A Reblog: Olympics Exploits Afro-Brazilian Land by Building Media Village on Sacred Mass Grave of Enslaved Africans

Originally published on Atlanta Blackstar (click link for original article):

As journalists and media professionals head to Rio ahead of the 2016 Summer Olympics, many remain unaware that their lives are about to intersect with the dark slave past of Brazil.

According to Rio On Watch, the apartments that will be used to house journalists during the highly anticipated sporting competition were built using “labor in conditions analogous to slavery,” and reportedly constructed over top a sacred mass burial ground for enslaved Africans.

The land belongs to a group of people known as the quilombo, a federally recognized community comprised of the descendants of enslaved runaways. Officially designated as Barra Media Village 3, the newly constructed apartment complex was specifically built in Quilombo do Camorim, a community located near several Olympic venues in the West Zone of the city, Rio On Watch reports.

Quilombo Camorim leader Adilson Batista Almeida has accused developers of trampling the history of slavery in the area by ruining a number of archaeological remains near the site of an old sugar mill and taking away much needed land for the development of a public space that would be used to celebrate Afro-Brazilian culture.

“One Sunday morning a chainsaw came and devastated everything, including century-old trees,” Almeida said. “I regard the ground as sacred because it is where my ancestors were buried.”

According to The Guardian, the land was reportedly purchased in 2013 by real estate developer Cyrela, which felled hundreds of trees, dismantled a community football pitch and destroyed the remains of the old slave owner’s house and the slavery-era sugar mill so that the apartments could be constructed.

Going into the Olympics, many journalists, as well as the general public, remain unaware of the controversy, as major news networks have spent little to no time to covering the story. Holding the Olympic games in a country known for importing the largest number of enslaved Africans in the world is also a tough pill to swallow. Some would rather forget the history altogether.

But the quilombo serve as a reminder of Brazil’s dark history of slavery. Under Brazil’s modern constitution, quilombos are entitled to claim the lands their ancestors occupied, The Guardian reports. There are currently over 3,500 of these communities throughout Brazil, many of whom are still fighting to preserve their land and rich culture.

“I can say from my heart that I am proud to be part of a quilombo,” Almeida said. “Slavery was a time of great suffering for our ancestors, but we remember them not for the suffering, but for the struggle and resistance they went through to build this country.”

Late last year, the Cyrela real estate company found itself in hot water after the Public Ministry of Labor for Rio rescued 11 laborers from deplorable working conditions “analogous to slavery.” According to Rio on Watch, the workers charged with constructing the media village were provided accommodations that didn’t have any drinking water, was crawling with cockroaches and mold, and the only available bathroom had no shower and a toilet that didn’t flush.

The real estate developer “contracted out… the main activities of the company in an illegal way with the objective of circumventing worker’s rights to lower the costs of labor,” public prosecutor Guadalupe Couto said.

Cyrela was ultimately forced to pay each of the workers $20,000 as compensation, in addition to other fines, the publication states.

In an effort to reclaim what’s theirs, The Guardian reports that the quilombo have been working to acquire the title to land in the area near the old sugar mill for over a decade. However, the process to reclaim ownership was never finalized.

“Quilombo members haven’t yet made a final decision what land to claim, but in principle, they claim the land that is next to the church square, for cultural purposes,” read a 2009 report by the National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform.

The Rio de Janeiro city government said it wasn’t aware of any claim made by the quilombo community, according to The Guardian.

Now forced to live with the media village built atop their ancestral burial ground, the quilombo have focused their efforts on constructing a community center on an adjacent, untouched piece of land. According to Almeida, the center will be built in honor of the community’s enslaved ancestors.

“Their blood that was spilled – I don’t want it to be in vain,” he said. “We want to fight for our space, our rights and our traditions so that our ancestors can look and see that today we are living in a better place.”

A Reblog: You’re Overdrafted, They’re Overpaid

Originally published on Truthout.org

(Click link for original post)

Tuesday, 12 July 2016 00:00 By Sam Pizzigati, OtherWords | Op-Ed

Over the first three months of this year, Bank of America collected $393 million in overdraft fees, up from $371 million in the first quarter of 2015.Over the first three months of this year, Bank of America collected $393 million in overdraft fees, up from $371 million in the first quarter of 2015. (Photo: Jeremy Brooks / Flickr)

Almost two-thirds of Americans today — 63 percent — don’t have enough savings to cover an unexpected $500 expense. Anything from an emergency brake job to a refrigerator on the fritz could zero out their bank accounts.

