Seenthis
•
 
Identifiants personnels
  • [mot de passe oublié ?]

 
  • #f
  • #fe
  • #fer
RSS: #ferguson

#ferguson

  • #ferguson’s
  • #ferguson_mo
  • #fergusonspeaks
  • #fergusonoctober
  • #fergusoniseverywhere
0 | 25 | 50 | 75 | 100 | 125 | 150 | 175
  • @biggrizzly
    BigGrizzly @biggrizzly CC BY-NC-SA 17/11/2025
    2
    @ericw
    @rezo
    2

    Armes soniques : bientôt la fin du déni ?
    ▻https://www.blast-info.fr/articles/2025/armes-soniques-bientot-la-fin-du-deni-ZEtRvuTFRgWEjeR5u04odw

    Élodie Emery 16.11.2025

    Utiliser le #son comme une #arme, ce n’est plus de la science-fiction. Les armes #soniques existent. Des États les utilisent sur le terrain #militaire, mais aussi pour le #maintien_de_l_ordre. Le 15 mars dernier, lors d’une manifestation massive dans la capitale serbe, #Belgrade, la foule s’est fendue en deux. Un son étrange a provoqué un mouvement de panique. Journaliste indépendante, Élodie Emery a mené l’enquête. Un article publié en collaboration avec La Chronique, le magazine mensuel d’Amnesty International.

    (...)

    Le #canon_à_son #LRAD, pour #Long_Range_Acoustic_Device, est classé parmi les «  #armes_non_létales_à_énergie_dirigée  », aux côtés du #gaz_lacrymogène et de la #grenade_assourdissante. Aux États-Unis, les policiers l’ont utilisé en 2009 lors du sommet du G20 à #Pittsburgh, puis en 2014 à #Ferguson pour #disperser des #rassemblements contre les violences policières. Les images de l’époque sont éloquentes : des manifestants fuient en se bouchant les #oreilles, visages crispés, certains désorientés, d’autres à genoux. Les effets physiologiques du LRAD, mal documentés, sont loin d’être anodins. Soumis au modèle #450X qui crache jusqu’à 145 #décibels (au-dessus du seuil de la douleur humaine), des manifestants rapportent maux de tête, vertiges, troubles respiratoires, oppression thoracique, accélération du rythme cardiaque. Le LRAD 2000, plus puissant, émet au-delà de 160 dB, un niveau sonore qui peut provoquer l’éclatement d’un #tympan… Plusieurs manifestants américains ont déposé des plaintes, certains évoquant des #séquelles durables.

    (...)

    BigGrizzly @biggrizzly CC BY-NC-SA
    • @fil
      Fil @fil 18/11/2025

      cf. aussi le livre d’@intempestive
      ►https://www.editionsladecouverte.fr/le_son_comme_arme-9782707168856

      Fil @fil
    • @colporteur
      colporteur @colporteur CC BY-NC-SA 18/11/2025

      Élodie Emery a rédigé un rapport pour Amnesty international, et publié une vidéo
      ▻https://seenthis.net/messages/972036#message1146548

      #police #terreur_policière #TSPT

      colporteur @colporteur CC BY-NC-SA
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @cdb_77
    CDB_77 @cdb_77 20/04/2022

    Will The Reckoning Over Racist Names Include These Prisons?

    https://i.imgur.com/WtzNK1r.png

    Many prisons, especially in the South, are named after racist officials and former plantations.

    Not long after an #Alabama lawyer named #John_Darrington began buying up land in Southeast #Texas, he sent enslaved people to work the soil. They harvested cotton and sugarcane, reaping profits for their absentee owner until he sold the place in 1848.

    More than a century and a half later, men—mostly Black and brown—are still forced to work in the fields. They still harvest cotton. They still don’t get paid. And they still face punishment if they refuse to work.

    They are prisoners at the #Darrington Unit, one of Texas’s 104 prisons. And not the only one in the South named after slaveholders.

    While the killing of George Floyd has galvanized support for tearing down statues, renaming sports teams and otherwise removing markers of a (more) racist past, the renewed push for change hasn’t really touched the nation’s prison system. But some say it should. Across the country, dozens of prisons take their names from racists, Confederates, plantations, segregationists, and owners of slaves.

    “Symbols of hate encourage hate, so it has been time to remove the celebration of figures whose fame is predicated on the pain and torture of Black people,” said DeRay McKesson, a civil rights activist and podcast host.

    Some candidates for new names might be prisons on former plantations. In #Arkansas, the #Cummins Unit—now home to the state’s death chamber—was once known as the #Cummins_plantation (though it’s not clear if the namesake owned slaves). In North Carolina, Caledonia Correctional Institution is on the site of #Caledonia_Plantation, so named as a nostalgic homage to the Roman word for Scotland. Over the years, the land changed hands and eventually the state bought that and other nearby parcels.

    “But the state opted to actually keep that name in what I would say is a kind of intentional choice,” said Elijah Gaddis, an assistant professor of history at Auburn University. “It’s so damning.”

    Among several state prison systems contacted by The Marshall Project, only North Carolina’s said it’s in the early stages of historical research to see what name changes might be appropriate. Spokesman John Bull said the department is “sensitive to the cultural legacy issues sweeping the country,” but its priority now is responding to the COVID pandemic.

    Two of the most infamous and brutal plantations-turned-prisons are #Angola in #Louisiana and #Parchman in #Mississippi—but those are their colloquial names; neither prison formally bears the name of the plantation that preceded it. Officially, they’re called Louisiana State Penitentiary and the Mississippi State Penitentiary.

    In some parts of the South, many prisons are former plantations. Unlike Darrington or Cummins, the vast majority at least bothered to change the name—but that isn’t always much of an improvement.

    In Texas, for example, most of the state’s lock-ups are named after ex-prison officials and erstwhile state politicians, a group that predictably includes problematic figures. Arguably one of the worst is Thomas J. Goree, the former slave owner and Confederate captain who became one of the first superintendents of the state’s penitentiaries in the 1870s, when prison meant torture in stocks and dark cells.

    “Goree was a central figure in the convict leasing system that killed thousands of people and he presided over the formal segregation of the prison system,” said Robert Perkinson, a University of Hawaii associate professor who studies crime and punishment. “Even though he thought of himself as a kind of benevolent master, he doesn’t age well at all.”

    In his book “Texas Tough,” Perkinson describes some of the horrors of the convict leasing practices of Goree’s era. Because the plantation owners and corporations that rented prisoners did not own them, they had no incentive to keep them alive. If you killed an enslaved person, it was a financial loss; if you killed a leased convict, the state would just replace him. For decades, Texas prison laborers were routinely whipped and beaten, and the leasing system in Goree’s day sparked several scandals, including one involving torture so terrible it was known as the “Mineola Horror.” Goree defended the system: “There are, of course, many men in the penitentiary who will not be managed by kindness.” Plus, he explained, prisoners in the South needed to be treated differently because they were different from those in the north: “There, the majority of men are white.”

    The present-day Goree Unit is in Huntsville, an hour’s drive north of Houston, but his family’s former plantation in Lovelady—about 20 miles further north—has been turned into another prison: The Eastham Unit, named for the later landowners who used it for convict leasing.

