Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Statement from NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous on the Shirley Sherrod incident

The events of the past month have offered signs of great hope for our beloved Association to reinvigorate the national movement for civil rights and social justice as we move towards the fall elections.

They also provided me with a hard-earned reminder of how we must proceed together if we are going to maximize our chances for success.

Three weeks ago, I dedicated my address at our national convention to making the case for One Nation - a massive march on Washington for jobs, justice, and education on 10-2-10 - exactly one month before the national elections. This march will reunite the forces of progress (civil rights, human rights, labor, small business, faith-based, and student organizations), reinvigorate our troops at a critical moment in history, and add volume to our collective demand for massive job creation, good schools and just treatment for all.

In that address, I chose to challenge the national Tea Party leaders to stop explicitly racist extremists from gaining increased influence over our nation's political discourse through involvement in their rapidly growing movement. The comments were inspired by a resolution presented by members of our Missouri State Conference. They are, as I am, concerned that silence in the face of such extremism only allows the possibilities for hate and the violence it produces to grow. The resolution was passed unanimously by more than 2000 delegates.

Our challenge to Tea Party leaders provoked a series of public responses that were covered widely by the media. First, Tea Party leaders denied our claims were valid. Then they pushed out a false spin that we were calling the Tea Party itself racist. Then, because we were steadfast in the face of their resistance, Tea Party leaders launched an intensive internal conversation about racist elements in their ranks. Thanks to your overwhelming support for the call for civility and responsible stewardship of their movement, they expelled Mark Williams - a Tea Party leader who had a history of making racist remarks - and the faction he had helped lead (which is a good start).

Our call also provoked a wave of threats against volunteer NAACP leaders and staff members across the country. We counted more than 100 in total. In the midst of this wave, a young man was arrested in Florida for making terrorist threats against an NAACP unit, and another man was arrested after a shootout in California. He was dressed in body armor and reportedly on his way to shoot up our allies at the ACLU and the Tides Foundation.

Finally, it provoked a barrage of viral video attacks on the NAACP. Most of them failed to get any traction. One now-notorious video promoted by Andrew Breitbart and Fox News gained widespread media attention on several networks.

I made a critical mistake in assessing the content of that video excerpt, and issued a statement supporting USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack's decision to "accept the resignation of Mrs. Shirley Sherrod" for statements allegedly made at a local NAACP event and condemning the statements as portrayed.

As President Obama has said, Mrs. Sherrod did not deserve the rush to condemnation.

The mistake is one I deeply regret at a magnitude unparalleled in the 19 years since I took my first job working in the civil and human rights movement. I hurt Mrs. Sherrod and hurt her deeply, and I am very sorry.

I am also thankful that she has graciously accepted my apology, and that she has stated publicly that she continues to believe in the NAACP and the urgent need for our work.

We issued the original statement in the wee hours of the morning on Tuesday, July 20, attempting to head off a brewing media firestorm before the morning news shows.

Within hours of issuing that statement, we knew something was wrong.

By 9:00 a.m., that same day, we had removed the statement from our website and announced publicly that we were withdrawing it. We had also assembled a multi-departmental team to investigate the facts surrounding the incident.

By 11:00 a.m., we had contacted Mrs. Sherrod to inform her we were actively reassessing our statement.

By 4:00 p.m., we had tracked down the full video, and assembled staff and a national commentator on CNN to listen to the entire speech.

By 5:00 p.m., I was on the phone apologizing to Mrs. Sherrod and reviewing with her the statement we would issue moments later stating our error and urging the Administration to reinstate her.

By 7:00 p.m., that evening, we succeeded in uploading the full video of her remarks on our website for the world to see and to unequivocally set the record straight.

That evening I went on CNN and MSNBC to amplify our new statement.

I am grateful for how our national staff came together to address the error.

The beautiful and inspiring speech Mrs. Sherrod gave to our Coffee County, Georgia, Branch has now been viewed more than 500,000 times since being posted at NAACP.org. Most notably, it was viewed by senior officials at the USDA and the White House as they deliberated and decided to make their apologies to Mrs. Sherrod and invite her to rejoin the senior ranks of the USDA.

As she graciously accepted my apology, Mrs. Sherrod asked that the NAACP redouble our efforts on Capitol Hill to ensure Black farmers receive the settlement they won after filing a lawsuit documenting the USDA's entrenched patterns of racial discrimination. I agreed readily. It is an issue in which our Washington Bureau Director Hilary Shelton and I have both been personally engaged.

A mistake of this sort will not happen again. In the future, no matter what the context, before making such a decision, there will be much more intensive investments in research and consultation on the front end.

The staff is currently in the process of debriefing and reviewing protocols to institutionalize this commitment. America counts on the NAACP to get it right the first time, and you should be able to count on your national office to be the standard bearer for our great Association.

In the meantime, what will not change is our commitment to confronting racism wherever it flourishes, and building powerful alliances to combat its most urgent structural manifestations.

We applaud Mrs. Sherrod's decision to sue Mr. Breitbart and will back her up on that suit. We will complement that effort and build upon the work we began with our nationwide protests against Fox News' parent company, NewsCorp, by advocating even more aggressively for them to reverse their pattern of exploiting and inflaming national racial and social tensions. (It should come as no surprise that the aforementioned gunman claims to be a loyal listener to Glenn Beck, or that the ACLU and the Tides Foundation are frequent targets of his on-air animus.)

