Author: greenecodemocratcom

  • Emmett Till sign In Mississippi vandalized by dozens of bullets

    By: Zeba BlayVoices Culture Writer, The Huffington Post

     

    emmett-till-sign

    Emmett Till sign with bullet holes

        A memorial sign dedicated to commemorating the murder of Emmett Till has been vandalized in Money, Mississippi. The sign, marking the spot where Till’s body was discovered in August 1955, had been riddled with at least 50 bullet holes.

    At only 14, Till fell victim to racist violence when he was kidnapped, tortured and killed by an angry white mob for apparently whistling at a white woman. The disfigured body of the Chicago-born teen was found three days later floating in the Tallahatchie River.

    J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant, the two white men charged with killing Till in 1955, were acquitted of the crime, though they later bragged about kidnapping and murdering the teen. Till’s death and the lack of justice against his murderers became a catalyst for the civil rights movement throughout the United States in the ‘50s and ‘60s.

    In 2007, eight signs marking key locations in the last days of Till’s life were erected by the Emmett Till Memorial Commission. By 2013, as revealed in a 2013 tweet by writer Christopher Hooks, the sign marking the location Till’s body was found had been shot at dozens of times.  More recently, on Oct. 15, a North Carolina man named Kevin Wilson Jr. posted an updated photo of the memorial sign, now riddled with at least 50 bullet holes, on Facebook.

    There doesn’t seem to be any leads on the identities of the vandals, though efforts are already being made to fix the sign. According to the New York Daily News, the Emmett Till Interpretive Center is attempting to raise $15,000 to replace the damaged sign. Until then, it stands as a reminder that the racism that killed Till still lives on today.

    It was not the first time that this particular sign has been vandalized since it was erected in 2007. The Emmett Till Memorial Commission put up eight site markers at important locations, including near the Mississippi river where Emmett’s body was found after he was kidnapped, tortured and killed for allegedly whistling at a white woman while visiting relatives down South.

    As the Daily News notes, officials have said that replacing and restoring the sign every time someone damages it or steals it goes beyond their financial capabilities. However, after news spread across social media, donations came pouring in, raising the amount to go toward replacing the sign to a whopping $19,200 as of 3 p.m. EDT on Monday. More than 400 people have contributed to the effort so far. In Greene County, Alabama, signs naming Highway 14 as “Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Drive have attracted similar bullet hole attacks by vandals.

  • Black women will elect the next President

    By Freddie Allen (NNPA Newswire Managing Editor)

     

    ben-chavis-and-denise-rolark-barnesBen Chavis, CEO of National Newspaper Publishers with Denise Rolark-Barnes, NNPA Board Chair

      Black women will play a key role in electing the next president, according to a recent report by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO). The AFL-CIO is a national trade group and the largest federation of unions in the United States.

    Carmen Berkley, the director of civil, human and women’s rights policy at the AFL-CIO said that the labor group wanted to provide context to the power that Black women voters have displayed over the past two presidential election cycles. In the briefing paper, researchers provided a case for why labor unions and non-profit organizations should be paying attention to Black women. “Without Black women, President Obama would not have won the White House in 2012,” said Berkley. “Black women voters delivered in key battleground states like Ohio, Pennsylvania and Florida where President Obama picked up 67 additional electoral votes.”

    Berkley continued: “If Black women had not turned out, President Obama would have been five electoral votes shy of winning the presidency.”

    Denise Rolark Barnes, the publisher of The Washington Informer and chairwoman of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) said that Black women voters could make a monumental difference in the outcome of the 2016 election, just like they did in 2012.

    But Rolark Barnes also expressed concerns that neither of the presidential candidates have touched on the issues that are important to Black women and single parents, who are also the primary breadwinners in their families; issues like health care, education and the environment are very important to Black women and their families.“I don’t think we’ve heard enough from the candidates about how they plan to address issues that affect Black and Latino families,” Rolark Barnes said.

