Posts Tagged With: New York Times

White Male Terrorist Violence, White Supremacy and The Media | Gradient Lair

In regards to Sandy Hook and all of the other recent White male terrorist-lead mass murders, many of the conversations among people of colour have been about the media narratives used to reinforce White supremacy when White men commit terrorist acts. I’ve seen memes that compare how overly kind and respectful the media has been towards Adam Lanza’s memory and he was a White male terrorist, versus Trayvon Martin, a Black male victim. There’s no need to compare how White male criminals’ media narratives are shaped versus Black male criminals. That’s beyond obvious. Black men, innocent or guilty, honest citizen or criminal have been demonized for centuries (and the dehumanization adapted as the technology did. Think Birth of a Nation. Now think of 24-hour news, print media, social media, local news, government policy etc.) No need to travel down that obvious road.

Sign for "colored" waiting room at a...

Seeing the visual memes that compare Lanza’s media versus Martin’s are traumatic for me. I understand the point that some people of colour are trying to make; I just…can’t even view them for too long. Hurts bad. The level of utter disregard and disdain for Black life in America is reinforced by both the government, the right arm of oppression and the media/Hollywood, the left arm of oppression. Citizens stand in the middle with surveys revealing how more than half of Whites have negative opinions of Black people, how Whites were angry over any Trayvon coverage, not nuanced views of that coverage—that it was primarily negative and bigoted, what many Black people were angry about, and their one-by-one attacks on Black people by hyper-vigilant White males and the police. Black people suffering with poverty and internalized White supremacy become our own executioners as well.

Because of the disgustingly bigoted history and present in this country, I expect the massive discrepancy in media coverage and what motivates legislative talk, when it comes to race. Black/other people of colour (and even some White people) who know nothing about critical race theory, don’t critique media, don’t pay any attention to any of this can SEE this now. This is how obvious White supremacy has become. No critical analysis needed. (This is good, in context. Conversations must go beyond the academic world.) It is so BLATANT and obvious that random joes on the streets…literally…start conversations with me about White supremacy and media, even if they don’t use the “academic” terms (which are not needed anyway. Academia is not needed to validate their truthful observations and how it impacts their lives.) It’s sickeningly obvious. This country is ILL. (The first time I noticed random people discussing media bigotry was the Olympics. It was so blatant that even those who either aren’t aware or pretend racism/sexism doesn’t exist could pretend no longer.)

However, what has become (disgustingly) fascinating is the media framing of Lanza and these White victims. Again, I’m fully aware of the hatred and disdain for Black life and existence in America. However, I did not expect to see Lanza held at the esteem level of the White victims. The White victims. I noticed this with Aurora as well. And the Penn State abuse case till the very end. And previous shootings. (Other than the “othering” done to these men via mental illness labeling, barely a harsh word is uttered about them.) And then, I re-realized something important. White supremacy itself is more important than any individual life, even a White one. (i.e. individual White soldiers die to uphold American imperialism, white supremacy and xenophobia.) To truly critique Lanza for what he did and the CONNECTION to White supremacy and patriarchy is to literally shoot darts into the theory of White supremacy. Protecting this is more important than even 20 innocent young White lives gone. This is the sickness of White supremacy. In its hierarchical nature, sure, individual White lives matter more than individual Black ones. Black mothers sadly know this oh too well. They’ve buried too many children. But White supremacy itself must be protected above individual White lives? This is what both the government and the media no longer covertly insinuates but actively proselytizes now…through euphemisms (as George Carlin reminded us all), slick media framing and more. I…think some Whites realize this now more than ever. Some join in step with the government and media and quickly try to silence any political conversations by promoting the logical fallacy that critically thinking about race, racism and violence is equal to not caring about the victims of violence. White privilege and semantic warfare are partners in this illogical stance. But…other Whites know better. They know the truth. The problem is, again, many people, White and people of colour (with internalized White supremacist ideals), are avidly invested in protecting White supremacy, so even Whites who are now rejecting this all and whose views match other people or colour (who see or have always seen the truth) are in for a helluva fight. You think fighting the gun lobby is hard? Try dismantling the ideology behind their nonsensical need for gun violence to reinforce White masculinity or altering the two arms of oppression, the government and the media.

