A 17-year-old boy whose death has sparked national outrage fearfully told a friend over the phone moments before he was shot and killed that he was being followed, ABC News reported Tuesday.
“He said this man was watching him, so he put his hoodie on. He said he lost the man,” the female friend of Trayvon Martin, who was shot to death on Feb. 26 in Twin Lakes, Fla., told ABC. “I asked Trayvon to run, and he said he was going to walk fast. I told him to run, but he said he was not going to run.”
More than 435,000 people, many alerted by tweets from celebrities such as movie director Spike Lee and musician Wyclef Jean, signed a petition on Change.org, a social action website, calling for the arrest of Martin’s shooter, George Zimmerman, who has claimed he acted in self-defense. On Monday, the Justice Department and FBI announced they opened an investigation into the shooting.
Although Martin initially told his friend he wasn’t going to run, he eventually did, she said, but the stranger managed to corner him.
“Trayvon said, ‘What, are you following me for,’ and the man said, ‘What are you doing here.’ Next thing I hear is somebody pushing, and somebody pushed Trayvon because the head set just fell. I called him again and he didn’t answer the phone.”
After that, the line went dead, she said. According to ABC News, other than screams on 911 calls as Martin and Zimmerman scuffled, those were the last words Martin said.
Zimmerman called police 46 times
Zimmerman, meanwhile, called 911 dozens of times in the months that led to the fatal shooting, The Orlando Sentinel reported Monday evening. The Seminole County Sheriff’s Office released six calls he had made, four of which called police to report “suspicious” persons — all of whom were black — in or near the Retreat at Twin Lakes enclave, the paper said.The other calls were about a neighbor’s open garage door and children playing in the street at dusk, reported The Sentinel. None of the newly released calls are related to Martin’s shooting.
(Source: msnbc.com)
| 45 | VIA mickyalexandria | ||||
| ORIGINALLY misterdelfuego |
And to quote Paul Mooney: Zimmerman’s “got the complextion, for the protection of the collection…”
No probable cause?!?! *shakes head* This crazed racist shot him because he was a young BLACK man—let’s color it what it is. Self defense, my ass….
(Source: greydotmatters)
| 81 | VIA greydotmatters | ||||
| ORIGINALLY greydotmatters |
Sign the petition to prosecute the murderer of Trayvon Martin.
Tragic. Just tragic. Whoever thinks we live in a post-racial society is living in My Little Pony Land.
If a Democratic governor, or a black governor, had gotten in George W. Bush’s face like this the way Arizona governor Jan Brewer did today with Barack Obama, the media would have a field day. I also have to seriously wonder if she would have pulled this crap if the President were white.
Jan Brewer owes the President an apology.
Bolded the line that is a big fat DUH! Ya wonder? How about I know. All the hate towards Obama is simply because he’s a Black man in the White House, he’s a Black man in power, he’s a Black man who has class and intelligence and it makes folks like this woman who believes all minorities are inferior, squirm because she’s finding her way of thinking antiquated, finding herself not the all-mighty anymore, that surprise—-he’s her equal, and not her inferior. It’s as simple as that. You can disagree with Obama and his ideas, that’s perfectly okay, but don’t disrespect him.
| 295 | VIA blackculture | ||||
| ORIGINALLY ryking |
What The Hell of the Day: How does a 14-year-old African-American girl who speaks not one word of Spanish end up being deported by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to Colombia? That’s what they would like to know.
ICE Director of Public Affairs Brian Hale said the department has opened an investigation into the circumstances leading to the deportation of a Texas teen named Jakadrien, who was arrested and sent to Colombia last year despite never having been there in her life.
According to Jakadrien’s grandmother, who managed to track down her granddaughter with the help of Dallas Police and Facebook, the then-14-year-old ran away from home in 2010 after her grandfather died and her parents divorced.
News 8 says Jakadrien ended up on the streets of Houston, where she was arrested by police for theft. Alone and scared, the young girl gave officers a fake name, which, by sheer misfortune, happened to belong to a 22-year-old illegal immigrant from Colombia.
Without verification, ICE collected Jakadrien’s fingerprints and deported her to the South American republic, where she was given a work card and released. In Facebook posts, Jakadrien reportedly complained of being tired from having to work all day cleaning a big house.
Though the U.S. Embassy has been notified of her whereabouts, this sad story isn’t over yet: The Colombian government has since seized Jakadrien, and is holding her in a detention facility for reasons unknown.
Her grandmother, however, is far from giving up: “I feel like she will come home,” she says. “I just need help and prayer.”
[wfaa.]
| 2191 | VIA thedailywhat | ||||
| ORIGINALLY thedailywhat |
We remembered Tupac’s death. Somebody’s gotta remember these 4 little girls. Be mindful.
In addition to the friends & families who have never forgotten them, Spike Lee’s first full-length documentary, Four Little Girls (1997) (watch it via GoogleVideo here) focuses on the tragically too-short lives of Cynthia, Addie Mae, Denise, & Carole who were blown up while waiting for Sunday School to start in the basement of Sixteenth Street Baptist Church. It is excellent.