Breitbart's attack on Mrs. Sherrod, on us and on the movement was just malicious. He said he attacked Mrs. Sherrod to destroy the NAACP. Let me say again that I made a grave mistake. What Breitbart did was calculated and deliberate, designed to divide and destroy.

But if those who seek to divide us think what was done in trying to damage a mighty and heroic black woman, damage the NAACP, and damage the movement will succeed, then they do not know that we live by a higher order.

What was meant for evil, God will turn to good. We will be made stronger, not weaker.

That's why we will stand with Shirley Sherrod, a hero to us all, in her lawsuit.

That's why we will continue on, release our report on racism in the Tea Party, and push all their factions to adhere to modern standards for inclusiveness and civility.

That's why we will mobilize and march on Washington on 10.2.10, and continue to build the movement to put schools before wars, and fighting massive joblessness for our neighbors above maintaining massive tax breaks for the nation's wealthiest 1 percent.

We must be as aggressive as parents fighting for their children's lives, or as individuals fighting for their own lives, because we are.

We must be as inclusive as our long-standing vision for the 21st Century, because it is here.

And we must be as vigilant in the fight against hate-based politics and racist threats and violence as our forebears, because as the NAACP we are committed to ensuring America moves ever forward, never backward.

As Mrs. Sherrod said in her now famous speech, "If we are going to rebuild our communities, if we are going to get with all of the problems we have in our communities, it will take all of us working together to solve them."

Thank you to everyone who has contacted me with advice, counsel, and encouragement in recent weeks. I have benefitted from it, and I am as committed to seizing this personal opportunity for growth as I am to maximizing our collective opportunity to lead America in a better direction.

It is an honor to serve as your national president.

I look forward to seeing you on 10-2-10 as we together take the fight to our foes, make our demands on Congress clear before the elections, and remind America that we and our allies are the present and growing majority and will not yield the battlefield willingly.

Yours in the struggle,


Benjamin Todd Jealous
President and CEO
NAACP

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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Join us for the second installment of the Wichita NAACP Community Film Series




Join us on Thursday, February 4th, for the second installment of the Wichita NAACP's community film series. We will be showing the film "A Soldier's Story"; a classic film set in 1944 which masterfully explores the issues of race, class, and the complex ways that racism is internalized and manifested within the Black community...

So come on out and enjoy some popcorn, a great movie, and some good conversation on us...

The Wichita NAACP Community Film Series
"A Soldier's Story" (1hr 41min) 
Movie and Discussion
Thursday, February 4th, 6pm
829 N Market St.

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Sunday, February 15, 2009

The Wichita Branch Releases its 2009-2010 Goals & Priorities


On January 10th, the Wichita Branch NAACP held it's annual strategic planning session wherein we set our goals and priorities for the 2009 - 2011 term. We began with a review of the goals and priorities we'd set for 2008 and a critical analysis of our 2008 Branch activities. We then worked collaboratively to establish new goals and priorities for each committee of the branch.




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Monday, February 2, 2009

Jennifer Hudson & Seal to perform at the "40th NAACP Image Awards" Thursday, February 12th, live on Fox

Sean "Diddy" Combs, Taraji P. Henson, Keke Palmer, Regina Taylor and Kerry Washington to Appear on Star-Studded Special Coinciding with Organization's Centennial

Academy Award-winning actress and Grammy Award nominee Jennifer Hudson and multi-platinum singer-songwriter Seal are set to perform at the 40TH NAACP IMAGE AWARDS, which will broadcast live from Los Angeles' historic Shrine Auditorium Thursday, Feb. 12 (8:00-10:00 PM ET live/PT tape-delayed) on FOX. Additionally, Sean "Diddy" Combs, Taraji P. Henson, Keke Palmer, Regina Taylor and Kerry Washington will present during the special joining previously announced hosts Halle Berry and Tyler Perry.

Executive-produced by Vicangelo Bulluck, the special coincides with the NAACP's 100th anniversary and will kick off the organization's year-long centennial celebration. Previously announced honorees include Former Vice President Al Gore and Dr. Wangari Muta Maathai, who will both receive the Chairman's Award, as well as Russell Simmons, who will receive the Vanguard Award. Additional performers and presenters to be announced.

Chicago native Jennifer Hudson and her RIAA-certified Gold self-titled debut album recently received four Grammy Award nominations. Hudson's eponymous debut entered Billboard's Top 200 at No. 2 and marked the biggest first week sales for an R&B female entry since 2004. The follow-up to her smash hit single "Spotlight" is the beautiful mid-tempo "If This Isn't Love." Hudson received two NAACP Image Award nominations this year for her role in "The Secret Life of Bees" and six nods for her album "Jennifer Hudson."

London-born singer Seal first emerged from Britain's house music scene in the early 1990s. After his single "Crazy" debuted in the Top Ten, Seal went on to earn critical acclaim and worldwide commercial success with his next four albums. His soaring baritone has become a signature with such hits as "Prayer for the Dying," "Kiss from a Rose" and "Don't Cry." Seal recently released his sixth album, "Soul," a collection of the all-time greatest soul classics produced by music legend David Foster.