Most American households, in other words, are living on the financial edge. And that suits America’s biggest bank CEOs just fine. They love to see Americans desperately juggling credit cards and checking accounts to keep bills paid.

With all that juggling, our banksters know, something will inevitably get dropped. A checking account will be slightly overdrawn. A debit card transaction will overstep a limit. And that’s when the banks start to really clean up — through overdraft fees.

“Over the years,” Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director Richard Cordray has testified, “overdraft programs have become a significant source of industry revenues.”

How significant? Over the first three months of this year, Bank of America collected $393 million in overdraft fees, up from $371 million in the first quarter of 2015. Wells Fargo pulled in even more, with $411 million — a 16 percent increase from the same period last year.

Banks play all sorts of games to maximize these mega millions in overdraft income. They particularly enjoy “reordering” the purchases consumers make. Banks that “reorder” process a day’s biggest charge or check first, even if smaller charges or checks came earlier in the day.

What difference does this reordering make? A great deal more than you might think.

Say you start the day with $80 in your account and you charge three $25 items — and then find yourself having to shell out another $100 later in the day. If the bank processes these charges in chronological order, you’ll pay only one overdraft fee when the $100 charge pushes you over your limit.

But if the bank processes the $100 charge first, ahead of the three smaller purchases, you’ll end up paying four overdraft fees for the exact same day’s worth of charges.

Who’s benefiting from this sort of chicanery? Not bank branch managers. They’re only averaging $54,820 a year, calculates PayScale. And certainly not bank tellers. The typical American teller last year earned just $12.70 an hour, about $26,410 a year, says the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Bank CEOs, on the other hand, are living spectacularly high on the hog. Last year, the 10 most lavishly compensated of these top execs averaged over $15.5 million each, with the CEO of overdraft fee king Wells Fargo coming in at over $19.3 million.

Overdraft fees make these over-the-top CEO rewards possible. But let’s keep in mind an even more important point: Sky-high rewards for CEOs make overdraft chicanery inevitable. They give banking execs a powerful incentive to maximize overdraft income from reordering and all sorts of other tricks of the banking industry trade.

The federal government’s Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is trying to clamp down on these tricks and has already made some progress. But as overdraft revenues continue to rise, bank execs simply have no incentive to turn off the spigot.

If we want to see real reform in the financial industry, we can’t just put some limits on how much banks can grab from overdrafts. Maybe we need to start talking about limiting how much pay can go to the executives who run our biggest banks.

This piece was reprinted by Truthout with permission or license. It may not be reproduced in any form without permission or license from the source.

 

Sam Pizzigati

Institute for Policy Studies associate fellow Sam Pizzigati co-edits Inequality.org. His most recent book is The Rich Don’t Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over Plutocracy that Created the American Middle Class, 1900-1970.

 

A Poem: “As Long As the Sun is Shining”

From the Melanated Man:

 

I woke up this morning and not to my surprise,

Even with fresh cold stuck in the pit of my eyes,

I could see out of my bedroom window…

THAT THE SUN RISES!!

 

I turn on the morning news as I watch ‘hue-men’ like me

Shot and killed by ‘other’ men in blue with impunity

My blood boils with rage at the constant injustice I see

I shout to God, “How can this be? How can this be?

Do you love your people? Is this our  preordained destiny?”

 

“I wear the skin, this dark skin of oppression,

Too difficult to ignore my peoples birthright of depression,

Perpetuated by dead food, meaningless religion, and economic  repression,

And I wonder… will we ever experience any sustaining progression?”

 

But a warmth eases my tense spirit,

A calm voice whispers into my weary soul,

“My child, look to the sky! As long as the SUN touches upon this rock, everything will be alright!”

 

Suddenly a thought crosses my mind,

That I possess an element that makes my connection to the SUN so divine,

An element that enhances this earthbound existence of mine,

And causes my inner being to shine…

 

An element aptly named MELANIN!!

 

Then I realize that my people will inevitably win the day,

Through our prosperous eras  and turbulent ages we are are to stay,

Although the outcome seems doubtful and the forecast looks gloomy and gray,

AS LONG AS THE SUN IS SHINING, EVERYTHING WILL BE OKAY!