    Recently, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke at a campaign rally in Durham, N.C., flanked by “Mothers of the Movement,” a group of Black women who have lost children to gun violence or during interactions with law enforcement. The group included Gwen Carr, the mother of Eric Garner, Sybrina Fulton, the mother of Trayvon Martin, Lucia McBath, the mother of Jordan Davis and Geneva Reed-Veal, the mother of Sandra Bland.

    Clinton also delivered remarks at the Black Women’s Agenda conference in September, where she acknowledged that even though the contributions of Black women are “often missing from the history books — make no mistake — you are the change makers, the path breakers, and the ground shakers. And, you are proof that yes, indeed, Black girl magic is real.”

    Berkley said that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has said that he knows the Black community, but he hasn’t proven that he understands the impact that Black people, especially Black women, have on society.

    “Black women drive turnout for the Black community,” said Berkley. “We care a lot about police reform, raising the minimum wage, protecting social security and we are economically liberal when it come to the government.” Berkley also noted that Black women have been very reliable voters in the past two election cycles. In 2012 and 2014 Black women voted at higher rates than other women.

    According to the briefing paper on the importance of Black women voters in 2016, “In 2012, 83 percent of registered Black women turned out, compared to 73 percent for all other women, a ten-point difference. Black women turned out at a higher rate than other women in 2014 as well. Fifty-five percent of registered Black women turned out in 2014, compared to 53 percent for all other women.”

    Berkley said that Black women do more than vote. “We’re very active in our churches, we’re very active in our communities and we’re very active in our unions,” she said.

    According to a survey by Lake Research Partners (LRP), a leading public opinion and political strategy research firm, Black workers are far more likely to view labor unions favorably (77 percent for Blacks vs. 50 for all-respondents) compared to other workers.

    Petee Talley, the secretary-treasurer of Ohio branch of the AFL-CIO, said that evidence shows that Black women union members have stepped up in remarkable ways. “Not only are they organizing inside of their unions, they are organizing the Black community around vote registration efforts,” said Talley.    And when Black women take on leadership roles, they have the power to significantly affect elections inside their unions.

    The briefing paper said: “As labor scholars Kate Bronfenbrenner and Dorian Warren found in their oft-cited study “Race, Gender, and the Rebirth of Trade Unionism,” unions won 89 percent of elections where Black women were the lead organizers compared with 53 percent for female organizers overall and 42 percent for male organizers.”

    The report noted that Black women were more likely than any other group to skip at least on race on the ballot. “By skipping down ballot races, Black women lose the potential to be a political force in local races, which arguably have a more direct impact on the day-to-day lives of Black people,” the report said.  The briefing paper said that as the labor movement grows, it should look to Black communities and Black women organizers as a potential base for power.  “This requires incorporating Black communities into long-term strategic thinking and lifting up the most progressive voice of the Democratic base,” the briefing paper said. “For organized labor and other parts of the political left, Black women are a smart investment, in 2016 and beyond.”

    Rolark Barnes said that Black women hold the power of the vote and also have the influence in their households to make sure their families and friends get out to vote.

    Rolark Barnes continued: “We need to come out strong, like we did before, and make the difference we know we can make in November.”

     

     

  • Oprah on Hillary Clinton: ‘You don’t have to like her’

    oprah-et-hillary_276072_largeby the grio |

     Oprah Winfrey and Hillary Rodham Clinton

     

    Oprah Winfrey endorsed Hillary Clinton in June, but she hasn’t spoken out much on the Democratic candidate’s behalf. But in an interview set to air next Thursday, she explained to the American public that there is really only one choice.

    “The reason why I haven’t been vocal, other than saying I’m with her, is because I didn’t know what to say that could actually pierce through all the noise and the chaos and the disgusting vitriol that’s going on and actually be heard,” Winfrey told the Dallas-based pastor T.D. Jakes in the hour-long interview.

    “But there really is no choice, people. All the people sitting around talking about they can’t decide. This is what I what I wanna say — wait a minute,” she said as Jakes tried to interrupt. “I hear this all the time. You get into conversations — and there’s not a person in this room who hasn’t been in this same conversation — where people say, ‘I just don’t know if I like her.’”