    James E. #Ferguson—namesake of the notoriously violent Ferguson Unit, also near Huntsville—was a governor in the 1910s who was also an anti-Semite and at one point told the Texas Rangers he would use his pardoning power if any of them were ever charged with murder for their bloody campaigns against Mexicans, according to Monica Muñoz Martinez, historian and author of “The Injustice Never Leaves You.”

    Ferguson got forced out of office early when he was indicted and then impeached. Afterward, he was replaced by William P. Hobby, a staunch segregationist who opposed labor rights and once defended the beating of an NAACP official visiting the state to discuss anti-lynching legislation.

    #Hobby, too, has a prison named after him.

    “In public he tried to condemn lynchings, but then when you look at his role in suppressing anti-lynching organizing he was trying to suppress those efforts,” Martinez said of Hobby. “It’s horrific to name a prison after a person like him. It’s an act of intimidation and it’s a reminder that the state is proud of that racist tradition.”

    Northwest of Abilene, the Daniel Unit takes its name from #Price_Daniel, a mid-20th-century governor who opposed integration, like most Texas politicians of the era. As attorney general he fought desegregating the University of Texas Law School, and later he signed the Southern Manifesto condemning the Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education.

    The namesakes of the #Billy_Moore Unit and the frequently-sued Wallace Pack Unit were a pair of prison officials—a major and a warden—who died in 1981 while trying to murder a Black prisoner. According to Michael Berryhill, a Texas Southern University journalism professor who wrote a book on the case, it was such a clear case of self-defense that three Texas juries decided to let the prisoner off.

    “They should not have prisons named after them,” Berryhill said. He called it “a stain” on the Texas prison system’s reputation.

    In Alabama, the #Draper Correctional Center is named after #Hamp_Draper, a state prison director who also served as an interim leader—or “imperial representative”—in the #Ku_Klux_Klan, as former University of Alabama professor Glenn Feldman noted in his 1999 book on the state’s Klan history. The prison closed for a time in 2018 then re-opened earlier this year as a quarantine site for new intakes.

    In New York City, the scandal-prone #Rikers Island jail is one of a few that’s actually generated calls for a name change, based on the namesake family’s ties to slavery. One member of the Dutch immigrant clan, #Richard_Riker, served as a criminal court judge in the early 1800s and was known as part of the “#Kidnapping_Club” because he so often abused the Fugitive Slave Act to send free Blacks into slavery.

    To be sure, most prisons are not named for plantations, slave owners or other sundry racists and bigots—at least not directly. Most states name their prisons geographically, using cardinal directions or nearby cities.

    But some of those geographic names can be problematic. In Florida, Jackson Correctional Institution shares a name with its home county. But Jackson County is named after the nation’s seventh president, #Andrew_Jackson, who was a slave owner obsessed with removing Native people to make room for more plantations. Less than an hour to the south, #Calhoun Correctional Institution also bears the name of its county, which is in turn named after John C. Calhoun—Jackson’s rabidly pro-slavery vice president. The same is true of Georgia’s Calhoun State Prison.

    Also in #Georgia, Lee State Prison is in Lee County, which is named in honor of #Henry_Lee_III, the patriarch of a slave-owning family and the father of Robert E. Lee. A little further northeast, Lee County in South Carolina—home to violence-plagued Lee Correctional Institution—is named after the Confederate general himself.

    In #Arkansas, the namesake of #Forrest City—home to two eponymous federal prisons—is #Nathan_Bedford_Forrest, a Grand Wizard in the Ku Klux Klan who also controlled leased convicts in the entire state of Mississippi at one point.

    To many experts, the idea of changing prison names feels a bit like putting lipstick on a pig: No matter what you call it, a prison is still a prison. It still holds people who are not free. They are still disproportionately Black and brown.

    “If you are talking about the inhumanity, the daily violence these prisons perform, then who these prisons are named after is useful in understanding that,” Martinez said. “But what would it do to name it after somebody inspiring? It’s still a symbol of oppression.”

    But to Anthony Graves, a Texas man who spent 12 years on death row after he was wrongfully convicted of capital murder, the racist names are a “slap in the face of the justice system itself.” New names could be a powerful signal of new priorities.

    “At the end of the day the mentality in these prisons is still, ‘This is my plantation and you are my slaves,’” he said. “To change that we have to start somewhere and maybe if we change the name we can start to change the culture.”

    ▻https://www.themarshallproject.org/2020/07/29/will-the-reckoning-over-racist-names-include-these-prisons

    #prisons #USA #Etats-Unis #toponymie #toponymie_politique #esclavage #Thomas_Goree #Goree #James_Ferguson #William_Hobby #John_Calhoun

    CDB_77 @cdb_77
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @unagi
    unagi @unagi CC BY-NC 20/06/2020
    1
    @sinehebdo
    1

    ▻https://clppng.bandcamp.com/track/knees-on-the-ground

    unagi @unagi CC BY-NC
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 20/06/2020

      20 août 2014 :
      ▻https://soundcloud.com/clppng/knees-on-the-ground

      Our new track “Knees On The Ground” might benefit from an explanation. This is the most unguarded I ever intend to be when writing about #Clipping.

      What had happened was this: our very brief UK/Europe trip got called-off the day before we were supposed to get on a plane to London. Since we didn’t have any other plans, we met up in the studio with an idea to crank out a new track. On our list of songs to finish was one particular piece aimed directly at the club (or, at least, our twisted idea of what clubs should play). But none of us were in the mood for it. Each of us had spent the previous several days following the news of protests in #Ferguson, MO. It was the only thing on our minds. We couldn’t bring ourselves to think about anything else, so we decided to direct our fear, our revulsion, our heartbreak into a new track.

      The problem was that we’d defined our band — in interviews and to each other — as decidedly-not-an-activist-project. Diggs’s lyrics have been criticized for seeming apolitical, at least in comparison to what many listeners (perhaps rightly) expect to hear from an ‘experimental’ rap group. I have many times said (perhaps naïvely) that our politics lie in our structures, in our formal engagement with the rap genre. We love its conventions, its clichés, and we’re not above them. We see our participation in rap as something resembling an old punk flyer — an out-of-context collage of charged images with an fractured, contradictory, multiple point-of-view. I hope that our more dedicated listeners hear this and understand that we’re not interested in spoon-feeding them a position. At the same time, I’ve always assumed that they pretty much agree with us on most issues anyway. (We have yet to meet the misogynist, homophobic, white supremacist Clipping fan with an MBA and an NRA membership).

      So what do we do when all we can think about, all we can feel, is a profound injustice — yet another young unarmed person of color is murdered by a police officer? How does a band, which overtly rejects affect and the emotions, address something that is, for its authors, a deeply felt, deeply affecting topic? Well, we don’t entirely know. But the fact is: there’s more truth in Diggs’s lyrics than we generally let on. “Inside Out” describes a drive-by shooting in Oakland, “Chain” is about three stick-ups. They are presented with a lot of detail and specificity (perhaps the result of personal experience). But at the same time, they represent archetypal scenarios within rap music. One trope we had yet to explore as Clipping was the anti-police rap — the lineage of Public Enemy, NWA and Paris, straight through The Coup, and all the way into the ‘stop snitching’ panic of the early 2000s. “Knees On The Ground” is a paradigmatic white-cop-kills-an-unarmed-black-kid-and-gets-away-with-it tale — a story that happens all the fucking time in the US. What we have learned — from our first hand experience in Oakland in 2009, and from the media coverage of Ferguson in 2014 — is that the second part of this story involves a police response better suited to a war zone than to an American city. Cops think they’re playing Call Of Duty when they’re supposed to be part of a community. If Ferguson were in Iraq, Obama would have sent in an airstrike already.