 

 

Peace and Love to my melanated family,

The Melanated Man

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Reblog: On The Fourth of July, Thank the Most Important Founding Father: Haiti’s Jean-Jacques Dessalines

Originally published on BLACK AGENDA REPORT (click link for original post):

 

Submitted by Pascal Robert on Tue, 07/05/2016 – 17:53

On The Fourth of July, Thank the Most Important Founding Father: Haiti’s Jean-Jacques Dessalines

by Pascal Robert

This article previously appeared in Thought Merchant.

“Napoleon’s defeat forced him to give up his plans of conquering North America and the United States.”

With the rise of Donald Trump as the presumptive Republican nominee for the 2016 presidential election, a reactionary nativism has taken hold in America. Resentment towards immigrants and Muslims has found solace in Trump’s promises to “build a wall” between Mexico and the United States, as well as deny further entry to Muslim immigrants. These themes have generated a White nationalistic fervor among Americans who believe they want to “take their country back,” and “make America great again.”

What is both ironic and comical about the pleas of these reactionary American nativists is that they are premised on ridiculous White settler colonial myths about the founding of America. The mythology assumes America was founded on notions of liberty and freedom when, in reality, those rights were originally only assured to land-owning White males. What is more important in deflating this pedestrian narrative about American history’s “debt” to its bourgeois slave owning revolutionary origins, is that the most important person in assuring this settler colonial project called America was not aborted less than 30 years after the July 4, 1776 Declaration of Independence, was a former Black slave who helped lead an army of his fellows against three European Empires to free his people: Jean-Jacques Dessalines, founder of the independent nation of Haiti.

“But the prejudice of race alone blinded the American people [to] the debt they owed to the desperate courage of 500,000 Haitian Negroes who would not be enslaved.” — Henry Adams, direct decedent of John Adams and America’s foremost Historian of the 18th and 19th centuries

After defeating one of the greatest military expeditions in the history of the British Empire,

“The most important person in assuring this settler colonial project called America was not aborted less than 30 years after the July 4, 1776 Declaration of Independence, was a former Black slave.”

L’Ouverture’s second in command, General Jean Jacques Desssalines was charged with the task of ultimately defeating Napoleon Bonaparte’s massive army from the years of 1802-1803, after Toussaint was captured by Bonaparte’s emissaries and sent back to France to die imprisoned.

What is lost on most Americans is that Napoleon Bonaparte, renowned as one of the greatest military minds in Western history, was not merely intent on conquering the former African slaves in Haiti, but also using the opportunity to plant a military expedition in New Orleans large enough to conquer North America and then president Thomas Jefferson’s United States. Hence making the newly independent United States a subject and colony of the French Empire.

“[Napoleon] set his sights on a new goal: restoring the imperial crown’s finest jewel, the lost Saint-Domingue/Haiti. In 1801, he sent the largest invasion fleet that ever crossed the Atlantic, some 50,000 men, to the island under the leadership of his brother-in-law Charles LeClerc. Their mission was to decapitate the ex-slave leadership of Saint-Domingue/Haiti. “No more gilded Africans,” Napoleon commanded. Subdue any resistance by deception and force. Return to slavery all the Africans who survived.

Napoleon had also assembled a second army, and he had given it a second assignment. In 1800, he had concluded a secret treaty that “retroceded” Louisiana to French control after 37 years in Spanish hands. This second army was to go to Louisiana and plant the French flag. And at 20,000 men strong, it was larger than the entire U.S. Army. Napoleon had already conquered one revolutionary republic [France] from within. He was sending a mighty army to take another by brute force [The United States of America].” – The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism, Edward E. Baptist

In the eyes of many Americans today, deluded with America’s current military prowess, the notion of Thomas Jefferson and the United States ever being concerned about a threat from France may seem ridiculous. What such ahistorical analysis ignores is that Thomas Jefferson himself, drafter of America’s Declaration of Independence, was so terrified at the prospect of Napoleon’s army in Louisiana that he publicly stated that Napoleon’s mere presence may force the newly independent United States to run back to cower under the protection of Great Britain’s military.