Taken and donated by Guinnog.

Taken and donated by Guinnog. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

(Oh…and have you seen the filthy apologist, White supremacist post in the Opinion section of The New York Times? It’s reprehensible. I loved what some writers on Tumblr had to say about it.)

Interesting reads by other writers, related to this topic:

Nice White Boys Next Door – Sikvu Hutchinson

It Will Never Be The White Man’s Fault - queervomit

The Racism of Quaintness - girlebony

Time To Profile White Men? – David Sirota, Salon

America Breeds Terrorists. And They Are White Not BrownCrunk Feminist Collective

Ten Differences Between White Terrorists And Others – veryethnic

Related Posts: response To Edward Park’s quote on race/terrorism, response to President Obama’s statement after the Newtown terrorism, The High Cost Of Protecting Institutions and Ideologies Over Individuals, a tweet on terrorism, Aurora Theater Shooting = Terrorism, White Privilege and Criminal Justice

http://www.gradientlair.com/post/38256373744/white-male-terrorist-violence-white-supremacy-media

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New York Police Department workers punished for racist web posts on West Indian parade

Nearly 20 employees of the New York Police Department have faced discipline in connection with the posting of racist or derogatory comments on a Facebook page about revelers at the 2011 West Indian American Day Parade, a heavily policed annual celebration in Brooklyn on Labor Day weekend, a spokesman for the department said Wednesday.

The comments referred to “savages” and “animals,” and one poster wrote, “Let them kill each other.” The Facebook page, titled “No More West Indian Day Detail,” elicited comments from more than 150 people, many of whose names matched those of police officers.

After an article appeared in December in The New York Times about the online remarks, the police commissioner, Raymond W. Kelly, vowed to conduct an internal affairs investigation, saying that 20 offensive comments “were associated with names that match those of police officers.”

On Wednesday, the department’s chief spokesman, Paul J. Browne, said 17 people had since been disciplined; four of those are officers facing pending departmental trials on charges of “conduct prejudicial to the good order of the Police Department,” he said.

Mr. Browne said that seven had received the department’s lowest level of punishment, the equivalent of a reprimand. Six others received what is known as a command discipline — a punishment that sometimes entails a loss of up to 10 vacation days, although Mr. Browne said he was unaware what penalties were issued in these particular cases.

Mr. Browne said he did not know which Facebook comments in particular corresponded to each punishment.

The parade has been marred by violence. In 2011, the police tied three shootings to the parade, and seized 14 guns during the celebration the night before the parade, which is known as J’Ouvert.

Some of the comments on the Facebook page suggested that some police officers felt the event had turned too dangerous.

“Why is everyone calling this a parade,” one wrote. “It’s a scheduled riot.”

A Brooklyn city councilman, Jumaane D. Williams, who is of West Indian descent, said the punishments indicated that the Police Department had taken the comments seriously. But Mr. Williams, who was himself handcuffed during the parade last year as he walked in an area that the police had closed to the public, said he was concerned that the racist comments reflected the attitudes of a department that he said used discriminatory policing practices.

The associate legal director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, Christopher Dunn, said it was difficult to evaluate the punishments without knowing which Facebook comments in particular had prompted them.

“Like all public employees, police officers have a First Amendment right to speak freely in their personal lives, even if that speech is offensive,” Mr. Dunn said. “What they do not get to do is be racists in their work lives, and the Police Department can and should discipline officers who are guilty of that.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/23/nyregion/racist-posts-tied-to-west-indian-parade-bring-police-dept-discipline.html

