Daily Archives: June 14, 2012

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Reblogged from DEPRESSION: my muse:

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this may help with your reading pleasure:

I have exhausted my store of happiness?

It seems my joy has come and gone, I am a person out of time, born to late.

I reach out to take hands that are already full, hearts at capacity, she is spoken for and taken.

I fallen out of synchronicity with desires and needs, I no longer have the ability to distinguish a tree from the forest.

Read more… 202 more words

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us

Reblogged from replace white supremacy with justice:

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Black male awarded $25 million for workplace racial harassment

A US jury has awarded $25 million in damages to an employee of a Luxembourg-based steel company who for years endured racial harassment at his workplace, his lawyer said.

Elijah Turley, an African-American, had testified in a three-week trial that racial slurs and other incidents from 2005 to 2008 at a Lackawanna, New York steel plant, left him a broken man.

“It’s absolutely shocking that a case like this is in court in 2012,” his lawyer Ryan Mills said in his closing argument. “It should be viewed as atrocious and intolerable in a civilized society.”

An eight-member jury unanimously found ArcelorMittal and some of its executives responsible on Tuesday. Most of the damages were punitive.

The steel giant, which had argued in court that it had taken reasonable steps to stop the incidents, was found liable for allowing a “hostile work environment” and “intentional infliction of emotional distress,” The Buffalo News reported.

It said that “KKK” and “King Kong” graffiti were written on the walls of the plant where he worked for 14 years and that a stuffed monkey with a noose around its neck was found hanging from Turley’s driver’s side mirror.

“Mister Elijah Turley and his family are very pleased that justice was achieved,” Mills told AFP.

But ArcelorMittal said the damages awarded to Turley “far exceed what is normally allowed under federal or New York state law,” noting that it had not ruled out launching an appeal.

The company repeated claims it made during the trial that it had taken measures to prevent such incidents and respond to them, including hiring a third-party investigator, installing security cameras and shutting down the operating line where Turley worked to question employees.

“However, the company was unable to determine who was involved in the unacceptable behavior,” it added in a statement.

“Management’s efforts were met with a ‘code of silence,’ meaning employees, including the plaintiff, did not provide information that would have allowed the company to pursue necessary action against those engaged in the inappropriate behavior.”

http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/world/298008/us-man-awarded-25-mn-for-workplace-racial-harassment

Categories: racism, racism is white supremacy is racism, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

us

Categories: replace white supremacy with justice (rwswj) | 1 Comment

white male earns jail term for despicable racial attacks

David Alan Dooley

David Alan Dooley

A man found guilty by a jury of what the judge called “despicable” racial attacks on Asian people has been jailed for three years and six months.

    David Alan Dooley, 26, was upset when the jury returned its verdicts at the end of his Christchurch District Court trial and still does not accept the outcome. He is seen as a high risk of reoffending.

    Dooley was sentenced yesterday on two charges of assault with intent to injure, injuring with intent to injure and burglary.

    Defence counsel Allister Davis said Dooley was reluctant to accept the verdicts of the jury, so showed no remorse. He accepted that Dooley was on release conditions from prison when the offending happened.

    Judge Alistair Garland said that on September 24, 2010, Dooley was walking along Riccarton Rd when he yelled at three teenage Asian males and ran across the road to them.

    He used his left arm to push one to the ground, and a co-offender punched him. They then punched a second man to the ground and kicked him in the head and body.

    The group continued along Riccarton Rd and yelled at an Asian man riding his bicycle. Two of the group chased him and kicked him in the head and upper body.

    Further along the road they followed a couple on to their property while shouting racial abuse. They cornered the man and banged his head against the door.

    At earlier court sessions, a 17-year-old co-offender received a sentence of six months’ home detention and 120 hours’ community work, and a 19-year-old co-offender was sentenced to two years and four months in prison.

    The judge said the offending was racially motivated.

    As he left the court, Dooley gave the judge the thumbs-up and said: “Cheers, boss.”

http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/news/7099058/Despicable-racial-attacks-earn-jail-term

Categories: racism, racism is white supremacy is racism, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

NC downgrades Racial Justice Act, ignores the role racial bias has had in prosecuting capital cases

The North Carolina House gave its initial OK on Tuesday to scaling back a 2009 law that sought to check racial bias involved in the death penalty — a move that appears to have enough support to override any veto by Gov. Beverly Perdue.

The House gave tentative approval to changes that limit how statistics in capital cases can be used in trying to prove discrimination in sentencing. The 2009 Racial Justice Act directed judges to reduce death sentences to life in prison without parole when they determine race was a significant factor in the sentence or in jury selection.

