Monday, June 26, 2006

Death of the Black Woman -- an email

...got this in an email...decided to share

While struggling with the reality of being a human instead of a myth,
the strong black woman passed away. Medical sources say she died of
natural causes, but those who knew her know she died from being
silent when she should have been screaming, smiling when she should have been raging, from being sick and not wanting anyone to know because her pain might inconvenience them.

She died from an overdose of other people clinging to her when she
didn't even have energy for herself. She died from loving men who didn't love themselves and could only offer her a crippled reflection. She died from raising children alone.

She died from the lies her grandmother told her mother and her mother
told her about life, men & racism. She died from being sexually abused as a child and having to take that truth everywhere she went every day of her life, exchanging the humiliation for guilt.

She died from asphyxiation, coughing up blood from secrets she kept
trying to burn away instead of allowing herself the kind of nervous
breakdown she was entitled to, but only white girls could afford.

She died from being responsible, because she was the last rung on the
ladder and there was no one under her she could dump on.

She died from being a mother at 15 and a grandmother at 30 and an
ancestor at 45. She died from being dragged down and sat upon by
un-evolved women POSING as sisters and friends.

She died from tolerating Mr. Pitiful, just to have a man around the
house. She died from sacrificing herself for everybody and everything when what she really wanted to do was be a singer, a dancer, or some
magnificent other. She died from lies of omission because she didn't want to bring the black man down.

She died from tributes from her counterparts who should have been
matching her efforts instead of showering her with dead words and
empty songs. She died from myths that would not allow her to show weakness without being chastised by the lazy and hazy.

She died from hiding her real feelings until they became hard and
bitter enough to invade her womb and breasts like angry tumors.
She died from always lifting heavy groceries all by herself.

She died from never being enough of what men wanted, or being too
much for the men she wanted. She died from being too black and died again for not being black enough.

She died from being misinformed about her mind, her body & the extent
of her royal capabilities. She died from knees pressed too close together because respect was never part of the foreplay that was being shoved at her. She died from loneliness in birthing rooms and aloneness in abortion centers.



She died in bathrooms with her veins busting open with self-hatred
and neglect. And sometimes when she refused to die, when she just refused to give in she was killed by the lethal images of blonde hair, blue eyes and flat butts, being rejected by the OJ.'s, the Quincy's, the Cuba's & the Kobe's (just to name a few). Sometimes, she was stomped to death by racism & sexism, executed by hi-tech ignorance while she carried the family in her belly, the community on her head, and the race on her back!

Labels: , ,

Friday, June 23, 2006

"I wonder why we take from our women, why we rape our women, do we hate our women?

...food for thought

I think its time we kill for our women. To heal our women. Be real to our women. -- Tupac Shakur (Keep Your Head Up)

I get around. The underground just don't stop for Ho's. -- Tupac Shakur (I Get Around-Same CD)


Dear Black Woman: I know that you have suspected this for many years but now it's time to lay the cards on the table and keep it real.


I hate you.


I know that some of the "heavy" Brotha's say that you are the mother of civilization and every thang but they never taught me that in history class. They never taught me about Queen Nzinga and Candace and the old flix on cable have the queens of Egypt lookin' more like Elizabeth Taylor than Eartha Kitt. I never saw any movies about the original ride or die chick Harriet Tubman who was quick to pull a gat on any sucka that punked out and didn't want to roll with tha crew to the Promised Land. But I did see Butta Fly McQueen flossin' in front of Ms. Scarlett 'bout how she "didn't know nuthin' bout birthin' no babies." White folks call that joint a classic. Church wasn't much better as the only women I ever heard about were a white virgin named Mary and whispers about Sis. Ruth sleepin' with the pastor and half the deacon board.


So I hate you.


Now I ain't tryin' to get all deep and philosophical bout this thang cuz I know that peeps have dropped science about some sort of legacy of slavery and how the white man snatched African men from their women and children. How 100 pound Ol' massa Charlie would have his way with Sallie Mae while all 300 pound Big Buck could do was sit in the corner and cry like a little b....um baby. I've heard the old playa's from down south talk about how every Saturday night when they were out with a sweet lil honey, they ran the risk of having a bunch of good ol boyz snatch her up and throw her in the back of a pickup. So they say when I strike out at you I am really striking out at them and my inability to protect you from them. But that ain't true, I'm just following the pimp code laid down by Bishop Don Juan and them..."Always keep a Ho in her place..."