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

Wells Fargo Gets Away with $175 Million Penalty for Racist Lending Practices

John Stumpf, president of Wells Fargo since 2005

Wells Fargo, the nation’s largest mortgage lender, cheated at least 34,000 minority homeowners during the 2004-2008 housing boom, either charging them more for their mortgages or steering them into risky loans. For these acts of discrimination the bank has agreed to pay a penalty of $175 million, while not admitting any wrongdoing.
Out of the $175 million settlement, the bank will pay $125 million to the black and Hispanic individuals who were victimized by Wells Fargo’s racist lending practices. The other $50 million will go towards direct down payment assistance to borrowers in communities that were hit hard by the housing crisis and disproportionately impacted by the bank’s discriminatory loans.
The U.S. Department of Justice said it went after Wells Fargo after finding it had conned black and Hispanic borrowers into paying more than white homeowners—“not based on borrower risk, but because of their race or national origin.”
Using a practice known as “steering,” Wells Fargo gave 4,000 African-Americans and Hispanics subprime mortgages even when they qualified for prime loans.
Mike Heid, president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, told The New York Times that the bank agreed to settle the case “because we believe it is in the best interest of our team members, customers, communities and investors to avoid a long and costly legal fight, and to instead devote our resources to continuing to contribute to the country’s housing recovery.”
The settlement awaits final approval by a federal judge.
The Wells Fargo case follows another involving Bank of America, which agreed late last year to pay $335 million to resolve similar charges against Countrywide, which it acquired in 2008.
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Cannibalism, ‘mommy porn’ and sexting, oh my!

50ShadesofGrey.jpg

This combo made of book cover images provided by Vintage Books shows the  ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’; trilogy by best-selling author E L James.  (AP/Vintage Books)

Forget the stagnant American economy, our severe debt crisis and the rapidly  mounting financial troubles in Greece and Spain, at least for a moment. Consider  what’s driving American headlines these days”

Pornography – The #1, #2 and #3 books on the New York Times fiction  best-seller list, and on the USA Today best-seller list, and on Amazon for the  last few weeks have been the “Fifty Shades of Grey,” erotic novels by E.L. James  that are being widely described as “Mommy Porn.” The sexually explicit trilogy  has become an overnight, viral phenomenon among American girls in their young  teens all the way up through grandmothers in their seventies and eighties and is  making headlines across the nation.

Cannibalism — Have stories about human beings eating other human  beings ever been a major story in the United States, much less a series of  headlines that lasted day after day? The Drudge Report and media outlets across  the U.S. have been dominated in recent weeks by stories of six different  instances of cannibalistic acts, some here in America and some around the world.  Such stories are almost too horrifying to read, yet where is the outrage? People  are almost treating these stories as bizarre but even a bit humorous, it as if  it were no big deal, just another news story.

Sexting” – A teacher in Texas was arrested for “sexting” with a  student only days after he was named Teacher of the Year. “Sexting,” sending  nude photos or videos of oneself via cell phone, is on the rise in high schools  across the country as students seek approval in the wrong places from their  classmates and teachers. A recent survey shows that even among adults the  practice is on the rise, with 1 out of 5 smartphone users admitting to “sexting.”

What in the world is going on? With a stagnant U.S. economy, more than $15  trillion in national debt, and some $65 trillion in unfunded federal liabilities  fast coming due, America faces the very real possibility of an economic collapse  in the not-too-distant future. But is it possible we’re already imploding  culturally? Is there any hope of turning this around?

These are not normal times. Americans have been gripped by a widespread and  deeply rooted pessimism in recent years. They are openly asking whether our  nation can survive. A growing number of Americans fear that this period of our  history is different and the crises we face today – and those coming up over the  horizon – may be far worse than anything we have experienced in the past. Many  Americans genuinely fear that God is preparing to remove his hand of protection  and blessing from our country, or perhaps already has.

We must not kid ourselves. The evidence suggests we may very well be aboard  the Titanic, heading for icebergs and inexplicably increasing our speed toward  disaster. So many on board are unaware of the dangers fast approaching and not  concerned in the slightest. We haven’t hit the icebergs yet, but if we don’t  make a sharp turn fast, we soon will, and we will sink. Who will serve as our  captain and crew going forward? Will they understand the gravity of the threat  and have the wisdom, courage and speed to take appropriate action before it is  too late? What is our role as passengers? Are we to succumb to decadence,  indulging ourselves in amusements and entertainment and alcohol with no regard  for our own safety or the safety of others aboard? Or will we rise up, sound the  alarm, and take action while we can?

The good news is that God has shown mercy to our country in the past. In the  early 1700s we experience what became known as the first Great Awakening. In the  early 1800s, we experienced the Second Great Awakening. These were massive,  widespread, game-changing eras of spiritual revival. In 1770, for example, there  were fewer than two dozen Methodist churches in America. By 1860, there were  nearly 20,000. In roughly the same time frame, the number of Baptists went from  under 200,000 to more than one million.

