Society's ChildS


Eye 1

Best of the Web: The US has legalized murder against its own citizens and created state terror to deal with those fighting back against oppression

police protester
© Max Becherer / APA protester yells in front of police headquarters after officers arrived in riot gear to clear protesters from the street in Baton Rouge, La., on Saturday
Police officers carry out random acts of legalized murder against poor people of color not because they are racist, although they may be, or even because they are rogue cops, but because impoverished urban communities have evolved into miniature police states.

Police can stop citizens at will, question and arrest them without probable cause, kick down doors in the middle of the night on the basis of warrants for nonviolent offenses, carry out wholesale surveillance, confiscate property and money and hold people—some of them innocent—in county jails for years before forcing them to accept plea agreements that send them to prison for decades. They can also, largely with impunity, murder them.

Those who live in these police states, or internal colonies, especially young men of color, endure constant fear and often terror. Michelle Alexander, author of "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness," calls those trapped in these enclaves members of a criminal "caste system." This caste system dominates the lives of not only the 2.3 million who are incarcerated in the United States but also the 4.8 million on probation or parole. Millions more are forced into "permanent second-class citizenship" by their criminal records, which make employment, higher education and public assistance, including housing, difficult and usually impossible to obtain. This is by design.

The rhetoric of compassion, even outrage, by the political class over the police murders in Baton Rouge, La., and near St. Paul, Minn., will not be translated into change until the poor are granted full constitutional rights and police are accountable to the law. The corporate state, however, which is expanding the numbers of poor through austerity and deindustrialization, has no intention of instituting anything more than cosmetic reform.

Snakes in Suits

Politicizing sport: All Russian track and field athletes barred from competing in Rio Olympics

Yelena Isinbayeva
© Sergei Karpukhin / ReutersYelena Isinbayeva
The IAAF has rejected all applications from Russian track and field athletes to compete in this summer's Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, the Russian Olympic Committee has said, with the exception of long jumper Darya Klishina.

The decision made by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) means that athletes such as the pole vault world record holder Yelena Isinbayeva won't be allowed to compete when the games get underway in Brazil in August, her trainer Evgeny Trofimov told R-Sport.

"Everyone received a refusal, including Yelena. As a result of this refusal, we will file a lawsuit to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in order to defend the rights of the sportsmen and women. They knew that if there were refusals that we would file lawsuits and our lawyers are ready to do this," Trofimov said.

Isinbayeva, who has been outspoken at the stance taken by the IAAF, once again hit out at the organization.

"The fact that they threw this out shows their weakness and their helplessness," Isinbayeva told TASS, referring to the IAAF. "The presumption of innocence before guilt does not exist and they cannot show who is clean in Russia and who isn't. They just show their ineffectiveness."

Comment: It should be clear to anyone paying attention that this isn't about doping, it's about the West's continued witch-hunt against Russia and their desperate efforts to eliminate any positive impressions Russian athletes will give to the viewing audience. The depths with which the West will sink apparently knows no bounds.


Handcuffs

Police State America: Cops use Nazi tactics to bust up peaceful protest on private property

Baton rouge arrests
© Shannon Stapleton/ReutersPolice officers scuffling with a demonstrator while trying to apprehend him during a rally in Baton Rouge on Sunday.
Peaceful but emotional protests over the seemingly ceaseless violence by police and the murders of five officers in Dallas continue unabated in cities nationwide. In Baton Rouge, police shoved people into the street — and then arrested them for being in the street.

"No justice, no peace!" protesters chanted as they gathered downtown following a rally at a Methodist church to condemn the killing by police of Alton Sterling.

Though the seemingly spontaneous gathering of around 500 at the intersection of France and East didn't resort to violence or mayhem, around 100 riot gear-clad cops showed up to police the event. One homeowner, the Daily Beast reported, offered refuge on her front lawn precisely to prevent the arrests of demonstrators for occupying the street.