They tell me that there is some sort of conspiracy to destroy the Black family by givin' the sista's more job opportunities than the Brotha's. Some sort of two for one deal where they can satisfy racial quota requirements by hiring somebody who is both black and female before they hire me. So while you went out lookin' for work , every day I was at home eatin' Cheerios and playin' Play Station. That was until social services told you that you had to choose between me stayin' at your crib and keepin' the welfare check so you could feed my lil seed Tyree. So, I'm back home:a 30 year ol man still sleepin' on his mama's couch.


So I hate you.


Maybe I hate you cuz you hate yourself. This ain't the 60's with Sista's with Angela Davis afros throwin' up the Black fist and demanding RESPECT. This ain't even the Sista Power Hip Hop Era when Latifah was still tha queen and Yo Yo was down with the Intelligent Black Woman's Coalition. I mean Isis long done changed her name to Lin Que. We ain't seen Sista Soulja in a minute and Ms. Melody's been missing in action every since she and Kris got that divorce. I haven't heard a Sista speak what's on her mind in a while. But I do see Betty tha Body's booty on the videos every day. Not even sure if Sista's got a voice cuz in every video they are showin' her behind like it's got a mind of its own. But I watch anyway.


So when I flip the channel on the wide screen and hear about a bunch of white boys rapin' a Sista with a broomstick, I can't even get mad cuz my boy Shawn told how he put an extra C-note in Sexy Chocolate's thong at the Hypnotic Ho Club, last night so that she could do that thang she does with a Colt 45 bottle and some Skittles....


So I hate you.


I heard that some Brotha's and Sista's are calling May "Respect Black Women Month" and starting the R.O.S.E. (Respect Our Sisters Everywhere) movement. I heard that they are asking Hip Hop headz not to call Sista's tha "B" word this month and asking Brotha's to give a rose to any Sista whom they have disrespected...I probably won't participate, though. I can't be no hypocrite.


Like I was tellin' my anger management counselor last week, you know the one that the court assigned me to after I caught that case for slappin' Toneka on the corner of 5th and 3rd, last week? Anyway, he asked me if I hated my moms and I told him that I hated her every since that day when them boyz chased me home from school in the 3rd grade and I hoped that pops would come to the door to have my back but it was mama...Pops had skipped town again. Or that time when it was only mama who came to my graduation...Pops couldn't make it. He was locked up again. I never really liked too much of anything after that. Not even my own reflection in the mirror.


Maybe I hate you so much cuz I hate me.......



SOURCE

Labels: , ,

Friday, June 16, 2006

Justice for Corey pt. II

I was researching the progress of Corey's case (see old blog...), and came across this posting at http://newsbusters.org/node/5574 , a site claiming to expose Liberal Media bias. Here's another version of what happened:

Former Atlanta Police Department Officer Raymond S. Bunn was indicted on December 9, 2005 by a Fulton County County grand jury supervised by District Attorney Paul L. Howard.

Officer Bunn was charged with Murder, Felony Murder, Aggravated Assault with a Deadly Weapon and Violation of Oath.

The indictment arises from an incident that occurred three years earlier in the early morning of July 14, 2002 at a parking lot on Peachtree Road in Atlanta. Officer Bunn fired two shots at a Chevy Tahoe SUV that was trying to run him down in the parking lot; the driver of the vehicle, Corey Ward, was hit once in the head and died instantly. Murder and Felony Murder are capital offenses in Georgia. Officer Bunn was a seven-year veteran of the Atlanta P. D.

