Outcry over the killing of George Floyd has gone international, with people taking to the streets Berlin and London to show solidarity with US protesters. In Germany, soccer stars wore t-shirts and knelt in support.
Monthly Archives: May 2020
Voices In the Storm
Charles M. Blow, columnist, New York Times
Son called today to say he was going to a protest in NY to provide bottled water and take first aid kits. Proud of that kid. But, when he told me that he had written my telephone number on his arm “just in case,” I damn near cried. Why do our babied have to even think abt this?!
— Charles M. Blow (@CharlesMBlow) May 30, 2020
collected by Celeste Fremon & Taylor Walker
Charles M. Blow, columnist, New York Times
Son called today to say he was going to a protest in NY to provide bottled water and take first aid kits. Proud of that kid. But, when he told me that he had written my telephone number on his arm “just in case,” I damn near cried. Why do our babied have to even think abt this?!
— Charles M. Blow (@CharlesMBlow) May 30, 2020
LZ Granderson, Los Angeles Times
— LZ Granderson (@LZGranderson) May 30, 2020
Alicia Garza, co-creator Black Lives Matter
First, Black people are exhausted. I’m exhausted. Angry. Devastated. Scared.
— Alicia Garza (@aliciagarza) May 27, 2020
I try really hard not to be enraged at these kind of inquiries. Protest for too many is a performance for someone else’s benefit — rest assured people are not facing tear gas to perform for you. They are sick and tired of being stripped of humanity and no one doing anything.
— Alicia Garza (@aliciagarza) May 27, 2020
(see rest of thread)
Alex M. Johnson, Program Director, The California Wellness Foundation
They don’t know how to deescalate when the topic is the lives of black people. Violence isn’t dents and graffiti on police cars paid for by our tax dollars.
— Alex M. Johnson (@AMJ_AlexJohnson) May 30, 2020
Isaac Bryan, Director of Public Policy, UCLA Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies
I can tell you first hand… there was no violence until the police batons, tear gas, and rubber bullets came out.
The movement is, has been, and will always be rooted in love and justice. #BlackLivesMatter pic.twitter.com/nITExN4DeH
— Isaac Bryan (@ib2_real) May 31, 2020
Ava DuVernay, filmmaker, When They See Us, 13th, and more
White people talking to white people. More of this please. If you’re white and you believe yourself not to be racist, yet you don’t talk to your white friends like this or stand up beyond tweets for Black people… you simply aren’t who you think you are. pic.twitter.com/hUjJsZ0iFv
— Ava DuVernay (@ava) May 31, 2020
Natalie Neysa Alund, breaking news reporter, USA Today, Nashville
I cannot believe what I just witnessed. They pulled up onto the square with a police siren on and did this. #Louisville pic.twitter.com/65o2lgZCJh
— Natalie Neysa Alund (@nataliealund) May 30, 2020
Michel Moore, Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department
My statement regarding planned protest activities in Los Angeles: pic.twitter.com/rSslocJPJX
— Chief Michel Moore (@LAPDChiefMoore) May 29, 2020
Jasmyne Cannick, strategist, journalist
If you allow it, the media will bait you into speaking against your own people. After years of doing this, I don’t fall for that.
— Jasmyne Cannick (@Jasmyne) May 31, 2020
The uprising in #Watts in 1965 also including looting and vandalism. 34 died and over 3,400 arrested. Wash, rinse and repeat in 1992 with the #LAriots. Both triggered by the police. And here we are in 2020 and again an uprising triggered by the police. Let’s discuss that! pic.twitter.com/RCWlqkSmMM
— Jasmyne Cannick (@Jasmyne) May 31, 2020
That’s their way of not addressing the real issue–instead, they’d rather focus on the looting and vandalism and not why people are out there in the first place. They never ask the white commentators that question though.
— Jasmyne Cannick (@Jasmyne) May 31, 2020
Molly Hennessy-Fiske, reporter Los Angeles Times,
Minnesota State Patrol just fired tear gas at reporters and photographers at point blank range. pic.twitter.com/r7X6J7LKo8
— Molly Hennessy-Fiske (@mollyhf) May 31, 2020
Mark Ridley-Thomas, Member Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
I feel I need to say something to those who are contemplating violating curfew and risking arrest. Go home!
