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| #Post#: 9815-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 17, 2021, 10:35 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQBil6hNKTA | |
| #Post#: 10240-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: December 23, 2021, 9:36 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ni9KaCSWQOw | |
| #Post#: 10570-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: January 15, 2022, 2:28 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ynWXXsXQxxk | |
| #Post#: 11121-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: February 7, 2022, 11:07 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://us.yahoo.com/lifestyle/didnt-teach-school-assassination-medgar-18010329… | |
| [quote]What They Didn't Teach You In School: The Assassination | |
| Of Medgar Evers And The Murderer Who Walked Free For Three | |
| Decades | |
| Medgar Evers is one of the most important Civil Rights activists | |
| in American history. He fought against Jim Crow, was the NAACP's | |
| first field officer in Mississippi, and spearheaded | |
| investigations into some of America's most egregious racial | |
| crimes, including the murder of Emmett Till. | |
| ... | |
| Medgar and his brother would walk several miles to their | |
| segregated school, as they were not allowed to attend school | |
| with white children. | |
| ... | |
| "I was born in Decatur here in Mississippi, and when we were | |
| walking to school in the first grade white kids in their school | |
| buses would throw things at us and yell filthy things," Evers | |
| stated. "This was a mild start. If you're a kid in Mississippi | |
| this is the elementary course." | |
| "I graduated pretty quickly," Evers continued. "When I was | |
| eleven or twelve a close friend of the family got lynched. I | |
| guess he was about forty years old, married, and we used to play | |
| with his kids. I remember the Saturday night a bunch of white | |
| men beat him to death at the Decatur fairgrounds because he | |
| sassed back a white woman. They just left him dead on the | |
| ground. Everyone in town knew it but never [said] a word in | |
| public." | |
| ... | |
| Medgar registered to vote, but found resistance when he and his | |
| brother tried to exercise their right. Medgar, his brother, and | |
| a handful of their friends were threatened at gunpoint when | |
| attempting to vote in a local election by over 200 white men. | |
| Often, racist whites would try to intimidate Blacks who went to | |
| vote, and it would get violent quite frequently. | |
| ... | |
| Medgar was appointed as the NAACP's first field officer in | |
| Mississippi in 1954. In this role, Medgar was involved in a few | |
| very high-profile cases. | |
| One such case was that of James Meredith, who became the first | |
| Black student to enroll at the University of Mississippi, the | |
| same college that denied Medgar entry. | |
| James' case made it all the way to the Supreme Court, which | |
| ruled in his favor. However, when James went back to the | |
| University to enroll in classes, he was met with blockades and | |
| riots, which left two people dead. Angry mobs of racist whites | |
| flew Confederate Flags as they destroyed property and attacked | |
| anyone supporting James. Attorney General Robert Kennedy sent | |
| U.S. Marshals, while President John F. Kennedy dispatched the | |
| military to assist with the deadly situation. 160 of the U.S. | |
| Marshals were wounded, 28 of them shot. Finally, the military | |
| was able to get a handle on the situation and James was able to | |
| enroll in 1962. | |
| Another prominent case that Medgar was monumental in was the | |
| investigation into the murder of Emmett Till. | |
| Medgar opened an investigation into the murder, urging any Black | |
| witnesses to come forward despite the danger they would be in by | |
| speaking out. After securing Black witnesses, Medgar and T. R. | |
| M. Howard helped protect them throughout the trial, even | |
| assisting them in escaping the town after things had concluded. | |
| Despite all this work, J. W. Milam and Roy Bryant were | |
| acquitted, and Howard was placed on the KKK's death list... he | |
| was forced to flee Mississippi. | |
| Medgar also fought to clear the name of Civil Rights activist | |
| Clyde Kennard. Kennard was another activist who tried to push | |
| back against segregation in the south, by applying to become the | |
| first Black person to attend Mississippi Southern College (now | |
| the University of Southern Mississippi). Instead of admitting | |
| him, in 1960 the state framed him for petty crime, and sentenced | |
| him to seven years in jail. An all-white jury convicted him in | |
| ten minutes. | |
| Medgar's involvement in such high-profile cases put him in the | |
| crosshairs of the KKK. White supremacists attempted to kill him | |
| many times. His home was firebombed in May 1963, and his family | |
| was threatened on several occasions. On June 12, 1963, white | |
| supremacists made good on their threats and murdered him. | |