Following the incident Officer Bunn, a former Marine, was called for duty in Iraq by his National Guard Unit. He served in Iraq from February 2003 until January 2004 when he retuned to the Atlanta P. D. In July 2004 he resigned from the Atlanta P. D., taking a position with the Triple Canopy Security firm. In April 2005 he began work with the Blackwater Security Company providing security for Department of State personnel in Iraq. He has one prior incident involving use of force. In this same tough area of Atlanta, Officer Bunn was on patrol and asked the driver of a Jeep Cherokee to turn the stereo radio down so he could be heard. The driver, a female exited the car, and attacked Officer Bunn, striking and scratching him. Officer Bunn, in defense, struck her once and gave her a black eye. He was later exonerated of claims of racism and police brutality. He has an excellent record as an officer. He is 37 years old, married with five children. No trial date has been set.

Manny Arora of the firm Garland Samuel and Loeb represents officer Bunn. Manny Arora specializes in criminal defense matters.The Incident
In the early morning hours of July 14, 2002 Officer Bunn and his partner, Officer Terry Mulkey, were patrolling a tough nightclub area in Atlanta known as “Buckhead”. The area has bars that stay open until 4 a. m. and experiences lots of burglaries, car thefts, break-ins, shootings and riotous drunken behavior. Local residents complain frequently of brawls, fights and shootings. Officer Mulkey was driving an unmarked police vehicle; Officer Bunn was in the front passenger seat. They stopped at a parking lot and observed several vehicles at the back of the lot, and heard the breaking of a car window, and a vehicle alarm go off.

Suspecting that a vehicle theft was in progress, Mulkey pulled the cruiser into the lot and both exited their vehicle, leaving room for vehicles to enter and exit the parking lot. Prior to leaving the cruiser the officers turned on the blue police flashing lights to identify themselves as police officers. Both officers observed a black male, later identified as Jamal Smith, jump through the passenger side window of a Buick Grand National SUV. The window had been shattered and was missing.

Upon exiting their cruiser, the officers shouted “police, police stop” as Jamal Smith jumped out of the window of the Buick SUV and ran to a Chevy Tahoe. They saw him get into the back seat of the Chevy Tahoe driven by Corey Ward. Both officers were wearing pullover shirts with the words “Atlanta Police” in bold on the front and back; both were wearing chains around their necks that secured their Atlanta Police badges. Emergency blue lights were flashing from inside the windshield and in the rear of the police cruiser. Officers Bunn and Mulkey confronted the Chevy Tahoe about 25 feet in front with weapons drawn; they again yelled, “Police stop, Police stop”.

At the distance of 25 feet in front of the Chevy Tahoe Bunn and Mulkey started to approach the stopped vehicle, when the driver hit the gas and accelerated in reverse screeching the tires and then came to an abrupt stop. The officers began to advance towards the Chevy Tahoe again, but then the driver, Corey Ward, punched the gas pedal and came straight at the Officers. The officers retreated to front of their cruiser for safety. Both officers were in front of the cruiser that was sitting at a right angle with its front facing to the Chevy Tahoe. The Chevy Tahoe was bearing down straight at the front right side of the cruiser. Officer Mulkey was on the driver’s side and escaped to a position on the left front drivers side of the cruiser. Officer Bunn was trapped between the right front of the cruiser and the approaching Chevy Tahoe. As the Chevy Tahoe approached him at about 6- 8 feet, he jumped to his right to avoid being hit and fired his service revolver at the driver. The Chevy Tahoe hit Officer Bunn and his left knee was injured seriously when it was caught between the left front of the Chevy Tahoe and the right front fender of the cruiser. Officer Mulkey confirmed Officer Bunn’s version and stated that Officer Bunn fired his weapon before being hit by the Chevy Tahoe. He said he heard the shots fired, a loud thud and Officer Bunn yelling out in pain. Corey Ward was hit in the head by one bullet that went through the front drivers side window. The trajectory of the bullet was from the front of the temple to the back of the head. The Investigation
Atlanta officer M. R. Carter conducted the investigation. Officer Bunn was interviewed and gave a description of the incident, which was identical to the statement given by officer Mulkey. Both believed that their lives were in danger as the Chevy Tahoe bore down on them. There is no question that the deceased driver, Corey Ward, knew that Officers Bunn and Mulkey had clearly identified themselves as police officers. Two of the occupants of the vehicle, Rodriguez Brown and Jamal Smith say they heard the officers announce their identification, saw their badges and also saw the flashing emergency police lights. Other occupants of the vehicle will claim they thought white armed gunmen were robbing them.

