The Official People Ignoring Protests Against "Black on Black Crime" Unappreciation Thread

The Amerikkkan Idol

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Just read this ASININE article written by this c00n in the Detroit Free Press

Where’s anger for what African Americans do to selves?
Leonard Pitts Jr., The Miami Herald 3:29 p.m. EST December 10, 2015
B9320054862Z.1_20151210114353_000_GA9CQO2G0.1-0.jpg


(Photo: Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

So where was the march for Tyshawn Lee?

Where were the demonstrators barring access to stores in Chicago’s premier commercial district on the busiest shopping day of the year? Where was the Rev. Jesse Jackson, joining his voice with a thousand other people demanding justice? Where were the news media, beaming the images to the world?

All that and more happened in the name of Laquan McDonald, the 17-year-old African American shot to death last year by a white police officer who claimed the teenager threatened him with a knife. A dashcam video, the release of which the city stonewalled for more than a year, contradicts that story. Far from threatening the police, it shows that McDonald was trying to avoid them.

So here is yet another example of the kind of out-of-control policing this country countenances in an injustice system that has all but criminalized African-American existence. And yes, it deserves all the outrage, media attention and civil disobedience it has generated.

But where was that level of engagement for 9-year-old Tyshawn Lee, lured into an alley and executed in the same city a few weeks ago? Where was it for J-Quantae Riles, a 14-year-old boy shot to death a few days later after leaving a barber shop? Where was it for Jonylah Watkins, a 6-month-old baby killed by stray bullets in 2013 as her father was changing her diaper?

The argument is not that no one cared about the killings of those black children, or that no one took action because of them. Yet there is, it seems obvious, a difference both quantitative and qualitative in the African-American response to atrocities inflicted from within and those inflicted from without. And in the news media’s response as well.

It is into that disparity of concern that Spike Lee drops his new movie, “Chi-Raq.” Based on an ancient Greek play, it is the tale of Lysistrata, a gang leader’s fed-up girlfriend, who leads the women of Chicago in a sex strike. They vow to deny their men their bodies until those men put down their guns and pledge allegiance to peace.

Yes, the movie is as uneven as you’ve heard — by turns poignant, raunchy, hilarious and incomprehensible. But one thing it is consistently and that is, impassioned. “Chi-Raq” is an indictment of the forces that have allowed major urban areas to devolve into killing fields where the body count surpasses that of Mideast war zones. It identifies those forces as: the NRA, which contends that the problem with a nation of an estimated 310 million firearms is that we have too few guns; the politicians too gutless to stand up against the gun lobby; a black unemployment rate that is perpetually double the national average, and disinvestment in our cities even as we spend billions to rebuild Afghanistan’s and Iraq’s.

To these culprits, the movie implicitly adds one more: what it sees as an African-American community that tacitly accepts urban murder as almost a natural disaster like an earthquake or heat wave, a thing one can only endure, but never change. As in a scene wherein a distraught mother cries out to passersby to step forward, bear witness to the caught-in-the-crossfire killing of her daughter, and receives in response only silence.

Police malfeasance will probably always monopolize our attention, precisely because it is police malfeasance, something we’ve too often seen go unpunished, unchecked and excused. But “Chi-Raq” argues that, for all the rage African Americans bear for what others do to us, we need to also spare some indignation for what we are doing to ourselves. Over half the murder victims in this country last year were black, an obscene number that cries out for black people — for all people of conscience — to stand up and give a damn.

After all, those black lives matter, too.

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for the Miami Herald. E-mail him at lpitts@miamiherald.com.

I swear to Jah, if I hear one more motherfukker tell me that Black people don't protest "Black on Black" crime, I am going to stab them in the damned eye socket and be one of the damned Black criminals they're talking about.

I guess I have to post ALL of the marches and protests that Black people have against Black on Black violence here, now, right?:why:
 

The Amerikkkan Idol

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Jersey City youth to hold stop the violence rally/march


Jersey City Public Safety Director James Shea said a small number of people are responsible for the recent uptick in gun violence and they remain free in part because residents in the city's South and West districts do not provide information to police. Michaelangelo Conte | The Jersey Journal
Reena Rose Sibayan | The Jersey Journal
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By Mak Ojutiku | The Jersey Journal
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on November 27, 2015 at 2:14 PM, updated November 27, 2015 at 4:10 PM


JERSEY CITY - In response to the recent string of shootings in Jersey City, local community organizers will be holding a rally/walk across the city on Sunday. The rally intends to give the city's youth an opportunity to voice their concerns about the killings, and other issues in their community.

