Posts Tagged White Supremacy
Mobilize Now Against Bigots in NC
Posted by illvox collective in Organizing on August 25, 2009
Close to the 30 year anniversary of the Greensboro Massacre, on August 29th, the National Socialist Movement will attempt to hold a regional conference in Greensboro, NC. As they are inviting white supremacists and fascists from all over the East Coast, North Carolina anti-racists are inviting anti-racists from all over the East Coast to join us in confronting them. We won’t take this lying down. On August 29th in Greensboro, NC the National Socialist Movement (Nazi Party) is planning (hoping?) to hold a regional conference. They have avoided making this announcement public until recently, it seems, to keep anti-racists from organizing a counter-response. The hotel where the conference is to be held has not been announced yet, but anti-racists from across the state are making plans and getting ready.
According to one white power website, white supremacists are being invited from PA, DE, MD, VA, WV, NC, SC, FL, AL and GA to the one-day event. According to white power websites, the conference will begin at 10am and end at 6pm, and will take place at a hotel somewhere in Greensboro.
The conference is, not coincidentally, to be held close to the 30-year anniversary of the Greensboro Massacre, where five anti-racist organizers were shot and killed by the Klan, with help from police and FBI. The choice of this date alone will surely help get TONS of pissed Greensboro folks out.
As there will be fascists from almost ten different states present, North Carolina anti-racists are inviting comrades from across the East Coast to join us in confronting white supremacists in Greensboro. Keeping these kinds of groups weak and disorganized is a key component in our larger fight to create a world without white supremacy. So tell your friends, take the day off work, and stay tuned.
It is typical for fascists to keep logistical details secret until the last minute to prevent disruption or confrontation. Nevertheless, more details will be made available as soon as possible.
In solidarity,
(some of the many) North Carolina Anti-Racists
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Let Walter Currie Know He’s Not Alone
Posted by illvox collective in Organizing on August 18, 2009
This week, Walter Currie, Jr. had to face the young man who doused him with gas and set him on fire for the first time since the attack took place June 13, 2009, in Poplar Bluff, Missouri.
The 16-year-old charged with the attack appeared in a preliminary juvenile court hearing August 5, 2009, presided over by Butler County’s Associate Circuit Judge John Bloodworth, who will decide if he will tried as an adult or a juvenile.
Winona Currie, Walter’s mother, seemed anxious as she and the family were getting ready for the hearing. Walter is 15 years old, and still has a youthful appearance. He smiles easily, but is soft spoken and shy. His face shows no signs of the attack, but heavy scarring and discoloration peak out from his collar and stretch up his neck.
“I’ve lived in Poplar Bluff all my life,” said Walter Currie Sr., Walter’s father, as the family prepared to leave for the courthouse. “But after this, I don’t know if I want to stay here.”
On June 13, 2009, Walter, who is African-American, was walking with his cousin on a street near downtown Poplar Bluff, a small city of about 17,000 residents in Southeast Missouri. After Walter exchanged a few words with his alleged assailant, who is also one of his classmates, the young man doused Walter with gasoline and set him on fire. A 16-year-old white youth carrying a lighter and a Gatorade bottle filled with gas was arrested at the scene and charged with the crime. The burn injuries to Walter’s stomach, chest, shoulders, and neck put him in the hospital for nine days, and he has had one skin graft surgery, so far.
The racial connotations of this case, and the legacy of lynchings where African Americans were burned to death, are still painfully present for many people. After reading reports from Kansas City and St. Louis on the case, we reached out to Walter’s family and learned how alone they’ve felt in coping with this tragedy. Our film crew decided to go to Poplar Bluff to meet Walter and his family, talk to local law enforcement, and join a group of Kansas City ministers traveling to the town to witness the hearing for Walter’s assailant.
Before the court proceeding, I met with Poplar Bluff Police Chief Danny Whiteley and his Deputy Chief Jeff Rolland. We talked about the Curries’ concern that the police were not adequately investigating the crime, and that the possible racial motivation for the attack was not in the police report. The local authorities told us they’ve found no evidence that the attack was racially motivated, but say that they are cooperating with the Department of Justice on its inquiries into the crime.
“We also sent everything we had to the FBI, so they could look it over,” said Deputy Chief Rolland.
“Our hands are tied on some of this because it is a juvenile case. We may be able to say more after this hearing, if the accused is tried as an adult,” Whiteley said.
According to the department leadership, the Poplar Bluff police department presented evidence to Butler County Prosecuting Attorney Kevin Barbour that would enable him to charge Walter’s attacker with first-degree assault, a Class A felony. If the accused is tried as an adult, such a felony in Missouri carries a minimum prison sentence of 10 years.
Before the court hearing, Chief Whiteley and Deputy Chief Rolland went to the Currie family’s home and drove Walter and the family to the courthouse.
MAKING THE CASE TO TRY WALTER’S ASSAILANT AS AN ADULT
“As preachers, as ministers, and as pastors, we wanted to lend whatever weight we could just by our presence,” said local Pastor Gregory Nichols, Walter’s uncle. “Young Walter needs to know that people care about what happened to him, and about what happens to him in the future as we move forward.”
The Butler-Ripley County Juvenile Office petitioned the court to have Walter’s attacker tried as an adult. The office’s representative, Drew Million, presented witnesses who indicated that if the nearly 17-year-old accused was tried as a juvenile, he would face a maximum sentence of one year and three months. The witnesses testified that the short period might not be enough time to “rehabilitate” the offender.
The defendant’s attorney, Danny Moore, a seasoned local litigator, argued that his client was acting in self-defense against Walter. The juvenile court officer indicated that the youth is accused of carrying a Gatorade bottle filled with gasoline, spraying it on Walter and then igniting him with a lighter.