Event sponsors for the 40th NAACP Image Awards include Chrysler, FedEx, American Airlines, Bank of America, Blockbuster, Ford Motor Company and Southwest Airlines.



Founded on Feb. 12, 1909, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is the nation's oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its half-million adult and youth members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, and monitor equal opportunity in the public and private sectors. For more information on the NAACP IMAGE AWARDS, please visit naacpimageawards.net.

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Friday, November 28, 2008

Tyler Perry Studios and Writers Guild announce agreement

Tyler Perry, NAACP President Ben Jealous, NAACP Hollywood Bureau Director Vic Bulluck


Tyler Perry Studios and the Writers Guild of America, West today announced that they have come to an agreement following more than five months of negotiations. Vic Bulluck, executive director of the NAACP Hollywood Bureau, was instrumental in bringing the two parties together.

"We are pleased to have come to a resolution with the WGA, and thank the NAACP for their support during negotiations. We look forward to many years working with the talented writers who are members of the Guild." stated Tyler Perry. "With a continued focus on fostering young, diverse talent, we are eager to continue our dialogue with the WGA to dramatically increase the number of minority writers working in Hollywood today."

"At a time when true independent producers like Mr. Perry are rare in this business, we congratulate him on his success and welcome his decision to become signatory to a WGA contract," said Writers Guild of America, West President Patric M. Verrone. "I also would like to thank Ben Jealous, NAACP national president and CEO, Vic Bulluck, executive director NAACP Hollywood Bureau, and Clayola Brown, national president of the A. Philip Randolph Institute, for their help during this negotiation."

"The NAACP is a staunch advocate for workers rights and for nearly one hundred years has fought for greater minority representation and inclusion in Hollywood. We applaud Tyler Perry's efforts to not only promote, but to also provide work for people of color in the entertainment industry," stated Benjamin Jealous, president and CEO of the NAACP. Adding, "We recognize the unique and important influence writers have in our society. The NAACP will continue to work with the WGA to make sure their rights are protected and that all the networks and studios provide greater opportunity for minority writers."

The contract with the WGA was the last union agreement outstanding for Tyler Perry Studios, which had previously brokered deals with the Teamsters, IATSE, SAG, DGA, and others. Acknowledging that some of the writers on the TBS series House of Payne and Meet the Browns will not be returning, Perry thanked them for their services and wished them well in their future endeavors.

Matt Johnson of Ziffrren, Brittenham negotiated the deal for Tyler Perry Studios.

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About the NAACP
Founded on February 12, 1909, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is the nation's oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its half-million adult and youth members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, and monitor equal opportunity in the public and private sectors. For more information on the NAACP and the NAACP Hollywood Bureau, please visit www.naacp.org
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About Tyler Perry Studios
Tyler Perry Studios is 100% financed by Tyler Perry in an entrepreneurial endeavor, and is not backed by a studio or other investors. The studio produces both Meet the Browns and House of Payne, as well as several feature films a year including the upcoming Madea Goes to Jail. Perry recently announced the formation of another production arm, 34th Street Films, which will develop projects written and directed by talent other than Perry under the Tyler Perry brand.

About the Writer's Guild of America, West
The Writers Guild of America, West is a labor union that negotiates and administers contracts and represents writers of motion pictures, television, radio and Internet programming, including news and documentaries. For more information on the WGAW, please visit: www.wga.org
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Monday, October 29, 2007

Why is the Only "Good" Civil Rights Leader a Dead One?

Reposted from "The Debate Link"


As an online discussion concerning race grows longer, the probability of a person referencing Martin Luther King, Jr. as a means to justify their racist and/or ignorant attitudes approaches one. Many contemporary anti-racism activists have expressed frustration in the way MLK--and indeed, the entire 60s civil rights movement--has been "neutered" so as to mask just how radical and revolutionary its agenda was (and, by extension, how far short we fell from achieving it).
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I've noticed, along with this, a meme that floats around the conservative right that tries to split the "good" civil rights activists of the 60s, whose cause was laudable and just (though not, it's worth noting, during the 60s themselves, as anyone who has read National Review articles from that time knows) from the next generation of Black leaders, who are charlatans and "race-baiters."
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Dr. King is the emblem of the former group, and perhaps its only political member; virtually no other civil rights pioneer of that era gets similar treatment. Dr. King serves as an apt model because he is quite conveniently dead, and thus unable to take positions that might be inopportune for his more conservative supporters. Had he not been assassinated, I firmly believe that White America would not have accorded King his current valorized status, for the precise reason that it would have been that much more difficult to mythologize his legacy if he was alive to contest it. Hence we have the title of the post: The only "good" civil rights leaders is, quite literally, a dead one.
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This splitting of the past (or "past", see my third point) and present civil rights leadership is entirely unjustified. First, there is very little division in the controversial elements of the political agenda of the 1960s Black community and the current Black community. "Color-conscious" remedies were always on the table. Black leaders were not hesitant to indict White America for their racism.
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Barbara Ransby notes the position of Ella Baker (a top SCLC and SNCC organizer) that "previously oppressive practices had to be radically reversed, not simply halted...and corrective measures had to be put into place" [Barbara Ransby, Ella Baker and the Black Freedom Movement: A Radical Democratic Vision (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 2003), 369]. Dr. King, too, was neither particularly accommodating towards the hurt feelings of White moderates, nor opposed to remedial racial preferences. To the former, he suggested in his Letters from a Birmingham Jail that they were possibly more damaging to the prospects of Black liberation than the Klan, "more devoted to 'order' than to justice" and perpetually urging Black activists to "wait" for the time to be ripe for civil rights reform (a time that would never come). To the latter, King wrote in Why We Can't Wait:

