A NIGHT
IN FERGUSON: Rubber Bullets, Tear Gas, and a Jail Cell
Late
Monday evening, after many of the major media outlets covering the protests in
Ferguson, Mo., had left the streets to broadcast from their set-ups near the
police command center, heavily armed officers raced through suburban streets in
armored vehicles, chasing demonstrators, launching tear gas on otherwise quiet
residential lanes, and shooting at journalists. Their efforts resulted in one of the largest nightly arrest
totals since protests began 10 days ago over the killing of unarmed African
American teenager Michael Brown by white Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson.
At approximately 2 a.m. local time, Missouri Highway Patrol Capt. Ron Johnson
announced at a press conference that 31 people had been
arrested over the course of the night (NBC News later reported that, according
to jail records, the actual total was more than double that). I was unable to
attend or report on Johnson’s press conference because I was one of those
people… None of the other people who are still there, as far as I know, work for
well-funded, high-profile media organizations. Few are white. The concerns these
men raised—and the intensity that they have for this moment in Ferguson—runs
very deep… Not a single one of these men, through our hours of conversations,
expressed any desire to let up. This will not end soon.
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FROM
GAZA TO FERGUSON:
Exposing
the Toolbox of Racist Repression
From
the death and destruction in Israel’s latest war on Gaza to the dramatic arrival
of the national guard on the streets of Ferguson, Missouri, there have been
plenty of brutal reminders on display of the violence that underpins racial
hierarchies in Israel and the United States. But amid the headlines, one could
easily forget the more sustained and entrenched forms of oppression through which
hierarchies of race, citizenship, nationality, and class are produced and
maintained—in the United States as well as Israel. Among the most significant of
these is mass incarceration… it is important to remember how precarious life is
for Palestinian children even in “normal” times. Since
2000, more than 8,000 Palestinian children have been detained and nearly
2,000 children have been killed—with almost complete impunity for the Israeli soldiers and settlers
involved… On the other side of the globe, the burgeoning U.S. prison population
now comprises a quarter of all the prisoners in the world. Close to 70 percent
of all people in U.S. incarceration, moreover, are people of color. As Adam
Gopnik observed in The New Yorker, “there are more black men in the
grip of the [U.S.] criminal-justice system—in prison, on probation, or on
parole—than were in slavery” on the eve of the civil war… As in Palestine,
resistance in the streets of Ferguson has been met with violence, leading
several shocked Ferguson protesters to compare the local police to Israeli occupation forces. Some analysts pointed out that
Ferguson and St. Louis County police forces had even received training in Israel. More
THOMAS
EDSALL: Ferguson, Watts and a Dream Deferred
While
the
economic downturns of the last decade-and-a-half have taken their toll on
the median income of all races and ethnic groups, blacks have been the hardest
hit. By 2012, black median household income had fallen to 58.4 percent of white
income, almost back to where it was in 1967 — 7.9 points below its level in
1999… Blacks suffered more than whites as a result of the 2008-9 financial
meltdown and its aftermath, but the negative trends for African-Americans began
before then… Today, however, political and policy-making stasis driven by
gridlock — despite a momentary concordance between left and right on this
particular shooting — insures that we will undertake no comparable initiatives
to reverse or even stem the trends that have put black Americans at an
increasing disadvantage in relation to whites — a situation that plays no small
part in fueling the rage currently on display in Ferguson.
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12
years of data from New York City suggest stop-and-frisk wasn’t that
effective
…a
New York Civil Liberties Union report released Wednesday that
the group is framing as a comprehensive account of stop-and-frisk during the
Bloomberg years. During the mayor's 12-year tenure, police department data show
that officers made more than 5 million stops, a quarter of them of young black
men who made up just 1.9 percent of the city's population. The NYCLU report
documents the racial imbalance that has made the policy so divisive in New York
and other cities where the practice has contributed to animosity between
minority communities and law enforcement. But the ACLU accounting also points to
other data that undermine the rationale for stop-and-frisk: It yielded few
weapons when officials justified the policy as a way to reduce shootings and
recover guns; in more than 5 million stops, police recovered a gun less than
0.02 percent of the time. And as the NYPD ramped up the number of stops,
shootings and murders in the city did not appear to correspondingly decline.
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Palestinians
share tear gas advice with Ferguson protesters
Local
authorities in Ferguson have begun responding to nightly protests with tear gas
and rubber bullets. Palestinians on Twitter could relate, and shared words and
images of support with the US protesters… After images of Ferguson police using
tear gas were disseminated on Twitter, Palestinians Rajai abuKhalil and Mariam
Barghouti drew on their own experiences to express support with protesters in
Missouri.
Solidarity
with #Ferguson. Remember to not touch your face when
teargassed or put water on it. Instead use milk or coke!
Dear
#Ferguson. The Tear Gas used against you was probably
tested on us first by Israel. No worries, Stay Strong. Love, #Palestine
Israel-trained
police "occupy" Missouri after killing of black youth
Since
the killing of 18-year-old Michael Brown by Ferguson police in Missouri last
weekend, the people of Ferguson have been subjected to a military-style
crackdown by a squadron of local police departments dressed like combat
soldiers, prompting residents to liken the conditions on the ground in Ferguson
to the Israeli military occupation of Palestine. And who can blame them? The
dystopian scenes of paramilitary units in camouflage rampaging through the
streets of Ferguson, pointing assault rifles at unarmed residents and launching
tear gas into people’s front yards from behind armored personnel carriers
(APCs), could easily be mistaken for a Tuesday afternoon in the occupied West
Bank. And it’s no coincidence.
At
least two of the four law enforcement agencies that were deployed in Ferguson
up until Thursday evening — the St. Louis County Police Department and the St.
Louis Police Department — received training from Israeli security forces in
recent years.
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