Corey Ward had over two ounces of cocaine in his pocket when he was shot. A large knife was found in the pocket compartment between the driver and passenger’s seats. The Chevy Tahoe was searched and seven bags of marijuana were discovered hidden under the dashboard. Two stolen cell phones were found in the Chevy Tahoe. One cell phone was stolen from a nearby truck the night of the incident.

A study of the crash was conducted using the Vetronix Crash Data Retrieval System that apparently can retrieve data from the airbags in a severe crash. This data showed that the vehicle was traveling at 26 MPH 5 seconds before the crash and at 14 MPH one second before the impact with Officer Bunn and the police cruiser.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) made an analysis of the trajectory of the bullets. The GBI determined that Office Bunn’s position when the shots were fired was at the right front of the cruiser and to the front left of the Chevy Tahoe. The trajectory of the bullet that killed Corey Ward was from front to back of the head. The analysis by the GBI determined that the distance from Officer Bunn to the Chevy Tahoe when he fired was 5 feet or less.

Atlanta Police Department Use of Force Regulations
The regulation in effect for use of force in July 2002 for the Atlanta P. D. provided that “unnecessary use of force against any person or property is prohibited”; and “an employee shall only use necessary force against another person to effect an arrest, prevent an escape . . . or defend himself or another from physical assault. In any event, only the nature and amount of force deemed reasonably necessary by a prudent person to accomplish a lawful purpose shall be used.”

The regulation in effect for use of firearms in July 2002 provided that the primary intention of the policy was to “ensure the safety of both the public and the employees of this department. Therefore while it may become necessary for an employee to discharge a firearm, it is required that the employee make every effort to avoid such drastic action. In all cases only the given amount of force shall be used which is consistent with the accomplishment of the mission. The employee shall use caution and act in a calm and deliberate manner when he/she finds the use of a firearm necessary. No employee will be criticized if he/she chooses not to discharge a firearm if the discharge might threaten the life or safety of another or if the discharge might not be clearly warranted by this policy, state or reasonable judgment. Nor will criticism be made of an employee who when faced with a situation which threatened life or serious physical injury discharged a firearm in self-defense or in the defense of another.” The regulation ends with the caution that “deadly force cannot be taken lightly and that the employee’s actions must be legally warranted and defensible, but also within accepted moral and social codes and consistent with rational and humane social control in a democracy.” Analysis
This is a case, like the Morningstar case in Detroit, where an officer faced, and indeed, believed that he was in a dangerous and violent situation. If he did not act, he could be the victim of violence. Like the Morningstar case, Officer Bunn should be judged from the perspective of what he was facing and what he perceived the threat to be.

Both officer Bunn and Mulkey claimed that they feared for their lives when Corey Ward accelerated the Chevy Tahoe directly at them. Both considered the Chevy Tahoe to be a dangerous weapon. Corey Ward knew that Bunn and Mulkey were police officers since both officers had drawn weapons, emergency lights were flashing and clear identification was on their bodies. Two of the passengers, Rogriguez Brown in particular, state unequivocally that Ward knew they were police officers. Brown was sitting directly behind Ward in the backseat and stated that he observed the emergency lights and the police identification and said Ward also observed the same things that he did.

It can be reasonably concluded that Ward feared being caught with cocaine on his person and deliberately chose to go at the officers in an attempt to run them down and escape. There was clearly room for Ward to avoid the officers and simply speed out of the parking lot. Why he attempted to drive at and over the officers and harm them is speculative. But the discovery of 7 bags of marijuana and the possession of cocaine on Wards person probably caused him to panic and go straight at the officers.

The forensic evidence tends to support Officers Bunn and Mulkey in their claims of imminent danger from the Chevy Tahoe. At 14 miles per hour, a Chevy Tahoe is a dangerous instrument, at 25 miles per hour it is deadly. The logical reason for the drop in speed from 25 MPH to 14 MPH is that in the last few seconds, Corey Ward had been shot and thus no longer was pressing down on the gas pedal.