| On that fateful night, Medgar had just gotten home. After | |
| parking his car and walking up to his home, he was shot in the | |
| back. His family, who was home, heard the gunshot and found | |
| Medgar in the front yard. He was taken to a hospital but died | |
| within the hour. Just moments before his murder, President | |
| Kennedy had addressed the nation on the importance of the Civil | |
| Rights movement. | |
| ... | |
| Byron De La Beckwith, a founding member of the White Citizens | |
| Council in Mississippi, was soon named the prime suspect in the | |
| assassination. Local police found the rifle used in the murder | |
| near Medgar's home, and also discerned that it had recently been | |
| fired. Fingerprints on the rifled were immediately connected | |
| back to Byron, based on his military prints on record. Witnesses | |
| had also claimed Byron had been asking around about Medgar's | |
| address. He was arrested several days after the murder, and had | |
| an injury around his eye consistent with the recoil of shooting | |
| a rifle while looking down the scope. | |
| Three trials were held in an attempt to convict Byron. Before | |
| the first one, Byron was sent letters of support and money for | |
| his defense. During the first trial in 1964, two police officers | |
| claimed to have seen Byron in Greenwood, which is roughly 90 | |
| miles from Medgar's home, on the night of the assassination. | |
| Byron also claimed his gun was "stolen" before the murder. An | |
| all-white jury was unable to reach a verdict. A retrial was | |
| slated for later that year, but also resulted in a deadlock. | |
| Once again, an all-white jury could not come to a decision and | |
| Byron was set free. | |
| ... | |
| In 1989, The Clarion-Ledger, a newspaper in Jackson, documented | |
| how in 1964 a legal state agency that supported segregation | |
| assisted Byron's defense team in screening jurors for both | |
| trials against him. | |
| ... | |
| Byron spent three decades walking around as a free man, boasting | |
| about a murder that he thought he got away with. And in a way, | |
| he almost did. He wasn't convicted until he was in his 70s, | |
| meaning he lived the majority of his life as a white supremacist | |
| free to go about his business until the early 90s.[/quote] | |
| NEVER FORGIVE. NEVER FORGET. | |
| #Post#: 12458-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 2, 2022, 9:40 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/lynchings-untold-piece-asian-american-104555864.html | |
| [quote]Lynchings: An untold piece of Asian American history | |
| As the nation enacts a new historic anti-lynching bill into law, | |
| experts say there needs to be increased attention on a dark and | |
| largely untold piece of Asian American history: lynchings that | |
| terrorized communities. | |
| The big picture: Under the new law, which comes after over 200 | |
| failed attempts to codify federal anti-lynching legislation, a | |
| crime could be prosecuted as a lynching when a conspiracy to | |
| commit a hate crime results in death or serious bodily injury. | |
| Some of the first anti-Asian crimes that could fall under this | |
| definition were recorded in the 1800s at the height of white | |
| economic anxiety. | |
| An 1871 massacre wiped out 10% of the Chinese community in | |
| Los Angeles. It was one of the most brutal mass lynchings in | |
| U.S. history. | |
| These riots were part of a massive campaign across the U.S. | |
| now known as the Driving Out, which saw mobs regularly attack | |
| Chinese immigrants. | |
| ... | |
| The U.S. must educate people on how lynching was used to "demand | |
| subordination" not just among Black Americans but also other | |
| racialized groups, according to Catherine Ceniza Choy, author of | |
| the forthcoming book "Asian American Histories of the United | |
| States." | |
| ... | |
| In 1885, a similar act of arson in Wyoming killed 28 Chinese | |
| miners, many of their bodies left mangled and decomposed. | |
| ... | |
| In 1907 in Washington state, Indian migrant workers became the | |
| target of mob beatings that successfully forced the entire South | |
| Asian population out of Bellingham within 10 days. | |
| Between 1929 and 1930, anti-Filipino riots broke out along the | |
| West Coast as white people felt threatened by growing | |
| interracial relations. | |
| In Watsonville, California, hundreds of white men terrorized | |
| local Filipinos for five days, dragging them out of their homes | |
| and throwing some off a bridge. A Filipino man died after | |
| rioters shot him while he was sleeping. | |
| What they're saying: These are only the tip of the iceberg when | |
| it comes to historic examples of anti-Asian violence, according | |
| to Choy. | |
| "What distinguishes lynching as a form of violence is that | |
| it is precisely done in a way to make the violence public and to | |
| instill fear in the community," Choy noted. Perpetrators largely | |
| went unpunished.[/quote] | |
| NEVER FORGIVE. NEVER FORGET. | |