      This is the least obtuse Diggs’s lyrics will ever get. We’re embarrassed by the timeliness of this track. We do not intend to capitalize on what is, undoubtedly, a terrible tragedy. But journalists make think-pieces and we make songs. Writers write what they know, and this is what we know right fucking now.

      — William Hutson, Clipping.

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 20/06/2020

      Clipping drop new protest EP Chapter 319 on Juneteenth
      Cerys Kenneally, The Line of Best Fit 19 June 2020

      https://cdn2.thelineofbestfit.com/images/made/images/remote/https_cdn2.thelineofbestfit.com/media/2014/Clipping_by_Cristina_Bercorvitz_1024_672_90.jpg

      “Chapter 319” is a direct response to Donald Trump and the ongoing Black Lives Matter protests. Daveed Diggs raps, “A knee to the neck is this week’s / Symbol of shit you’ve been reaping / As a reaper of people there’s no equal / To the police and they be their own sequel.”

      “Chapter 319” also features a sample of “Freestyle” by DJ Screw and Big Floyd (the late George Floyd).

      ►https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkEAOLYasZU

      #Musique_et_politique #Musique #ACAB #Violence_policière #Violences_policières #brutalité_policière #Assassinats_policiers #racisme #racisme_systémique #USA

      Autres chansons en hommage à #George_Floyd ici :
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/856449

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @loutre
    Loutre @loutre 4/06/2020
    6
    @gonzo
    @reka
    @af_sobocinski
    @kassem
    @sinehebdo
    @tintin
    6

    Stop à la formation de la police par Israël : lettre ouverte au maire de Minneapolis, Jacob Frey
    Par William A. Cook 31 mai 2020
    ▻https://www.chroniquepalestine.com/stop-a-la-formation-de-la-police-par-israel-lettre-ouverte-au-ma

    https://www.chroniquepalestine.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/a0-24-e1591162493268.jpg

    (...) Aux États-Unis, environ 33 états ont été formés par la même entreprise, l’état israélien, parmi lesquels le Michigan, l’Alabama, l’Arizona, la Floride, New York, et Washington, D.C. Pendant vingt-sept ans, les services de police de la Géorgie ont reçu des subventions du Ministère de la Justice des E.U. pour financer ces formations. « Des militants en Géorgie réclament qu’il soit mis fin au programme d’échange de policiers d’Atlanta. »

    De nombreux groupes sont impliqués dont Jewish Voice for Peace et Project South. Pourquoi cette opposition ? Parce que Israël a un bilan explicite de violations des droits de l’homme et de violence d’état à l’encontre des Palestiniens. « Au cours de l’année qui a suivi le début en 2018 des manifestations de la Grande Marche du Retour plus de 250 Palestiniens ont été tués et 23000 ont été blessés par les forces israéliennes. »

    Pourquoi les Américains devraient-ils payer pour la formation de la police qui utilise comme méthodologie d’action les tactiques que l’état d’Israël a apprises en utilisant l’emprisonnement et la torture et les tactiques de contrôle expérimentées sur des personnes qu’il ne reconnaît pas comme citoyens, des personnes à qui on refuse l’accès aux autoroutes construites par Israël pour l’usage exclusif des juifs, ce qui s’appelle de l’apartheid et un comportement non démocratique, c’est à dire des Palestiniens ? (...)

    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/857190

    Loutre @loutre
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 5/06/2020

      #Palestine #USA #Israel #Complicité #Racisme #violence_policière #Police #Armée #Militarisation #Baltimore #Ferguson #Minneapolis :
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284577
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284745
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284972
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/285053
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/380931
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/381187
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/631789
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/857190
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/857761

      Mais aussi le désistement de #Durham :
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/688257

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 17/06/2020

      La différence en matière d’oppression entre Minneapolis et Jérusalem est infime
      Jonathan Cook, Middle East Eye, le 11 juin 2020
      ▻https://www.chroniquepalestine.com/la-difference-en-matiere-doppression-entre-minneapolis-et-jerusa

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @loutre
      Loutre @loutre 19/06/2020

      Les parallèles entre Minneapolis et Jérusalem sont loin d’être superficiels
      Jonathan Cook
      Jeudi 18 juin 2020 - 14:54
      ▻https://www.middleeasteye.net/fr/opinion-fr/george-floyd-palestine-police-israel-occupation

      Loutre @loutre
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 9/07/2020

      Israéliser la police américaine, palestiniser le peuple américain
      Jeff Halper, Mondoweiss, le 19 juin 2020
      ▻https://agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2020/06/25/israeliser-la-police-americaine-palestiniser-le-peuple-americai

      Bien sûr qu’Israël exporte des armes et des pratiques policières : depuis des décennies, il les teste contre les Palestiniens
      Riya Al’sanah et Rafeef Ziadah, Novara Media, le 7 juillet 2020
      ▻https://agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2020/07/09/bien-sur-quisrael-exporte-des-armes-et-des-pratiques-policieres

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @sinehebdo
    Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 1/06/2020
    1
    @loutre
    1

    Nous ne pourrons respirer que lorsque nous serons libres ! Les Palestiniens sont solidaires des Noirs américains
    Comité National palestinien de BDS, le 30 mai 2020
    ▻https://www.bdsfrance.org/nous-ne-pourrons-respirer-que-lorsque-nous-serons-libres-les-palestiniens

    https://www.bdsfrance.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Palestinian-solidarity-with-Black-Americans-headline-narrower-5.30.2020-750x375.png

    Nous demandons au mouvement de solidarité avec la Palestine, aux États-Unis et ailleurs, d’être aux côtés du Movement for Black Lives (Mouvement pour la vie des Noir·es) ainsi que d’autres organisations dirigées par les Noir·es dans leur lutte légitime pour la justice, et d’adopter une position abolitionniste envers la réforme de la police, la réparation et la libération. Nous soutenons les appels au boycott ciblé et stratégique ainsi qu’aux campagnes de retrait de financement et de désinvestissement contre les institutions, les banques et les sociétés impliquées dans le système d’injustice raciale.

    Le système de racisme structurel aux États-Unis est appliqué avec violence par des services de police paramilitaires, souvent formés par Israël, notamment la police du Minnesota. Ces forces de police ont été chargées d’agir, quoi qu’il en coûte, pour protéger ce système pourri de suprématie blanche, qui prive de leurs droits les Noir·es, les Latinos/Latinas et les Indigènes.