“And yet, as Jefferson now instructed his envoy to Paris, Robert Livingston, ‘there is on the globe one single spot, the possessor of which is our natural and habitual enemy. It is New Orleans.’ Jefferson had to open the Mississippi one way or the other. ‘Should a French army occupy New Orleans,’ wrote Jefferson, ‘we must marry ourselves to the British fleet and Nation.’”— The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism, Edward E. Baptist

Thomas Jefferson, America’s founding father, was cowering in fear about the prospect of fighting Napoleon’s Army. The same army the Haitian former slaves had been bravely vanquishing and eventually totally defeated under the leadership of Jean Jacques Dessalines. So much for the idea of American exceptionalism.

Dessalines planned a war of extermination of every Frenchman on the Island.”

The capture of Toussaint L’Ouverture on June 7, 1802, instead of weakening the Haitian resistance in fact strengthened it. Toussaint was one of the more moderate Haitian Revolutionary leaders, and he was replaced as head of the Black rebellion by the most feared and brutal of his Generals: Jean Jacques Dessalines. Dessalines planned a war of extermination of every Frenchman on the Island using the revolutionary call “Koupe Tete, Boule Kaye” meaning “Cut off their heads, and burn their houses,” – referring to all French soldiers and Frenchmen in sight.

 “By the middle of 1802, the first wave of French forces had withered away [in Saint Domingue/Haiti]. Napoleon reluctantly diverted the Louisiana Army [20,000 soldiers] to Saint Domingue/Haiti. Then this second expedition was also destroyed. So even as Toussaint L’Ouverture shivered in his cell across the ocean, the army he left behind [under Jean Jacques Dessalines] became the first to deal a decisive defeat to Napoleon’s ambitions. Damn sugar, damn coffee, damn colonies,” the first of the Whites [Napoleon] was heard to grumble into his cup at a state dinner. “– The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism, Edward E. Baptist.

After vanquishing Napoleon’s forces in Port Au Prince and Les Cayes, Napoleon’s remaining army retreated to Au Cap, Haiti, to be defeated in the final battle of the Haitian Revolution, the Battle of Vertieres, November 18, 1803. This final defeat of the remains of Napoleon’s massive expedition was so demoralizing that it not only forced Napoleon to give up his plans of conquering North America and the United States, it compelled him to enter an agreement that would change the history and trajectory of the United States forever, literally giving birth to the nation it was to become: Napoleon consummated The Louisiana Purchase. Again, this was only possible because of the Haitian Army lead by Jean Jacques Dessalines.

“The treaty would change the trajectory of the United States forever.”

Thomas Jefferson expected to only benefit from the situation by acquiring the city of New Orleans. So important was that port to the potential development of the United States, he was more than thrilled with the possibility of acquiring merely that city from Napoleon. The extent of Bonaparte’s demoralized defeat at the hands of Jean Jacques Dessalines and the Haitian army was demonstrated by the dimensions of the deal he consummated with Thomas Jefferson’s representative in Paris:

“Napoleon’s minion shocked Livingston [Thomas Jefferson’s representative] almost out of his knee breeches with an astonishing offer: not just New Orleans, but all of French Louisiana–the whole west bank of the Mississippi and its tributaries. now the United States was offered–for a mere $15 million–828,000 square miles, 530 million acres at three cents per acre. This vast expanse doubled the nations size. Eventually the land form the Louisiana Purchase would become all or part of fifteen states. It still accounts for almost a quarter of the surface area of the United States. By the late twentieth century Jefferson’s windfall would be feeding much of the world. One imagines that Livingston found it hard to hold his poker face steady. He immediately agreed to the deal. – The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism,” Edward E. Baptist.

The efforts of Jean Jacques Dessalines and the Haitian Revolutionary army not only protected the fledgling United States from impending French conquest, the defeat of Napoleon by the brave Haitian former slaves gave America the land mass that would propel it into being one of the most powerful nations in history. None of this would have been possible without the bravery of the Haitian people who would not be enslaved.

 “To the deadly climate of Saint Domingue/Haiti and the courage and obstinate resistance made by its Black inhabitants are we indebted…[The] truth is, Bonaparte found himself absolutely compelled’–and not by Jefferson–“to relinquish his daring plan of colonizing the banks of the Mississippi.” — Alexander Hamilton. Quote from: “The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism,” Edward E. Baptist.

