Two separate eyewitness accounts, telling the exact same story.
Tag: ferguson
I know most news networks are not covering Ferguson or are doing a shit job. So here is a compilation of NPR’s coverage. It’s really good.
How People In Ferguson See The Police in Ferguson
For A 4th Night, Ferguson Police Disperse Protesters
In Tense Ferguson, Mo., 2 Reporters Caught in Arrests
Tear Gas and Arrests: Ferguson Police and Protesters Face Off
Race Relations ‘Top Priority” in Ferguson, Police Chief Says
In Ferguson Shooting’s Tumultuous Wake, Leaders Call for Peace and Protest
In the Absence of Answers, Protests fill Ferguson’s Silence
In Ferguson, Missouri, Calls for Justice and Calm After Michel Brown’s Death
Police Shooting Death of Missouri Teen Stokes Racial Tension
Protesters in St. Louis- Area Call for Accountability in Teen’s Death
FBI Opens Probe Into The Police Shooting That Roiled St. Louis
In Hashtag Protest, ‘Black Twitter’ Shows Its Strength
What Policing Looks like to Former (Black) Officer
What Policing Looks Like to Former Investigator of Misconduct
Vigil For Teen Killed by Police Officer Spirals into Violence
St. Louis Police: Black Teen Shot In Altercation With Officers
So the cops lied about the tear gas (tried to say it was only smoke bombs, despite people’s eyes and throat burning). Anther person has been shot. Many people have been arrested.
Black women and girls lost to gun violence, police brutality, intimate partner violence and transphobia:
Dana Larkin
Kassandra Perkins
Rekia Boyd
Tarika Wilson
Aiyana Stanley-Jones
Adaisha Miller
Brandy Martell
Deanna Cook Patrick
Tyisha Miller
Ashley Sinclair
We remember your names and we honor your lives.
12:01 AM in Ferguson. Curfew broken.
INDICT HIM AND WE LEAVE
Ladies and Gentleman, the man that will be in history books. He was throwing the burning tear gas. Not to the cops but away from the children protesting. In his American Shirt and bag of chips. Check his twitter.
We want you all to know and remember that Black girls are always present despite efforts to disappear, displace, and rearrange us.
I want you to know what the members of Combahee River Collective wanted the world to know: black girls and black women are inherently valuable. To say that black women and girls are valuable to is to acknowledge the brilliance, labor, and love that proceeds from their very existence. To affirm and practice that black women and girls are inherently valuable is to negate the systems of oppression that depend on appropriating surplus value from black girls and other peoples in order to reproduce their death-dealing relations. To know that black girls are inherently valuable is to speak life in the face of death. Know that.
I think about the work that my mentors at SOLHOT do and the deep immense gap there is in the representation of our stories. Black girls and women have been trying for centuries to tell the world that they are killing us. Yes, some of us live to tell those stories, but others don’t. This fight against white supremacist police brutality will not see any success if we continue to treat the violence and deaths of Black women and girls as a secondary niche cause for only feminists to deal with. Our lives are valuable. our names are worthy of remembering. SOLHOT created Know /Remember for this reason. We need to Know/Remember these girls and women and the countless. COUNTLESS. (64,000 Black girls are gone in this country. Missing or dead) others who get swept under the radar or are relegated to misinformed/incorrect scrolling updates on our fuckshit news coverage of the war being waged over Black bodies. There is no racial justice without gender justice and lives of Black girls and women that were taken at the hands of police are not any less valuable or worthy of mention.
Know/Remember:
Tyisha Miller: Feb 8, 1999 Miller and five girlfriends went to a nearby mall at about 4 p.m., stayed for a few hours and then headed for an amusement park. There, they went on a water ride, filled out job applications for the ride, then went to a city park, where they “talked and wrestled on the grass.” Some of the girlfriends say they had been drinking, but others deny it. An autopsy found that Miller had been drinking that day. At about 12:30 a.m., Miller dropped off all but one of her friends, a 15-year-old girl nicknamed Bug. While heading home to Rubidoux, the car got a flat tire and they stopped at a convenience store. There, according to what friends told lawyers, a white man the young women didn’t know replaced the flat with a spare. But the air pump at the convenience store didn’t work, so they drove to a gas station, less than a mile away, followed by the man. When they realized the spare tire would not hold air, Miller began calling friends for help. Bug hitched a ride to Rubidoux with the man, while Miller waited with the car for her friends to arrive.
Shantel Davis: June 16, 2012 Unarmed 23-year-old Shantel was fatally shot by an NYPD officer in East Flatbush Thursday.
Alesia Thomas: Alesia Thomas lost consciousness and died in Los Angeles police custody on July 22, 2013, after being handcuffed, placed in a hobble restraint device (leg restraints) and put into the back of a patrol vehicle.
!!!
I’ve been seeing posts and photos about the looting and the police standing around, I just wanted to say that Antonio French has been tweeting all about the looters and the protestors, please go to @AntonioFrench to read through what happened last night, these are all written by him while he was there or retweeted from him, there’s a lot I didn’t include, please stay informed by those that are there.
These tweets (and one retweet) are from my friend Ryan, a journalist who has been on the ground in Ferguson for the past few days. (His Twitter account is here, and it’s a great source of updates on the situation there [x]).
I just wanted to remind everybody that while spreading word about Michael Brown’s unjust murder and the horrifying events of the night of August 14, 2014, please do not oversimplify or ignore the complexities of the situation.
Journalists in the town have been doing what journalists do: focusing on all the negative aspects about the community to try and make it look like a hell-hole in order to sell their own pictures and stories, and basically all many of them want to do is further their own careers. But focusing on all that negativity only paints the picture of one side of the story, ignoring a lot of other important things going on there.
Please do not fall prey to the media’s game. Anger at the actions of the police in Ferguson is totally justified, but in the midst of that we cannot allow the people who are living with the situation every day to be dehumanized. Despite all this tragedy and chaos going on around them, they’re still a community and in many ways they’re pulling through all of it together. They want peace. Anyone looting or burning things down is a very small portion of the community. The whole story is so much bigger.
A story doesn’t need tear gas to be interesting. We need to hear every side of this story, not just the horrific parts.
TL:DR: please don’t fall prey to media attempts to dehumanize and oversimplify the situation in ferguson!!