Whenever this issue of compensatory or preferential treatment for the Negro is raised, some of our friends recoil in horror. The Negro should be granted equality, they agree, but he should ask for nothing more. On the surface, this appears reasonable, but it is not realistic. For it is obvious that if a man enters the starting line of a race three hundred years after another man, the first would have to perform some incredible feat in order to catch up.
If one reads the actual writings of 1960s civil rights activists -- from Martin Luther King, Ella Baker and Thurgood Marshall to Stokely Carmichael, Harold Cruse, and Malcolm X -- it is nearly impossible to place any of them as color-blind assimilationists, or moderate accommodationists. They wanted change, they wanted it now, and they wanted it to come with the explicit awareness that Blacks were the victims of an intense and systematic campaign of White supremacy that affected and infected all levels of society, far beyond laws that said "Black" and "White". Placing them in any other historical or political framework is naked historical revisionism, pure and simple.
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Second, the characteristics associated with the latter group of civil rights activists are rhetorically and substantively identical to those ascribed by White racists in the 60s to the first group. At that time, too, vocal Black leaders were invariably called "agitators" (the contemporary analogue to "race-baiter"), or folks concerned more with their own personal publicity than the needs of ordinary Black people. The "special rights" charge has a long pedigree, dating back to President Andrew Johnson's veto of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 on the grounds it gave special rights to Blacks.
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Similarly, the White press often focused on personal scandals and salacious details of activist's personal lives as an excuse for ignoring the substance of their critiques. Along all these axes, the purported nostalgia for the last generation of civil rights leaders is nothing but a facade. It masks the importation of the same racist tropes used against King and his cohorts to the current crop of civil rights leaders. We should be suspicious of these echoes.
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Third, and most importantly, the split between the 60s activists and the current ones is ridiculous because often we're talking about the same people. Jesse Jackson was one of Dr. King's top associates later in his career. Rep. John Lewis (D-GA), deacon of the Congressional Black Caucus, was beaten as a freedom rider in Alabama in 1961. Thurgood Marshall articulated much of the progressive Black legal agenda while a litigator for the NAACP, and then while serving on the Supreme Court bench up through the early 90s. Maya Angelou was a close friend of Malcolm X, as well as a coordinator for King's SCLC at Dr. King's request. Julian Bond helped found SNCC. Andrew Young was Executive Director of the SCLC and one of King's key lieutenants. By and large, the folks currently represented among the Black leaders were the same folks leading the charge in the 60s civil rights movement. It's schizophrenic to the extreme to simultaneously praise and condemn the same people for the same advocacies in the same words.
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Again, Martin Luther King is a useful tool for justifying racism because he died so young. Being dead, he can't contest or contextualize the actual content of his beliefs. Being dead, he can't remind audiences of the criticisms and abuse he was subjected to during his campaigns, and how it is eerily reminiscent of the charges foisted upon contemporary Black leaders. And being dead, he is no longer a political threat, and thus is a safe person to prop up upon an altar and praise.
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Were he alive, we might be faced with the uncomfortable prospect that this great hero of American history might demand we actually fulfill our covenant with Black citizens, and that would require actual change and reform and sacrifice. Dead people tell no such tales.


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Monday, October 22, 2007

Thank you to our Supporters...

This past weekend we hosted the Annual convention of the Kansas State Conference which concluded with our Annual Freedom Fund Banquet. This is the one major fund-raising event held by the branch each year and we would not be successful as a branch were it not for the tremendous showing of support we receive each year from our local community.

This year, thanks to your generous support and commitments, we have reached our annual fund-raising goals. To show you that you support is well placed, I would like to present to you a brief listing of our accomplishments for 2007. This is the return on your investment.

Membership

  • Submitted a list of 25 College students to be chartered as the WSU NAACP College chapter
  • Wichita Youth Council President Amani Myles was elected Vice-President of the Kansas State NAACP Youth Council.
  • Wichita Youth Council Treasurer Kyron Cox was elected treasurer of the Kansas State NAACP Youth Council.
  • Wichita Youth Council Secretary Isaiah Myles was elected to the Executive Committee of the Kansas State NAACP Youth Council.

Enhancing Advocacy Training

  • On September 22nd, I traveled to Salina Kansas and spoke with students from Brown-Mackie College about legislative advocacy and the NAACP. All of the students in attendance joined the Salina Branch that evening.
  • Hosted a reception for 5 women from the nation of Kenya who were visiting the United States with the “Kenyans working for Good Government” program.

