Quote of The Week:


‎"Natural hair has its place in the discussion of identity for people of African descent. As does love for ones inherent African features such as skin tone, body type and bone structure. But these ideals are only details in a much bigger picture that in panoramic view is more inclusive of living an authentic and sustainable lifestyle. During Happily Natural Day, one is immersed in the myriad of ways that people of African and indigenous descent experience authentic and sustainable lifestyles in a modern contemporary context. Through Happily Natural Day one becomes more aware of lifestyles that compliment a disengagement from the plastic inorganic life continuum that is forced upon us as people of color living in societies that circumscribed our cultures as savage and uncivilized. Through Happily Natural Day and events like it we seek reclamation of our sacred whether it be through food, adornment, commerce, education or performance art."

Duron Chavis - Founder of Happily Natural Day Feb 29th, 2012


15th National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality

The Call for the 15th National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality

#Bring a candle in remeberance of victims of police brutality – bring a sign with their name – bring a drum if you drum #

Richmond, Virginia
Friday October 22nd 8:00pm to 9:00pm
Downtown Shockoe Slip – 11th & Main St
duronchavis@gmail.com

Atlanta, Georgia
4:00pm Woodruff Park (Downtown Atlanta)
Corner of Edgewood Park and Peachtree Street
One block from 5 Points MARTA
oct22atl@yahoo.com

The Call for the 15th National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality, Repression and the Criminalization of a Generation

October 22, 2010: UNITE TO FIGHT!

Hundreds of people from around the country marched in Detroit to express their pain and outrage at the police shooting of seven-year old Aiyana Jones, killed during a police raid while she was sleeping in her home. Hundreds more will march on the Department of Justice in Washington DC on September 25th for the Redeem Aiyana’s Dream March, coordinated on the same day with the Mothers Taking a Stand Against Police Brutality and Gun Violence rally taking place in Oakland, CA for Aiyana Jones and Oscar Grant.

Thousands of people nationally were horrified watching the Youtube videos of Oscar Grant lying face down on the BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) platform, getting shot in the back on January 1, 2009 by BART police officer Johannes Mehserle. In July, people demonstrated in the Bay Area and Los Angeles and other cities across the nation when Mehserle received a slap-on-the-wrist conviction of involuntary manslaughter.

Actions for Oscar Grant are being organized all around the country to take place on October 23rd. Days of protests in Los Angeles against the killing of Manuel Jamines, a Guatemalan day laborer, were met with aggressive police repression — rubber bullets, riot gear, and turning two of the protesters over to ICE (immigration) custody.

Six people were killed from 8/30 to 9/7 in Washington State, beginning with John T Williams, a well-known and beloved First Nations totem carver who was shot down on August 30th for carrying a knife and a piece of wood. Three hundred people came out for a vigil and drum circle in protest.

Nationally there has been widespread protests against the new Arizona law, which promotes racial profiling against anyone who “appears” like an immigrant. This new law would result in more arrests and deaths of people at the hands of law enforcement agents.

In under two weeks, two Mexicans were killed on the border by Border Patrol agents, the second death being that of a 15-year-old Mexican boy.

Thousands of people across the country wept angry tears when Lynne Stewart, a people’s attorney for many decades who has fought fiercely against police brutality, was brought up for resentencing and given an even longer prison term of ten years (see www.lynnestewart.org to read more of her history).

October 22nd, the National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality, Repression and the Criminalization of a Generation is a day to build upon the resistance that is already happening, and strengthen our ability to UNITE TO FIGHT on a national level.

High school students in many states face police repression and tasers in their schools. A 17-year old student was tased in Middletown, CT for stealing a Jamaican patty from the school cafeteria.

In Pittsburgh, PA, 18-year old honors student Jordan Trent Miles was attacked by three plainclothes police officers who did not identify themselves. He was viciously beaten until unrecognizable, some of his dreads torn from his scalp, then charged with aggravated assault.

The NYPD Stop and Frisk policies, which result in police on an average day arbitrarily stopping 2000 people (many of whom have not violated any laws), come down the hardest on teenagers and young men under 20. Nine out of ten people stopped are Black and Latino. Any one stop has the potential to turn deadly.

Homeless people are on the front lines of intersection with law enforcement, because they are often in public spaces. In Portland, Oregon, people are protesting laws which criminalize people sitting on a sidewalk. In Eureka, California, people are organizing against raids against homeless encampments.

WHY SHOULD YOU COME OUT for the National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality, Repression and the Criminalization of a Generation on OCTOBER 22nd? You should take part in the October 22nd events in your area because —

**You want to help create the most powerful, most visible protest possible on a national basis

** You want to STOP the LIES told about people stopped, beaten or killed by police – “they must have been doing something wrong or it wouldn’t have happened to them” — and let people know what the real stories are, told by the families of the victims who take part in October 22nd

** You want to create unity among the different groups of people being attacked – UNITE TO FIGHT!

#Bring a candle in remeberance of victims of police brutality – bring a sign with their name – bring a drum if you drum #

Richmond, Virginia
8:00pm to 9:00pm
Downtown Shockoe Slip – 11th & Main St
duronchavis@gmail.com

Atlanta, Georgia
4:00pm Woodruff Park (Downtown Atlanta)
Corner of Edgewood Park and Peachtree Street
One block from 5 Points MARTA
oct22atl@yahoo.com

Related Reading:

The Thin Blue Line: An In-depth Look at the Policing Practices of the Los Angeles Police Department
Why Blacks Fear 'America's Mayor': Reporting Police Brutality and Black Activist Politics Under Rudy Giuliani
Law 101: Everything You Need to Know About American Law (Law 101: Everything You Need to Know about the American Legal System)
Disorder at Day Laborer Sites
We Are an Image from the Future: The Greek Revolt of December 2008


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