| #Post#: 12830-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 15, 2022, 4:30 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Continuing from: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/news/state-subverters/msg12817/#msg12817 | |
| some historical context: | |
| https://us.yahoo.com/news/opinion-bowen-turners-sexual-assault-151955883.html | |
| [quote]Bowen Turner is a 19-year-old South Carolina man who | |
| since 2018 has been charged with two sexual assaults. To this | |
| day, he's free. (Photo: Bamberg County Detention Center) | |
| If you�ve not heard of Bowen Turner, don�t worry � that�s by | |
| design. | |
| See, Turner is a 19-year-old South Carolina man who since 2018 | |
| has been charged with two sexual assaults. In one case, the | |
| alleged victim is now dead. In the another, the alleged victim | |
| watched as he violated the terms of his house arrest at least 20 | |
| times � and on Friday learned that he pleaded guilty to a lesser | |
| charge that won�t even have him register as a sex offender. | |
| There was a third allegation, but law enforcement never brought | |
| charges. To this day, Turner is free. | |
| And all of this proves one thing: The judicial system is working | |
| just fine. | |
| I don�t want to bore you with details, but in 1789 or | |
| thereabout, a bunch of white men decided �to establish the | |
| judicial courts of the United States,� which was signed into law | |
| by the president, the founding father George Washington. The | |
| system created by white men, for white men was basically enacted | |
| to issue justice fairly and properly to white men, because no | |
| one else mattered but white men. Slaves (Black people) couldn�t | |
| even testify against white men, and even if they were hit by a | |
| white person, they (slaves, Black people), couldn�t hit them | |
| back. White women were leaps and bounds above slaves, but they | |
| were still less than white men. They didn�t have the right to | |
| own property, they couldn�t keep their own money, and they | |
| couldn�t vote. But they were still considered a person � granted | |
| a second-class citizen, but a citizen nonetheless. | |
| Basically, �White Cis-Male Lives Matter,� and little has changed | |
| since then.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 13482-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: May 20, 2022, 8:25 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/learning-horrors-kentucky-history-us-091505582.html | |
| [quote]The New York Times published �The 1619 Project,� which | |
| makes a clear and irrefutable argument that racism is not | |
| anecdotal, practiced by a few bad people, but built into our | |
| systems which were created when our country was steeped in (and | |
| getting powerful and rich from) slavery. | |
| This new white concern did not go unnoticed. As the Urban League | |
| publicly stated later, �For a moment, it seemed that we were | |
| ready to wrestle with at least some of the systems perpetrating | |
| disparity at every turn.� Like maybe Black people were starting | |
| to get traction, to get ahead. | |
| And the kids were right: �They hate it.� | |
| �They� being those steeped in white supremacy who make up a | |
| larger percentage of the population than many of us knew. They | |
| came back like a steamroller with new voter suppression laws and | |
| hysterical �anti-CRT� laws in a desperate attempt to push things | |
| back to the way they were. They don�t want Black people voting | |
| in large numbers for candidates with their interests at heart. | |
| And they don�t want to hear the horrific truth about long-term, | |
| unending racial injury that started with kidnapping and | |
| enslaving Africans and hasn�t ended yet. | |
| �They hate it.� They don�t want to acknowledge the depth of | |
| depravity that created enormous wealth and power that we as | |
| whites still benefit from. They don�t want to know the harm | |
| that�s been done. They�re afraid of how it will make their | |
| children feel to hear those stories. Afraid they�ll be | |
| uncomfortable. | |
| What stories? Well, here�s one set right in our fair city of | |
| Louisville. From many accounts, the term we often use for | |
| betrayal, �sold down the river,� was invented here, on those | |
| same Ohio River banks where enslaved people once looked | |
| longingly across to Indiana and freedom. They were held in | |
| chains, many even kept in pens. Yes, you read that right. Pens. | |
| For human beings. Those pens held people who�d been sold and | |
| were awaiting boats that would wrench them away from home, from | |
| loved ones whom they�d never see again, to work on plantations | |
| in the deep south, where the conditions were known to be much | |
| harsher and treatment of slaves much more brutal. It was deeply | |
| dreaded: the greatest betrayal. And thus, the phrase came to be: | |
| �He (she) was sold down the river.� | |
| Does that story make people uncomfortable? We certainly hope so! | |
| We hope it moves us to work for something better. To listen�and | |
| try to right the horrific wrongs of the past. | |
| But for now, Black people are being betrayed again�by white | |
