NEWS TODAY

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The New Progressive Agenda: A Return to Citizenship

Editors’ note: On Tuesday, May 12, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is unveiling his “Progressive Agenda to Combat Income Inequality,” a 13-point plan framed as the political left’s answer to Republicans’ 1994 “Contract With America,” in a speech outside the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. Below, renowned novelist Toni Morrison reacts.

2015/5/12-I applaud with enthusiasm this gathering of leaders, thinkers, activists, and artists, each and all committed to strategies of and for social progress.

The Progressive Agenda to Combat Income Inequality identifies the pillars upon which healthy social structures can be built. Each pillar is designed to improve, even save, the lives of vulnerable populations. Addressing everything from financial traps to failing schools to jobs to methods for strengthening families and communities, each pillar of support enhances the lives of the poor and middle class, which in turn benefits the whole society.

The solutions are not mysterious, not unknown, nor are the means by which to achieve them. We know what they are and how to apply them. There is simply, and too often, no will to organize and enact the agenda. But indifference and inaction stops here. With New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s insistence and foresight, along with the dedication and passion of serious progressives, vital changes in our cities and towns will surface.

Remember when we used to be called “citizens”? There were levels of citizenship, certainly, but we were citizens nonetheless. “I am an American citizen” was our proud boast. Then, following World War II, the prosperous decades began, and we were called “consumers.” The American consumer wants; the American consumer needs — and consume we did. Items that were once luxuries became necessities, and, unlike our great-grandparents, we were ashamed to have only one pair of shoes or one Sunday dress. Being a consumer is not without pleasure or comfort. Yet now we are identified by a brand-new label, one that floods political speech, pundit themes, and media headlines: “taxpayer.” It seems that that definition is all we are.

The difference between understanding oneself as a citizen and understanding oneself as a taxpayer is not merely wide; it is antagonistic. A citizen thinks primarily about his or her community and is preoccupied with the safety of the neighborhood, the health of the elderly and disabled, the well-being of the young. A taxpayer thinks mostly about himself or herself, about who or what is taxing — that is to say “taking” — his hard-earned money to give to some undeserving body or some other distant, wasteful thing.

The Progressive Agenda seeks to return us to citizenship, the happily adult responsibility of being citizens to each other. It’s concerned with how to ensure a livable wage for all of us; how to improve schools in all our neighborhoods; how to protect working-class jobs and pensions from predators who rely on exploitation and selfish behavior; how to welcome the immigrant, the “huddled masses” we all (except for Native Americans and slaves) once were.

This new Progressive Agenda reimagines citizenship and is far, far more than worthy; it is crucial.

 

source: The Huffington Post

Toni Morrison

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$10 Million Lawsuit Filed Over Death of Man in Custody

2015/05/12 – A $10 million wrongful death lawsuit has been filed against the Neshoba County Sheriff Department and the Philadelphia Police Department.

A $10 million wrongful death lawsuit has been filed against the Neshoba County Sheriff Department and the Philadelphia Police Department.

The lawsuit, which presents only one side of the legal argument, was filed in U.S. District Court in Jackson on behalf of Brittany McDougle of Philadelphia, whose husband died while in police custody in November.

“According to eyewitness testimony, Brittany McDougle’s husband, Michael McDougle, was beaten and tasered by officers of the Philadelphia Police Department on the evening of Nov. 1, 2014 while in handcuffs,” said attorney Carlos Moore, who filed the lawsuit on behalf of Brittany McDougle. “Mr. McDougle was also tasered while in custody at the Neshoba County Jail while in handcuffs. Mr. McDougle was found dead in his jail cell around 7:30 a.m. on Nov. 2.”

Moore said the state medical examiner listed McDougle’s cause of death as head trauma. He said no one was charged in the case. He said McDougle didn’t receive any medical attention.

The autopsy report said McDougle, 29, had a head injury and he had drugs in his system. The autopsy listed McDougle’s cause of death as undetermined.

Published reports said McDougle was arrested by police after a breaking and entering report.

 

Source: The Clarion-Ledger 

Jimmie E. Gates

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JPD Commander Under Investigation for Social Media Posts

2015/05/12 – A high-ranking officer in the Jackson Police Department is under an internal investigation for racial and religious slurs as well as comments regarding the female anatomy made on his social media page.

Dating back to 2009, the Twitter page that appears to belong to JPD Commander Tyree Jones includes posts regarding Muslims, African Americans and women.

Chief Lee Vance said he became aware of the comments after reading the initial story on The Clarion-Ledger’s website Monday afternoon. Vance said he immediately began an investigation once he saw the posts.

“We don’t condone racial bigotry or insensitivity toward females,” Vance said. “It’s not consistent with the mission of this department so we will conduct an investigation. It will be handled like any other internal investigation. The results of that, we’ll deal with it through our disciplinary process.”