The rally will start at noon at Triangle Park at Rose and Danforth avenues. Participants will then head to Audubon Park at Audubon Avenue and Bergen Avenue. The event will conclude at Arlington Park, Grand Street and Arlington Avenue.

Latarsha Williams-Johnson, one of the event's organizers, says the point of the rally is to reach out to the kids of Jersey City, and give them an opportunity to speak their mind.

"The purpose of the rally ... is to reach out and ask (the kids) what can we do to help," said Williams-Johnson. "In all reality, it's not older people that are doing the shootings. It's kids, our kids that are doing it."




Shea says Jersey City community must work with cops to quell violence

Since Oct. 7, there have been nine homicides in Jersey City, including seven shooting deaths, and a number of nonfatal shootings.

Williams-Johnson says politicians will not be speaking at the event, however any input from young people will be welcomed.

"We would all like the killings to stop," said Williams-Johnson. "Now it's time to ask them what we can do to help, and it doesn't have to be in a negative way."

For any more information, contact event organizers at (908) 768-6972, (201) 898-9467, or (973) 816-0489.

The following map highlights fatal and non-fatal shootings in Jersey City since Oct. 1. The non-fatal shootings are marked by black symbols, while the fatal shootings are marked by red symbols.
 

The Amerikkkan Idol

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'Stop the violence' march planned for Saturday in Ypsilanti

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A memorial is left at the spot where Keandre Duff was shot and killed during a block party on Brooks St. in between Watling and Jefferson streets early on July 12. Friends and family held a vigil for Duff, also know as "Paulie" and "Jugg," on Sunday evening. Melanie Maxwell | The Ann Arbor News
Melanie Maxwell | melaniemaxwell@mlive.com
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By Darcie Moran | dmoran@mlive.com
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on July 17, 2015 at 5:45 AM


A "Stop the Violence" march and rally will be held Saturday in a southern neighborhood of Ypsilanti.

The effort comes just a week after 20-year-old Keandre Duff was found shot in the head near Brooks and Watlings streets.

His death comes a little more than a year after the death of 17-year-old Keon Washington on a nearby street.

Several incidents of gun violence have followed the recent death, in what police speculate may have been attempts at retaliation.

Jeannette Hadden, who lives in the neighborhood where Duff died and has worked to organize the march, said she is hopeful the gathering will bring the community together and encourage better choices among children and parents alike.

The matter is urgent, Hadden said.

"People are in a state of panic and a lot of people are wanting to retaliate, " she said. "We have got to change this."

The rally is a cooperative effort with the Gospel Fest being held at Parkridge Park on Saturday, said the Rev. Ricky Jefferson, a former Ypsilanti City Council member, in an emailed statement.

Jefferson said the rally will take begin at 12 p.m. July 18 at the Perry Child Development Center parking lot at 550 Perry St.

A march through the community will begin at 1 p.m. and end at Parkridge Park, where speakers will address the crowd, Jefferson said.

The Gospel Fest is scheduled to run from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. in the park, he said.

Jefferson said those responsible for the rally are hopeful it will inspire action in the community and encourage those with knowledge of recent crimes to come forward.

It will also encourage residents to mentor youth in the community, he said.

Ypsilanti Mayor Amanda Edmonds confirmed in an email Thursday that she intends to attend the event.

Several officers from the Ypsilanti Police Department also are expected to attend and police Lt. Deric Gress has been asked to speak, he confirmed.

Darcie Moran covers cops and courts for MLive and The Ann Arbor News. Email her at dmoran@mlive.com or follow her on Twitter @darciegmoran.
 

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Community Holds Stop the Violence March and Rally, NAACP President Speaks Out (With Video)


FORT WAYNE, Ind. (www.incnow.tv) – Local community groups are taking a stand for peace in the community. The President of the local NAACP branch in Fort Wayne, Rev. Dr. Saharra Bledsoe, has a statement for the community in the wake of Saturday afternoon's shooting. She says, "Understand that no matter what you are doing, or what position you are in, even if you've been stopped by the police, you need to know your rights. And one thing you should never do is run." Bledsoe says she and the NAACP have set up a meeting with police Chief Rusty York on Monday. If you have any questions or concerns, you can call the NAACP office at (260) 426-3049. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Fort Wayne Chapter of the NAACP, along with other community organizations, continued its efforts to end violence in the city by holding a march and rally. People of all ages and different races gathered Saturday afternoon to participate in the march. The march began at the intersection of S. Anthony Blvd. and E. Pontiac St. and ended at S. Anthony and McKinnie Ave. Since 1980, more than 700 Fort Wayne residents have lost their lives due to senseless gun violence. This year already the city has seen 15 lives lost, all by guns. "Stop the violence, stop the funerals...pick up a book, not a gun,” was the message the group is sending as they marched holding signs and chanting their message. Before the march began, the group took a moment to remember each and every life lost to violence.

