still choose to love ourselves when everything in the world tells us otherwise.



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J. Cole's New Track 'Snow On Tha Bluff' Is Unprogressive Art That Hit A Sour Note With Many Black Women

It's not hard to understand why a lot of people, predominately Black women, are upset with J. Cole's new track "Snow On Tha Bluff." The North Carolina rapper pretty much dedicated an entire three minutes and fifty-five seconds to chastise a Black "queen" about her "holier than thou" attitude and bothersome tone, because he felt personally attacked by her approach to Black activism.

YouTube | J. Cole

When he released the track on Tuesday, Twitter users immediately pinned Chicago rapper Noname as the "high IQ" Black woman addressed in the song. J. Cole neither confirmed nor denied the popular assumption, but Noname's outspoken views on Black radical unity and capitalism makes the speculation quite believable. Regardless of who J. Cole aimed his lyrics at, one thing is certain, he could not have picked a worse time to defend his ego — brother, we are in the middle of multiple crises.

Black people are dying from COVID-19 at a disproportionate rate. We are dropping like flies, at the hands of police officers; and it seems as though a new traumatic Black murder gets recorded and goes viral every other day. In addition to these devastating plights, Breonna Taylor has not even begun to receive an ounce of justice, after being murdered by Louisville officers; 19-year-old Black activist Toyin Salau's sexual assault and murder is collectively weighing heavy on our hearts; and not enough people are talking about Priscilla Slater, a Black woman recently found dead in her holding cell.

At the moment, many Black women are feeling vulnerable and disregarded. This might not be the best time to release a patronizing, but "honest" opinion about how a Black woman should communicate. In fact, there's never a good time for that. We are dealing with a sensitivity issue that can be compared to when 9/11 took place and all radio stations refrained from playing the Outkast hit "B.O.B. (Bombs Over Baghdad)" — timing is everything.

Twitter users and fellow artists responded with polarized views. Some found the track as a respectful suggestion on how to unify the Black community without coming across as an elitist. Others saw the song for what it was, an ill-timed condescending display of J. Cole's insecurities.



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Harriet Tubman Museum In New Jersey Opening Virtually For Juneteenth

Most museums have had to close for the foreseeable future due to the coronavirus pandemic. But a new museum dedicated to the legacy of Harriet Tubman is opening its doors virtually in honor of the Juneteenth holiday. 

The Harriet Tubman Museum in Cape May, New Jersey, was slated to open for in-person visits on Juneteenth this year, as Blavity previously reported. The pandemic, however, forced organizers to shift plans and hold the opening ceremony through Facebook, according to The Daily Journal.

"The Harriet Tubman Museum has been organized to recognize Harriet Tubman's courage, compassion and conviction as well as the history of abolitionist activism in Cape May and its surrounding region. Harriet Tubman lived in Cape May in the early 1850s, working to fund her expeditions to conduct fugitive slaves to freedom, and leaving Cape May to rescue enslaved people in southern states," event organizers said in an announcement.

Although Cape May is a small New Jersey town about an hour outside of Philadelphia, it played an integral role in the abolitionist movement and served as a home to Tubman and many others as they worked to free slaves.

The town sits right across the bay from Delaware and for many slaves served as a destination to freedom.

The museum organizers told The Daily Journal that they hope it can provide visitors with an in-depth understanding of the roots of the abolitionist movement in Cape May and the many actions people took to free enslaved people.

Tubman worked out of a hotel near the town's historic Howell House, which sat next to the Macedonia Baptist Church and is now where the museum is located. 

There are a number of buildings in the town that are part of its rich history as a place where Black people lived and organized funding for the Underground Railroad. 

"We understood the impact but we also wanted it to connect with our church and also to the history of Cape May City and definitely to its African American residents that at one time, the population was over 30 percent and probably has diminished to probably in the area of under 5 percent today," church trustee Lynda Townes told The Daily Journal, adding that the museum was a way for people now to "look at one small place and a person who made such a difference in lives, and know that there are many who are still making the same impact that Harriet Tubman did."

The Harriet Tubman Museum, located at 632 Lafayette Street in Cape May, will have a virtual opening live-streamed on their Facebook page from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. accompanied with music and a discussion about Black preservation efforts. 



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Teen Shot And Killed Selena Reyes-Hernandez In Her Chicago Home After Telling Him She Was A Trans Woman

According to the Chicago Sun-Times, an 18-year-old has been arrested for the murder of Selena Reyes-Hernandez, a 37-year-old trans woman. 

WGN9 reported that Reyes-Hernandez and Orlando Perez came back to her home together at 5:30 a.m. on May 31. 