The regulations for the use of force and use of firearms do not provide much in the way of guidance for a police officer faced with a dangerous confrontation. Use of force is authorized to defend from physical assault, but is to be exercised reasonably and with prudence. Us of a firearm is authorized but is to be avoided if possible, but is authorized in life threatening situations and where serious physical injury is threatened. Deadly force must be legally warranted and defensible.

This is not a case where the officers deliberately confronted the occupants of the vehicle to provoke an incident. They legitimately suspected a burglary or break in was in progress, and properly demanded that the suspects stop and obey their lawful orders. Corey Ward used the vehicle as a weapon, and did so recklessly. By comparison, how different would the officers have reacted if Corey Ward had pointed a firearm at them? No different, they would have correctly concluded that they were in imminent danger and would have been justified using deadly force. The Chevy Tahoe was used as a weapon and in view was the use of deadly force, no less that if Corey Ward had pointed a firearm at the officers. Thus it can be concluded that Officer Bunn used deadly force in self-defense and in defense of the safety of officer Mulkey.


...I also found this...:
SECTION: Metro News; Pg. 1C

LENGTH: 2056 words

HEADLINE: Mourning for Corey;
Family, friends remember teen killed by officer

BYLINE: ERNIE SUGGS

SOURCE: AJC

BODY:
Blaring raps by Jay-Z or Biggie Smalls once welcomed Monesia Youngblood home from work. But her house went silent July 14.

That night, her 18-year-old son, Corey Ward, left home in her new Chevy Tahoe with a truckload of friends, never to return.

"Corey was always the joy of the house," Youngblood said. "I don't hear loud rap music anymore when I come home. But I wish the music was playing."

Ward died after he was shot by Atlanta police Officer Raymond Bunn. Police say the plainclothes officer thought the teens were trying to steal the car and fired in self-defense because Ward was trying to run over him. Ward's friends and family say the teenager thought he was being carjacked by a man with a gun and was trying to get away.

In mid-January, an internal Atlanta Police Department investigation into Ward's death was turned over to Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard's office for review. "We have been painstakingly reconstructing what happened, so we can make a fair judgment" on whether to bring any charges, Howard said.

Making matters more difficult, Howard said, is the fact that Bunn is now stationed overseas with his Army Reserve unit. Bunn could not be reached for comment. In the past, he has declined to discuss the Ward shooting.

As investigators sift through events surrounding the shooting, Youngblood, her family, and Ward's friends still reel from that summer night. It took them seven months to feel they could speak publicly about it. Recently, they met at Youngblood's house for a group discussion with a reporter.

"I just want to see justice," said Ward's father, John Arnold.

The family room of Youngblood's brick home in Decatur is full of folks. If there were ever an extended family, Corey Ward had one.

His grandmothers --- Judy Atkins and Avis Jones --- live in the neighborhood. So does his aunt Sharon Robinson. The five men who were in the car with Ward the night he died --- who were around the house so much they are referred to by Atkins and Jones as their "grandchildren" --- grew up nearby. The group grew so tight they became known as the "Canary Court Boys," after the neighborhood where they grew up.

They attended high school together, played together and chased girls together. Three of them work together now.

Youngblood's sister, Chalee Carmichael, moved in to keep Youngblood company after her son's death. She moved into Ward's room. Aside from a few personal touches, like perfume and flowered comforters, it still looks like a teenage boy's room. Ward's stuff is still there.

"We are not ready to box it up yet," Youngblood said.

"The time will come," said Atkins. "But not now."

Ward was born when his mother and father were in high school. Even though Youngblood and Arnold never married, they have maintained a friendly relationship. He lives across the street from her. Youngblood later married, but her husband died three years ago, making Ward --- who grew up with his mother's maiden name --- the man of the house. In a wood-paneled room lined with trophies and photographs, they describe Ward as a teenager who was kind to his grandmothers, tended to his 9-year-old brother, Alphonse Jamal "A.J." Youngblood, and still was a "player" who took three dates to the prom. He hoped to become an electrician, they said.