Policy Advocacy

  • Branch Vice President/District 1 City Councilperson Lavonta Williams has done a wonderful job of advocating for the citizens of her district which encompasses the predominately African American Central Northeast community.
  • President Myles now serves on the Wichita Airport Advisory Board and the Community Corrections board
  • Marvin Stone now serves on the Juvenile Corrections board
  • Charles Coleman now serves on the Cultural arts funding board
  • Walt Chapel now serves as the Chairman and VJ Sessions as the Vice-Chair of the City of Wichita Racial Profiling Advisory Board.
  • Loren Breckenridge now serves as the Chairman and Kenya Cox as the Vice-Chair of the City of Wichita’s Task Force to deal with small and disadvantaged businesses.
  • Kevin Myles continues to serve on the Kansas State Racial Profiling Task Force.
  • Emile McGill continues to serve on Governor Sebelius' 2010 Kansas Education Committee

Criminal Justice

  • Worked with the WSU African American Student Association (soon to become the WSU branch NAACP) and participated in a Jena 6 forum which was held at the Rhatigan Center on September 19th.
  • Helped to plan and moderated a State-Wide Racial Profiling Task Force town-hall meeting in Wichita on September 20th.
  • Kevin Myles has been named to serve on the State Wide Racial Profiling Task Force’ Officer training Sub-committee which will begin meeting this month
  • Filed a complaint with the FBI and DOJ on behalf an African American woman who was allegedly beaten by an officer of the Wichita PD.
  • Filed a complaint with the FBI and DOJ on behalf of two Hispanics who allege Police misconduct and use of excessive force
  • Filed 3 new racial profiling cases with the Kansas Human Rights Commission
  • Filed a formal charge against the KC Gas station for selling drug paraphernalia in violation of the new Kansas statute that we drafted. Police went in and seized 3,000 pieces of Paraphernalia. And because the station is within 1,000 feet of Allison Middle School, the owners were both arrested on felony counts.
  • Successfully handled Federal Mediation on behalf of employees of the VA Hospital

Educational Excellence

  • Participated in a panel discussion along with Wichita State University Vice-President, the USD259 General Counsel, and the President of USD259 on the campus of WSU on the Supreme Court’s deseg ruling.
  • On 9/5 I attended the Superintendent’s “State of the District” address
  • On 9/8 I spoke at the Parent to Parent Support group’s annual Breakfast about Parental involvement
  • Held separate meetings with representatives of the District and the School Board to discuss the district’s intent with regard to busing
  • Keynoted the Kansas and Missouri Associations of Private and Career Colleges annual conference
  • Met with the Kansas Education Commissioner and delivered a copy of our 4-point plan to End the Achievement gap.
  • Started the Ron A. Walters Leadership Academy for youth between the ages of 12 and 16.
  • Participated along with the Wichita Alliance of Black School educators and the Parent to Parent Support Group in two “Youth Speak-Out” forums. The forms were attended by 300 African American Students and their parents.
  • Partnered with the Wichita Branch NAACP Youth Council and the Wichita Black Arts Festival Committee to host a Youth Teen-Summit dealing with the negative terms and images in Youth and hip-hop culture

Political Empowerment

  • Wrote a county supplemental budget request and worked as a member of the Sedgwick County Voter coalition to get the Board of County Commissioners to earmark $100,000.00 for the purchase of new voting machines to replace some of those the removed when we switched to touch screen machines.
  • We are currently working with the Sedgwick County voter coalition and it’s 25 member organizations on a multi-organizational voter education program
  • Scheduled a meeting with Secretary of State Ron Thornburgh to discuss the National Voter Registration Act and the non-compliance of our Departments of motor vehicles.
  • Reached out to other organizations with similar interests to build a coalition to press for changes in the law affecting Voter Registration. (Now known as our “20 by 10” campaign)
  • On February 10th, we co-sponsored a Legislative Town Hall meeting with the Kansas African American Affairs Commission, Representatives Goudeau and Miller, Senators Betts and Haley, and the Urban League.

Other

  • We are continuing to meet as a member of the WYEP partnership and as a member of the African American Coalition
  • On July 11th the Branch received a National Thalheimer Award from NAACP Chairman Julian Bond for outstanding branch activities.
  • The Wichita Branch Health Committee participated along with representatives of City and County Government, local hospitals and safety net clinics, in a County-wide Health Access Summit intended to develop strategies to make quality health care accessible to everyone.

So on behalf of the Wichita Branch of the NAACP, we would like to say thank you to all of you in the local community and the business community who have given time and/or resources to our organization. Thanks to your support, we will continue to serve this community with integrity and purpose for years to come.


KM

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Thursday, October 4, 2007

The sophistical association between the recent RICO arrests and WPD Racial Profiling

In today's newspaper there was an article that described the community's reaction to recent indictments handed down against 39 members of the Crip street gang. In the article, local Pastors were interviewed and each was asked about the 'allegations' that the charges were the result of Racial Profiling. Not surprisingly, each stated that they didn't believe that the charges were related to Racial Profiling and while not a quote, a sentiment was ascribed to a Pastor with the following statement on Profiling: "although that is a serious concern, people should be more concerned right now about violence in their community than racial profiling."


When I read that, I was gravely troubled, because it made it clear to me how easily positions can be created and ascribed to others and how we in the community, if we're not careful, can be pitted against one another.

For the benefit of those of you who are not a part of our local community, let me give you a bit of background and context.