The last place you want to be during this COVID-19 pandemic is in LA County Jail.
— Mark Ridley-Thomas (@mridleythomas) May 31, 2020
We have been notified that all #COVID-19 testing centers throughout LA will be closed until further notified. A troubling consequence of social breakdown prompted by excessive use of force resulting in the death of another unarmed African American man, Mr. George Floyd. Damn!!!
— Mark Ridley-Thomas (@MRTempower) May 31, 2020
Marqueece Harris-Dawson, Los Angeles City Councilmember, District 8
— Marqueece (@mhdcd8) May 31, 2020
Ishmail Abdus-Saboor, Mitchell J. and Margo K. Blutt Presidential Assistant Professor of Biology, University of Pennsyvania
Matthew Ormseth, Los Angeles Times
Fairfax and Clinton pic.twitter.com/Xc4GOciRWe
— Matthew Ormseth (@MatthewOrmseth) May 31, 2020
Tanya Kerssen, researcher, author, Minneapolis, MN
Share widely: National guard and MPD sweeping our residential street. Shooting paint canisters at us on our own front porch. Yelling “light em up” #JusticeForGeorgeFloyd #JusticeForGeorge #BlackLivesMatter pic.twitter.com/bW48imyt55
— Tanya Kerssen (@tkerssen) May 31, 2020
Alex villanueva, Los Angeles County Sheriff
@LACoSheriff & all of our specialized units are closely monitoring & strategizing to keep LA County safe! I strongly condemn the murder of George Floyd, but burning down our communities does nothing to bring about police reform. Stay safe everyone! pic.twitter.com/TI2FuElrrs
— Alex Villanueva (@LACoSheriff) May 31, 2020
Patrisse Cullors, co-founder Black Lives Matter, co-author, When They Call You A Terrorist
Let’s be honest.
Black pain, grief and rage are not only dismissed by elected officials, our response to those feelings are also criminalized.
To feel is the most fundamental human desire.
Yet, we are consistently punished for expressing our feelings and desires.
— patrisse cullors (@OsopePatrisse) May 31, 2020
Ibram X. Kendi, historian, author, winner 2016 National Book Award, nonfiction
Police murder. People rage. People demonstrate. Some people get violent. Some property is destroyed. The coverage turns from the senseless destruction of Black lives to the senseless destruction of property. Same old news cycle. No need to wonder why police violence continues.
— Ibram X. Kendi (@DrIbram) May 30, 2020
John Cusak, actor, in Chicago
Cops didn’t like me filming the burning car so they came at me with batons. Hitting my bike.
Ahhm herea the audio pic.twitter.com/tfaOoVCw5v— John Cusack (@johncusack) May 31, 2020
Sal LaBarbera, retired homicided detective, Los Angeles Police Department
Anyone lives nearby Highland and Melrose. Osteria Mozza Restaurant. I’m alone restaurant broken into I’m surrounded. @Venice311 @LAPDHollywood @anblanx
— Sal LaBarbera (@Sal_LaBarbera) May 31, 2020
Well all laugh about this later. Imagine me asking over Twitter for a little help. PS: I could not save the wine. Still have a few people inside. I’m standing outside
— Sal LaBarbera (@Sal_LaBarbera) May 31, 2020
You’re going to see muzzle flash from the restaurant that will be me. Highland and Melrose
— Sal LaBarbera (@Sal_LaBarbera) May 31, 2020
I’m still standing @LAPDHollywood Hollywood and Melrose. Officers are west of me they need to come east to Highland
— Sal LaBarbera (@Sal_LaBarbera) May 31, 2020
William Bratton, Former Police Commissioner, NYC; Chief, LAPD; Police Commissioner, Boston
As cops across America hold the line for the city’s they protect & the peaceful demonstrators — they risk it all at violent protests compounded by the threat of #COVID19. My thoughts are with them as I know these brave men & women will lead those they serve through these crises. pic.twitter.com/aAhwCvSX5S
— Bill Bratton (@CommissBratton) May 31, 2020
Dave Cullen, journalist, author, Columbine, and Parkland
I hesitate to post this, because this is not ABOUT journalists. But, journalists play a crucial role in informing us all. This is a danger to us all: “A Reporter’s Cry on Live TV: ‘I’m Getting Shot! I’m Getting Shot!’ “https://t.co/JGekvlpxmd
— Dave Cullen (@DaveCullen) May 31, 2020
Madeleine Brand, Host of KCRW’s Press Play
Harlem, by Langston Hughes:
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.Or does it explode?