But after an hour and a half, without provocation, the militarized cops decided they'd had enough and charged the crowd, causing exactly the chaos their presence ostensibly sought to prevent as protesters fled down a side street — where they were arrested for obstructing a highway.

Brick Wall

The Age of Disposability: State terrorism & racist violence

State terrorism
© Christopher Lee / The New York TimesDemonstrators record a crowd of police officers on hand in New York's Times Square, where a large crowd protested after fatal police shootings in Louisiana and Minnesota, July 7, 2016.
Note from Henry Giroux on July 10, 2016: The racist killing machine is in full bloom in the age of domestic terrorism. Once again, Americans and the rest of the world are witness to a brutal killing machine, a form of domestic terrorism that is responsible for the deaths of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling.

Castile and Sterling were both shot point-blank by white police officers who follow the script of a racist policy of disposability that suggests that Black lives not only do not matter, but that Black people can be killed with impunity since the police in the United States are rarely held accountable for such crimes. What we are witnessing is not simply the overt face of a militarized police culture, the lack of community policing, or the toxic consequences of a culture of violence that saturates everyday life. We are in a new historical era, one that is marked by extreme violence and a policy of disposability fueled in part by a culture of fear, a deeply overt racist culture that is unapologetic in its racism, and a culture of cruelty that is the modus operandi of neoliberal capitalism. This culture of cruelty is a cage culture, a culture of combat, a hyper masculine culture that views killing those most vulnerable as sport, entertainment and policy.

We are witnessing not simply the breakdown of democracy but the legitimization of a society in the grips of what might be called a politics of domestic terrorism. The US is deep into the entrails of fascism, and until that is recognized, the violence will escalate, people of color will be killed, whites will claim they are the real victims and the discourse of racial objectification will continue to be a visible if not embraced signpost of our politics at every level. The face of white supremacy -- with its long legacy of slavery, lynchings and brutality -- has become normalized, if not supported by one major political party.

Today, I am sharing one of my reflections on this racist culture that appeared previously in Truthout because it is even more relevant today than when it was first posted at the beginning of 2015.

Comment: Read more of Henry Giroux's essays:


War Whore

A black ex-cop tells the real truth about race and policing

Police brutality protest
© Ricky Rhodes/Getty Images A protest in Cleveland, Ohio, after police officer Michael Brelo was acquitted for the shooting deaths of Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams.
On any given day, in any police department in the nation, 15 percent of officers will do the right thing no matter what is happening. Fifteen percent of officers will abuse their authority at every opportunity. The remaining 70 percent could go either way depending on whom they are working with.

That's a theory from my friend K.L. Williams, who has trained thousands of officers around the country in use of force. Based on what I experienced as a black man serving in the St. Louis Police Department for five years, I agree with him. I worked with men and women who became cops for all the right reasons — they really wanted to help make their communities better. And I worked with people like the president of my police academy class, who sent out an email after President Obama won the 2008 election that included the statement, "I can't believe I live in a country full of ni**er lovers!!!!!!!!" He patrolled the streets in St. Louis in a number of black communities with the authority to act under the color of law.

That remaining 70 percent of officers are highly susceptible to the culture in a given department. In the absence of any real effort to challenge department cultures, they become part of the problem. If their command ranks are racist or allow institutional racism to persist, or if a number of officers in their department are racist, they may end up doing terrible things.

It is not only white officers who abuse their authority. The effect of institutional racism is such that no matter what color the officer abusing the citizen is, in the vast majority of those cases of abuse that citizen will be black or brown. That is what is allowed.

Comment: A scathing indictment of the law enforcement system as it stands today. Unfortunately, the top-to-bottom reformation of such a corrupt system can't be done overnight. Those who enjoy the power to abuse and terrify won't give up that power so easily.


Handcuffs

Thousands protest against police brutality across US, cops arrest over 100

phoenix BLM protest
© Luis Alvarez/ YoutubeBlack Lives Matter protest in Phoenix, Arizona
After police increased their vigilance following the deadly shooting of policemen in Dallas, US law enforcement across the nation went on to arrest over 100 people protesting against police brutality and racism on Friday night.