"He always had a calmness about him. He was a humble, down-to-earth person who never got in trouble," said Avis Jones, the matriarch of the Ward family, which just had a book published that dates the family to 1851 in Atlanta.

After his death, dozens of people participated in marches on behalf of Ward. Hundreds attended his funeral.

"It amazed my heart to see the people who were here. It was like his light was shining," said Atkins. "God flew this angel into our lives and he let him fly out."

Atkins said faith and prayer have helped them cope with the death.

"For a moment, I thought God was punishing us," said Atkins. "I was angry with God for letting this happen. I was confused. But through prayer, I am more hurt than mad now. I am asking God to give me strength."

Riding in style

On the day he died, Ward asked to borrow his mother's 2001 Chevy Tahoe to go to a party with his friends Jason Heath, Jamal Smith and Jason Smith. Although they all had cars, Ward felt he needed the bigger vehicle to ride in style and comfort.

Halfway to their destination, Jason Heath heard a favorite song of his younger brother, Jerrell, on the radio.

"Corey said, 'Let's go get Jerrell,' " Jason, 19, remembers. Jason was surprised. Ward usually didn't want so many riders in one car. Jerrell, 17, recalled a few months earlier on a rainy afternoon when he was walking home, Ward pulled up with two other people in the car.

"I asked for a ride, and he was like, 'Nah. I never ride four deep,' " Jerrell said. "Then he left me. I walked home." On their way to get Jerrell last July, Ward and his friends spotted Rodriguez "Toot" Brown, Ward's first cousin. Brown, 17, a state Merit Award winner who will attend Morehouse College next year, was headed to his date's house that night. After Ward complained that Brown never hung out with them since he had gotten a girlfriend, Brown succumbed to peer pressure. He jumped into the Tahoe.

The Canary Court Boys set out for a house party that another friend was having in the neighborhood.

"But there were no girls there, so we left," said Brown. "We decided to go to Buckhead."

Since most of them were too young to get into a club, they spent the Saturday night walking the strip and talking to girls.

"We were having such a good time that night," said Jason Heath. "Corey was smiling all night."

A record of force

Officer Raymond Bunn and his partner, Terry Mulkey, also were in Buckhead that evening. They were assigned to the area as members of the police crime suppression unit, a force that works in plainclothes in populated or high-crime areas.

Bunn joined the Police Department in September 1997. In July 1999, Bunn was the first officer on the scene of All-Tech Investment Group Inc., one of two day trading offices where trader Mark O. Barton killed nine people in a 1999 shooting rampage.

On four occasions, according to Bunn's personnel file, the department's Office of Professional Standards investigated claims that Bunn used excessive force in making arrests.

Police union officials have said that four incidents in six years isn't an excessive number, although in one incident, the officer broke a woman's eye socket. Bunn admitted that he used force against Ylia Lavender, but police said she never pursued a complaint. The Atlanta City Council later denied her claim for damages and the case quietly closed.

Marc Lawson, president of the Atlanta chapter of the International Brotherhood of Police Officers, said Bunn had been seen by others in the department as a good officer. "I have been acquainted with Bunn for years, and every encounter I have had with him was professional," Lawson said. "His fellow officers seem to be supportive of him. I have had no one tell me that he is given to overreacting. Certainly not to intentionally harm a citizen."

The two stories

At about 3 a.m. July 14, Corey Ward and his friends had had enough of Buckhead and went to get the Tahoe to drive back home. What happened after that is the subject of considerable dispute.

According to police, the events unfolded this way: Bunn heard glass break near where Ward was parked and thought someone was trying to steal or break into a car. Bunn told investigators he ordered Ward to stop. Ward refused and drove at Bunn, hitting the officer with the slow-moving Tahoe. Bunn fired, shooting Ward in the head.

According to Ward's friends, it happened like this: Ward panicked when he saw two white men jump from a Ford Taurus with guns drawn. Ward tried to escape. As he tried to get away, Bunn shot him.

His friends believe Ward may have panicked because he was deeply scarred by a 2001 carjacking. About a year earlier, two men confronted him at a stop sign, pistol-whipped him and took his car, they said.