— Madeleine Brand (@TheMadBrand) May 31, 2020
Kareem Abdul-Jabar, author, N.B.A.’s all-time leading scorer, recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom
via Los Angeles Times, via Elizabeth Colvin, Senior advocate, Children’s Rights Division, Human Rights Watch.
So maybe…the Black community’s main concern rn isn’t whether protesters stand 6 apart or loot but that being Black means being murdered by cops & wannabes, & sheltering at home forever b/c the racism virus infecting the US is more deadly than COVID-19.
https://t.co/4rYvhHoxKm— Elizabeth Calvin (@FairSentencing) May 31, 2020
Voices In the Storm
Charles M. Blow, columnist, New York Times
Son called today to say he was going to a protest in NY to provide bottled water and take first aid kits. Proud of that kid. But, when he told me that he had written my telephone number on his arm “just in case,” I damn near cried. Why do our babied have to even think abt this?!
— Charles M. Blow (@CharlesMBlow) May 30, 2020
collected by Celeste Fremon & Taylor Walker
Charles M. Blow, columnist, New York Times
Son called today to say he was going to a protest in NY to provide bottled water and take first aid kits. Proud of that kid. But, when he told me that he had written my telephone number on his arm “just in case,” I damn near cried. Why do our babied have to even think abt this?!
— Charles M. Blow (@CharlesMBlow) May 30, 2020
LZ Granderson, Los Angeles Times
— LZ Granderson (@LZGranderson) May 30, 2020
Alicia Garza, co-creator Black Lives Matter
First, Black people are exhausted. I’m exhausted. Angry. Devastated. Scared.
— Alicia Garza (@aliciagarza) May 27, 2020
I try really hard not to be enraged at these kind of inquiries. Protest for too many is a performance for someone else’s benefit — rest assured people are not facing tear gas to perform for you. They are sick and tired of being stripped of humanity and no one doing anything.
— Alicia Garza (@aliciagarza) May 27, 2020
(see rest of thread)
Alex M. Johnson, Program Director, The California Wellness Foundation
They don’t know how to deescalate when the topic is the lives of black people. Violence isn’t dents and graffiti on police cars paid for by our tax dollars.
— Alex M. Johnson (@AMJ_AlexJohnson) May 30, 2020
Isaac Bryan, Director of Public Policy, UCLA Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies
I can tell you first hand… there was no violence until the police batons, tear gas, and rubber bullets came out.
The movement is, has been, and will always be rooted in love and justice. #BlackLivesMatter pic.twitter.com/nITExN4DeH
— Isaac Bryan (@ib2_real) May 31, 2020
Ava DuVernay, filmmaker, When They See Us, 13th, and more
White people talking to white people. More of this please. If you’re white and you believe yourself not to be racist, yet you don’t talk to your white friends like this or stand up beyond tweets for Black people… you simply aren’t who you think you are. pic.twitter.com/hUjJsZ0iFv
— Ava DuVernay (@ava) May 31, 2020
Natalie Neysa Alund, breaking news reporter, USA Today, Nashville
I cannot believe what I just witnessed. They pulled up onto the square with a police siren on and did this. #Louisville pic.twitter.com/65o2lgZCJh
— Natalie Neysa Alund (@nataliealund) May 30, 2020
Michel Moore, Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department
My statement regarding planned protest activities in Los Angeles: pic.twitter.com/rSslocJPJX
— Chief Michel Moore (@LAPDChiefMoore) May 29, 2020
Jasmyne Cannick, strategist, journalist
If you allow it, the media will bait you into speaking against your own people. After years of doing this, I don’t fall for that.