Racial Profiling has been a hot topic in our community as of late. We've had numerous complaints from a cross section of the community (everyone from Professors to Black Police Officers) yet the Professional Standards Office of the Wichita Police Department has exonerated the Officers in every investigation they've conducted. They have a 'perfect' record of having never substantiated a case of profiling.

In 2005 the Kansas Legislature passed a bill the prohibits the practice of Racial Profiling in the State of Kansas. The bill specifically defines Racial Profiling as:

"the practice of a law enforcement officer or agency relying, as the sole factor, on race, ethnicity, national origin, gender or religious dress in selecting which individuals to subject to routine investigatory activities, or in deciding upon the scope and substance of law enforcement activity following the initial routine investigatory activity. Racial profiling does not include reliance on such criteria in combination with other identifying factors when the law enforcement officer or agency is seeking to apprehend a specific suspect whose race, ethnicity, national origin, gender or religious dress is part of the description of the suspect."

In early September, several newspapers around the State reported that many police departments had not complied with the statute and had not reported their number of complaints. Senator Donald Betts who introduced the bill in 2005 remarked in the articles that the Racial Profiling Task force appointed by the Governor should act immediately to bring about Statewide compliance.

On September 20th, Wichita hosted a town-hall meeting with the Kansas Statewide racial Profiling Task Force. In this 2-hour meeting attended by approximately 200 community residents, 19 individuals stood and offered accounts of Racial Profiling by the WPD. The accounts were each specific and detailed. Additionally, we (the Wichita NAACP) were given the names and contact numbers for 23 individuals from the Hispanic community who have complaints they'd like to file.

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On September 28th the Wichita Eagle released a completely unrelated story about Federal indictments handed down against 28 members of the Crips street gang. The story detailed the charges levied against each of the 28 men, and the strategy of the WPD to charge these individuals under the RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization) Act.

That article was followed by others on October 1st and 2nd, which talked about 11 additional indictments that have been handed down under the same act, bringing the number of defendants to 39.

Now let's be frank - there is NO relationship between Racial Profiling, which is a police tactic used in affecting traffic stops (clearly defined by Kansas statute), and the arrest of these 39 Gang members for crimes ranging from Agg Battery, possession of Cocaine with intent to distribute, transporting a minor across State lines for illicit purposes, to attempted murder. They are completely unrelated... The investigation into the alleged crimes of the Crip gang members was not comprised of data gathered from routine traffic stops. Nor were the hundreds of meaningless stops for "wide turns" & "failure to signal 100 feet from the corner" and the subsequent requests for vehicle searches, a Police strategy to search for the Crips.

YET

On Monday, October 1st, (the day the second RICO story went to print) I received a call from a reporter at the Wichita Eagle. The Reporter said, "I understand you may have heard some concerns from the community that this may be racial profiling; do you have any comment on that?".

Stop Sign: The mention of Racial Profiling as somehow being connected to the RICO arrests immediately raised a red flag. Primarily because I immediately understood that they were wholly unrelated. Secondly, and most significantly, because while I had already received 8 calls and 3 emails from concerned family members and had had numerous conversations with folks who are active in the community, NO ONE had raised the issue of profiling. As President of the NAACP and as a member of the Kansas State Racial Profiling Task Force, the two most prominent organizations which receive and process racial profiling complaints, that we hadn't heard this issue raised is significant. (since that time the total is now 17 calls and 6 emails and still no one has made that claim)

I told the reporter that I had not heard from anyone who related the arrests to Racial Profiling and that I had no comment that I was willing to make on the arrests at that time. The following day, 10/2, we had an Executive Committee meeting of the NAACP. We discussed the call and my concern that the Eagle might 'construct' a community opinion if they could find someone to validate it by answering that loaded question. We also discussed the fact that since they didn't get the answer from me, they'd probably continue to call people in the community until someone gave it to them. We agreed that no member of the branch would answer any question that attempted to link these two unrelated issues and that any requests for interviews would be redirected to me.

Then this morning I pick up the paper and see the statement: "although that is a serious concern, people should be more concerned right now about violence in their community than racial profiling."

So now you have a prominent figure in the Black community seemingly discrediting the efforts to stop Racial Profiling. Now let me say for the record, I am not upset with the Pastor... He is a good friend of mine and a genuinely good man who is deeply concerned about the community. I know that this was a comment in search of an author. And I know how easy it is to answer a loaded question, then to have an 'editorial idea' represented as your opinion (been there, done that). My outrage is reserved for the paper.

Are we to believe that our community lacks the resources and/or the capacity to deal with more than one issue at a time? The community has called upon the Police Department to deal effectively with the Gang issue for quite sometime now. Now that they've acted, are we now somehow strangely obliged to turn a blind eye towards police misconduct?

We want to live in safe communities. We want the Police to arrest the bad guys. If I have a problem and I pick up the phone, I want the Police to respond. Is it to much to ask that we also be treated fairly and with respect? Must we choose one or the other?

I reject that notion. In fact I find the very postulate offensive. As someone who spends several hours each month hearing complaints and talking to community members on all sides of these issues, I am happy to see that the Police department has moved proactively on the issue of gangs.