    But, she insisted, that is the wrong question to be asking. “She’s not coming over to your house! You don’t have to like her,” she said. “You don’t have to like her. Do you like this country? Do you like this country? You better get out there and vote. Do you like the country? Do you like freedom and liberty? Do you like this country? OK. Do you like democracy or do you want a demagogue?”

  • Delta Chapter sponsors 6th Annual Breast Cancer Awareness Walk

    detla

    The Greene County Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. held its 6th annual Breast Cancer Awareness Walk, Saturday, October 1, 2016 on the old courthouse square in Eutaw. All participants and interested citizens received various materials on breast cancer awareness. Breast cancer survivors and their families, as well as individuals currently struggling with the disease, were also recognized and celebrated.
    The annual walk is also held to encourage the community to adopt more healthy lifestyles, including healthy food choices, regular physical exercise and medical exams.
    Dr. Dana Todd serves as chairperson of the DST Chapter’s Physical & Mental Health Committee. Andrea Perry is Chapter President.

  • School Board approves Black History to be taught across the curriculum

    The Greene County Board of Education, at its monthly meeting held Monday, October,17, 2016, approved a recommendation by Superintendent James Carter to develop a system policy directing that Black History is infused across the curriculum. The instructional item approved authorized the superintendent to “implement a discipline base Black History Course that will be taught across the curriculum and across all content areas.”
    It was noted that Black History begins before Africans were forced to the Americas and enslaved.
    Dr. Carter explained that the Black History contents will correspond to the specific courses taught. “All African Americans are part of the American dream and reality and have a right to know the difference between historical facts, myths, factual and real information,” he said. Carter stated that the Black History infusion will also incorporate a multicultural and multiethnic learning process.
    The Black History infusion across curriculum is intended to be initiated in the Spring semester.
    The board also approved formulation of system policies allowing students to be disciplined who create safety issues at school sponsored activities as well as off school campus. Superintendent Carter will work with the system’s policy committee regarding development of all new policies.
    On the recommendation of Superintendent Carter, the board approved registering with the State Board of Education as a Public Charter School Authorizer. This will position the Greene County Board to have some input regarding any group seeking to start a charter school in this county.

    The following instructional items were also approved:
    * Develop plans and organize the Learning Academy at Peter J. Kirksey to become a virtual school for the Greene County School District.
    * Provide students with instruction on how to conduct themselves when stopped by a police officer.
    * Give surplus textbooks to students to help with reading comprehension.
    * Provide books to parents who are pregnant as an effort to promote reading to unborn babies. This program will be called the Unborn Initiative.
    * Organize a peer mentoring program for grades 6 – 12.
    In other business the board approved the following Personnel Items:
    * Retirement of Ms. Brenda Grant, Elementary Teacher at Robert Brown Middle School, effective November 30, 2016.
    * Employment of Ms. Jacqueline Edwards as Part-time Custodian at Robert Brown Middle School; Ms. Tiffany Linebarger from Long-term Sub to a regular teacher at Robert Brown Middle School.
    Adding the following to the current Bus Driver Substitute List 2016-2017: Eddie Coats and Wenonah Peebles.
    The board also approved the following:
    * Agreement between Greene County Board of Education and Greene County Park & Recreation for use of Carver Middle School’s gymnasium during current Basketball Season.
    * Payment of all bills, claims, and payroll.
    *Bank reconciliations as submitted by Mr. Leon Dowe, CSFO.

    In his report to the board, Superintendent Carter presented the following initiatives:
    * Organize a system-wide Friends and Classmates Day.
    * Teach the 2016 Election Process and the importance of voting.
    * Get to Know Your Students Day for teachers and school personnel.
    * Enhance career and technical education programs designed to coincide with technical schools and the workplace.
    * Graduate 75% to 80% of students who will be college or career ready.
    * Identify middle school students who are ready to advance to a more challenging curriculum.
    * Enhance the STEM program to include Welding (seeking to hire a welding instructor).
    * Pre AP Courses will be offered to Middle School students.
    * Provide cameras for all classrooms for safety and accountability.
    * November 11 is Veterans Day – A salute to all Veterans on this National Holiday. School is out.