These revivals were not a panacea. They did not save every soul or solve  every social ill. No revival ever has or will. But the good news is this: the  historical evidence is clear and compelling that many Americans found salvation  during these periods, and American society as a whole was dramatically impacted  and improved by both of these revivals.

One piece of observable evidence in this regard is the explosive growth in  the number of church congregations that were established in the wake of both  Great Awakenings. At the same time, Christians during this period sought to put  their faith into action to improve their neighborhoods and communities and the  nation as a whole. They persuaded millions of children to enroll in Sunday  school programs to learn about the Bible and pray for their nation. They opened  orphanages and soup kitchens to care for the poor and needy. They started  clinics and hospitals to care for the sick, elderly and infirm. They founded  elementary and secondary schools for girls as well as boys. They established  colleges and universities dedicated to teaching both the Scriptures and the  sciences. They led social campaigns to persuade Americans to stop drinking so  much alcohol and to abolish the evil of slavery. These Christians didn’t expect  the government to take care of them. They believed it was the Church’s job to  show the love of Christ to their neighbors in real and practical ways. They were  right, and they made America a better place as a result – not perfect, but  better.

Today, the central question of our time for Americans is this: Will the  American people experience a Third Great Awakening? The Tea Party movement and  to some extent the Occupy Wall Street Movement have launched a constitutional  revival, returning to the principles of 200 years ago.

Maybe it’s time to go back 2,000 years for a spiritual renaissance. If not,  our days may be numbered and a terrible implosion is coming. There is no more  middle ground. It is one or the other.

http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/06/22/cannibalism-mommy-porn-and-sexting-oh-my/print#ixzz1zY1458kI

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Stormfront White Supremacists Planning ‘Practical Politics Seminar’

The white supremacist website Stormfront is getting set to host their second annual Stormfront Practical Politics Seminar in September. According to a posting on the site by Stormfront founder Don Black, the seminar will take place in “the all-White east Tennessee Smoky Mountains” and will include discussions of political strategy and a “an informal nature walk through the Smokies” led by former KKK Grand Wizard and member of the Louisiana Legislature David Duke.

“Like last year, this isn’t a hand-wringing meet-and-retreat, but a practical politics seminar on winning,” Mr. Black said.

Speakers include Mr. Black, former  KKK lawyer Sam Dickson, a white supremacist radio host who goes by “Horus the Avenger” and Mr. Black’s son, Derek.

Stormfront and its users have flirted with mainstream political involvement far more than other white supremacist groups. In 2010, Derek Black mounted a high profile, ultimately unsuccessful campaign to be seated on the Republican Party Executive Committee in his home of Palm Beach County, Florida. Mr. Black has donated to Ron Paul and both he and his son were photographed with the Republican Republican candidate at a presidential debate held in Florida in 2007. Late last year, Mr. Black gave an interview to The New York Times in which he said “several dozen of his members were volunteering for Mr. Paul’s presidential campaign.”

http://politicker.com/2012/05/10/stormfront-supremacists-planning-practical-politics-seminar/

Categories: racism, religion, the religion of white supremacy, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Black unemployment: African-Americans disproportionately affected by decline in government jobs

Black unemployment: decline in government jobs hurts African-Americans

The continuing high rate of black unemployment is, in part, the result of a sizable and continuing drop in the number of African-Americans employed by state and local governments.

Over the last two years, the economic recovery, while sluggish, has caused a sustained increase in private sector jobs. But, because most states have laws that prevent them from accumulating huge deficits, unlike the federal government, local and state governments have severely pared back their employees as they continue to have funding shortfalls.

Data released Friday showed that while nearly every other sector showed job growth, 15,000 more government jobs were lost.

And blacks have been disproportionately affected; about 20 percent of black workers are in government jobs the federal, state or local level.

In a report this week, the Economic Policy Institute, a Washington think tank, estimated about 177,000 blacks have lost jobs in the public sector over the last five years. (Nearly sixteen million African-Americans are working in the U.S., while more than two million are looking for jobs) Across all races and ethnic groups, more than 450,000 public sector jobs have been lost in just the past two years.