However, the fact that they've made these arrests in no way absolves or excuses the officer who Punched 49 year-old Rowana Riggs in the face and blacked her eye after stopping her in her driveway for a burned-out tail light. These arrests do not absolve or excuse the officer who tasered Luis Delarosa 3 times outside of 'America's Pub' and then joked about it in the Police Car. These arrests do not absolve or excuse the officer who kicked Sena Peden's 15 year-old son in the face and then argued in court that as he entered his car he thinks his foot accidentally made contact with the young man's face. They don't absolve or excuse the other officers who were present when Ms. Peden was pepper-sprayed in the face as she tried to come out of her front door to see what was happening to her son. These arrests do not absolve or excuse the officer who tasered Tiara Carolina three times in the parking lot of Harry and Ollies while calling her a fat bitch in front of multiple witnesses.

Curtis Webber was stopped for having expired tags on his car, he ended up dead with a pool of blood on the curb... Aaron Patterson was stopped for making a wide turn, he was accused of being a drug dealer and forced to sit on the curb for more than an hour while the police conducted a search of his vehicle that he did NOT consent to... the late Jihad Muqtaasid was stopped for making a wide turn and patted down on his own street when he was 76 years old!.. Adriana Molina was leaving America's Pub, an Officer approached her from behind and when she spun around to see who grabbed her, she was arrested and charged with battery on a Law Enforcement Officer... And then there were the 19 other folks who made their complaints at the town hall meeting.

And in exchange for the officers arresting criminals in the community, are we supposed to ignore these types of excesses?

No. We want the Police to deal effectively with Gang violence in the community AND we want to see an end to Police misconduct, excessive force, and racial profiling. And we absolutely will not substitute one goal for the other. And shame on anyone who suggests we should...








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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

African-American Woman Kidnapped and Tortured for at least a week

Initially I thought I would post this without comment, thinking that the story itself is so horrific that any additional comment wouldn't add context, only outrage. And I really want this blog (and our efforts) to be more "Light" than "Heat". But I had to come back and say a few words because I believe this story offers us an genuine opportunity to explore race in a larger context than convention would ordinarily allow.

I am an avid reader of Blogs on various subjects and they always make for 'interesting reading' to say the least. But what I have found most fascinating about the 'blogosphere' is the seemingly ever-present undercurrent of racism and prejudice. Perhaps most alarming is the fact that no seems to be alarmed...

The Internet provides us with a truly open forum with a sense of anonymity and relative safety from reprisal. Therefore it represents a forum where we can have a 'truly' honest dialogue. Yet take a look around the blogosphere and observe our discussions on race.

As an exercise, go to Google and type in "You call me a racist". (This was the title of a post that began on "My Space" which argues if Blacks and Latino's have organizations that look out for their interests than Whites should have White History Month, White Entertainment Television etc...) For the sake of discussion, I'm reprinting it here:

There are African Americans, Mexican Americans, Asian Americans, Arab Americans, Native Americans, etc. And then there are just Americans.
You pass me on the street and sneer in my direction.
You call me "Whiteboy," "Cracker,""Honkey," "Whitey," "Caveman" and that's OK.
But when I call you, Nigger, Kike, KOON, Towelhead,Sand-nigger, Camel Jockey, Beaner, Gook, or Chink you call me a racist.
You say that whites commit a lot of violence against you, so why are the ghettos the most dangerous places to live?
You have the United Negro College Fund. You have Martin Luther King Day. You have Black History Month. You have Cesar Chavez Day. You have Yom Hashoah You have Ma'uled Al-Nabi You have the NAACP. You have BET.
If we had WET(White Entertainment Television) we'd be Racists.
If we had a White Pride Day you would call us racists.
If we had White History Month, we'd be racists.
If we had any organization for only whites to"advance" our lives, we'd be racists.
We have a Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, a Black Chamber of Commerce, and then we just have the plain Chamber of Commerce.Wonder who pays for that?
If we had a college fund that only gave white students scholarships, you know we'd be racists. There are over 60 openly proclaimed Black Colleges in the US, yet if there were "White colleges" that would be a racist college.
In the Million Man March, you believed that you were marching for your race and rights. If we marched for our race and rights, you would call us racists. You are proud to be black, brown, yellow and orange, and you're not afraid to announce it. But when we announce our white pride, you call us racists.
You rob us, carjack us, and shoot at us. But, when a white police officer shoots a black gang member or beats up a black drug-dealer running from the law and posing a threat to society, you call him a racist. I am proud. But, you call me a racist.

While the tone and tenor of this post is obviously racist to "me", what I find most incredible is when you do an advanced Google search, you will see that it has been re-posted 13,600 times on separate blogs and web pages. Yet the dark cloud of racism generates no meaningful dialogue because we are all so entrenched in our positions that our sensitivities interpret sincere disagreements as 'personal attacks' thereby stifling discussion.

Organizations such as the NAACP are routinely criticized for even dealing with or discussing discrimination. 'Racism', we are told, is a thing of the past and we should simply stop complaining then life will be good... After all, we have Black Mayors, and politicians, etc etc... People who claim to have been the victims of discrimination are automatically assumed to be poor performers using racism as an excuse for personal failure, and the people who speak out against it are regarded as opportunists out to build a reputation by playing the "race card".