The Haitian Revolution saved Jefferson’s United States from eventual conquest by Napoleon who placed 20,000 soldiers (more than the entire United States Army at the time) in New Orleans to invade North America after he foolishly thought he could defeat the Haitian Revolutionary Army. Those 20,000 soldiers had to be sent to Haiti to quell the rebellion and were subsequently defeated. Napoleon then sold all the Louisiana Territory west of the Mississippi to Thomas Jefferson for three cents per acre. This is the real story of how America was made great. Next time some Trump supporters wish to pop off about “taking their country back,” just remind them they should thank God and the Haitian people that they even have a country.

Pascal Robert is an iconoclastic Haitian American Lawyer, blogger, and online activist for Haiti. You can find his work on the web at Thought Merchant, and at Huffington Post. He can be reached via twitter at https://twitter.com/probert06 @probert06 orthoughtmerchant@gmail.com.

Reblog: Police Rule African-American Man Found Hanging in Atlanta’s Piedmont Park Suicide, Black Twitter isn’t Buying it

(Well I’m staying out of Piedmont Park!!)

 

Originally posted on Atlanta Blackstar:

 

July 7, 2016 | Posted by Tanasia Kenney

 

Reports of a Black body found hanged in a tree at Atlanta’s Piedmont Park began circulating on social media early Thursday morning.

Amid recent high-profile incidents of violence against African-American men, many were quick to deem the tragedy a “modern day lynching.” But spokesman for the Atlanta Police Department, Donald Hannah, said it’s nothing of the sort.

According to authorities, the person found was the victim of an apparent suicide. Atlanta PD told Atlanta Black Star via Twitter that officers were called to the Charles Allen entrance of the park just before 5 o’clock Thursday morning when they discovered a man’s body hanging from a tree by a rope. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

“There were no discernible signs of a struggle or foul play,” Hannah said.  “A Fulton County medical examiner concurred that the death was consistent with a suicide.”

According to a direct message from Atlanta PD’s official Twitter account, the individual found hanged was an African-American male,  aged 25-35.

Medical examiner “Hagar assumed custody of the unidentified body,” the message stated. “Atlanta Crime Scene Unit L. Robertson photographed the scene. Final cause and manner of death are pending autopsy.”

Although officials have ruled the man’s death a suicide, Black Twitter isn’t buying it.

 

View article in its entirety on Atlanta Blackstar:

http://atlantablackstar.com/2016/07/07/police-rule-african-american-man-found-hanging-in-atlantas-piedmont-park-suicide-black-twitter-isnt-buying-it/

 

Random Thought: My Appreciation for the Common Voice Grows!

 

 

Blog.png

 

From the Melanated Man:

Well I’m tapping back into the madness for a minute  just to share a few words. I been working on my memoir and i have to tell you, writing a book sucks all of your creative juices. Which is why I mentioned a couple a weeks ago I was stepping away from the blog to focus more on that.

It’s been fun and self-fulfilling too! I learn more about myself every time I write my 1000 word per day on it.

But I can’t leave The Melanin Man blog hanging, so I got to tend to my baby (besides my two beautiful daughters and wife!) so people won’t worry that I fell off the face of the earth.

During that time memoir writing, I have been on a self-imposed mainstream media blackout for a little over a week and a half, which I intend on stretching into the winter. Hopefully I can grow even more than I have already have in last couple of years. I have only stuck to the blogs I follow and a select few of BLACK-focused websites which I re-post articles from time to time.

And so far it has been rewarding.

I already had a appreciation for blogs created by common folk such as myself. And by staying off mainstream sites such as Yahoo, CNN, Fox, ABC and those that ilk, I understand how essentially important the common man’s (and woman’s) voice truly is.

Honestly, it’s the only voice that MATTERS.

We are the GROUND LEVEL, the GRASSROOTS as you would say.

When I read blogs that I follow (i.e. gray suede, Kushite Kingdom, nidotopianwarrior ) I can hear a passion that is UNFILTERED and a commonality that I can’t obviously receive from the mainstream media platform.

I can connect, and now I recognize that connection in its entirety…and I am grateful for that.

I’m grateful that I can share a piece of myself with others who I have something in common with. And these days that is very HARD to find.

Because the mainstream media platform only DUMBS DOWN your consciousness, especially those of HIGH MELANIN CONTENT.

99% of their content is ENTERTAINMENT BULLSHIT, 1% may be substantive but SLANTED.

