dinsdag 9 december 2014

U.S. Democracy 29

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Exploding Protest Movement Has Gone National—People Are Demanding an End to Era of Brutal and Racist Policing

This is about changing policing as we know it.
 
 
Photo Credit: Kate Sommers-Dawes via Twitter #berkeleyprotests
 
Late Saturday, hours into a protest march over police brutality in Berkeley, Calif., police were looking to make arrests and spotted Kyle McCoy. The young black man, a well-known racial justice activist and University of California-Berkeley alum was  arrested on suspicion for felony assault with a deadly weapon. He was taken away and booked, but by Sunday morning he was free on bail. On Monday afternoon, when he was scheduled to be arraigned in court, a bailiff announced the criminal charge had been dropped. 
That kind of routine police harrassment is partly why protests over police brutality and institutional racism continue nationwide. It is not just because ongoing deaths of unarmed black men and youths at the hands of police have struck a deep chord across America. The more you talk to protesters the more it becomes clear that this movement’s goals are crystalized by racist policing but do not stop there. 
“Everyone out there is saying they can’t breathe for a lot of reasons,” said one protester who came to the courthouse to support McCoy, referring to Eric Garner’s last words before dying from a chokeheld during his arrest in New York City. “I know a lot of people who are out there [protesting]. It’s a lot of issues.” 
In the Bay Area, today’s protesters are a mix of newcomers and veterans. There have been massive protests in recent years over other police killings of black men, notably Oscar Grant. There has been the Oakland-centered Occupy movement, protests over urban gentrification, rising higher education costs, and other issues with racial and economic justice underpinnings. But Cynthia Morse, an older white woman and longtime protester who came to the court to support those arrested this weekend, said police brutality was unlike other issues, especially if your family has been victimized. 
“This whole issue has got to be a black people’s movement. It’s theirs. They want it. They don’t need direction from us. They need our support and that’s what most of us are really trying to do,” Morse said. “The institutional racism, the overt racism, the police brutality against young black men has been very real to us because we are part of Oakland and they have been so many of us [seeking justice] who are black, and mothers with children who have been killed, and friends—it’s really personal. This is a life and death issue.”  
Morse said she was sickened by the outsiders who used the protests to vandalize local stores. “It’s such a disgusting lack of respect for the people who have died,” Morse said. “It is just the most incredible disrespect to them and their families.” 
Protesters Demands
Across the country, the core demands of protesters following the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri and Eric Garner in Staten Island, New York, have been to end the institutionalized racism in policing. This means ending racial profiling, changing the police practices and grand jury process that allow officers who use excessive force to evade accountability. It means taking a range of militarized weapons out of police hands in non-emergency contexts, such as at protests.    
But as demonstrations continue, there also are related concerns. In Berkeley, some leaders of the weekend marches said their demands included ending the “new Jim Crow,” the lack of educational and economic opportunities. They want to restore affirmative action on UC campuses and double non-white enrollment, said Yvette Felarca, a leader of the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration, and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary ( BAMN).
In Detroit, Michigan, Jose Alvarenga, another BAMN organizer, said their top agenda is to “connect the fight against police brutality to what’s going on in Detroit….We have been having marches on every Saturday in the east side of Detroit against police brutality. They definitely have been bigger now after the two [grand jury] decisions.” 

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