    #Palestine #USA #Solidarité #Black_Lives_Matter #Racisme #George_Floyd #violence_policière

    Et, à propos de #Police #Armée #Militarisation #Israel #Complicité #Baltimore #Ferguson #Minneapolis :
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284577
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284745
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284972
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/285053
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/380931
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/381187
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/631789
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/857190

    Mais aussi le désistement de #Durham :
    ►https://seenthis.net/messages/688257

    Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 3/06/2020

      A propos de #Palestine #USA :

      De Minneapolis à la Palestine, le racisme est l’ennemi commun
      Ahmed Abu Artema, le 1er Juin 2020
      ▻https://agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2020/06/02/de-minneapolis-a-la-palestine-le-racisme-est-lennemi-commun

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 10/06/2020

      Le lobby pro-israélien voit Black Lives Matter comme une menace stratégique majeure
      Ali Abunimah, Electronic Intifada, le 8 juin 2020
      ▻https://agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2020/06/09/le-lobby-israelien-voit-black-lives-matter-comme-une-menace-str

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @gonzo
    gonzo @gonzo CC BY-NC 30/05/2020
    6
    @kassem
    @loutre
    @simplicissimus
    @sinehebdo
    @colporteur
    @7h36
    6

    Where Do Many Police Departments Train? In Israel
    ▻https://www.amnestyusa.org/with-whom-are-many-u-s-police-departments-training-with-a-chronic-human-

    http://blog.amnestyusa.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/GettyImages-542426432-1.jpg

    When the U.S. Department of Justice published a report Aug. 10 that documented “widespread constitutional violations, discriminatory enforcement, and culture of retaliation” within the Baltimore Police Department (BPD), there was rightly a general reaction of outrage.

    But what hasn’t received as much attention is where Baltimore police received training on crowd control, use of force and surveillance: Israel’s national police, military and intelligence services.

    Baltimore law enforcement officials, along with hundreds of others from Florida, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, California, Arizona, Connecticut, New York, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Georgia, Washington state as well as the DC Capitol police have all traveled to Israel for training. Thousands of others have received training from Israeli officials here in the U.S.

    #usa #israel #racisme (via angry arab)

    gonzo @gonzo CC BY-NC
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 31/05/2020

      #Palestine #USA #Israel #Complicité #Racisme #violence_policière #Police #Armée #Militarisation #Baltimore #Ferguson #Minneapolis :

      Ca a déjà été abordé, même ici, mais c’est bien que #Amnesty_International s’en inquiète :
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284577
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284745
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284972
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/285053
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/380931
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/381187
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/631789

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 2/06/2020

      Avec qui s’entraînent de nombreux départements de la police des États-Unis ? Avec un champion des violations des droits humains : Israël (Edith Garwood, Amnesty International USA, le 25 août 2016)
      ▻https://agencemediapalestine.fr/blog/2020/06/02/avec-qui-sentrainent-de-nombreux-departements-de-la-police-des-

      Les agents des forces de l’ordre de Baltimore, ainsi que des centaines d’autres de Floride, du New Jersey, de Pennsylvanie, Californie, Arizona, Connecticut, New York, Massachusetts, Caroline du Nord, Géorgie, l’Etat de Washington ainsi que la police du Capitol sont tous allés en Israël pour s’entraîner. Des milliers d’autres ont reçu des formations d’agents israéliens aux Etats-Unis.

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 2/06/2020

      Avec quand même le désistement de #Durham en 2018 :
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/688257

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @loutre
      Loutre @loutre 4/06/2020

      By Edith Garwood
      August 25, 2016 at 10:32 AM
      ▻https://blog.amnestyusa.org/middle-east/with-whom-are-many-u-s-police-departments-training-with-a-chronic-h

      Loutre @loutre
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 4/06/2020

      C’est le même texte, sauf qu’ici il est daté et signé et qu’il date en fait de 2016 ! Du coup je corrige... Merci !

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @val_k
    ValK. @val_k CC BY-NC-SA 28/05/2020
    2
    @colporteur
    @vanderling
    2

    La fabrique des « agitateurs extérieurs »
    ▻https://came2016.wordpress.com/2020/05/28/la-fabrique-des-agitateurs-exterieurs

    https://came2016.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/poster1370.jpg?w=1200

    Traduction par le Collectif Auto Media énervé

    Article initialement paru le 20 août 2014 sur CrimethInc. Republié et traduit aujourd’hui suite aux émeutes en cours à Minneapolis en réaction au meurtre de #George_Floyd par la police, avant que des théories conspirationnistes circulent sur les responsables de ces émeutes. Retour sur la stratégie de division des médias, de la police et de l’État du Missouri lors des émeutes de Ferguson en 2014 suite au meurtre de Michael Brown par la police.

    Article original : The Making of “Outside Agitators”
    ▻https://fr.crimethinc.com/2014/08/20/feature-the-making-of-outside-agitators

    La police militarisée d’aujourd’hui entend dire qu’elle opère sur deux terrains différents à la fois : non seulement celui de la rue, mais aussi celui du discours. Tant que la plupart des personnes restent passives, la police peut harceler, battre, arrêter et même tuer des personnes en toute impunité – en tout cas certaines personnes. Mais parfois, les protestations deviennent « incontrôlables », c’est-à-dire qu’elles ont en fait un impact sur la capacité des autorités à garder la population sous contrôle. Alors, sans surprise, la police et les politiciens passent à la deuxième stratégie de leur manuel : ils déclarent qu’ils soutiennent les manifestant-e-s et sont là pour défendre leurs droits, mais quelques mauvaises pommes gâchent le tout. Dans ce nouveau récit, les ennemi-e-s des manifestant-e-s ne sont pas les policiers qui gazent et tirent sur les gens, mais celleux qui résistent à la police et à sa violence. Lorsque cette stratégie fonctionne, elle permet à la police de recommencer à harceler, battre, arrêter et tuer des personnes en toute impunité – en tout cas, certaines personnes.

    De #Ferguson à #Minneapolis
    Des U.S jusqu’ici
    #ICantBreathe
    Même système, sans frontières...

    « Si vous n’êtes attentifs-ves, les journaux vous feront haïr les personnes oppressées et aimer celles qui font ces oppressions. »
    Malcolm X

    ValK. @val_k CC BY-NC-SA
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @pguilli
    pguilli @pguilli 14/04/2020
    3
    @odilon
    @vanderling
    @simplicissimus
    3

    Sept thèses féministes sur le Covid-19 et la reproduction sociale – ACTA
    ►https://acta.zone/sept-theses-feministes-sur-le-covid-19-et-la-reproduction-sociale

    https://acta.zone/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/empty-lower-manhattan-streets-onj6q9fgrqrj8u3wi6r8232zdflkav91gtf1uqm2xk.jpg

    Cette pandémie, et la réponse qu’y donne la classe dirigeante, illustre de manière claire et tragique l’idée qui est au cœur de la théorie de la reproduction sociale : la production de la vie se plie aux exigences du profit.

    La capacité du capitalisme à produire son propre flux vital – le profit – dépend de la « production » quotidienne de travailleurs. Autrement dit, elle dépend du processus de création de la vie qu’il ne contrôle ou ne domine pas entièrement ni directement. Dans le même temps, la logique de l’accumulation exige de maintenir au plus bas tant les salaires que les impôts qui soutiennent la production et la préservation de la vie. Il s’agit là de la contradiction majeure qui est au cœur du capitalisme : il dénigre et sous-évalue précisément celles et ceux qui produisent la vraie richesse sociale : les infirmier·e·s et les autres personnels de santé, les ouvrier·e·s agricoles, les ouvrier·e·s des usines alimentaires, les employé·e·s des supermarchés et les livreur·se·s, les collecteur·trice·s de déchets, les enseignants·e·, celles et ceux qui s’occupent des enfants ou des personnes âgées. Ce sont les travailleuses1 racialisées, féminisées, que le capitalisme humilie et stigmatise en leur imposant des salaires bas et des conditions de travail souvent dangereuses. Pourtant, la pandémie actuelle montre clairement que notre société ne peut tout simplement pas survivre sans elles. La société ne peut pas non plus survivre avec des sociétés pharmaceutiques qui se font concurrence pour les profits et qui exploitent notre droit à rester en vie. Et il est évident que la « main invisible du marché » ne pourra pas créer et gérer l’infrastructure sanitaire planétaire dont la pandémie actuelle montre bien que l’humanité a besoin.