Perez admitted to police on video that when he and Reyes-Hernandez arrived at her apartment in Chicago's Marquette Park neighborhood, he asked her whether she was a woman. Reyes-Hernandez responded that she was trans, and Perez immediately left her apartment.

He came back 20 minutes later with a handgun and shot Reyes-Hernandez in the head and back. He allegedly left shortly after shooting her but went back again minutes later to fire more shots, according to the Sun-Times.

“He thought that was enough so he ran out. But he kept seeing her face, so he went back there to do it again,” Assistant State’s Attorney James Murphy said during Perez’s bond hearing.

The Chicago Tribune quoted prosecutors who said Perez told them he "kept seeing her face and it kept bothering him and he was mad as hell.”

The gunshots were so loud that a neighbor came to Reyes-Hernandez's apartment and found her body there. 

Police arrested Perez on Sunday, and he is being held without bail before his next court date on July 6.

Investigators are unsure of whether the two knew each other before the May 31 incident, but, following the execution of a warrant on Perez's home, police were able to tie the teenager to the shooting using his gun, which held the same kind of bullets found at the scene. 

Perez is also seen on security camera footage coming in and out of Reyes-Hernandez's home before and after the shooting. 

The Sun-Times reported the Bogan High School senior tried to move Reyes-Hernandez's car after shooting her, believing the police would be searching for it. Police also found a video on Reyes-Hernandez's phone, showing them together in a bathroom before her death. 


According to Them.us, there have been at least 15 other reported killings of trans people this year. Violence against trans people, particularly Black and brown trans men and women, continues to be an epidemic in the United States.

Less than a week ago, two Black trans women were killed within 24 hours of each other. Both Dominique “Rem’mie” Fells of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Riah Milton of Liberty Township, Ohio, lost their lives to anti-trans violence as concerns began to be raised about how the national conversation on Black lives needed to include LGBTQ+ Black people. 

The Human Rights Campaign, which has been keeping track of the number of anti-trans deaths this year, wrote that in its reporting "at least" is added in front of every number published because "too often these stories go unreported — or misreported."

"In 2019, advocates tracked at least 27 deaths of at least transgender or gender non-conforming people in the U.S. due to fatal violence, the majority of whom were Black transgender women. These victims, like all of us, are loving partners, parents, family members, friends and community members. They worked, went to school and attended church. They were real people — people who did not deserve to have their lives taken from them," a statement on the organization's website reads. 

"Some of these cases involve clear anti-transgender bias. In others, the victim’s transgender status may have put them at risk in other ways, such as forcing them into unemployment, poverty, homelessness and/or survival sex work. While the details of these cases differ, it is clear that fatal violence disproportionately affects transgender women of color — particularly Black transgender women — and that the intersections of racism, sexism, homophobia, biphobia, transphobia and unchecked access to guns conspire to deprive them of employment, housing, healthcare and other necessities," the statement adds. 

Just weeks after Reyes-Hernandez was killed, Chicago held the Drag March for Change, where dozens of Black speakers discussed how they felt left out of the wider LGBTQ+ community in the city due to their race.

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot tweeted about Reyes-Hernandez's death on Wednesday.

"Black and Brown Trans lives matter. Selena Reyes-Hernandez's life matters. The lives of countless other murdered Trans women matter. Being outraged is not enough. We must fight and fight hard to keep our Trans community protected and demand their attackers are brought to justice," Lightfoot said.



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Tuesday, June 16, 2020

It's Time We Have The Uncomfortable Conversations About Race In America

If you’re interested in sharing your opinion on any cultural, political or personal topic, create an account here and check out our how-to post to learn more.

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The tragic death of George Floyd at the hands of a white police officer in Minnesota sparked an unprecedented uprising fueled by decades of deep-rooted pain and anguish.

For weeks, passionate protests provided a national platform to face the sobering realities of racism, oppression, inequality and discrimination — but there’s a necessary element missing.

While we can search for more progressive ways to amplify the politics of race and privilege, nothing changes without the acceptance of a few unpopular truths and assuming accountability for that truth.

Although America’s history affirms a lineage of racial hate dating back centuries, the revelations of our past are pointless to those that deny them. More specifically, the severe consequences of racially charged hatred provokes no empathy or emotion in people who have been subconsciously granted immunity from it.

Regardless, one undeniable fact stands: racism not only exists, but the mechanics of it, both psychologically and systematically, are actively abrading the remaining sense of humanity in the United States. More notably, the divisiveness of racism continues eroding our perceived social progress, making it glaringly evident that America has become insensitive to its own afflictions.

In America, race is socially constructed. While racial superiority is, in essence, a myth — this practiced ideology serves as the foundation from which the pillars of this country were established. This accounts for key categories such as economics, education, politics and the criminal justice system.