  • Gov. Bentley to name Alabama Advisory Council on Gaming to set the course for lottery, electronic bingo in state

    greenetrackOn October 3, 2016, Alabama Governor Robert Bentley issued Executive Order 24 creating the Alabama Advisory Council on Gaming.
    This group is tasked with “assessing the current state and local laws on gambling, as well as the taxes generated therefrom, and to evaluate the best practices in other states, including tax revenue structures and the enabling and implementing regulations and law, as well as comparing Alabama state laws to applicable Federal gaming laws.”
    The Council is to report its findings and recommendations to the Governor and Legislature by January 31, 2017, prior to the next legislative session.
    The Governor’s action comes after he and Attorney General Luther Strange sent a series of letters at the end of September 2016 urging local Sheriffs and District Attorneys around the state to enforce the laws prohibiting electronic bingo in their jurisdictions. This letter was sent to Greene County Sheriff Benison and D.A. Greg Griggers.Governor Bentley and Luther Strange sent a more specific and pointed letter to the Sheriffs and D. A.’s for Macon and Lowndes County, listing specific electronic bingo facilities, like Victoryland, which recently opened in these counties and requesting that they be closed based on Alabama law and Supreme Court decisions.
    The law enforcement officials in Macon and Lowndes responded to this letter saying that they did not have the capacity or desire to move against electronic bingo facilities in their jurisdictions.
    In his Executive Order creating the Gaming Advisory Council, the Governor indicates that gaming in Alabama has been the subject of dispute and controversy and that the State of Alabama needs a fresh perspective and a clear path forward as it relates to gaming and games of chance.
    Efforts by the Governor to pass an Alabama State Lottery in this summer’s special legislative session met with defeat because of different gaming interests, including electronic bingo in counties with local Constitutional Amendments. Indian casinos in Alabama and casinos in other states, were not satisfied or protected by the legislation. The proceeds of the state lottery would have been used primarily to support Medicaid in the General Fund and possibly scholarships and pre-K educational programs.
    The Governor’s proposed Advisory Council on Gaming will have at least 11 members appointed as follows:

    • five (5) appointed by the Governor;
    • two members of the House of Representatives, appointed by the Speaker of the House, one Republican and one Democrat;
    • two members of the Alabama Senate, appointed by the President Pro Temp, one Democrat and one Republican;
    • one representative of the Alabama District Attorneys Association, appointed by the Governor;
    • one representative of the Alabama Sheriffs Association, appointed by the Governor;
    • and additional appointments as the Governor deems necessary.

    In the two weeks since his announcement of the Council, the Governor has not publically announced the appointment of any members.
    The Greene County Democrat contacted Luther “Nat” Winn, CEO of Greenetrack for a statement of the Governor’s Advisory Council on Gaming. “ I hope Governor Bentley is serious and sincere about seeking a way forward for gaming in the state and not just trying to divert attention from the issue. He seems to be moving slowly in naming the Council. They have a lot of work to do in preparing recommendations for the upcoming legislative session, which begins in February 2017,” said Winn.
    “We intend to continue operating in Greene County under Constitutional Amendment 743, because the voters of Greene County authorized electronic bingo. We know that Luther Strange has appealed our latest case to the Alabama Supreme Court, but we feel we are on sound legal and constitutional grounds to operate electronic bingo in the county.
    “We feel the people of Greene County will support us and rally to our defense if the Supreme Court decides against the jobs, contributions and progress provided by gaming in Greene County,” said Winn.