Community Holds Stop the Violence March and Rally, NAACP President Speaks Out (With Video) | 21Alive: News, Sports, Weather, Fort Wayne WPTA-TV, WISE-TV, and CW | Home
 

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Clergy and community leaders meet in Cleveland for stop the violence rally
Posted 5:15 pm, October 11, 2015, by Kaily Cunningham, Updated at 06:15pm, October 11, 2015


CLEVELAND – Clergy and community leaders gathered on Sunday morning to rally against the crime and violence in Cleveland.

Three children have died in the last few weeks following shootings throughout Cleveland. Ramon Burnett, 5, Major Howard, 3 and 5-month-old Aavielle Wakefield.

City officials have also met several times to try and find a solution to the violence. Police Chief Calvin Williams recently said “enough is enough” adding “When are we going to stop counting babies being killed out here on the streets for nothing?”

The leaders said the focus of the march was on the families that lost their children.

They want the violence to stop before things get even more out of control.

Chief Williams urges any witnesses to come forward and contact police with information in these shootings. Crime Stoppers accepts anonymous tips at 216-252-7463.

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'Stop the Violence' rally aims to keep youth off the streets
Posted: Jun 13, 2015 11:25 AM CDT Updated: Jul 11, 2015 11:25 AM CDT
By WAFF 48 Digital Staff
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(Source: WAFF) DECATUR, AL (WAFF) -
Saturday, Decatur leaders held a Stop the Violence rally. The march sent hundreds from City Hall to the Daikin Amphitheater.

Their message was clear: "Stop the violence - we need peace!"

This was planned in response to a violent crime spree allegedly committed by three teens and a 20-year-old last month, resulting in the murders of TIMELINE: Deadly crime spree

"The violence needs to stop. It's a shame lives are lost and families are destroyed," Renee Davis, the mother of a murdered son.

Several speakers urged the community to band together to find ways to keep young people occupied, engaged, and off the streets.
Young people were also encouraged to take a pledge on non-violence and "pay it forward" by spreading the message to their friends.

"By looking at the community, by looking at the people coming out, we want to get them to understand that if we all work together, if we are all part of the solution, we can stop some of this violence," said Bruce Jones, Director of Decatur Youth Services.

"We have got to do everything we can to save our young people," he continued. "We've got to teach them something better, and it's going to take us adults to help do that."

Those who took the pledge received a colorful bracelet to symbolize their commitment to non-violence and their pledge to share its meaning with others.

Cody Jaggwe is one of the dozens who proudly sported their bracelets Saturday.

"I want people to have stuff to do during the day; like, right now, we got the camps going on, we got all these kids working with DYS," said Jaggwe. "I like that, but I want more of the kids to be involved in it because not everyone is in it and there is still violence in the streets."

Organizers are planning a youth summit in September to continue spreading their message of peace.

Copyright 2015 WAFF. All rights reserved.
 

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Stop the Violence rally urges end to senseless crime
Updated: Mon 12:09 PM, Aug 31, 2015
By: Anthony Sabella - Email



FLINT (WJRT) - (08/30/15) - A deadly month in Flint is coming to a close with a new call for an end to all the violence.

Dozens took to the city streets Sunday afternoon, hoping to spread a message of peace.

The Flint Stop the Violence movement has simple demands - no more violence and that it has to stop immediately.

While a small rally greeted cars on Robert T. Longway, a much bigger group traveled several miles down Saginaw Street, through the heart of Flint.

Both carried the same message. They're tired of the senseless killings, many of which have occurred not just this year, but really this month.

The idea was to bring people of all ages together to present a united front against violence, and at the same time, promote love.

Living in the city with his own family, local activist DeWaun E. Robinson said Sunday is all about bringing back hope to Flint that better days are ahead.

"Hit me close to home because I lost a lot of friends, a lot of family members due to violence. Just knowing what happens when you're out there. It's just a lonely feeling, something we have to stop doing now," he said.

"Something good and we can get the message to the families of the people who are doing wrong. Maybe they'll take that back to their loved ones and kind of stop this," said Derrick Redwine, the organizer of the march.