As a result, what we see too often are sensible solutions and sound demands meeting blind eyes and deaf ears. It is impossible to show a blind person what you see. It’s also impossible for a deaf person to hear the words you speak. To heal the open wounds damaging race relations in America, white people must first take collective responsibility for their role in the ongoing attacks, both covert and overt, against Black and brown people.

By avoiding accountability, the real problems persist unchecked and unresolved. Instead, we are forced to witness white people rally around a narrative that attributes the condemnable faults of America to a skewed perception of the Black and brown experience. A perception that fails to note the ways in which a history of white privilege and systematic racism purposefully caused the extreme disparities in wealth, mass incarceration, the drug epidemic, the poverty crisis and the rapid emergence of black-on-black crime.

Properly confronting such issues stemming from America’s enforced racial hierarchy requires acknowledging the fraudulence of its foundation. More specifically, white people must accept that everything America has been built upon, structurally and systematically, is birthed from a vicious lie.

Getting to the root of this lie requires looking beyond the visible symptoms, outcomes and circumstances. Effectively addressing these conflicts calls for tracing all the way back to the source. It demands diagnosing the deep-rooted trauma, inherent triggers and how each directly impacts a personal belief system.

Our beliefs shape our values. Our values mold our thoughts. Our thoughts inspire our actions. As such, our lives are merely a reflection of the stories we tell ourselves about ourselves and the world around us.

The projection of white superiority implies that white people operate under a collective belief that other races are inferior — in talent, intellect, physical ability and personal potential. Therefore, white superiority suggests that Black people are incapable of being equal across categories. Yet, digging deeper into the complexities of this ideology suggests that, in fact, white people could suffer from an inferiority complex.

Inferiority breeds insecurity. Insecurity breeds jealousy. Jealousy breeds self-hate and irrational rage. Irrational rage speaks to an anger that is not justifiable or grounded on a basis of truth, but is self-derived. As a result, the existing racial hierarchy within America may not only be an expression of insecurity and inferiority, but more so an intentional method of defense against the suppressed understanding that other races are undoubtedly capable of being stronger, smarter and more advanced than white people.

Even in the face of blatant hate, discrimination and systematic oppression, people of color have diligently persevered to excel at the highest level across spaces. They have risen from the lowest points to become groundbreaking pioneers, fearless revolutionaries, legendary political leaders and iconic public figures.

Despite every attempt to reduce their worth and deny their power, people of color have prevailed to develop a shared identity and design a culture that carries unparalleled influence on a global scale. Not only have people of color been at the forefront of prominent shifts and movements, they have generated unprecedented social, cultural and economic value.

The most evident examples of this can be found within music and sports.

Although the power structure in these industries has historically mirrored the power structure in America, people of color have been almost single-handedly responsible for sports and entertainment growing to become two of the largest global exports for the United States.

From Michael Jordan and Oprah Winfrey, to Jay Z and Barack Obama, we’ve witnessed contemporary examples of gifted Black men and women defying the odds to reach unseen heights. They redefined the rules by not only becoming the first Black President or the first Black billionaires in their respective fields, but by also shattering limitations to become iconic cultural leaders. 

For decades, we’ve also watched Black women carry the country on their shoulders with admirable grace, becoming heroic symbols of hope and solidarity that continue showing the world what compassion looks like.

Seeing these undeniable realities raises the question: What gives merit to the idea of white superiority in today’s America? Why should white people today be granted the same unwarranted privileges they’ve so freely enjoyed throughout history? Could white people not want other races to have equal access because they’re secretly afraid of being considered less valuable, less capable or less powerful themselves?

Prejudices are universal. Every living person, based on our exclusive and unique set of experiences, develops a personal depiction of the people, places and things we encounter. That’s human nature. It’s a challenge each of us, regardless of race, must honestly confront within ourselves and work to operate in truth before assumption. From childhood, we are taught what’s right and what’s wrong; who is accepted and who is not. As such, racism is a learned weapon of misplaced hatred matriculated through generations. Reversing this trend means introducing a new way of thinking that is anchored in honesty, not idealism.

Until millions of white people march the streets, soaked in tears while lifting signs that say Black lives matter, the change we so relentlessly seek will not be realized. Until you can show up to work amongst your white coworkers and see them naturally concerned about the troubles of Black and brown people, there is an abundance of work to do. Until the lives, lifestyles and social conditions of the privileged are threatened, headlines of Black deaths will be recycled for decades to come.

Suppressing the value of Black lives not only stifles the growth of America, it cripples the progress of communities across the world. We have global case studies of reconstruction that prove new ideologies, systems and socioeconomic frameworks are achievable. In order to rewrite history for the millions of Americans who follow this critical moment, it’s time we have the uncomfortable conversations that will bring us closer to truth, and ultimately bring us closer to each other.



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