    #reproduction_sociale #féminisme #marxisme #féminisme_marxiste #Bhattacharya #Bromberg #Dimitrakaki #Farris #Ferguson #HM #covid_19

    pguilli @pguilli
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @cdb_77
    CDB_77 @cdb_77 21/04/2019
    1
    @monolecte
    1

    #Segregated_By_Design

    Examine the forgotten history of how our federal, state and local governments unconstitutionally segregated every major metropolitan area in America through law and policy.

    ▻https://vimeo.com/328684375


    #ressources_pédagogiques #vidéo #film
    #USA #Etats-Unis #Afro-américains #Ferguson #ségrégation_raciale #ségrégation #géographie_urbaine #urban_matter #politiques_racistes #logement_social #logement #United_State_housing_authority #Austin #ghetto #emancipation_park #FHA #Levittown #zonage_racial #Redline #cartographie #visualisation #murs_intra-urbains #mur_intra-urbain #inégalités #slums #bidonville #destruction #démolition #Sugar_Hill #Los_Angeles #Harvey_Clark #richesse #pauvreté #paupérisation #discriminations #fair_housing_act #mobilité_sociale #immobilité_sociale #constitutionnalité #constitution #responsabilité

    CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 21/04/2019

      EDUCATION THAT LEADS TO LEGISLATION

      ‘Segregated By Design’ examines the forgotten history of how our federal, state and local governments unconstitutionally segregated every major metropolitan area in America through law and policy.

      Prejudice can be birthed from a lack of understanding the historically accurate details of the past. Without being aware of the unconstitutional residential policies the United States government enacted during the middle of the twentieth century, one might have a negative view today of neighborhoods where African Americans live or even of African Americans themselves.

      We can compensate for this unlawful segregation through a national political consensus that leads to legislation. And this will only happen if the majority of Americans understand how we got here. Like Jay-Z said in a recent New York Times interview, “you can’t have a solution until you start dealing with the problem: What you reveal, you heal.” This is the major challenge at hand: to educate fellow citizens of the unconstitutional inequality that we’ve woven and, on behalf of our government, accept responsibility to fix it.

      ▻https://www.segregatedbydesign.com

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 21/04/2019

      The Color of Law

      This “powerful and disturbing history” exposes how American governments deliberately imposed racial segregation on metropolitan areas nationwide (New York Times Book Review).

      Widely heralded as a “masterful” (Washington Post) and “essential” (Slate) history of the modern American metropolis, Richard Rothstein’s The Color of Law offers “the most forceful argument ever published on how federal, state, and local governments gave rise to and reinforced neighborhood segregation” (William Julius Wilson). Exploding the myth of de facto segregation arising from private prejudice or the unintended consequences of economic forces, Rothstein describes how the American government systematically imposed residential segregation: with undisguised racial zoning; public housing that purposefully segregated previously mixed communities; subsidies for builders to create whites-only suburbs; tax exemptions for institutions that enforced segregation; and support for violent resistance to African Americans in white neighborhoods. A groundbreaking, “virtually indispensable” study that has already transformed our understanding of twentieth-century urban history (Chicago Daily Observer), The Color of Law forces us to face the obligation to remedy our unconstitutional past.

      https://cdn.wwnorton.com/dam_booktitles/635/img/cover/9781631494536_198.jpeg

      ▻https://books.wwnorton.com/books/detail.aspx?id=4294995609&LangType=1033
      #livre

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 25/08/2020

      Les conséquences, aujourd’hui, sur l’impact du #changement_climatique différencié selon les quartiers :
      How Decades of Racist Housing Policy Left Neighborhoods Sweltering
      ▻https://seenthis.net/messages/873081

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @ant1
    ant1 @ant1 CC BY-NC 20/03/2019
    1
    @unagi
    1

    #AP #black_lives_matter
    #the_hate_you_give

    Puzzling number of men tied to #Ferguson protests have died
    ▻https://apnews.com/436251b8a58c470eb4f69099f43f2231

    Two young men were found dead inside #torched cars. Three others died of apparent suicides. Another collapsed on a bus, his death ruled an overdose.

    Six deaths, all involving men with connections to protests in Ferguson, #Missouri, drew attention on social media and speculation in the activist community that something sinister was at play.

    Police say there is no evidence the deaths have anything to do with the protests stemming from a white police officer’s fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown, and that only two were #homicides with no known link to the #protests.

    ant1 @ant1 CC BY-NC
    • @unagi
      unagi @unagi CC BY-NC 20/03/2019

      ce qui se passe à Ferguson mérite quelques secondes d’attention. Depuis 2014 les militant.e.s là-bas qui ont impulsé le mouvement #BlackLivesMatter meurent les uns après les autres. De mort violente.

      ►https://twitter.com/OlivierCyran/status/1108279806104428544

      unagi @unagi CC BY-NC
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @sinehebdo
    Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 19/04/2018

    La ville de #Durham aux #Etats-Unis annule le programme prévu d’échange entre sa police et la police israélienne :

    Durham, North Carolina, votes for nation’s first ban on police exchanges with Israel
    Jewish Voice for Peace, Mondoweiss, le 17 avril 2018
    ▻http://mondoweiss.net/2018/04/durham-nations-exchanges

    #Palestine #BDS

    Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 2/06/2020

      Sur le même sujet : #usa #israel #complicité #racisme #Police #Armée #Militarisation #Ferguson #Baltimore #Minneapolis #violence_policière

      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284577
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284577
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284745
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/284972
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/285053
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/380931
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/381187
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/631789
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/857190
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/857761

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @kassem
    Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA 22/09/2017
    1
    @sinehebdo
    1

    Israel Security Forces Are Training American Cops Despite History of Rights Abuses
    ▻https://theintercept.com/2017/09/15/police-israel-cops-training-adl-human-rights-abuses-dc-washington

    https://cdn01.theintercept.com/wp-uploads/sites/1/2017/09/israel-us-militarized-police-occupation-palestine-1505421754.jpg

    IT’S NOT UNCOMMON for residents of America’s most heavily policed neighborhoods to describe their local cops as “an occupying force.” Judging by where many U.S. police forces get their training, the description seems apt.

    Thousands of American law enforcement officers frequently travel for training to one of the few countries where policing and militarism are even more deeply intertwined than they are here: #Israel.