— Jasmyne Cannick (@Jasmyne) May 31, 2020
The uprising in #Watts in 1965 also including looting and vandalism. 34 died and over 3,400 arrested. Wash, rinse and repeat in 1992 with the #LAriots. Both triggered by the police. And here we are in 2020 and again an uprising triggered by the police. Let’s discuss that! pic.twitter.com/RCWlqkSmMM
— Jasmyne Cannick (@Jasmyne) May 31, 2020
That’s their way of not addressing the real issue–instead, they’d rather focus on the looting and vandalism and not why people are out there in the first place. They never ask the white commentators that question though.
— Jasmyne Cannick (@Jasmyne) May 31, 2020
Molly Hennessy-Fiske, reporter Los Angeles Times,
Minnesota State Patrol just fired tear gas at reporters and photographers at point blank range. pic.twitter.com/r7X6J7LKo8
— Molly Hennessy-Fiske (@mollyhf) May 31, 2020
Mark Ridley-Thomas, Member Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
I feel I need to say something to those who are contemplating violating curfew and risking arrest. Go home!
The last place you want to be during this COVID-19 pandemic is in LA County Jail.
— Mark Ridley-Thomas (@mridleythomas) May 31, 2020
We have been notified that all #COVID-19 testing centers throughout LA will be closed until further notified. A troubling consequence of social breakdown prompted by excessive use of force resulting in the death of another unarmed African American man, Mr. George Floyd. Damn!!!
— Mark Ridley-Thomas (@MRTempower) May 31, 2020
Marqueece Harris-Dawson, Los Angeles City Councilmember, District 8
— Marqueece (@mhdcd8) May 31, 2020
Ishmail Abdus-Saboor, Mitchell J. and Margo K. Blutt Presidential Assistant Professor of Biology, University of Pennsyvania
Matthew Ormseth, Los Angeles Times
Fairfax and Clinton pic.twitter.com/Xc4GOciRWe
— Matthew Ormseth (@MatthewOrmseth) May 31, 2020
Tanya Kerssen, researcher, author, Minneapolis, MN
Share widely: National guard and MPD sweeping our residential street. Shooting paint canisters at us on our own front porch. Yelling “light em up” #JusticeForGeorgeFloyd #JusticeForGeorge #BlackLivesMatter pic.twitter.com/bW48imyt55
— Tanya Kerssen (@tkerssen) May 31, 2020
Alex villanueva, Los Angeles County Sheriff
@LACoSheriff & all of our specialized units are closely monitoring & strategizing to keep LA County safe! I strongly condemn the murder of George Floyd, but burning down our communities does nothing to bring about police reform. Stay safe everyone! pic.twitter.com/TI2FuElrrs
— Alex Villanueva (@LACoSheriff) May 31, 2020
Patrisse Cullors, co-founder Black Lives Matter, co-author, When They Call You A Terrorist
Let’s be honest.
Black pain, grief and rage are not only dismissed by elected officials, our response to those feelings are also criminalized.
To feel is the most fundamental human desire.
Yet, we are consistently punished for expressing our feelings and desires.
— patrisse cullors (@OsopePatrisse) May 31, 2020
Ibram X. Kendi, historian, author, winner 2016 National Book Award, nonfiction
Police murder. People rage. People demonstrate. Some people get violent. Some property is destroyed. The coverage turns from the senseless destruction of Black lives to the senseless destruction of property. Same old news cycle. No need to wonder why police violence continues.
— Ibram X. Kendi (@DrIbram) May 30, 2020
John Cusak, actor, in Chicago
Cops didn’t like me filming the burning car so they came at me with batons. Hitting my bike.