African-Americans have not only lost a major source of work, but a lucrative one. Black Americans earn an average of 12.9 percent less than white workers in the private sector, but “the wage disparity between African Americans and whites is only 2.2 percent” in government jobs,” according to EPI.

In fact, for black public sector workers with a bachelor’s degree or an advanced degree, there is no racial pay gap, according to EPI. The EPI authors argue this pay equity is the result of stronger anti-discrimination protections in the public sector.

But these jobs now aren’t available for many black workers. And the layoffs are continuing, as many states around the country are still struggling to pay their bills.

Little help is likely to come from Washington. The 2009 stimulus bill President Obama championed included billions in aid to states to prevent the layoffs of teachers, police officers and other public service workers, thousands of whom are black.

But that provision has become the centerpiece of the Republicans’ case against President Obama as a champion of big government. Obama was able to get a much smaller stimulus-style bill through Congress in 2010, but a larger job creation bill that has been pushed for the last several months is barely being considered by congressional Republicans.

The 13 percent jobless rate for blacks in April, while a dip from March, virtually guarantees the first black president will stand for reelection while at least one of every 10 eligible, working-age African-Americans is jobless. And the lack of government jobs and work overall is not the only major economic challenge for African-Americans.

“Forget the smiling faces on television citing the latest hopeful economic statistics. Forget the assurances of self-styled black intellectuals that we are in some sort of marvelous post-racial era in which anybody can realize his or her dreams,” wrote former New York Times op-ed columnist Bob Herbert in a recent piece in the American Prospect.

“The black community is shouldering its way through an economic calamity. More than a quarter of all black Americans are poor, as are more than a third of all black children. Doors of economic opportunity–in the workforce, in access to higher education, and elsewhere — are slamming shut at a breathtaking rate.”

http://www.thegrio.com/specials/perry-on-politics/black-unemployment-decline-in-government-jobs-hurts-african-americans.php

Categories: c.o.w.s., economics, education, labor, politics, politics, racism, religion, the religion of white supremacy, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

new video of NYPD officers brutally beating black teen; backs his claim that he had no drugs and threw no punches to precipitate arrest

New surveillance video of Bronx teenager Jateik Reed, 19, who was brutally beaten by police officers earlier this year, calls into question officers’ allegations that the teen was carrying drugs.

In what his attorney calls a stop-and-frisk gone terribly wrong, the new footage shows Mr Reed moments before his encounter with police officers, walking down the street with his hands out by his sides – and NOT holding plastic bags of drugs as officers have claimed.

Mr Reed was stopped on January 26 by officers and was thrown to the ground, handcuffed and taken away by officers and charged with a variety of crimes – all of which have been dropped by the Bronx district attorney, Robert T. Johnson.

Evidence? New video surveillance Jateik Reed, right, shows him walking down the street with his friends and without holding any drugs in his hands moments before his brutal arrest in January

New video surveillance Jateik Reed, right, shows him walking down the street with his friends and without holding any drugs in his hands moments before his brutal arrest in January

Arrested: Mr Reed, right, was stopped by police because they claimed he had drugs in his hands

Arrested: Mr Reed, right, was stopped by police because they claimed he had drugs in his hands

Struggle: During his arrest, a video shows officers throwing Mr Reed to the ground

Struggle: During his arrest, a video shows officers throwing Mr Reed to the ground

‘Even if you don’t have 20/20 vision. Even if you have some substantial clarity, you can see quite clear there was nothing, there were no bags in Jateik Reed’s hands,’ said Mr Reed’s attorney, Michael Warren, to NY1.

In the criminal complaint against Mr Reed, officers claimed that the teen was carrying bags of marijuana and crack-cocaine-like substances, which caused them to arrest him.

A police officer attested that ‘He observed the defendant to have on his person, in his hand, one (1) clear plastic bag containing a white, rock-like substance, which he threw to the ground. In his hand, two (2) clear plastic bags, each containing a dried green leafy substance with a distinctive odor, in public view.’

But a new video, obtained by NY1, disproves those officers allegations.

Mr Reed is walking with his two friends with his hands in view and without any evidence of plastic bags or drugs.

