Rania Khalek Dispatches from the Underclass

Former Los Angeles police chief William “Bill” Bratton is a staunch supporter of stop and frisk—a practice that intensifies racial profiling and police brutality towards black and brown people while failing to prevent crime. Bratton loves stop and frisk so much that he says cities without it are “doomed to failure.”

So imagine my surprise when I learned that New York City Mayoral frontrunner Bill de Blasio—who’s marketed himself as an opponent of stop and frisk—had floated Bratton as his potential pick to replace Ray Kelly as the city’s police commissioner.

I was even more puzzled when I came across this August 22 post on de Blasio’s campaign website praising Bratton as the “architect of community policing”, in contrast to Ray Kelly (backed by Christine Quinn), the “architect of overuse-and-abuse of stop-and-frisk.” Read More

Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi is getting an earful for postponing the execution of a death row inmate for another month in order to attend a fundraiser for her re-election campaign.

This came as a surprise to many given Bondi’s fervent support for Florida’s recently passed “Timely Justice Act“—a law that speeds up the execution process despite Florida’s penchant for sentencing innocent people to death. Read More

I’m loving this map from the Atlas of Prejudice. It’s US foreign policy in a nutshell.

Yanko Tsvetkov's "Atlas of Prejudice: Mapping Stereotypes"

From Yanko Tsvetkov’s “Atlas of Prejudice: Mapping Stereotypes

Overwhelming public opposition to bombing Syria has been repeatedly attributed to the Iraq war by various media outlets. They’ve even come up with clever terms, like “Iraq fatigue” and “Iraq syndrome”, to describe the supposed illness that afflicts an overwhelming majority of the American public—because, it turns out, not wanting to drop bombs on people is a horrific disease that must be eradicated.

William Galston of the Brookings Institute took to the Wall Street Journal to scold this illness for getting in the way of saving the Syrian people.  “Little more than a decade after the Vietnam syndrome was laid to rest, an Iraq syndrome has replaced it,” writes  Galston. “The question is whether this new sentiment will dominate policy—whether acting for the wrong reasons in Iraq will prevent us from acting for the right reasons in Syria.” Read More

L-R: Khalia Wilson, 14; Lamis Chapman, 13; Shytika Wilson, 15; Jonathan Harris, 18. Photographed in the park on August 28, 2013. (Source: New York Daily News)

A group of Muslim teens were allegedly beaten up by NYPD officers on Monday, August 26, while playing handball in a Bronx park, and had their hijabs, or Muslim headscarves, torn off in the process.

Sisters Lamis Chapman, 12, and Khalia Wilson, 14, told the New York Daily News that they were playing handball on Monday, August 26, around 9:30pm at a park near their Bronx home when they were approached by NYPD officers who ordered them to leave because the park was closed.

The girls complied but as police followed them out they say one officer grabbed the younger sister, Khalia, from behind, put her in a chokehold and wrestled her to the ground. “They said they asked for ID. I didn’t hear them,” Khalia told the Daily News. Read More

Philip Agnew of the Dream Defenders and Sofia Campos of United We Dream were scheduled to speak at yesterday’s commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington. Both are youth led organizations tackling civil rights issues like immigration, racial profiling and the school-to-prison pipeline. That might explain why the were cut from the roster last minute.

So they posted their speeches on YouTube and Agnew called for others to post two-minute speeches as well and share them under the hashtag #ourmarch. And holy crap, they’re both brilliant, moving, beautiful, energizing, powerful and honest. No wonder they were cut. Had they given their speeches they would’ve stolen the show and spoken more truth to power than all of the big name speakers combined. I urge you to watch the speeches they had planned to deliver. They’re short and worth it!

Michelle Alexander, author of the bestseller “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration In the Age of Colorblindness”, posted a statement on Facebook today about her desire to broaden the conversation on racial injustice to include issues she typically has not addressed, like U.S. militarism and mass surveillance. She says she came to this conclusion after deep reflection about the 50th anniversary of the March On Washington and Dr. King’s evolving activism post-1963.