BLACK PEOPLE, you really have to be careful of the sources you receive your information from.

Go to the sources that you can relate, your BLACK MEDIA PLATFORMS, preferably ones that are not OWNED by the WHITE-MAJORITY!

Examples:

thegrio.com

blackagendareport.com

atlantablackstar.com

truth-out.org (funded by Caucasians but provides good non-bias information every so often.)

Check out other blogs (besides mine; I thank you for the support nevertheless!) on WordPress, Blogger, and other blog engines that you can relate to that can feed your SOUL.

Support the common messengers!

In the process, create your OWN voice, on your OWN platform if you have the courage ( I know you do!)

Because it is important and of value!

And I say common folk to get my point across, but I don’t believe any of us are common ( and I’m not just blowing smoke up your ass!)

 

OUR VOICE DOES MATTER!!!

 

Peace and love to my melanated family,

The Melanated Man

 

 

A Reblog: ‘Reverse Migration’ to Blame for the Sudden Drop in Chicago’s Black Population, Residents Head for Suburban South

Originally published on Atlanta Blackstar (tap link for original article):

n 2015, Chicago’s Cook County boasted the largest Black community of any other county in the U.S., home to a whopping 1.3 million African-American residents. The county has held the prestigious title for some time now, but a mass migration of its Black residents southward is chipping away at its impressive lead.

According to data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau, more African-Americans are choosing to move to outlying suburban communities or “warm-weather” states in the U.S. Over 9,000 Black residents left Cook County between 2014-15, bringing the total up to a staggering 35,000 African-Americans who’ve left the Chicago area since 2010, the Chicago Tribune reports. The exodus is greater than in any other metropolitan area in the country, according to the paper.

Census data shows that Chicago itself lost a total of 181,000 African-American residents between 2000 and 2010. The city’s metropolitan statistical area, defined by the census bureau, extends into the city and suburbs of Wisconsin and Indiana, which lost around 6,263 residents between 2014 and 2015.

“I have very little desire to return to the city,” 47-year-old Roosevelt Johnson told the Chicago Tribune. According to the paper, Johnson moved to Lake County, in the suburbs, 10 years ago after he was limited by the lack of resources on the South side and costly housing on the city’s north side.

“It became a rat race of having to try to get from Point A to Point B with raising our family,” he said. “Making sure everyone is in the place they need to be, despite escalating costs. It became too much for us to handle.”

Lack of opportunities and sky-high rent are just a few reasons Black residents are choosing to leave Chicago. Suburban communities are more attractive to African-Americans seeking prosperity, safe neighborhoods, and stable incomes, the Chicago Tribune reports. Southern states like Georgia have also become appealing to young Black Americans, as they have better job opportunities and affordable living spaces.

The Greater Atlanta Area saw a spike in its Black population in 2015, according to the publication. The city boasted the highest “numerical gain in Black residents of any city area” in the country, as nearly 198,031 African-American residents moved to the area, census data shows.

Brookings Institution demographer William Frey calls the phenomenon “reverse migration.” Aside from more job opportunities, Frey said Blacks in their 20’s and 30’s could be headed South for cultural reasons as well.

“Atlanta has a rising Black middle-class population, and people want to link into that labor market,” he explained. “But there’s also a cultural part to it. If you’re moving to a place where the economy is not so much better [than where you were] and you don’t have family or friends there, but there is an established Black community, that’s attractive to you.”

As African-Americans continue to move away from Chicago in search of prosperity, director of research and evaluation at the Chicago Urban League, Stephanie Schmitz Bechteler, said that their move could be problematic for families who choose to stay behind. The increased loss of a middle-class makes it harder on families who might not be able to relocate, the Chicago Tribune reports.

“You lose that healthy mix of incomes in the community, which can be problematic for the families still living there, in terms of investment and reinvestment and circulating dollars,” Schmitz Bechteler explained. “I’d never fault a family for leaving, but it does present challenges for the community they leave behind.”

A Reblog: Black 6th Grader Nearly Lynched at School: Officials Deny Responsibility

Originally published by  blackagendareport.com:

 

Adaboye_KidLynching

Submitted by Dr. Marsha Cole… on Tue, 06/21/2016 – 17:59

Black Agenda Report editor and columnist, Dr. Marsha Coleman-Adebayo

KP’s parents thought sending her to a predominately white school would provide a superior education and access to a brighter future. This decision almost cost KP her life.”