(Also, Angela Y Davis, a native of Birmingham & resident of Dynamite Hill talks in her autobiography about going to school with 3 of the young ladies who died that day, why she happened to not be in Sunday School that morning, and how that particular terrorist’s act shaped her life going forward. (Davis et al., 1974, p.184)
(Source: colesoulrebelle)
| 2653 | VIA classicalallure | ||||
| ORIGINALLY colesoulrebelle |
Michele Bachmann, 2010 in a graduation address to Blue Hills High School in Canton, MA. (via actualmichelebachmannquotes)
i truly cant w this ….thing.
(via soydulcedeleche)
We take this moment to point out that for serious ..
You can not without jack-knifing into debt so hard run a campaign that gains this much traffic with out support.
Michelle Bachmann’s point is to say as many nasty things about black/gay people as possible and salt the earth .
TO capitalize on silent racism and raise hidden prejuidices as possible and then get punted so that when people have no real problems with Barack Obama but his Blackness and no one challenges that In ANY way on EITHER SIDE.
it’s taken as agreement.
SO if you believe in that but hate her policy vote for me.
I can’t at all with her but she ain’t the only one I’m starting to wish for pyrokinesis for
(via blackamazon)
i have so much to say but none of it will come out…coherent or intelligent so I’ll just say smh…now we know what’s wrong with us black people, we need to act more white EUREKA….what type bullshit….
(via karbarkalediscope)
I now kinda hate that the last space shuttle was launched the other day, because I would love to blast this bitch off into space and leave her there. She is so fucking crazy.
| 163 | VIA notesonascandal | ||||
| ORIGINALLY |
Race Is Not A Card, It’s A Reality
When I was a high school sophomore, I read a short bio of Huey P.Newton over my school’s loudspeaker during some sort of Black History Month activity. Later that day, my (Jewish) English teacher made a “joke” about my omission of the details of Newton’s death (he was allegedly killed while purchasing crack in 1989). I didn’t find this funny at all. Up until this point, he had been one of my favorite teachers. I decided to write him a letter expressing my feelings and at the end, I quoted Langston Hughes’ “Theme For English B:”I felt mature and thoughtful…until he returned it to me with his response:
- You are white—yet a part of me, as I am a part of you. That’s American. Sometimes perhaps you don’t want to be a part of me. Nor do I often want to be a part of you. But we are, that’s true! As I learn from you, I guess you learn from me—although you’re older—and white—and somewhat more free.
While I understood his argument that he’d mocked the Puritans, Homer and plenty of other White folks…he’d only taught us about White folks. Most of whom were also male. This had been the case in most of my History classes as well: Whiteness at the center. So I took my opportunity to share some Black facts with my classmates very seriously. But even if the teacher couldn’t handle my critique of his words, the fact that he accused me–a 16-year-old–of “pulling the race card” upset me greatly. That was the last time I registered for one of his classes. By senior year, we no longer spoke when we passed one another in the hallway.
- if you play the race card, you’ll oft be ignored.”
The “race card” is a concept that has been used to silence people of color who attempt to speak out when they feel that race has been used unfairly in determining how people are treated. It is one of the most dangerous weapons in the White privilege toolbox, for it implies that a non-POC would know better when something is truly racist than someone who is constantly subjected to racism. That said, it isn’t that people of color can never be wrong about denouncing something as racism, but that they should be treated with a level of deference when expressing their concerns. Instead of having something dismissed as someone pulling a card, these complaints should be respectfully analyzed and received. If someone is truly committed to being non-racist, the appropriate reaction to a charge of racism is “I don’t feel like what I did was racist. Can you help me understand why you feel that way?”, not accusing someone of using race to be manipulative or deceitful.
But, alas, in a world of White privilege where is the incentive to say “You’re right, that was racist of me”? or “I didn’t mean to be racially insensitive”? And for even those who pride themselves in being non-racist, where would a non-Black person be taught the difference? If racism doesn’t negatively impact you in a very obvious way, it’s quite a task to say, “hey, let me learn about this so I make sure that I’m not out here supporting an unfair system of advantage that benefits me.”
It’s an amazingly duplicitous thing, to flip racism around so that the person who is the victim now looks like the guilty party because of their observations of someone’s behavior. A Black woman who feels that she has been passed over for a raise because of her background may be told that she is ‘pulling the race card’ and that racism will never end so long as people like her “see race in everything.” But how can you not see something that is constantly there?
The race card concept implies that the true racial power in this country lies in the hands of minorities, and that as soon as we “cry racism,” we will then be allowed to get away with anything or to unjustly persecute innocent White people. This is so infrequently the case. We holler “race” because so often it IS about race. While racism should not instill in Black folks a sense of paranoia, we must be constantly diligent and aware of how we are being treated. I do not wish to be color-blind. I am glad that I am aware of the racial climate that I live in, so that I may arm myself accordingly for whatever may come my way. We will never end or even lessen racism so long as we are made to be afraid to challenge it. Thus, I understand that the “race card” that I carry is not some get-out-of-culpability trump card, but instead, a challenging reality that I have been dealt.READ THIS.
| 770 | VIA blackculture | ||||
| ORIGINALLY darkjez |