John Eterno, a retired New York City Police Department captain, said that Mr Reed should never have been stopped in the first place.

 Assault? They beat him with batons, claiming he punched one of the officers, but the video does not show him as the aggressor

Assault? They beat him with batons, claiming he punched one of the officers, but the video does not show him as the aggressor

 Kicked: At one point, a female police offer walks over to Mr Reed and kicks him - while he was already on the ground

Kicked: At one point, a female police offer walks over to Mr Reed and kicks him – while he was already on the ground

‘The officers would have to only go in their pockets if they had reasonable suspicion, if there was a weapon in there,’ Mr Eterno said.

‘And given what I’ve seen on the film I’m not sure they had that reasonable suspicion.’

Following the beating, Mr Reed needed staples to close a wound in his head and and had stitches in his left elbow.

He also faced seven charges, including assault, drug possession and harassment, but all the charges were dropped in March.

 Cleared: All of the charges brought against Mr Reed, pictured, following his arrest were dropped, but his attorney says the officers should be charged with assault and falsifying a report

Cleared: All of the charges brought against Mr Reed, pictured, following his arrest were dropped, but his attorney says the officers should be charged with assault and falsifying a report

Police commissioner Ray Kelly launched a full investigation into the incident and the four officers in the video were stripped of their guns and badges and placed on modified duty, according to the New York Times.

Even more disturbing, however, the new video shows that Mr Reed did not punch an officer, as was alleged, but shows a female officer kicking Mr Reed while he’s on the ground.

 Trial: Experts believe the new video of the arrest back Mr Reed's version of the story and that the officers were in the wrong Trial: Experts believe the new video of the arrest back Mr Reed's version of the story and that the officers were in the wrong

Mr Reed’s attorney, Michael Warren, right, and John Eterno, a retired New York City Police Department captain, left, believe the new video of the arrest proves that the officers were in the wrong

‘They were looking to protect themselves for assaulting this young man, appearing to brutalize him. And so there was an effort to me to cover up what happened,’ Coleen Meenan, a former NYPD sergeant said.

DA Johnson said he would charge the officers with use of excessive force, but that Mr Reed refused to speak with him.

Mr Reed’s attorney, Mr Warren, said the video speaks for itself – and that the officers should be charged with assault and filing a false report.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2139961/New-video-NYPD-officers-BEATING-Bronx-teen-backs-19-year-olds-claim-drugs-threw-punches-precipitate-arrest.html#ixzz1u4DYp400

Categories: c.o.w.s., crime, law, physical assault, police brutality, racism, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Black Man’s Killing in Georgia Eludes Spotlight

Sha’von Patterson holds a picture of himself with his brother Justin.

Norman Neesmith was sleeping in his home on a rural farm road here in onion country when a noise woke him up.

He grabbed the .22-caliber pistol he kept next to his bed and went to investigate. He found two young brothers who had been secretly invited to party with an 18-year-old relative he had raised like a daughter and her younger friend. The young people were paired up in separate bedrooms. There was marijuana and sex.

Over the course of the next confusing minutes on a January morning in 2011, there would be a struggle. The young men would make a terrified run for the door. Mr. Neesmith, who is 62 and white, fired four shots. One of them hit Justin Patterson, who was 22 and black.

The bullet pierced his side, and he died in Mr. Neesmith’s yard. His younger brother, Sha’von, then 18, ran through the onion fields in the dark, frantically trying to call his mother.

On that day, Jan. 29, 2011, Mr. Neesmith was arrested. The district attorney brought seven charges against him, among them murder, false imprisonment and aggravated assault. On Thursday, Mr. Neesmith is expected to plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter and reckless conduct, which might bring a year in a special detention program that requires no time behind bars.

Over the past several weeks, the men’s parents, Deede and Julius Patterson, watched news of Trayvon Martin’s death in Florida and focused on the similarities. In both cases, an unarmed young black man died at the hands of someone of a different race.

And they began to wonder why no one was marching for their son, why people like the Rev. Al Sharpton had not booked a ticket to Toombs County. The local chapter of the N.A.A.C.P. has not even gotten involved, although Mr. Patterson’s father approached them.

“We are looking into the case,” said Michael Dennard, the president of the chapter, after a reporter called more than a year after the crime. He would not say more.