| parents screaming at school board meetings and by white | |
| politicians rushing through voter- and history- suppressing | |
| laws. And, by those who sit by silently as it happens. Once | |
| again: sold down the river. | |
| What do we plan to do about it?[/quote] | |
| It should begin with: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/true-left-vs-false-left/firearms/ | |
| #Post#: 13531-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: May 22, 2022, 4:40 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://us.yahoo.com/news/buffalo-shooting-brings-back-lifelong-120003487.html | |
| [quote]I have lived in that land for more than six decades now. | |
| And I can still remember when I first began to feel the weight | |
| of that burden, when it dawned on me that my brown skin could | |
| make me a pariah. | |
| Except I didn�t know that word back then, at Miles Elementary | |
| School in Cleveland, where almost all of the other students were | |
| white. I was in fifth grade and we were learning about the | |
| history of �our great country,� as my teacher always called it. | |
| I tried to laugh it off when I was mocked by white classmates, | |
| who thought images of crowded slave ships and Black men being | |
| whipped were cartoonishly funny. I was grateful then that my | |
| brown skin hid the red flush of shame. Some of these were people | |
| I�d considered friends. | |
| And the torment didn�t stop when the school day ended. At a New | |
| Year�s Eve sleepover at the YWCA, which I�d begged for | |
| permission to attend, my younger sister and I were terrorized by | |
| a cabal of white girls who pelted us with the N-word, then | |
| laughed uproariously as others joined in. | |
| We suffered in silence; there were two of us, dozens of them. | |
| ... | |
| My mother was born more than a century ago, when the Ku Klux | |
| Klan ruled rural Alabama, torturing and murdering any Black | |
| person who didn�t toe their line. One by one, she and her | |
| siblings migrated north to Cleveland in the 1940s and built new | |
| lives. | |
| I remember how hopeful she felt when we were growing up, at the | |
| apex of the civil rights movement, in a city known then for | |
| progression activism. We marched and protested and voted, and we | |
| clawed our way into the middle class. The future looked | |
| limitless and bountiful for our generation then. | |
| Now I am glad she is not here to see this. Our country is moving | |
| back toward its nakedly racist past, fueled by shameless | |
| politicians, coarse public dialogue and fictional social media | |
| conspiracies.[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 13867-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: June 4, 2022, 9:41 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.yahoo.com/news/lynching-york-130-years-ago-193019003.html | |
| [quote]On June 2nd a gathering in Port Jervis, New York will | |
| witness the unveiling of a plaque memorializing the lynching 130 | |
| years ago, on June 2, 1892, of Robert Lewis, a local Black | |
| citizen. Though scantly remembered for most of the 20th century, | |
| the horrific incident was infamous in its time, seen as a | |
| portent that lynching, then surging uncontrollably below the | |
| Mason-Dixon Line, was about to extend its tendrils northward. | |
| There had been a sharp rise in the reported number of Black | |
| people killed in this manner: 74 in 1885; 94 in 1889; 113 in | |
| 1891. The year 1892 would see the greatest number, 161, almost | |
| one every other day. The nation�s newspapers were rarely without | |
| news of a lynching somewhere, a barbaric crime that Black | |
| leaders such as Frederick Douglass, Ida B. Wells, and T. Thomas | |
| Fortune attributed to white resentment of African Americans� | |
| social and economic advance toward equality and full | |
| citizenship, by the presumption that Black people were | |
| inherently criminal, and by white men�s reflexive anxiety about | |
| Black male sexuality and white women. | |
| But what perplexed white Port Jervians and other New Yorkers was | |
| why a lynching had occurred in a village near to New York City | |
| and with so modest an African American population�roughly two | |
| hundred men, women, and children, or 2 percent of its | |
| approximately nine thousand residents. Although Port Jervis was | |
| hardly free from the common social and economic inequities of | |
| the era, and its normalized racism, it had no flagrant history | |
| of anti-Black violence.[/quote] | |
| Which just goes to show that we do not become safer by making | |
| "whites" feel safer. The safer they feel, the more comfortable | |
| they will be to express what has always been in their blood. | |
| [quote]Situated at the confluence of the Delaware and Neversink | |
| Rivers, where the states of New York, New Jersey, and | |
| Pennsylvania meet, it was a largely peaceful, orderly burg, | |
| surrounded by water and mountains, attractive to city folk who | |
| came in summer to fish for trout, canoe in the scenic Delaware, | |
| or enjoy a breeze on the verandas of the local | |