    #Etats-Unis #occupation

    Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 26/09/2017

      Déjà en 2014 :
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/285053

      #Ferguson #Missouri #USA #Israel #Police #Armée #Militarisation #Racisme

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @samizdat
    samizdat @samizdat CC BY-SA 7/05/2017

    #Ferguson #Activiste #EdwardCrawford c’est le 3ème activiste de premier plan retrouvé mort après les révoltes de Ferguson. Rest In Power !pic.twitter.com/ANTkYQMN9m
    ▻https://twitter.com/FergusonInParis/status/860785490064281602

    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C_If1uCW0AAw68R.jpg

    #Ferguson #Activiste #EdwardCrawford c’est le 3ème activiste de premier plan retrouvé mort après les révoltes de Ferguson. Rest In Power ! pic.twitter.com/ANTkYQMN9m

    samizdat @samizdat CC BY-SA
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @hlc
    Articles repérés par Hervé Le Crosnier @hlc CC BY 19/03/2017

    New Footage Michael Brown on the Day He Was Killed Shows How Easy It Is for Cops to Paint Victims as ’Bad Guys’ | Alternet
    ▻http://www.alternet.org/human-rights/new-footage-michael-brown-day-he-was-killed-shows-how-easy-it-cops-paint-v

    http://www.alternet.org/sites/default/files/story_images/michael_brown.jpg

    Last weekend, a new development emerged in the story of the 2014 killing of unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, whose death sparked unrest across the nation. Previously unreleased footage of Brown inside the convenience store that the police claimed he had robbed before he was confronted by Darren Wilson, the former officer, contradicts the story the police department pushed about Brown’s actions that day.

    The original narrative that emerged from many eyewitnesses in the immediate aftermath of Brown’s death, which was later contradicted by others, was that Brown, who was slated to attend college in a few weeks, put up his hands and then Wilson blew holes through him anyway. But Ferguson law enforcement officials quickly pushed back with the “Mike Brown was no angel” narrative, releasing a video that appears to show Mike Brown robbing a local convenient store before Wilson stops him. This shows Brown snatching what appears to be store property and exiting the store; however, the newly released video clearly shows an earlier exchange, not a robbery.

    These people control the narrative, and they use that power to demonize victims of police force in a constant effort to deflect negative attention away from themselves. Six Baltimore police officers were charged for their involvement in Freddie Gray’s spinal cord injury death in 2015, and therefore we knew everything about Freddie Gray’s criminal record before the first officer even took the stand. As if a few petty arrests in a man’s past justify the police chasing him down with no signs of criminal wrongdoing and arresting him. Many members of the public quickly accepted that narrative of “Freddie the Bad Guy” over the fact that he should not have been in the back of the police van in the first place. He shouldn’t have been bothered, and he shouldn’t be dead now.

    #ferguson #fake_news #post-truth #police #racisme

    Articles repérés par Hervé Le Crosnier @hlc CC BY
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @tintin
    jean michel @tintin 11/09/2016
    4
    @reka
    @kassem
    @biggrizzly
    @lyco
    4

    Ferguson protest leader #Darren_Seals shot and found dead in a burning car | US news | The Guardian
    ▻https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/sep/08/ferguson-protest-leader-darren-seals-shot-dead-burning-car

    #Ferguson protest leader Darren Seals was found dead early Tuesday morning in a car that had been set on fire. Seals had been shot, and St Louis County police said they were investigating his death as a homicide.

    The 29-year-old’s death sent waves of shock and grief through the community of activists in Missouri who protested the police killing of unarmed black teenager #Michael_Brown in Ferguson in 2014.

    [...]

    Local activists were also troubled by the parallels between Seals’ death and the 2014 murder of 20-year-old Deandre Joshua, who was shot and left in a burning car on the same night a grand jury chose not to indict police officer Darren Wilson in Brown’s death. In all, according to one activist’s count, five other men in the St Louis area have been shot and left in burning cars since 2014.

    “Many people are really worried. We don’t know if there’s some type of movement serial killer on the loose,” said Patricia Bynes, a protester and former Democratic committeewoman for Ferguson.

    [...]

    Seals was a proudly local activist and a fierce critic of the national Black Lives Matter movement. He had argued that prominent #Black_Lives_Matter leaders had hijacked the Ferguson protests and then failed to give enough back to the community that had catalyzed the movement. During a heated argument, he once hit Deray McKesson, one of the most nationally recognized movement activists.

    As the principles of Black Lives Matter have gained increased national recognition from politicians, the White House and in the 2016 presidential campaign, some community activists still in Ferguson are struggling. Some have left town, and some have have trouble getting work because of their political activism, Bynes said. Activists are still fighting an uphill battle to reform policing, education and the economy, and to prevent violence. But national political and media attention have moved on to other police killings and other protests.

    Several activists said that some of Seals’ criticisms of the national movement resonated with them.

    “We all kind of felt like we were kind of getting other people rich and getting other people fame for our oppression,” Masri said.

    “We were left here to suffer from the systemic abuse from the police. And, like, I don’t care about credit, as long as the job gets done. But the thing is, the job hasn’t got done.”

    The national movement’s current demands “are in a language that I don’t speak”, his friend and fellow activist Tory Russell said. “This movement #jargon, this #terminology, are not for #working_people. The movement is not geared towards #working_class black people, and D Seals could always call that out.”

    • #Darren Seals
    jean michel @tintin
    • @biggrizzly
      BigGrizzly @biggrizzly CC BY-NC-SA 11/09/2016

      Y-a comme une filiation avec ce que l’on trouve dans les « démocraties » d’Amérique Centrale, comme le Honduras (où la démocratie est de retour depuis le débarquement du gauchiste local (comme au Brésil)). Les syndicalistes, et autres activistes un petit peu trop libres se retrouvent éliminés plus ou plus violemment, sans réaction bien franche de l’Etat. C’est ballot.

      BigGrizzly @biggrizzly CC BY-NC-SA
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @sinehebdo
    Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 16/02/2016

    « Le jour où Beyoncé est devenue noire »
    Alexandre Hervaud, Libération, le 14 février 2016
    ▻http://next.liberation.fr/musique/2016/02/14/le-jour-ou-beyonce-est-devenue-noire_1433279

    ▻https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LrCHz1gwzTo

    ►https://www.facebook.com/snl/videos/10153910062511303

    #Musique #Beyoncé #USA #racisme #noirs #humour #Saturday_Night_Live #SNL #Katrina #Stop_Shooting_Us #Ferguson #Baltimore #Trayvon_Martin #Musique_et_politique #Brutalité_policière

    Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @coutoentrelesdents
    coutoentrelesdents @coutoentrelesdents 11/11/2015

    Le comité informel présente : de #ferguson à #wissam #el_yamni …
    ▻http://coutoentrelesdents.noblogs.org/post/2015/11/11/le-comite-informel-presente-de-ferguson-a-wissam-el-yamn
    #ACAB #ANTICOLONIALISME #ANTIFASCISME #CAPITALISME #EVENEMENT #LUTTES #ali_ziri #Clermont_Ferrand #débat #mathieu_burnel #said_bouamama #violence_policière #youssouf_madiba

    coutoentrelesdents @coutoentrelesdents
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @sinehebdo
    Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 14/10/2015
    3
    @le_bougnoulosophe
    @melanine
    @rezo
    3

    La réaction du collectif Black-Palestinian Solidarity (Lauryn Hill, Danny Glover, DAM, Omar Barghouti, Alice Walker, Angela Davis, Yousef Erakat, Annemarie Jacir, Boots Riley, Dr. Cornel West et plein d’autres) :
    ▻http://www.blackpalestiniansolidarity.com

    When I see them, I see us
    Black-Palestinian Solidarity, le 14 octobre 2015
    ▻https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsdpg-9cmSw

    #Palestine #Noirs_américains

    Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    • @rastapopoulos
      RastaPopoulos @rastapopoulos CC BY-NC 14/10/2015

      Black-Palestinian solidarity is neither a guarantee nor a requirement - it is a choice. We choose to build with one another in a shoulder to shoulder struggle against state-sanctioned violence. A violence that is manifest in the speed of bullets and batons and tear gas that pierce our bodies. One that is latent in the edifice of law and concrete that work together to, physically and figuratively, cage us. We choose to join one another in resistance not because our struggles are the same but because we each struggle against the formidable forces of structural racism and the carceral and lethal technologies deployed to maintain them. This video intends to interrupt that process – to assert our humanity – and to stand together in an affirmation of life and a commitment to resistance. From Ferguson to Gaza, from Baltimore to Jerusalem, from Charleston to Bethlehem, we will be free.