  • Community awaits Eutaw decision on hearing held for police officers

    On Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2016, Eutaw Mayor Hattie Edwards and the City Council held a closed personnel hearing reportedly for three Eutaw police officers who had been placed on administrative leave. At the close of the hearing, the outcome was not announced. It is expected that at the next regularly scheduled city council meeting on Tuesday, October 25, the public will be be given more information regarding the hearing and subsequent decisions.
    In an attempt to ascertain who has hiring and firing authority in city government, the Greene County Democrat staff researched recent municipal cases on this issue which resulted in Supreme Court decisions.
    The Alabama Supreme Court has issued various case rulings confirming that, in Alabama, mayors alone have the power to hire and fire municipal employees. In 2009 the Supreme Court ruled unanimously in favor of Fairfield Mayor Kenneth Coachman, who had sued five members of the city council after they voted in favor of an ordinance that would have stripped the mayor of appointing authority. Jefferson County Circuit Judge Dan King ruled that, according to state law, the authority rested with the mayor. The Supreme Court upheld King’s decision.
    In similar cases steaming from the 2009 decision, the Alabama Supreme Court issued rulings against the city councils of Fairhope and Daphne when they passed ordinances removing their mayors’ power over personnel matters and giving it to themselves. The Supreme Court forced the city councils to undo the ordinances.
    At press time, the Democrat was unable to reach the city attorney to corroborate the process and procedures involved in hiring and firing practices in Eutaw Municipal Government.

  • Girls freed from Boko Haram reunited with families

    Jane Onyanga-Omara , USA TODAY

    nigerian-girls-returned

     Some of the Nigerian girls

    The 21 girls who were rescued last week after being kidnapped by the militant group Boko Haram more than two years ago have been reunited with their families.

    They were among more than 200 students taken from their school in the northeastern Nigerian town of Chibok by the extremists in April 2014, sparking the global “Bring Back Our Girls” social media campaign.

    Speaking at a ceremony in the capital Abuja on Sunday, one of the girls said they were starved, the BBC reported. Many were forced to convert from Christianity to Islam.

    Information Minister Lai Mohammed denied reports that the girls were released in exchange for four detained Boko Haram leaders. The Nigerian government also denied that a ransom was paid. Some 197 kidnapped girls are believed to remain missing.

    The negotiations for the girls’ release were brokered by the International Red Cross and the Swiss government.

    Speaking Sunday, the Nigerian president’s spokesman said the Boko Haram splinter group that released the girls was willing to negotiate the release of 83 more girls.

    “These 21 released girls are supposed to be tale bearers to tell the Nigerian government that this faction of Boko Haram has 83 more Chibok girls,” Garba Shehu, spokesman for President Muhammadu Buhari, told Reuters by phone                  https://twitter.com/PhilipObin/status/787768790012551169

    “The faction said it is ready to negotiate if the government is willing to sit                            down with them,” he said, adding that authorities were willing to negotiate.

     

    Commenting on work to free the 83 girls, Mohammed said: “Already we are on phase two and we are already in discussions. But of course you know these are very delicate negotiations, there are some promises we made also about the confidentiality of the entire exercise and we intend to keep them.”

    International Alert — a London-based peace building charity — said it worked with the United Nations Children’s Fund in Nigeria and local organizations to help reintegrate girls who escaped from Boko Haram into their communities.

    “Tragically, the ordeal does not end when these girls and women escape or are rescued,” said Kimairis Toogood, an adviser for International Alert in Nigeria. “Many face rejection, and even violence, from their own families and communities due to stigma around sexual violence — especially if they return with a baby. This makes re-integration extremely difficult.”

    Shehu told Reuters that the splinter group said the rest of the kidnapped Chibok girls were with the part of the group that is under the control of Abubakar Shekau, who pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, also known as ISIL or ISIS, in March 2015.

    A number of extremists have moved away from Shekau over his failure to adhere to ISIL’s guidance, Reuters reported. In August, ISIL named Musab al-Barnawi as its new leader in west Africa.

     

     

  • #BlackoutBR protests, boycotts continue in Baton Rouge over Alton Sterling shooting

    By Meghan Ellis (The Drum, NNPA Member)

     

    blackoutprotest_thedrum_lores.jpg

    Protesters line the walls of a conference room at city hall during a police reform meeting in Baton Rouge, La. (The Drum)

     

     

     

    BATON ROUGE — As shootings continue to plague cities across the country, frustrated citizens are continuing their fight for justice. With each shooting, dashcam and other forms of surveillance footage have been released to ensure complete disclosure. Unfortunately, that hasn’t been the case with the deadly shooting of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge.