As mourners for the five police officers killed in Thursday night's shooting in Dallas ambush concluded their vigils, Black Lives Matter protests engulfed the country with renewed fervor.

Thousands of activists marched across US cities Friday night, demanding justice for Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, black men who were shot dead by police officers earlier in the week.

The largest number of arrests was made in Rochester, New York, where protesters blocked downtown streets after a crowd began to gather from around 9:45pm.


Comment: See also:


Pistol

Flashback Lakota People's Law Project: Police are killing Native Americans at a higher rate than any race - media remains silent

native lives matter
Americans are up in arms right now over the near epidemic number of deaths of African-American at the hands of police, and rightfully so. African-Americans make up only 13 percent of the population, yet they are the victims in 26 percent of all police shootings. That is nearly 3 times the rate of whites.

The outrage by the #Black Lives Matter movement is founded in statistical evidence which shows that the system inherently and with extreme bias disproportionately targets blacks.

Handcuffs

Another brutal police attack: Cop drags woman by her hair and punches her in the face

Providence police
© localsonly401
Cellphone video of a brutal arrest by Providence, Rhode Island, Police on May 23 is being reviewed by the department after Mayor Jorge Elorza questioned whether the use of force would be considered excessive.

'Excessive,' however, could be considered a major understatement whether or not the officers' claims the suspects acted violently toward them.

Footage uploaded to Facebook on July 7 begins with Patrolman Michael Place growling, "Get the fuck up," as he yanks a woman, identified later in police reports as Carolinmar Torres, to her feet from the steps of a front porch — violently striking her head first into the side of the home.

Apparently alarmed by the officer's actions, a man approaches, is thrown back by a second cop who punches him in the face, screaming, "Get the fuck off!" — as Place grips a handful of the Torres' long hair and forcibly jerks her away from the porch.

Passport

New German study finds no link between national origin and crime

refugees praying
© Stefanie Loos / Reuters Migrants pray after the Iftar (breaking fast) meal at a refugee shelter in a former hotel in Berlin, Germany June 9, 2016.
Over a million refugees came to Europe in 2015, and when mass sexual assaults left many nations in shock, migrants were the first to be blamed. However, a new study suggests there is no direct link between national origin and crime.

The Berlin-based organization Mediendienst Integration (Integration Media Service) compiled the study, led by the Münster criminologist Christian Walburg.

The research is largely based on data from Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office and claims to refute any connection between national origin and crime.

Since the past year, there has been no jump in the number of offenses per 100,000 people for the most frequent types of crimes, Münster told the Deutsche Welle media outlet.

Airplane

Denver Delta flight diverts to Tulsa, 12 passengers fall ill with elevated levels of carbon monoxide

ambulences
© www.kjrh.com
A Delta Airlines flight was diverted to Tulsa International Airport after multiple passengers fell ill at the same time. Flight 1817 was traveling to Denver from Atlanta on Saturday when it was diverted at around 3pm. Tulsa Fire Department said elevated levels of carbon monoxide was found in the bodies of some of the passengers, according to ABC News. The cause of the higher levels has not yet been determined but an investigation continues.

Initially it was reported that nine flyers felt ill and were complaining of nausea and sickness but fire department spokesman Stan May later said it was actually 12. May said that once passengers had got some fresh air, their levels returned to normal. Mel Gillen, one of the passengers on board, told Fox News that people 'put their head down because they were feeling so nauseous' and some had also vomited.

Emergency Medical Services Authority spokeswoman Kelli Bruer said one passenger was taken to the hospital as 'non-emergent'. Another passenger was taken to a hospital for unrelated medical issues according to Bruer.

The airline says 152 passengers were on board the plane when its crew decided to divert to Tulsa after 'a few' passengers reported feeling ill. A second plane was sent to Tulsa to take the passengers on to Denver on Saturday evening. Passengers were being re-screened at about 8.30pm local time to get them on another Denver-bound plane.