Jones, who is black, refers to black people as “koons” in at least one instance and refers to Muslims as “Mooslims” on one occasion.

Referring to women as “hoes” multiple times, Jones uses slang terms for the female anatomy twice and references nude photos of women.

The Twitter profile has a picture of Jones in uniform and identifies him as “Commander/Major Investigations, Jackson Police Department.”

Jones did not return multiple calls seeking comment.

In a post made on May 5, Jones references the shooting in Garland, Texas at a draw Mohammad cartoon contest that ended in the death of the two attackers. ISIS has since claimed responsibility for the attack.

The post depicts two body bags being carried away by two people in Hazmat gear. The photo reads: “Two Mooslims offended by the 1st Amendment were quickly introduced to the 2nd Amendment. Welcome to Texas B*tches!” Under the photo, Jones wrote, “2nd Amendment, God Bless America.”

Ibrahim Hooper, National Communications Director with CAIR, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said Jones has the right to his opinion and to post it on the internet but he questioned someone with those opinions being in law enforcement. Hooper said he, along with the rest of the American Muslim community, condemned the Texas attack.

“He’s free to be an anti-Muslim bigot if he so chooses,” Hooper said. “The difference comes when bigotry is esposed by a person in a position of authority, particularly a law enforcement officer that can make life and death decisions in the field. If those decisions are made based on prejudice and bigotry, I think we have a real problem there.”

Catherine Osborne, campaign director for the Shoulder-to-Shoulder Campaign, an interfaith campaign that supports American Muslims, also said Jones was entitled to his first amendment right to free speech. The fact that a law enforcement officer made such a statement, however, was “disturbing,” she said.”He is tasked with protecting all people in his community,” Osborne said. “To derogate one religious group and target one group like that is really disturbing.”

On February 24, 2012, Jones retweeted a photo of two people hiding behind a large metal bin with a line of police in riot gear in the background. The two people hiding in the photo are black. Jones added a caption, “Dem koons hiding, huh?”

Jones’ comments are “racist” and “hate speech” according to a spokesperson for the NAACP.

Jamiah Adams, NAACP interim vice president of communications and digital media, said while Jones’ comments are protected by the constitution, “It’s not OK.”

Adams said the term “coon” is a “racial epithet” and is “a derogatory name that refers to people of African descent.”

The term is considered hate speech regardless of the race of the person using it, Adams said.

“Racial profiling has to do with the victim, the people who are receiving the message, receiving the treatment, not the perpetrator,” she said. “No matter who it is…if they’re using that kind of language it’s considered hate speech.”

She added, “It doesn’t matter what race you are. If you’re using that language, it’s hate language, it’s racist language.”

Hooper said, unfortunately, comments like the ones Jones made are common. However, when someone like Jones, an officer of the law, makes the “bigoted” comments, the ramifications can be life and death.

“It’s not unlike the things we see a thousand times a day on the internet but the difference is when it comes from somebody who has actual authority over other people in society,” Hooper said. “That’s’ where we need to draw the line on what’s acceptable.”

Vance said JPD does have a social media policy.

The Clarion-Ledger filed a public records request for the policy but as of press time, had not received a copy.

Since the original posting of this story, the Twitter profile that appears to belong to Jones, @HOLLYWOODNUPE97, has been deleted.

 

Source: The Clarion-Ledger 

Sarah Fowler 

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History: Three Killed on JSU Campus in Two Protests

2015/05/12 – May 12, 1898: Louisiana adopted a new constitution, which incorporated a “grandfather clause” into voting requirements. It stated that a person may only vote if their father or grandfather was eligible to vote on or before January 1, 1867, thereby disqualifying most African Americans. By 1910, Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, Alabama and Oklahoma had adopted similar “grandfather clauses.”

May 12, 1967: Benjamin Brown, a former civil rights organizer, was shot in the back on this day in Jackson, Miss. He had walked with a friend into a café to pick up a sandwich to take home to his wife. On his way back, he encountered a standoff between law enforcement officers and students, who had been hurling rocks and bottles at them. Brown was hit in the back by two shotgun blasts. No arrests were ever made. In 2001, a Hinds County grand jury reviewing the case blamed two deceased officers: Jackson police officer Buddy Kane and Mississippi Highway Patrolman Lloyd Jones. The Brown family filed a lawsuit, and the city of Jackson settled for $50,000.

May 13, 1963: In United States of America and Interstate Commerce Commission v. the City of Jackson, Miss., the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the city’s attempt to circumvent laws desegregating interstate transportation facilities by posting sidewalk signs outside bus and railroad terminals reading “Waiting Room for White Only — By Order Police Department” and “Waiting Room for Colored Only — By Order Police Department” to be unlawful.