As a huge fan of Alexander’s tireless work in ending mass incarceration, it’s both refreshing and inspiring to see her take what I see as a crucial step towards a more holistic interpretation of racial and class oppression. And as regular visitors of this website are aware, I often write about the parallels between militarism abroad and policing at home, a topic that receives little attention. So I’m thrilled that a person of Alexander’s stature has acknowledged its importance. Read More

Montana teen Cherice Morales committed suicide following a sexual relationship with her teacher. (New York Daily News)

(Updated below)

Fifty-four-year-old Stacey Dean Rambold, a former high school teacher in Montana, was sentenced to 30 days in prison for raping 14-year-old Cherice Morales. That’s right, just 30 days.

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I spent yesterday in Washington, DC, where the the fiftieth anniversary of the March On Washington was being commemorated. And unsurprisingly it was a big disappointment, just as I expected it would be. It may seem harsh, but to think that a day packed with pretty speeches by a diverse array of powerful elites, like Attorney General Eric Holder and Democratic representatives Nancy Pelosi and Steny Hoyer (to name a few), would appropriately symbolize the legacy of Dr. King or the civil rights movement is borderline delusional.

Sure, there were plenty of exceptional speakers, my favorite being 9-year-old Asean Johnson, who’s been giving Rahm Emmanuel and co. hell for the racist school closures in Chicago. But, as Dave Zirin explains in an excellent summary of yesterday’s disappointments, these exceptional individuals were allotted just seconds to speak, barely enough time to challenge the establishment. In fact, Asean was cut off by Randi Weingarten, President of the American Federation of Teachers, when he attempted to go off script. I wasn’t the only one who heard Asean say, “Wait, I ain’t done,” when she snatched the microphone away while patting him on the back and smiling as if interacting with a pet.

“Based upon the speeches during the main portion of today’s events there can be little doubt that the Dr. King who was murdered in Memphis in 1968 would not have been allowed to speak at this fiftieth-anniversary commemoration of his life,” says Zirin. Who can argue with that?

It’s no secret that the civil rights leaders who organized and spoke at the March On Washington in 1963 were heavily monitored (and harassed) by the FBI both during the march and throughout their lives. This made it excruciatingly painful to watch big name speakers who moonlight as NSA cheerleaders celebrate the legacy of those who were once the surveillance state’s most sought after targets.

When President Obama praises the civil rights movement and the March On Washington in his speech later this week, I wonder if in the back of his mind he’ll recognize the irony that as the nation’s first black president he is responsible for the largest expansion of NSA surveillence in US history. Jelani Cobb at the New Yorker said it best: “The moral arc of the universe is long, and it bends toward irony.”

Still, there were positive aspects of yesterday’s celebrations. For me, it was hearing Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, an activist and postdoctoral fellow in the Department of African American Studies at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, speak live at Busboys and Poets. I didn’t know Taylor before yesterday, but her speech resonated and even gave me chills. She’s perhaps the most powerful speaker on racial inequality I’ve ever heard. You can check out her speech below. The beginning is cut off, but it’s still worth listening to.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T95QeNDrgcU&start=2436]

Authorities in Hayward, California are investigating the shooting death of Donny Gene Simmons Jr, a father of two who was shot dead Wednesday night by Hayward Police in front of his wife and two young daughters, marking the second fatal police-involved shooting by the Hayward Police Department this year.

Police say that they were responding to a 911 call from Simmons’ daughter concerning a domestic dispute. When they arrived, Police claim Simmons lunged at officers with a knife, forcing them to open fire.

But 34-year-old LaDonna Simmons, Donny Simmons’ high school sweetheart and wife of 13 years, contradicted the police version of events, telling the Bay Area News Group that the officers barged in her home unannounced and shot her unarmed husband once in the abdomen, followed by another six shots as he laid on the ground in the fetal position.

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