Although Walter was the victim in this crime, the Currie family was forced to hire their own attorney. Almost a month after the attack, Walter was charged with assault based on an altercation that took place several days before he was set on fire.
Walter’s mother, the last witness called to testify, had a calm demeanor as she spoke about her son. While her answers to questions were brief, at one point, she wiped tears from her face as she spoke. She says that Walter will face multiple surgeries and treatments over the next several years and will be required to wear a burn vest. “Walter is so different since this happened,” she said. “He doesn’t want to be alone. He is jittery and he has a hard time being still. He cries out in the night.”
Judge Bloodworth accepted the defense attorney’s motion for a continuance. He will reconvene the hearing August 19, 2009, and hear final evidence then on whether to try Walter Currie’s accused assailant as an adult.
THE CURRIE FAMILY
Police Chief Whiteley said they have been working with a local clergy member who has consulted with the Department of Justice on similar cases. Preacher Bobby Dean says he believes that the crime against Walter was racially motivated, but that misinformation and rumors have to be dispelled in order to get to the truth. Dean reported that initially there was talk that more than one person was responsible for the attack on Walter. “Only one person set Walter on fire, and we don’t currently have evidence that racial epithets were used at the time of the attack,” he said.
Dean believes the manner of the attack hearkens back to an earlier time when lynching occurred not just in Southern Missouri, but also across the country.
“You think about this kind of thing happening in the early 1900s when lynching was a way of life — even the 1950s and 1960s,” says Dean. “But to fast forward, in this day and time, to know that a human being was doused with gas and set fire to, it was very shocking, very appalling.”
Surely, there are good citizens who must be shocked and appalled by what happened to Walter and would like to do something to show their support. Some local leaders report that the town is working at opening up interracial communication.
But until this Wednesday, Walter and his family say they have felt very alone. Winona Currie says she would like to see more public outcry about what happened to her son. And she would have welcomed other expressions of support: if someone had brought over food to the hospital in St. Louis where Walter was treated for his wounds, or even joined her as she sat beside Walter’s hospital bed. “It’s hard having a child injured in such a hateful way,” she says. “And to have him lay there in pain, and there’s nothing you can do but hurt with him, cry with him. Sometimes, you just need people to talk to.”
In the documentary Not In Our Town, union leader Randy Siemers tells us, “In Montana, when one of your neighbors is under attack, you run out there and protect them. Don’t they do that in other parts of the country?”
Sometimes people laugh when they hear this question in the film. It’s an uncomfortable laugh, because I think so many of us wish we could be the kind of neighbors we know we ought to be. I hope the Curries will soon find that their Poplar Bluff neighbors are there for them as Walter struggles to heal from the burning wounds caused by this crime.
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SPLC Report: Return of the Militias
Posted by illvox collective in General on August 15, 2009
The 1990s saw the rise and fall of the virulently antigovernment “Patriot” movement, made up of paramilitary militias, tax defiers and so-called “sovereign citizens.” Sparked by a combination of anger at the federal government and the deaths of political dissenters at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, and Waco, Texas, the movement took off in the middle of the decade and continued to grow even after 168 people were left dead by the 1995 bombing of Oklahoma City’s federal building — an attack, the deadliest ever by domestic U.S. terrorists, carried out by men steeped in the rhetoric and conspiracy theories of the militias.
In the years that followed, a truly remarkable number of criminal plots came out of the movement. But by early this century, the Patriots had largely faded, weakened by systematic prosecutions, aversion to growing violence, and a new, highly conservative president.
As we report today (see complete report here), they’re back. Almost a decade after largely disappearing from public view, right-wing militias, ideologically driven tax defiers and sovereign citizens are appearing in large numbers around the country. “Paper terrorism” — the use of property liens and citizens’ “courts” to harass enemies — is on the rise. And once-popular militia conspiracy theories are making the rounds again, this time accompanied by nativist theories about secret Mexican plans to “reconquer” the American Southwest.
One federal law enforcement agency has found 50 new militia training groups — one of them made up of present and former police officers and soldiers. Authorities around the country are reporting a worrying uptick in Patriot activities and propaganda. “This is the most significant growth we’ve seen in 10 to 12 years,” says one. “All it’s lacking is a spark. I think it’s only a matter of time before you see threats and violence.”
A key difference this time is that the federal government — the entity that almost the entire radical right views as its primary enemy — is headed by a black man. That, coupled with high levels of non-white immigration and a decline in the percentage of whites overall in America, has helped to racialize the Patriot movement, which in the past was not primarily motivated by race hate. One result has been a remarkable rash of domestic terror incidents since the presidential campaign, most of them related to anger over the election of Barack Obama.
Via Hatewatch
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White people KILL MORE People of color
Posted by APOC-Philly in Uncategorized on June 26, 2009
Cindy Von Quednow
Minutemen Do More Than “Secure” Borders, Also Kill Arizona Dad and Daughter
Earlier this month, nine-year-old Brisenia Flores and her young father Raul were shot and killed during the night in their home in the border town of Arivaca, Arizona. Three suspects allegedly forced themselves into the family’s home dressed as law enforcement officials, shot the two victims and wounded a third.
Shawna Forde, the leading suspect of the murder of Flores and her father, is the leader of Minutemen American Defense and has had ties to Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), both of which have been labeled as hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).
This is another example of continuing violence against immigrants and people of color. The Minutemen and FAIR continually demonize and attack Latinos and immigrants. SPLC reports that FAIR is often quoted in the mainstream media and is taken as a serious entity, when they constantly spew racists rhetoric against immigrants.
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