GOP lawmakers and most district attorneys opposed the law they said has delayed the carrying out of capital punishment in North Carolina. Nearly all the 150-plus inmates on North Carolina’s death row filed for reviews under the law.

A judge has ruled in one case — ordering a death-row prisoner in April to receive a life sentence after ruling the case was so tainted by racially influenced decisions by prosecutors.

Republicans passed a bill last year that essentially voided the law, but Perdue vetoed it in December and GOP lawmakers couldn’t get enough Democrats to join in the override. On Tuesday, five Democrats joined all Republicans present in approving the bill 72-47. Seventy-two votes are needed in the full House to cancel a veto.

A final House vote is likely Wednesday, after which the bill will go to the Senate, where GOP lawmakers already have a veto-proof majority.

The proposal caps the time range in which statistics can be used to effectively 12 years around the murder case and limits the scope of those statistics to the county and prosecutorial district where the homicide occurred. There is currently no cap on the time, and statistics covering the entire state can be used. The bill makes clear that statistics alone cannot prove race was a significant factor.

The bill helps “do what justice is supposed to do, which is to focus on the defendant and the crime instead of society in general,” said Rep. Paul Stam, R-Wake, the House’s chief supporter of the Racial Justice Act changes. “It gets to the focus on where it does belong — on the person who is alleged to be a first-degree murderer.”

Several House Democrats said the measure would move the state one step back with racial progress by ignoring the clear role racial bias has had in prosecuting capital cases.

A study by two Michigan State University law professors on North Carolina death penalty cases over 20 years found prosecutors eliminated black jurors more than twice as often as white jurors. The study also found a defendant is nearly three times more likely to be sentenced to death if at least one of the victims is white.

Bill supporters “want to ignore the facts,” said Rep. Larry Hall, D-Durham, who voted against the changes. “Don’t turn away the mirrors that show the errors of our past.”

Rep. Bill Owens, D-Pasquotank, one of the five Democrats who voted for the bill Tuesday, said he supports capital punishment. He said after the vote he and other Democrats didn’t realize agreeing to the 2009 law would essentially halt carrying out the death penalty.

Tuesday’s bill was a reasonable compromise, according to Owens: “In a death penalty case, you need to consider all the factors.”

Kentucky is the only state with a similar law as the Racial Justice Act.

Rep. Nelson Dollar, R-Wake, described the details of a Forsyth County murder and read the names of the murder victims of Henry Louis Wallace, who was convicted of raping and killing nine black Charlotte women in the early 1990s. Wallace and the death-row prisoner convicted in Forsyth County are both seeking relief under the Racial Justice Act.

However well-intended the Racial Justice Act was, Dollar told colleagues, the law’s “effect has been obscene. The victims cry out, ‘change this injustice.’”

Rep. Larry Womble, D-Forsyth, a key supporter of the 2009 law, is still recovering from a December car accident. He came to the House floor Tuesday and pleaded with fellow lawmakers at the close of nearly two hours of debate not to vote for the bill. Womble said he was appalled by the crimes that Dollar spoke about, but said lawmakers need to do the right thing.

“We must set an example not to sink to the same level of some of these people who seek revenge based upon color alone,” Womble said. The Racial Justice Act, he said, shows that “in north Carolina you can get a fair deal.”

http://www.reflector.com/ap/staten/nc-racial-justice-act-changes-get-initial-house-ok-1101511

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e-mails show regent’s conflict in Iowa State University’s Africa land grab deal

Bruce Rastetter, a Hubbard resident and CEO of Hawkeye Energy Holdings, has been a significant donor to IowaÕs universities. Contributions include a $1.75 million commitment in 2007 to the entrepreneurship program in Iowa State UniversityÕs College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and a $5 million pledge in 2008 to theÊUniversity of Iowa Foundation to support the renovation of administrative space and training facilities of the University of Iowa football program.(Arturo Fernandez/The Register)

Bruce Rastetter, a Hubbard resident and CEO of Hawkeye Energy Holdings, has been a significant donor to Iowa’s universities. Contributions include a $1.75 million commitment in 2007 to the entrepreneurship program in Iowa State University’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and a $5 million pledge in 2008 to the University of Iowa Foundation to support the renovation of administrative space and training facilities of the University of Iowa football program

Regent Bruce Rastetter participated in discussions with Iowa State University about its partnership with a company he founded that is developing a huge commercial farming operation in Tanzania, a project critics call a land grab, records show.

Rastetter blurred the line between his role as investor in AgriSol Energy, which was working with ISU on the land deal, and his position on the Board of Regents, which governs the university, according to emails released to The Associated Press. Rastetter later recused himself and Iowa State pulled out of the deal, but only after both received criticism.