     

    After nearly three months, only the cell phone videos filmed by spectators have been released. In addition to the withholding of dashcam footage and other surveillance videos, Baton Rouge police officers Blane Salamoni and Howie Lake II are still on administrative leave. No charges have been brought against the officers and citizens are wondering why.

     

    Now, citizens and protesters are demanding answers. Monday, Sept. 26 was declared #BlackOutBR, a day where local citizens wore black clothes and did not work, go to college, or shop. A rally was held at the steps of City Hall calling for information on the Alton Sterling case. After the rally, protesters entered a police reform meeting to hear the committee’s plans and to demand answers and action.

     

    “The problem is, with an exception of a few, we don’t see these people in the community,” businessman Cleve Dunn Jr. told the committee. “When you look around and you don’t see the community, there should be no meeting.”

     

    The committee included District Attorney Hillar Moore, councilmembers Tara Wicker, Donna Collins Lewis and Erika Green, Baton Rouge Police Department Chief Carl Dabadie Jr., local pastors and residents.

     

    “What happens when leaders and protesters disrupt a meeting on police reform? Things get uncomfortable, they get real, and then they get a seat at the table, alongside the chief of police, the DA, & the DOJ,” wrote artist Walter Geno McLaughlin on Facebook.

     

    More than 30 protesters lined the walls of the small meeting room, including Sterling’s aunts. “We want to press upon our local government but also go all the way to feds that we want a decision on the investigation, said Dunn who explained the reason for the gathering and expressed protesters’ demands.

     

    “This issue of Alton Sterling has been divested from the people in this room as much as we hate to hear that,” said Will Jorden, who is an assistant district attorney and prosecutor. “We hear the frustration. I am frustrated. These pastors are frustrated. But what this [committee] does is give the people a sense of legitimacy and to be able to move forward with positive change.”

     

    Wicker said that the group wasn’t charged with coming up with solutions. “That’s not our job. That’s not what we are doing here,” said Wicker. “Our charge is to setup an infrastructure so that what you are saying can actually be heard, documented and put into a policy paper that will be submitted as the voice of the community.”

     

    Protesters presented a list of demands which included a request for changes to be made to city and state flood contracts. The change to contracts would require the cancellation of current contracts in order to include Black-owned firms in renegotiations. The third demand is in reference to police reform. With incidents of alleged injustices resolved with internal investigations, community leaders and local citizens adamantly believe there needs to be a task force in place on state and local law enforcement levels to reform police departments across the city and state.

     

        The Drum is a member publication of the National Newspaper Publishers Association. Learn more about becoming a member at www.nnpa.org.

     

  • Unions picket outside Trump’s Washington DC Hotel

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    Union members picket at Trump’s Hotel

    Hundreds of workers protested outside Donald Trump’s newly-opened hotel in Washington, D.C. on Thursday to demand he recognize and negotiate with the union at Las Vegas’ Trump International Hotel.

    Workers at the Las Vegas hotel, which is half-owned by the Republican presidential candidate, voted to organize in Dec. 2015 and the union was recognized by the National Labor Relations Board earlier this year.

    However, Trump and the hotel management have refused to recognize the vote of roughly 500 workers, saying it was “anything but free and fair.”

    Workers representing some of the country’s largest labor unions, including the AFL-CIO, CWA, AFSCME, and UNITE Here were holding banners and chanting: “What do we want? Contract! When do we want it? Now!”

    Similar pickets have been organized also outside Trump hotels in New York, Chicago, San Francisco and Honolulu.

    During his polemical presidential campaign, Trump has shown his disdain for unions, saying that wages are “too high.”

    With just weeks to go until Election Day on Nov. 8, polls show Trump is losing, with a widening gap between he and his Democratic Party rival, Hillary Clinton. His numbers dropped following the revelations of a lewd tape in which he boasted about sexually assaulting women.