A 12-year-old girl, attending the 6th grade at a pricey predominately white school in Waco, Texas, was viciously terrorized and nearly lynched by 3 white male classmates. No charges have been filed against the boys. According to reports, the boys wrapped a swing rope around the neck of the girl, identified as “KP,” knocked her to the ground and dragged her.  “KP” was the target of on-going attacks and assaults by white classmates while she attempted to study at the predominately white Live Oak Classical School in Texas.  This young lady was placed in a hand-to-hand combat situation for which she was utterly unprepared and at the mercy of white school administrators who denied the viciousness of the attacks and refused to protect her.

In 1900, Ida B Wells, newspaper publisher, journalist and anti-lynching activist wrote:

“Our country’s national crime is lynching. It is not the creature of an hour, the sudden outburst of uncontrolled fury, or the unspeakable brutality of an insane mob.”

Ida Wells would have understood that the violence KP confronted was simply the continuation, in the 21st century, of the national “unspeakable brutality” that has laced the history of this country. The attempted murder of KP was an escalation from previous attacks that were condoned by the principal and other school officials.

According to exhibits submitted with a pending $3 million dollar lawsuit, the school’s principal, Allison Buras, in response to KP’s mother’s concerns, wrote that she “would never want children hurting one another” and that she spoke to the boys about the alleged incident.  “It sounds like he may have pushed on the back of her leg to make her leg buckle, which is something the kids sometimes do,” Buras wrote. “Rarely is that done out of meanness but more out of a desire for sport.”

Like many black parents sold on the notion of integration, KP’s parents thought sending her to a predominately white school would provide a superior education and access to a brighter future. This decision almost cost KP her life.

The chaperons did not report the incident to the police or call for medical attention; instead they asked KP to apply Vaseline to her neck and take Motrin to alleviate the pain.”

KP was one of two black students among 20 other children who participated in an overnight trip to a local ranch. Anticipating danger, KP’s mother offered to chaperon the trip but school officials denied her request, choosing instead seven other white parents.

According to reports KP was:

“standing to the side of the swing, three white boys (including one boy who often bullied her) allegedly wrapped the rope around her neck, jerked her to the ground, and didn’t help her up. The rope cut into the entire front of her neck, halfway around her back, and burned her skin.”

When KP told the chaperons about the attack, in what can only be considered complicit behavior, the chaperons did not report the incident to the police or call for medical attention; instead they asked KP to apply Vaseline to her neck and take Motrin to alleviate the pain.

With remarkable consistency, none of the white chaperons bothered to tell Sandy Rougely, KP’s mother about the attempted murder the night before.  When KP’s mother saw her walking from the bus she thought her daughter was wearing a necklace.  She “…looked like somebody had ripped her neck apart and stitched it back together.” Rougely, immediately called an ambulance and took KP to the hospital. Rougely reported that the principal was “shocked when she learned they were going to the emergency room.”

Doctors working in the emergency room, however, thought KP’s injuries were apparently so severe that police were notified and an investigation launched.

The refusal to view KP as a human being continues. Jeremy Counseller, a board member for the school, told the Dallas Morning News “Live Oak takes the safety of its students seriously and is saddened that one of its family suffered an unfortunate accident and injury.” Counseller has described what happened as an “accident.”

The principal was “shocked when she learned they were going to the emergency room.”

This ridiculous babble shows the utter contempt for black life and the lives of our children who attempt to negotiate with white supremacy, begging to be allowed to sit or be miseducated at the same table.

In the face of the attempted lynching of 12 year old child and other young people engaged in daily hand-to-hand combat in white schools it is appropriate to remind ourselves of a brighter and more sustainable future for the African community in the US.

In 1966, The Black Panther Party (BPP) proposed a 10 Point Program of liberation. This program and its goals are still worthy of consideration. On the issue of education, the BPP Program stated:

“We want education for our people that exposes the true nature of this decadent American society. We want education that teaches us our true history and our role in the present day society.”

One of the lessons that we can learn from this tragedy is the ultimate importance of controlling the institutions in our community that preserve the integrity of our lives and provide an environment where our children can be free.