While the project already has been scrutinized, the records provide details about how Rastetter’s dual roles complicated matters for ISU and emboldened critics who say he tried to use the university’s expertise for a profit motive. Citing the emails, one liberal group called for his resignation Wednesday.

Gov. Terry Branstad appointed Rastetter, an agribusiness executive who donated $160,000 to the governor’s 2010 campaign, to the board in February 2011. Rastetter had been working on behalf of AgriSol with ISU since 2009 on a plan to develop 800,000 acres of Tanzanian farmland for crop production.

Investors stood to earn millions if the project was successful. But critics opposed the plan because the land had for decades housed 160,000 refugees from Burundi who were being relocated by the Tanzanian government. Investors said the plan would help residents by improving food production and farming techniques, adding they had no role in the relocation.

Officials with ISU’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences — which had received a $1.75 million gift from Rastetter in 2007 — traveled to Tanzania and hosted the country’s prime minister. Their role would be to implement an AgriSol-funded program to provide a range of services and training to help farmers living near the development.

Board policy says regents must act in the interest of the board, not their own, and be free of any appearance of conflict. The policy says conflicts include a personal business that partners with a university, and should be disclosed and managed appropriately.

Rastetter waited until June 17, 2011 — six weeks after his term started and four months after his appointment — to disclose the conflict, doing so after the project received publicity. He waited until Sept. 13 before recusing himself from discussions related to ISU’s involvement, which happened the same day the university dropped plans to seek a multimillion-dollar federal grant with AgriSol.

Rastetter’s dual roles could “create confusion about which entity Mr. Rastetter is representing,” a business partner wrote in announcing the recusal.

Rastetter spokesman Joe Murphy said Rastetter promptly disclosed the conflict after becoming a regent. He said he continued to discuss the project with ISU before his recusal because he wanted to make sure “it would be operating on a successful basis.”

“This is about lifting people out of the poverty cycle in a country that needs help,” he said.

The Iowa Ethics and Campaign Disclosure Board hasn’t received complaints about Rastetter, but will review emails obtained by the AP, said executive director Megan Tooker. She is also looking into why Rastetter’s financial disclosure form filed with the board does not list AgriSol.

Rastetter participated in discussions with ISU last summer after the nonprofit Oakland Institute slammed the project as a land grab, emails show. Rastetter asked David Acker, an assistant dean, on July 20 for a “write up on the division of responsibilities between the university and our commercial side.”

“I appreciate the discussion last week and our relationship and look forward to making a difference together,” wrote Rastetter, who had just become the board’s No. 2 official.

Acker proposed AgriSol guarantee ISU a five-year financial commitment for nonprofit work in Tanzania, which would be limited to lands where refugees weren’t present. He said the school couldn’t be associated with the for-profit business, but employees and students could work as AgriSol consultants and interns.

“We can’t risk raising expectations and then abandon the project abruptly,” Acker wrote. “We will be working with people who have very little means living on a razor-thin line between survival and true misery.”

The same day, an AgriSol official proposed ISU seek an international food assistance grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to support the project. ISU Vice President Warren Madden warned that Rastetter’s conflict “should be addressed in the early stages” while the proposal was developed.

“Is it even possible to have AgriSol as a formal partner on the USDA grant given that it would be viewed as a conflict of interest (ISU helping to get government monies that will help an enterprise partially owned by a Regent?)” Acker asked on Aug. 18.

A purchasing official warned that any subcontract for AgriSol would have to be a competitive bid because of Rastetter’s conflict. ISU then proposed AgriSol take the lead on the grant with the university acting as subcontractor, an idea abandoned when Rastetter announced his recusal.

ISU official Mark Westgate said the school would only serve as an advisor to avoid “any misperceptions or confusion that could arise because of Mr. Rastetter’s status as a regent.”

But criticism continued, and ISU ended its involvement in February. Critics signed a petition demanding Branstad censure Rastetter for the conflict, but Branstad spokesman Tim Albrecht said the governor was confident in Rastetter’s judgment.

Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement called for Rastetter to resign from the board Wednesday, warning it would consider filing a formal ethics complaint.

“Iowans shouldn’t have to wonder about who he was representing during these discussions — the Board of Regents or AgriSol,” CCI member Ross Grooters said. “This looks pretty bad.”

http://siouxcityjournal.com/news/state-and-regional/iowa/emails-show-iowa-regent-s-conflict-in-africa-land-deal/article_15d8a838-b5c0-11e1-b930-0019bb2963f4.html

Categories: racism, racism is white supremacy is racism, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

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