The march wrapped up on the University of Michigan-Flint campus at the corner of Longway and Saginaw with some free food and fun for the younger kids.
 

Anerdyblackguy

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Exactly! What the media doesn't tell you is that all those police rewards are raised by the community. For example, tyshawn Lee original reward information was 600 dollars. The community raised it to more than 60,000.

ST.Louis has more protest against black on black crime than any other city. It's just not exciting to the media.
 
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scarlxrd

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Proximity crime, it happens in every class and culture. Blacks kills blacks because of it, whites kill whites, asians kill asians, hispanics kill hispanics because they're right there. Don't even engage in that bullshyt. It's pure deflection.

Yes, I know your community is getting systemically fukked by outsiders but what about the crime you do to those in your own neighborhood? Why aren't you all living in harmony like the rest of the country? Let's stop talking about the bigger picture and focus on neighbors beefing with neighbors, fighting over scraps which are a byproduct of the bigger picture... :martin:

It's not even worth arguing against. It's a fallacy and anyone who uses it isn't intelligent enough to have a conversation about race, period. :shrug:
 

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I'd rep you if Icould OP, amazing thread:salute:. I hate hearing c00ns and cacs say 'w-w-well why dont they protest black on black crime!?'

Newark anti-violence rally draws thousands

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NEWARK – Seeking help in the city's fight against violent crime, Mayor Ras Baraka earlier this monthmade a request for aid to state officials. But at a Saturday anti-violence rally, Baraka made his pleas directly to thousands of Newark residents.

"Our children deserve to live in communities where gunshots don't ring out every night," he said in a fiery speech delivered from a stage at Saturday afternoon's "Occupy the City" rally.

Modeled after the so-called "Occupy" movement that took root in New York City and other parts of the country in 2011, the event began with a march beginning from five starting points – one in each ward – to the heart of the city's downtown at Broad Street and Market Street.

After contingents from each ward arrived, a series of speakers that included New Jersey native and actor John Amos and rapper Common encouraged residents to unite in response to street violence in their communities.

In his own speech, Baraka called on residents to "take charge" of their neighborhoods and end a culture of silence that inhibits crime prevention.

The rally comes amid a spike in street violence. Following an encouragingstart to the year, the city has recorded 53 homicides, 37 of which have come since April 1.

As of August 2, 23 people have been injured by a gunshot in 2015, a 32 percent increase over the previous year.

The latest killing took place Friday afternoon in the city's South Ward near the intersection of Astor and Brunswick streets, just yards from a scheduled rallying point for Saturday's march. Keron Brown, 38, of Newark was pronounced dead at University Hospital following a fatal afternoon shooting.

With the city police departmentgrappling with thinned ranks, Brown's death and recent others underscores the need to motivate residents to "take responsibility" for their neighborhoods, Baraka said after the meeting.

"If we're making all of these arrests, and the crime still persists, it tells us that there's more going on and that we can't arrest our way out of this problem," he said, referencing severalrecent narcotics busts.

City resident Cheryl Barker said she took part in the rally to provide an example to her two teenage sons, who both accompanied her on the march into downtown.

"We're raising children in these neighborhoods, and the only way it's going to change is if we teach them to want more for themselves and for the place they live," she said.





'Army of Moms' Starts Patrolling South Side After Shooting

300menmarch

Rally to stop the violence in Newark

Protest against gang violence held in Magazine Park

March to stop violence held in Chicago

http://www.ulpbc.org/programs-servi...ment/140-black-on-black-crime-prevention.html
 

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Proximity crime, it happens in every class and culture. Blacks kills blacks because of it, whites kill whites, asians kill asians, hispanics kill hispanics because they're right there. Don't even engage in that bullshyt. It's pure deflection.

Yes, I know your community is getting systemically fukked by outsiders but what about the crime you do to those in your own neighborhood? Why aren't you all living in harmony like the rest of the country? Let's stop talking about the bigger picture and focus on neighbors beefing with neighbors, fighting over scraps which are a byproduct of the bigger picture... :martin:

It's not even worth arguing against. It's a fallacy and anyone who uses it isn't intelligent enough to have a conversation about race, period. :shrug:
This.

It frustrates me that black people are literally the only group presented with this as if we're supposed to be held to absolutely unrealistic standards that others cant hold themselves.
 

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This.

It frustrates me that black people are literally the only group presented with this as if we're supposed to be held to absolutely unrealistic standards that others cant hold themselves.

Aren't the percentages different?
 
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