Why some cases with perceived racial implications catch the national consciousness and others do not is as much about the combined power of social and traditional media as it is about happenstance, said Ta-Nehisi Coates, a senior editor at The Atlantic who writes about racial issues.

Several events coalesced to push the Martin case forward: an apparently incomplete police investigation, no immediate arrest and Florida’s expansive self-defense law.

“These stories happen all the time,” Mr. Coates said. “It’s heartbreaking and tragic, but there’s not much news coverage unless the circumstances are truly, truly unusual.”

“Stories like the south Georgia killing don’t have the same particulars,” he said. “One of the great tragedies is that people get shot under questionable circumstances in this country all the time.”

Although the facts surrounding the case in Florida and the case in Georgia are quite different, both involve a claim of legally sanctioned self-defense, a dead young black man and, for the Pattersons and the Martins, deep concern that race played a role in the deaths of their sons.

“I definitely believe racism is why he was shot,” said Mrs. Patterson, who recently left her job as director of operations at a uniform company and moved to another small Georgia town. “And for him to get nothing but a slap on the wrist? There is something wrong here.”

Deede Patterson, the young men’s mother, with Justin’s daughter. The Pattersons are helping to raise their granddaughter.

That race played a significant part is not hard to imagine here in a county that was named after Robert Toombs, a general and one of the organizers of the Confederate government. A black woman has never been named Miss Vidalia Onion in the annual festival that begins Thursday. And until last year in neighboring Montgomery County, there were two proms — one for whites and one for blacks.

Still, like so many other crimes where race might be a factor, this one is not so clear-cut. Mr. Neesmith says he felt threatened. He says he aches for the parents but believes none of this would have happened if the young men had not been in his house when they should not have been.

“I think about it every day. It’s the worst thing I’ve ever been through,” Mr. Neesmith said as he stood in the doorway of his home. “In two minutes it just went bad. If you ain’t never shot nobody, you don’t want to do it, I’m telling you.”

In the backyard, a pool was ready for neighborhood kids — both black and white — who he said loved to come over after school for a swim. Mr. Neesmith, a former school bus driver, and his late wife had been foster parents to dozens of children.

They took in a great-niece, who has a black parent, when she was a baby. She is now 19 and admitted to investigators that she invited Justin Patterson to their trailer home that night, timing it so Mr. Neesmith would be asleep. The two had been flirting on Facebook and in texts.

When Mr. Neesmith pulled the young men out of the bedrooms, he threatened to call the younger girl’s grandfather, according to court documents and interviews. He asked the two, who both have young daughters, why they were not home with their children. He ranted and waved the gun around.

So the brothers made a run for it. By all accounts, while the younger one struggled to unlock a side door, the older one shoved Mr. Neesmith.

Police testimony in early court documents shows that Justin Patterson pushed him against a table and chairs. In a recent interview and in other documents, Mr. Neesmith said he took a “whipping” that caused bleeding and cuts. He showed a reporter repairs to two holes in the wall that he said came from the struggle.

Mr. Neesmith’s first shots were fired while he was on the floor, according to investigators. One bullet hit the ceiling and the other hit Justin Patterson. Then, as the two ran, Mr. Neesmith went to the porch and fired two more shots. He called a friend, a bail bondsman, who told him to call the police.

Mr. Neesmith said he fired the extra shots as a warning. “Those boys could have come back and killed me in my own bed,” he said.

District Attorney Hayward Altman said he presented the more serious charges to the grand jury because he did not know exactly what he was dealing with. It is easier to reduce charges than add more, he said. And it seemed that a more serious crime had been committed.

“There was no weapon in their hand,” Mr. Altman said in early court documents. That they ran was understandable. It was, he said, “a normal reaction for young men under those circumstances.”

As the case unfolded, however, circumstances became clearer. The other girl in the trailer was 14, though she had told the men she was 18. Mr. Neesmith’s lawyers pointed out that a statutory rape charge could be brought. So could drug charges.

The shots off the porch were something someone in the country might do to make sure the intruders did not come back, Mr. Altman said. Mr. Neesmith, who has a chronic nerve condition in his right arm and hand as well as other health problems, had been woken up in the middle of the night. He was not thinking clearly, Mr. Altman said; he had no record, and by all accounts was a good man.