Dr. Marsha Coleman-Adebayo is the author of the Pulitzer Prize nominated: No FEAR: A Whistleblowers Triumph over Corruption and Retaliation at the EPA. She worked at the EPA for 18 years and blew the whistle on a US multinational corporation that endangered South African vanadium mine workers. Marsha’s successful lawsuit led to the introduction and passage of the first civil rights and whistleblower law of the 21st century: the Notification of Federal Employees Anti-discrimination and Retaliation Act of 2002 (No FEAR Act). She is Director of Transparency and Accountability for the Green Shadow Cabinet, serves on the Advisory Board of ExposeFacts.com and coordinates the Hands Up Coalition, DC.

 

Link to article: http://www.blackagendareport.com/black_child_lynched_in_texas

A Poem: “#@ NO CHARGE!”

To live as civilized human beings…

We have to pay the power bill to have light for our home, but the Creator gave us the Sun for that #@ NO CHARGE!

We have to pay the water bill for quality H2O to drink and bathe in, but the Creator gave us plenty of that before its contamination #@ NO CHARGE!

We have to pay the gas bill to keep warm and cook our food, but the Creator gave us the know-how to create fire without the use of man-made chemicals #@ NO CHARGE!

We have to pay the car note to get from Point A to Point B, but the Creator gave us two legs and two feet at birth to accomplish that feat #@ NO CHARGE!

We have to pay the cell phone bill to keep in touch with one another, but the Creator gave us our antenna-like nappy hair to communicate with each other and Mother Nature #@ NO CHARGE!

We have to pay the cable bill to have entertainment to create enjoyment for our lives, but the Creator gave us the gift of MELANIN which enhances the OUTER and INNER BEING during our time on this planet #@ NO CHARGE!

So the question is…what are we paying for?

 

Peace and Love to my melanated family,

The Melanated Man

 

When Consumption Changes, “The Matrix” Will Fall

From the Melanated Man:

I was reading a some comments on a YouTube video I was watching recently. I came across a comment stating that essentially there were no true blacks leaders living to bring about change because if there were, they would already be dead! All the so-called black leaders are agents!

I do agree that most, if NOT ALL, of the black leaders promoted on the MAINSTREAM level by the ESTABLISHMENT are not our TRUE leaders. They are definitely PROXIES.

But there are many leaders who are underground that are truly concerned about the well-being and liberation of BLACK-MELANATED PEOPLE, such as Dr. Phil Valentine, Bobby Hemmitt, Llaila Afrika, Dr. Sebi, Dick Gregory, the recently-deceased Dr. Delbert Blair, and many others. There were other leaders who have passed on who were not as well-known as the Malcolm Xs and Martin Luther Kings  (the very few MAINSTREAM leaders who were NOT PROXIES) of their day and since who were just as impactful if NOT more.

John Henrik Clarke, Dr. Yosef Ben-Jochannan, Chancellor Williams, Dr. Amos Wilson, the list goes on and on.

You think, ” With all these leaders around to help bring about our LIBERATION, why hasn’t it happened yet?”

Somewhere along the line we, the rest of the BLACKS, bought into the LIE OF INTEGRATION.

Our CONSCIOUSNESS changed, which id exhibited through our CONSUMPTION.

When the majority of US decides to change OUR CONSUMPTION on ALL FRONTS, that is when we will finally rise.

When we eat DEATH, we stay DEAD.

When we entertain ourselves to a REALITY that is NOT our own, we become EMPTY IMITATIONS.

When we work to build another man’s FORTUNE, we SUCK ourselves dry of the ENERGY needed to FIGHT and IMPROVE OUR OWN PLIGHT!

We need to be the leaders. It’s not reasonable or fair to depend on one man or woman to lead us when that load should be shared amongst the MULTITUDE, especially when that MULTITUDE’S CONSUMPTION is not up to par.

And personally, I understand if there is hesitancy in those who wish to come out and lead because of that reason.

 

Are we really ready to change OUR CONSUMPTION, people?

 

Note to my followers: I’m going to cut back on my posts INDEFINITELY so I can focus on learning more knowledge to share  with you all, and HOPEFULLY start working on my book “The Black Anamoly.” I have had this on the burner for about a year but I’m ready to get started now. Mostly I will be posting videos, articles, re-blogs, and an occasional written post if the mood strikes me for the time being. So please don’t go away. I’m recalibrating myself at the moment.

 

Peace and Love to my melanated family,

The Melanated Man