| boardinghouses.[/quote] | |
| Trout do not make "whites" feel unsafe. How do "whites" treat | |
| trout? Why do you think they will treat you any differently? | |
| [quote]In recent years, due to the efforts of a small group of | |
| current and former residents, and the influence of the Black | |
| Lives Matter movement, there has been new interest in the | |
| lynching, arguably the most troubling incident in the town�s | |
| past. But years of silence about the crime have left many | |
| residents, Black and white, substantially unfamiliar with it. | |
| This collective lack of remembering (or remembrance) cannot but | |
| seem determined, a result of the town�s shame over the lynching | |
| itself, as well as the ensuing humiliation when, after vowing to | |
| punish and hold to account those responsible, the local courts | |
| and community failed to do so. | |
| ... | |
| A twenty-minute walk will take one by many of the places | |
| involved in the Robert Lewis lynching, from the home of Lena | |
| McMahon to the banks of the nearby Neversink, where she was | |
| allegedly attacked; to the now-abandoned Delaware & Hudson | |
| Canal, along which Lewis was pursued and captured; and to the | |
| lynching site on East Main Street, where white merchants, | |
| railway workers, lawyers, doctors, hoteliers, and factory | |
| workers, most of whom knew one another, and many of whom knew | |
| Robert Lewis, beat him repeatedly and then hoisted by a rope | |
| until he was dead.[/quote] | |
| Similar to how they hoist trout from a fishing line with a hook | |
| on the end? | |
| [quote]My research and writing on civil rights history have, | |
| since the 1980s, been guided largely by a confidence in the | |
| forward advance of racial progress, a faith never unanimous | |
| among citizens of the United States but for many years broadly | |
| assumed. While no one seriously believed Barack Obama�s | |
| presidency would usher in a post-racial nation, there was a | |
| sense that the successes of the modern civil rights movement and | |
| the laws and policies it inspired, though not comprehensive and | |
| not attained without suffering and immense struggle, had at | |
| least moved the country to a place of enlarged racial | |
| understanding and opportunity. | |
| Today, instead of guarded optimism, there is a weary pessimism | |
| that, as the Port Jervis lynching signaled in its time, the | |
| assault on and devaluing of the lives of Black Americans are | |
| neither a regional nor a temporary feature but a national crisis | |
| and, for the foreseeable future, a permanent one.[/quote] | |
| Permanent so long as (or only until) "whites" are prohibited | |
| from reproducing. | |
| [quote]Much like at the end of Reconstruction in the 1870s, when | |
| post�Civil War idealism was supplanted by Southern whites� | |
| bare-knuckle tactics of exclusion and intimidation, so now do we | |
| find ourselves confronting the abandonment of hard-won gains | |
| from the New Deal, the civil rights and environmental movements, | |
| and other progressive causes. Voting rights, gained courthouse | |
| to courthouse by Black Southerners and civil rights workers, | |
| have been gutted by the Supreme Court, and conservative forces | |
| continue to seek creative new ways to curtail and impede them, | |
| targeting Black people and other minorities, as one North | |
| Carolina judicial opinion noted, �with surgical precision.� | |
| Each fortnight brings a new report of the killing of a Black | |
| person by police. �Jim Crow,� a term once seemingly relegated to | |
| the nation�s past, has found new purpose in expressing the harsh | |
| structural conditions of post-prison life for persons formerly | |
| incarcerated, as well as large-scale efforts by states to make | |
| voting inaccessible to Blacks and other minority citizens, while | |
| seizing ever-greater control of whose votes get counted. | |
| ... | |
| The crowds of whites who once amassed outside Southern jails | |
| demanding that sheriffs relinquish Black prisoners, or who | |
| forced their way inside to abduct them, have as their | |
| 21st-century counterparts the white militiamen, the Oath | |
| Keepers, Three Percenters, and Proud Boys, who invade | |
| state-houses and the Capitol in Washington, plot the kidnapping | |
| of elected officials, and seek to intimidate voters, | |
| legislators, and peaceful protesters. This �mobocratic spirit,� | |
| a phrase Abraham Lincoln used as early as 1838 to describe | |
| vigilantism�s corrosive effect on America, frightfully | |
| insinuates that mob violence is a legitimate means of effecting | |
| political change.[/quote] | |
| It is! Instead of finding it frightening, we must accept that | |
| only anti-racist mobs can defeat racist mobs. | |
| #Post#: 14200-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Trumpism is an echo | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: June 19, 2022, 11:23 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNI7fb3geyM | |
| ***************************************************** | |
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