Moreover, Mr. Altman said in a recent interview in his office, “I couldn’t see that I could find a jury that would convict.” Most people in a rural area with a high percentage of gun ownership would most likely accept that the fatal shot was in self-defense, he said.

“It might not feel fair for the family, and I am sorry for their loss,” he said. “But this is not at all like the case in Florida, other than they are both tragedies.”

At Justin Patterson’s grave, his mother shakes her head. She visited with her son’s preschool-age daughter, whom the Pattersons, though divorced, are helping to raise.

She says things simply do not add up. What made the district attorney change course? And how could her son, who was not even 5-foot-7 and perhaps 120 pounds, be such a threat to Mr. Neesmith, who is nearly 6 feet tall and 240 pounds?

“If he had just asked them to get out of his house, they would have,” she said. “They are mannerable boys. He took a life he didn’t have to take.”

Julius Patterson, who works maintaining soda vending machines, sees Mr. Neesmith around town. “At the end of the day, really we wouldn’t have gotten a fair trial because everyone knows him,” he said.

Sha’von Patterson is so troubled he can barely speak about the shooting. His older brother was watching out for him to the end, just as his mother had told him to all his life. His death changed everything.

“It made me grow up and realize you can leave this earth anytime,” he said.

Justin Patterson’s grave. His friends said he was quiet, charming and a great basketball player.

Justin Patterson, whom friends recalled as quiet, charming and a great basketball player, had a tattoo on his right arm that read, “I am who I am.” In his brother’s memory, Sha’von Patterson and several of Justin’s friends got tattoos.

Jay Sneed, 22, who went to kindergarten with Justin and was one of his closest friends, is one of them. “Everything down here is just real bad when it comes to situations like this,” he said. “This is not where you come to find justice.”

Robbie Brown contributed reporting from Atlanta, and Gillian Laub from Lyons.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: April 30, 2012

An article on Thursday about the shooting death of an unarmed young black man in Georgia gave an unofficial height from the Toombs County Sherriff’s Office for Norman Neesmith, who killed the young man. While the authorities said Mr. Neesmith is 6-foot-2, that was the height he gave them. As a height chart in an accompanying picture taken during his booking showed, he is closer to 5-foot-11.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/26/us/spotlight-eludes-black-youths-killing-in-georgia.html?pagewanted=1

Categories: crime, law, murder, racism, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Smoking Rates Increase With Perceived Racial Discrimination

As the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) rolls out its graphic anti-smoking ad campaign next week, researchers at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis are honing in on what drives people to smoke in the first place.

For racial and ethnic minority groups, discrimination may be a key factor, according to a study of over 85,000 people, which found that the odds of smoking increased among individuals who perceived that they were treated differently because of their race.

In a release highlighting the findings published in the American Journal of Public Health, study author Jason Q. Purnell says the study reveals a potentially high-risk group of individuals who report feeling unfairly treated because of their race and who may be smoking as a means of coping with the psychological distress associated with discrimination.

Though they did not look at the link to discrimination, previous studies have shown that using smoking as a method of relieving stress can actually have an adverse effect, causing long-term stress levels to rise, not fall, the New York Times reported in 2010.

The CDC’s ramped up efforts to curb adult smoking, which experts say is the leading preventable cause of mortality in the United States, follows less successful efforts, including raising tobacco taxes and implementing smoking bans.

But African-Americans have been particularly difficult to sway, accounting for approximately 12 percent of the 46 million adult smokers in the United States, according to 2008 numbers from the American Lung Association.

A study conducted by researchers at Columbia University that year found that African Americans and Hispanics have a harder time quitting smoking than whites do, though their report linked it to worries about weight gain or lack of support in quitting.

“It’s important to understand the factors that promote smoking among racial and ethnic minority groups,” Purnell says, suggesting that alternative forms of coping with discrimination may be a fruitful area of discussion in counseling interventions designed to help individuals quit smoking.

While smoking rates among blacks tends to be lower overall, African Americans are more likely to develop and die of lung cancer than their white counterparts, the American Lung Association reports.

Categories: 9 areas of people activity, racism, white supremacy | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

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