May 14, 1961: On this Mother’s Day, a group of Freedom Riders traveling by bus from Washington, D.C. to New Orleans were met by a white mob in Anniston, Ala. The mob attacked the bus with baseball bats and iron pipes. They also slashed the tires. When the hobbled bus pulled over, the mob pulled riders off the bus and beat them with pipes. Then they set the bus on fire. The photograph of the Greyhound bus engulfed in flames, the black smoke filling the sky became an unforgettable image of the civil rights movement.

May 14, 1966: Stokely Carmichael defeated John Lewis, longtime national chairman for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Carmichael announced SNCC would no longer send white organizers into black communities.

May 15, 1832: Mary Fields, who became the first African-American woman to work for the U.S. Postal Service, was born in Hickman County, Tennessee. In 1895, the 63-year-old Fields was hired as a mail carrier because she was the fastest applicant to hitch a team of six horses. She never missed a day, her reliability earning her the nickname “Stagecoach.” Ebony magazine reported, “Born a slave somewhere in Tennessee, Mary lived to become one of the freest souls ever to draw a breath, or a .38.”

May 15, 1970: Mississippi law enforcement officers opened fire on the Jackson State University campus, killing two African-American students, Phillip Lafayette Gibbs and James Earl Green. Police insisted the students fired first, but no evidence was found to confirm this. The killings took place 11 days after the shooting of students at Kent State University in Ohio. A historical marker at JSU pays tribute to the victims.

May 16, 1792: Denmark became the first European country to outlaw the slave trade. Slave traders abducted millions of Africans and treated them as cargo, cramming them together as close as possible. Many died from suffocation, malnutrition and disease. One former slave later wrote, “The shrieks of the women, and the groans of the dying, rendered the whole a scene of horror almost inconceivable.” Half or more died on these trips, according to estimates. The Portuguese term for these slave ships? “Floating tombs.”

May 16, 1950: A South Carolina lawsuit, Briggs v. Elliott, was filed that would help lead to the successful Brown v. Board of Education decision four years later. Levi Pearson had previously sued, asking that school buses be provided for black students. After J.A. DeLaine as well as Harry and Eliza Briggs joined this litigation, both Briggs were fired from their jobs, and DeLaine’s church was torched. The judge in the case, Walter Waring, who sided with their concerns, was forced to leave the state. In 2003, Congressional Gold Medals were awarded posthumously to the Harry and Eliza Briggs, Pearson and DeLaine.

May 16, 1968: Six weeks after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., the city of Memphis settled its sanitation strike. The civil rights leader had come to Memphis to help the sanitation workers with their strike.

May 17, 1875: The first Kentucky Derby ever held was won by an African-American jockey, Oliver Lewis, riding the horse Aristides. On that day, 14 of the 15 jockeys were African-American.

May 17, 1954: In Brown v. Board of Education and Bolling v. Sharpe, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the “separate but equal” doctrine in Plessy v. Ferguson was unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment, which guaranteed equal treatment under the law. The historic decision, bringing an end to federal tolerance of racial segregation, specifically dealt with Linda Brown, a young African-American girl denied admission to her local elementary school in Topeka, Kansas, because of the color of her skin. In Mississippi, segregationist leaders called the day “Black Monday.”

May 17, 1957: The Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom became the largest nonviolent demonstration for civil rights so far. Martin Luther King Jr. led 30,000 on the pilgrimage to Washington, D.C., to mark the third anniversary of Brown vs. Board of Education decision in which the U.S. Supreme Court declared racial segregation in education unconstitutional.

May 18, 1896: The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7-1 in Plessy v. Ferguson that racial segregation on railroads or similar public places was constitutional, forging the “separate but equal” doctrine that remained in place until 1954. In his dissent, Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote, “Our constitution is color-blind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens. In respect of civil rights, all citizens are equal before the law.”

 

Source: The Clarion-Ledger 

Jerry Mitchell 

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Voter Turnout Low in North Miss. Congressional Race

2015/05/12 – So far, voters in north Mississippi are trickling into the polls to cast ballots in a special election to fill the seat vacated by Republican Rep. Alan Nunnelee, who died of brain cancer in February.

Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann says there’s been an alarmingly low turnout for the election in which 13 people are vying for the 1st District seat which includes all of 21 counties and part of Oktibbeha County.

Polls opened at 7 a.m. Tuesday. They close at 7 p.m.

Hosemann urged voters in the district to cast a ballot in the election and honor Nunnelee’s memory.

If nobody receives a majority Tuesday, the top two candidates will advance to a June 2 runoff. The winner will serve most of a two-year term started by Nunnelee.

Candidate Quentin Whitwell votes in the special election

 

Source: Associated Press