      RastaPopoulos @rastapopoulos CC BY-NC
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 14/10/2015

      #Ferguson #Gaza #Baltimore #Jerusalem #Charleston #Bethlehem

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @cdb_77
    CDB_77 @cdb_77 16/08/2015
    1
    @02myseenthis01
    1

    Race in the US: Know your history

    “And then you might understand how the death of #Michael_Brown became a tipping point in the US.”

    ▻http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2015/08/race-history-ferguson-150814082921736.html
    #racisme #USA #Etats-Unis #xénophobie #Ferguson

    CDB_77 @cdb_77
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @monolecte
    Monolecte 😷🤬 @monolecte CC BY-NC-SA 25/07/2015
    1
    @02myseenthis01
    1

    L’artiste à l’origine de l’œuvre controversée sur l’ado tué à Ferguson s’explique - Arts et scènes - Télérama.fr
    ▻http://www.telerama.fr/scenes/l-artiste-a-l-origine-de-l-oeuvre-controversee-sur-l-ado-tue-a-ferguson-s-e

    http://images.telerama.fr/medias/2015/07/media_129665/l-artiste-a-l-origine-de-l-oeuvre-controversee-sur-l-ado-tue-a-ferguson-s-explique,M243599.jpg

    J’ai toujours su qu’il y avait beaucoup de racisme dans ce pays. J’ai grandi pendant la période du mouvement pour les droits civiques. Mais l’ouragan Katrina qui a détruit et inoncé une partie de ma ville en 2005 a eu un énorme impact sur moi. La Nouvelle-Orléans est un lieu incroyable et j’ai toujours eu une connection profonde avec ses habitants. Mais je n’avais pas réalisé à quel point c’était ancré en moi avant l’été 2005. J’ai été bouleversée en voyant à la télévision des milliers de mes compatriotes abandonnés, désespérés, effrayés, affamés, assoiffés et mourants. La plupart d’entre eux étaient Afro-américains et je pense que s’ils avaient été Blancs, l’effort de l’aide humanitaire après la tempête aurait été très différent. Et oui, quelque chose a changé en moi. Je ne pouvais plus rester silencieuse. Il y a un peu plus d’un an, j’ai décidé d’exprimer cela dans mes œuvres. Ferguson a été un énorme choc aussi pour moi, d’où la création de l’installation Los Angelitos Negros.

    #art #racisme #privilège_blanc

    • #Ferguson
    Monolecte 😷🤬 @monolecte CC BY-NC-SA
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 25/07/2015

      ici aussi:
      ▻http://seen.li/8cfd
      #Ferguson

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @reka
    Phil Reka docs & archives @reka CC BY-NC-SA 12/07/2015
    3
    @la_taupe
    @kassem
    @02myseenthis01
    3

    Le meurtre de Michael Brown par un policier à Ferguson devient une oeuvre d’art exposée dans une galerie à Chicago

    Life-size depiction of Michael Brown after shooting is at center of Chicago art exhibit :

    ▻http://m.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/life-size-depiction-of-michael-brown-after-shooting-is-at/article_0d59d430-2974-5716-ac77-a885f51204de.html?mobile_touch=true

    http://bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com/stltoday.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/c/ed/ced505c0-0e15-5bc1-a63e-5fa7f558138e/55a13f276f542.image.jpg?resize=699%2C394

    An art exhibit that opened Friday at a gallery in Chicago features a life-size replica of Michael Brown lying face down after his death, according to a TV report.

    The exhibit at the Gallery Guichard is titled “Confronting Truths: Wake Up!” and features the works of New Orleans-based artist Ti-Rock Moore.

    Among those works, according to a report by WGN, is “a life size portrayal of Michael Brown as he laid in the streets of Ferguson for hours after he was shot by a white officer almost one year ago.”
    Advertisement: Story Continues Below

    Other pieces include a black Statue of Liberty and a noose dangling from a neon sign.

    The exhibit runs through Aug. 10, a day after the one-year anniversary of Brown’s death.

    • #michael brown
    Phil Reka docs & archives @reka CC BY-NC-SA
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 13/07/2015

      #Ferguson #art #police #violences_policières

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
    • @la_taupe
      La Taupe @la_taupe PUBLIC DOMAIN 13/07/2015

      #banksy_like_style

      La Taupe @la_taupe PUBLIC DOMAIN
    • @kassem
      Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA 14/07/2015

      Polémique : une artiste blanche met en scène la mort de Michael Brown
      ▻http://m.rue89.nouvelobs.com/node/260259

      La galerie décrit l’œuvre de Ti-Rock Moore comme « courageuse, provocatrice et éclairante ». Mais d’autres y voient une appropriation, au mieux maladroite, au pire cynique, de la violence raciale et de la souffrance des Noirs.

      Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @ville_en
    Enseigner la géographie / Ville En Guerre @ville_en CC BY-NC-ND 7/07/2015
    5
    @reka
    @unagi
    @fredlm
    @supergeante
    @gastlag
    5

    Ce que « Ferguson » révèle du racisme systémique aux États-Unis
    ▻http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/informations-scientifiques/dossiers-regionaux/etats-unis-espaces-de-la-puissance-espaces-en-crises/articles-scientifiques/Ferguson

    L’émotion suscitée par la mort du jeune Michael Brown impose ici d’en conter les faits le plus sobrement possible. Mais même ainsi, ce qu’ils nous disent de la violence du racisme systémique aux États-Unis est brutal.
    Le 9 août 2014 à Ferguson, petite ville du Missouri, s’est produite une rencontre entre Michael Brown – 18 ans, noir – et un policier blanc. Dans des circonstances confuses, ce dernier a tué l’adolescent, atteint par 6 balles dont 2 dans la tête. La victime n’était pas armée et ses mains auraient été en l’air selon certains témoignages. Son corps est resté exposé aux regards pendant plus de quatre heures sous un soleil de plomb, ajoutant ainsi à l’émoi et la colère de la population locale. Des manifestations et des protestations ont rapidement surgi. Des faits de pillages et de dégradations ont été rapportés, les premiers jours. Les manifestations ont, dès lors, été qualifiées d’émeutes par la plupart des commentateurs. La police les a réprimées violemment, exhibant un arsenal militaire. Devant l’enlisement du conflit et l’escalade de la colère, la police d’État a pris le relais. Sous les menaces du groupe Anonymous [1], le nom du policier a finalement été rendu public. Darren Wilson, 28 ans, a été suspendu. Le 24 novembre, un grand jury a décidé de ne pas inculper l’officier – qui a fini par démissionner quelques jours plus tard – ce qui a déclenché de nouvelles manifestations : une douzaine de commerces sont brûlés, une centaine de personnes sont arrêtées. Le 4 mars 2015, un rapport du ministère de la Justice (Department of Justice, 2015) fait état de pratiques racistes systématiques [2] dans le département de police de Ferguson. La mobilisation autour du mot d’ordre « Black lives matter » (les vies noires comptent) continue à mesure que d’autres Noir(e)s sont tué(e)s par des policiers (Tamir Rice, 12 ans, Tanisha Anderson, 37 ans, Aura Rain Rosser, 40 ans, Darrien Hunt, 22 ans, Dante Parker, 36 ans, Felix David, 24 ans, Akai Gurley, 28 ans, Ezell Ford, 25 ans, Freddie Gray, 25 ans, Walter Scott, 50 ans…). [...]