Ahhm herea the audio pic.twitter.com/tfaOoVCw5v— John Cusack (@johncusack) May 31, 2020
Sal LaBarbera, retired homicided detective, Los Angeles Police Department
Anyone lives nearby Highland and Melrose. Osteria Mozza Restaurant. I’m alone restaurant broken into I’m surrounded. @Venice311 @LAPDHollywood @anblanx
— Sal LaBarbera (@Sal_LaBarbera) May 31, 2020
Well all laugh about this later. Imagine me asking over Twitter for a little help. PS: I could not save the wine. Still have a few people inside. I’m standing outside
— Sal LaBarbera (@Sal_LaBarbera) May 31, 2020
You’re going to see muzzle flash from the restaurant that will be me. Highland and Melrose
— Sal LaBarbera (@Sal_LaBarbera) May 31, 2020
I’m still standing @LAPDHollywood Hollywood and Melrose. Officers are west of me they need to come east to Highland
— Sal LaBarbera (@Sal_LaBarbera) May 31, 2020
William Bratton, Former Police Commissioner, NYC; Chief, LAPD; Police Commissioner, Boston
As cops across America hold the line for the city’s they protect & the peaceful demonstrators — they risk it all at violent protests compounded by the threat of #COVID19. My thoughts are with them as I know these brave men & women will lead those they serve through these crises. pic.twitter.com/aAhwCvSX5S
— Bill Bratton (@CommissBratton) May 31, 2020
Dave Cullen, journalist, author, Columbine, and Parkland
I hesitate to post this, because this is not ABOUT journalists. But, journalists play a crucial role in informing us all. This is a danger to us all: “A Reporter’s Cry on Live TV: ‘I’m Getting Shot! I’m Getting Shot!’ “https://t.co/JGekvlpxmd
— Dave Cullen (@DaveCullen) May 31, 2020
Madeleine Brand, Host of KCRW’s Press Play
Harlem, by Langston Hughes:
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.Or does it explode?
— Madeleine Brand (@TheMadBrand) May 31, 2020
Kareem Abdul-Jabar, author, N.B.A.’s all-time leading scorer, recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom
via Los Angeles Times, via Elizabeth Colvin, Senior advocate, Children’s Rights Division, Human Rights Watch.
So maybe…the Black community’s main concern rn isn’t whether protesters stand 6 apart or loot but that being Black means being murdered by cops & wannabes, & sheltering at home forever b/c the racism virus infecting the US is more deadly than COVID-19.
https://t.co/4rYvhHoxKm— Elizabeth Calvin (@FairSentencing) May 31, 2020
In Mumbai, coronavirus patients must lie next to those who did not survive
Mumbai hospitals are so overwhelmed with coronavirus cases that patients must share wards with the bodies of those who died from COVID-19. Now doctors on the frontlines of the city’s outbreak are also succumbing to the disease.
Corporate Voices Get Behind ‘Black Lives Matter’ Cause – The New York Times
Companies like Nike, Twitter and Citigroup have aligned themselves with the Black Lives Matter movement. As Netflix posted on Twitter on Saturday: “To be silent is to be complicit. Black lives matter. We have a platform, and we have a duty to our Black members, employees, creators and talent to speak up.”
Despite Warnings, Races Continue at a N. Carolina Speedway
People will die as a result
At the direction of Gov. Roy Cooper, a county sheriff told the track’s operators to cancel Saturday’s races. Then they went ahead, again, as scheduled with fans in attendance.
Cuomo Says Attorney General Will Investigate NYPD’s “Inexplicable” Policing Of George Floyd Protests
“They know the attorney general is going to review it. I’m telling them that if that review looks at those videos and finds that there was improper police conduct there will be ramifications.”
“They know the attorney general is going to review it. I’m telling them that if that review looks at those videos and finds that there was improper police conduct there will be ramifications.” [ more › ]
85 migrant workers test positive in latest Ontario farm outbreak
A farm operation in Norfolk County, south of Simcoe, is the latest agricultural facility in Ontario to declare an outbreak after 85 migrant workers tested positive for COVID-19.
Health officials make last-minute plea to stop lockdown easing in England | World news | The Guardian
Senior public health officials have made a last-minute plea for ministers to scrap Monday’s easing of the coronavirus lockdown in England, warning the country is unprepared to deal with any surge in infection and that public resolve to take steps to limit transmisson has been eroded.
The Association of Directors of Public Health (ADPH) said new rules, including allowing groups of up to six people to meet outdoors and in private gardens, were “not supported by the science” and that pictures of crowded beaches and beauty spots over the weekend showed “the public is not keeping to social distancing as it was”.
Al racismo y el odio no lo miramos por TV
Las balas apuntan más a los cuerpos marrones, a los descendientes de indígenas y campesinos que habitan en la urbanidad, a los pobres, a las personas que viven en las villas. No pasa solo en Estados Unidos: pasa acá, a la vuelta de la esquina.
The post Al racismo y el odio no lo miramos por TV appeared first on Cosecha Roja.
You must be logged in to post a comment.