"The carjacking hurt him. Hurt him bad," said Jason Heath. "I came over here to walk to school and I didn't see his car. I said, 'Where your car at?' He said. 'I got robbed,' and just broke down and started crying. We couldn't even go to school that day. I just sat with him all day."

His friends say that Ward had been pulled over by police several times and probably would have stopped if he had known Bunn was a police officer.

"Any time you are young and black and you see the police behind you, you get paranoid anyway," said Jerrell Heath. "Why wouldn't he stop if he knew it was a cop?"

The morning news

The quiet woke Youngblood at 4 a.m. She knew the boys were going to sleep at her house that night, but she heard nothing.

"I saw that everybody's car was still parked outside. Corey never stays out late, and if he does, he always calls," said Youngblood, who immediately picked up the phone and started calling the cellphone numbers of Ward and his friends. "I called Corey. I called Toot. I called [Toot's mother] Sharon."

Youngblood couldn't go back to sleep. About 7 a.m., she saw a TV news report that a man had been killed in an attempted carjacking of an SUV that looked like hers.

Sharon Robinson, meanwhile, started calling police departments, hoping they could help her put the pieces together.

When she heard the word "carjacking," she assumed that if Ward and his friends were involved, it was the carjacker who had been killed.

By 9 a.m., Robinson reached an Atlanta police official who confirmed only that her son, Toot, was in jail. "I was still thinking it was a carjacking," said Robinson.

She called Youngblood. A police officer picked up the phone and she heard Youngblood wailing in the background. She knew it was bad.

At her home nearby, Marilyn Harris, mother of Jason and Jerrell Heath, was getting ready for church when she saw the report of the carjacking and the killing. "Five minutes after I saw the story, the phone rang. It was the police telling me to come pick up Jerrell," said Harris. "When I got there, he was out of it. He was pale white. I asked if Jason had been shot. He said, 'Corey's gone,' and just broke down."

Jerrell would say later the events of that night "traumatized" him. The four others were quickly put in red jumpsuits and booked on charges of obstruction of an officer and breaking into a vehicle.

The Rev. Markell Hutchins, who has served as the family spokesman, said the teens were outfitted in jumpsuits to demonize them. Police, Hutchins said, "knew they had a PR nightmare on their hands."

The Canary Court Boys were released to their parents by morning.

In September, police dropped all the charges against them.

Police policy reviewed

Seven months after Corey Ward's death, his friends said they hardly go out anymore. They avoid crowds and are prone to spells of silence.

"I used to always tell them, don't leave the neighborhood," said Robinson. "Rodriguez came to me and said, 'I used to not understand what you were saying, but we didn't do anything.' "

Ward's death was one of three involving police officers in a matter of days and prompted Atlanta Police Chief Richard Pennington to launch a review on the policies and procedures of how and when officers will discharge their weapons. In December, attorney Johnnie Cochran filed a civil lawsuit on behalf of Ward's family.

"If this blows over, it might be your son next," said Judy Atkins, one of Ward's grandmothers. "Chief Pennington visited us and I think honestly wanted to help. He did all that he could at that time, and I feel that he will do the right thing."

A quiet house

After two hours of talking, reflecting and crying in the family room, folks start to get hungry. Hutchins leads them in prayer, asking God to continue to give them strength.

As the room slowly clears, the Canary Court Boys spill into the yard. The grandmothers, cousins and aunts follow, trying to figure out who is going to cook that night.

For a moment, silence envelops Youngblood as she stands alone in her kitchen.

"You try to go through your regular routine, but it is hard," she said. "Now it is just me and A.J. The house is kind of quiet."

Labels:

Thursday, June 08, 2006

Georgia Academia -- statistics

Georgia gets an A in teaching of world history
Beth Furtwangler - Cox News Service
Thursday, June 8, 2006


Washington --- Georgia schools' standards for teaching world history rank high in a new national study.

The report on the State of State World History Standards gave just 16 states a passing grade and cited Georgia as one of eight states to receive an A.

Two-thirds of states earned a D or an F. Joining Georgia with an A were California, Massachusetts, Virginia, Indiana, New York, Minnesota and South Carolina.