    ▻http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/informations-scientifiques/dossiers-regionaux/etats-unis-espaces-de-la-puissance-espaces-en-crises/articles-scientifiques/images/recoquillondoc5

    PLAN DE L’ARTICLE :
    1. Loin de l’Amérique post-raciale, Ferguson, une banlieue noire gouvernée par des Blancs
    2. La militarisation de la police et la banalité de la violence
    3. Les brutalités policières : manifestations d’un racisme institutionnalisé

    ▻http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/informations-scientifiques/dossiers-regionaux/etats-unis-espaces-de-la-puissance-espaces-en-crises/articles-scientifiques/images/recoquillondoc6

    #Charlotte_Recoquillon #Géographie #Géographie_des_États-Unis #États-Unis #Ferguson #Géographie_de_l_Amérique_du_Nord #Michael_Brown #Géographie_Urbaine #Ségrégations_Urbaines #Insécurité_Urbaine #Saint-Louis #Amérique_du_Nord #Géoconfluences #Violences #Violences_Policières #Géographie_de_la_Violence #Discriminations #Inégalités #Géographie_des_Inégalités #Géographie_de_l_Emotion #Injustice #Injustice_Spatiale #Ghettos #Racisme #Géographie_du_Racisme #Géographie_de_la_Peur

    • #Ferguson
    • #michael brown
    Enseigner la géographie / Ville En Guerre @ville_en CC BY-NC-ND
    • @colporteur
      colporteur @colporteur CC BY-NC-SA 10/08/2015

      Un an après l’assassinat de Michael Brown, coups de feu contre la police lors d’une manif à Ferguson, la conf de presse du chef de la #police interrompue
      ►http://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2015/08/10/affrontements-en-marge-d-une-manifestation-a-ferguson-un-an-apres-la-mort-de

      Lors d’une marche silencieuse menée samedi par le père de Michael Brown, celui-ci avait affirmé à la presse que « rien » n’avait changé depuis la mort de son fils.

      #ni_oubli_ni_pardon

      colporteur @colporteur CC BY-NC-SA
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @lyco
    Lyco @lyco 4/05/2015

    In Defense of Looting (21-08-2014)
    ▻http://thenewinquiry.com/essays/in-defense-of-looting

    “People wanna say we destroying our own neighborhoods. We don’t own nothing out here!”

    #Ferguson #Baltimore

    • #Baltimore
    Lyco @lyco
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @kassem
    Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA 30/04/2015

    American #violence from #Ferguson to #Fallujah | Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
    ▻http://thebulletin.org/american-violence-ferguson-fallujah8220

    US policing [...] is increasingly seen by the police themselves as a form of counterinsurgency, designed to control hostile populations whose lives lack value. As if they were operating in Iraq or Afghanistan, US police infiltrate and spy on adversary networks, stop and search people at will, and bust down doors in the middle of the night with guns drawn. Recently the Guardian revealed that Chicago has been operating “the domestic equivalent of a CIA black site”—a detention facility where arrestees, some of them minors, are held off the books, with no recourse to legal advice, and are often shackled for long periods and even beaten during interrogation. Just as US soldiers have killed hundreds of Iraqi civilians for not stopping at checkpoints—which are often poorly marked—so Scott lost his life for running away from a traffic stop.

    For people of color and the poor, the United States is becoming a war zone. Anyone skeptical should consider the numbers. Estimates of how many insurgent and civilian foreigners the United States has killed by drone vary; the highest estimate, roughly 5,241 over 13 years, comes from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism. That is 403 deaths a year. In the United States, a recent government report revealed that over eight years (2003 through 2009 plus 2011), police killed an average of 928 people each year. That’s more than twice as many as the highest estimate of drone deaths in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, and Afghanistan combined. (Details of individual deaths can be found at Killedbypolice.net.)

    The four American security contractors working for Blackwater Worldwide, who were just sentenced by a US federal judge for randomly killing 14 innocent civilians in Baghdad, claimed to be acting in self-defense, until their story broke down. Likewise, after North Charleston, South Carolina police officer Michael Slager shot Scott in the back as he ran away, Slager reported that they had struggled and that he was acting in self-defense. Had a witness not made a video of Slager shooting Scott in the back as he ran away, we would not have known the truth.

    But the people at ground zero, African-Americans at home and Muslims abroad, don’t need videos to know the truth. The truth is that the American deployment of violence has gone badly off the rails. Violence is always described in carefully crafted official statements as discriminate or unavoidable; wrongful deaths as regrettable and unusual errors of judgement. The truth, though, is that violence is now often the first resort. Acting under cover of law, weaponized Americans have become a lawless force.

    #police #Etats-unis #hors_la_loi #terreur

    • #Chicago
    • #The Guardian
    • #Afghanistan
    • #Iraq
    • #United States
    • #black site
    • #Central Intelligence Agency
    • #US police
    • #Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
    • #The Guardian
    Kassem @kassem CC BY-NC-SA
    Écrire un commentaire
  • @ville_en
    Enseigner la géographie / Ville En Guerre @ville_en CC BY-NC-ND 29/04/2015

    Travailler sur l’histoire des Afro-Américains de l’esclavage à Ferguson
    ▻http://aggiornamento.hypotheses.org/2697

    http://f.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/357/files/2015/04/11059736_10206123101857186_6213176417351243590_n-300x228.jpg http://f.hypotheses.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/357/files/2015/04/11087084_10205630209068744_423629368_o-300x225.jpg

    #Histoire #Enseignement #Enseigner_l_Histoire #Ferguson #Esclavage #AfroAméricains #Etats_Unis #Etats-Unis #Histoire_des_Etats_Unis #USA #Amérique_du_Nord #Véronique_Servat #Aggiornamento_Histoire_Géographie

    • #Unis
    • #États-Unis
    Enseigner la géographie / Ville En Guerre @ville_en CC BY-NC-ND
    Écrire un commentaire
0 | 25 | 50 | 75 | 100 | 125 | 150 | 175

Thèmes liés

  • #ferguson
  • person: michael brown
  • provinceorstate: missouri
  • #usa
  • city: ferguson
  • #racisme
  • #police
  • person: darren wilson
  • country: united states
  • country: états-unis
  • #etats-unis
  • #palestine
  • #michael_brown
  • person: mike brown
  • #baltimore
  • #violence_policière
  • continent: america
  • #états-unis
  • #police
  • #minneapolis
  • #israel
  • #armée
  • #militarisation
  • position: officer
  • #racisme
  • #africa_is_a_country
  • company: twitter
  • #eric_garner
  • #blacklivesmatter
  • #durham
  • #musique
  • person: tamir rice
  • #missouri
  • #musique_et_politique
  • facility: eric garner
  • #acab
  • position: police officer
  • city: new york
  • #complicité
  • #racism