And before I go on, let me say a word or two about "The Race Card"... I believe that the term itself represents the epitome of Political Correctness. What other term is used and intended with the sole purpose of stopping and dismissing a discussion? In fact, I believe it represents the most insidious form of political correctness; that is a basic intellectual dishonesty designed to protect us from confronting our personal hypocrisy. If someone mentions race as an issue or factor in nearly any context, reflexively others will shout "stop playing the race card", as though the very idea of race playing a role in our society was ridiculous.

Now that we've buried the "N" word, we need to bury that term right next to it...

A professor by the name of Marimba Ani once coined the phrase "rhetorical ethics" which she described as the set of ethical standards we all publicly proclaim, but don't even attempt to live... Our contemporary society's 'Public Face' would never condone racism, sexism, or homophobia. But when the citizens of this same community are given an anonymous forum to express their opinions a real undercurrent of hate becomes discernible.

It is in THIS context that the movement to resegregate schools becomes understandable. (After all, Brown Vs Board didn't convert the Segregationists to the idea of deseg, it was just a ruling on the constitutionality of Segregation. The segregationist ideology and movement continued forth through the hundreds of legal challenges to busing, and is now reflected in the Neighborhood or Community School concept. The conceptual "Neighborhood school" is a masterful piece of semantic ju-jitsu that allows people to openly support segregation and feel ok about it) In this context the continuing wage and unemployment disparities become understandable. In this context disparate sentencing for like crimes becomes understandable. In this context Racial Profiling and Police misconduct become understandable. And it is only in this context that we can produce and witness an atrocity such as this:



LOGAN, W.Va. — Authorities said Tuesday they are considering hate crime charges in the case of a woman who was tortured while being held captive for at least a week. The victim was repeatedly called a racial slur while her captors sexually abused, beat and stabbed her, her mother said.


Six people, all white, including a mother and son and a mother and daughter, were arrested in connection with the alleged abduction of the 20-year-old black woman, who was held captive at a home in Big Creek in Logan County, about 50 miles southwest of Charleston.

"I don't understand a human being doing another human being the way they did my daughter," Carmen Williams said Tuesday from her daughter's room at Charleston Area Medical Center General Hospital. "I didn't know there were people like that out here."
Megan Williams, with a cast on her arm, spoke barely above a whisper.

"I'm better," she said.

The Associated Press generally does not identify suspected victims of sexual assault, but Williams and her mother agreed to release her name.

Deputies also interviewed the victim Tuesday morning. State, local and federal officials planned to meet later in the day to decide whether to file hate crime charges, Logan County sheriff's Sgt. Sonya Porter said. An FBI spokesman in Pittsburgh, Bill Crowley, confirmed that the agency is looking into possible civil rights violations.

The woman's abductors called her the N-word "every time they stabbed her," Carmen Williams told The Charleston Gazette earlier.

Authorities were still looking for two people they believe drove the woman to the house where she was abused, said Logan County Chief Deputy V.K. Dingess.

Neighbors said the were shocked to hear about the crime. "This is awful," said Cabin Whitt, who has raised five children in Big Creek and was trimming his lawn on Tuesday. "You don't expect to hear anything like that." The case is "something that would have come out of a horror movie," Logan County Sheriff W.E. Hunter said.

Deputies found Williams on Saturday when they went to Frankie Brewster's house to investigate an anonymous tip from someone who had witnessed the abuse, Porter said Tuesday.
Brewster was sitting on the front porch and told deputies she was alone, but moments later Williams limped toward the door, her arms outstretched, saying "Help me," the sheriff's department said in a news release.

Carmen Williams said doctors told her daughter she may be well enough to leave the hospital within a few days, although a nurse said the young woman's condition was listed as "under evaluation." "I just want my daughter to be well and recover," Carmen Williams said. "I know the Lord can do anything."

Besides being sexually assaulted, Williams had been stabbed four times in the left leg and beaten, Porter said. During her capture, Williams was forced to eat rat and dog feces and drink from the toilet, according to the criminal complaint filed in Logan County Magistrate Court. She was also choked and doused with hot water.

One of those arrested, Karen Burton, is accused of cutting Williams' ankle with a knife and using the N-word in telling Williams she was victimized because she is black, according to the criminal complaint. Brewster, 49, is charged with kidnapping, sexual assault, malicious wounding and giving false information during a felony investigation. She was released from prison in September 2000 after serving five years for voluntary manslaughter and wanton endangerment in the death of 84-year-old Polly Ferrell, according to court records.
Her son, Bobby R. Brewster, 24, also of Big Creek, is charged with kidnapping, sexual assault, malicious wounding and assault during the commission of a felony.

Burton, 46, of Chapmanville, is charged with malicious wounding, battery and assault during the commission of a felony. Her daughter, Alisha Burton, 23, of Chapmanville, and George A. Messer, 27, of Chapmanville, are charged with assault during the commission of a felony and battery. Danny J. Combs, 20, of Harts, is charged with sexual assault and malicious wounding.
All six remained in custody Tuesday in lieu of $100,000 bail each, and all have asked for court-appointed attorneys.

The state and local chapters of the NAACP plan to meet Saturday to discuss the case, said the Rev. Audie Murphy Sr., President of the Logan County branch. Until then, both he and State President Kenneth Hale declined to comment Tuesday.

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