The study was conducted by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a Washington-based nonprofit organization dedicated to improving education.

Historian Walter Russell Mead, who conducted the study, said he was aghast at what he found. His report is especially critical of a lack of standards for teaching history and culture of Latin America . He found many states overlooked these histories while focusing on European history.

"A working knowledge of world history is socially, politically, economically, and culturally indispensable for young Americans," Mead said in a statement.

Georgia scored 156 of a possible 170 points in the study, the first to evaluate states' standards for teaching kindergarten through 12th-grade world history. These standards are what a student is expected to know in the subject.

For Latin American and Mexican history and culture, Georgia scored a 9 on a scale of zero to 10.

"The future of Georgia hinges on a global economy," State Superintendent of Schools Kathy Cox said in a statement. "I know that our new world history standards will prepare our students to succeed in that global environment

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I tutored first graders for about two weeks on the CRCT test (see Community Service blog). Georgia went up a few points, but as usual, blacks are hovering at the bottom


http://www.ajc.com/search/content/metro/index/crctscores/grade1.html

Thursday, June 01, 2006

"She should've kept her mouth shut!"

...continuing on my rant on the silencing of the black woman, I shall recall a recent conversation I had with one of my friends. We were talking about films and movies, and got on the topic of the movie "Crash". Well, there's a scene in the movie involving Terrance Howard, so if you haven't seen the film yet, I suggest you stop reading now.
















last chance...



















okay. I'll introduce you to what I call a "selective-hypocrite". S/he wants you to take his/her opinions as the gospel, but only when it invovles him/her winning the harmless debate. The film left a lot of things nclear, which I thought was great about the film, becasue it dealt with social issues and seemed like its main goal was to ingite discussion on these issues...so here goes:

The movie is filled with all types of stereotypes by the way...Terrance Howard's character is a successful black man/movie director with Uncle Tom tendancies. One of Terrance's actor employees gets caught "talking white", and Terrance's boss commanded the dude to start "talking black" or else.

I'll explain another scene...there's a racist white cop in the film, who just got a call on a stolen vehicle. Terrance and his wife are in an expensive SUV, leaving some sort of formal dinner-type thing I guess. Terrance's wife has on a nice dress, and Terrance is dressed professionally. Observably, the wife has had one too many cocktails, and is in the car babbling over nothing in the passenger seat. Coincidentally, the racist white cop sees Terrance ride by, and he snaps on his sirens (even though Terrance's car doesn't match the profile of the stolen car in the least bit). Terrance is cool about it...he pulls over...keeps his hands on the steering wheel. Racist cop peeks in...saw the wife on Terrances lap. Terrance asks what the problem is, and the cop came back with some smart aleck remark...asks Terrance where his insurance and stuff is. Terrance has it, and procedes to explain the situation...racist cop aint hearing it. Tells Terrance to step out of the car.

At this point, Terrance is visably pissed, kinda laughs it off a little bit, but does as he is told. The wife, also pissed, rolls her eyes...tells the cop that they had no justifyable cause to pull them over. The cops partner is now searching Terrance...has him all hemmed up on the police car. Humiliating the man basically. The wife asks the cops again, why did they pull them over? Terrance yells for the wife to shut up...that everything will be ok...that he'll handle it. The wife rolls her eyes...mumbles under her breath. The 2nd cop yells that Terrance doesn't have anything on him. Racist cop yanks Terrance's wife out of the car...kinda man handles her a bit, and slams her againt the car. Racist cop then procededs to sexually assault the wife...he sticks his hands up her dress and everything; in front of the other cop and Terrance. Racist cop threatens to throw them in jail on a few bullshit charges, and Terrance ends up apologizing, and begging the cop to let him and his wife be on their way. Later on, the wife is pissed at Terrance's "lack" of manhood...and concludes that Terrance should have done something more to "protect" the wife.

...now according to some, Terrance could've handled the situation perfectly if his wife would have kept her mouth shut like he suggested. In conclusion, because wifey ran her mouth, its her own fault, and she has no one to blame but herself. It is also suggested that the problem with black men/women social issues stem from the premise that black women need to "learn their place"...and that marriages will continue to result in divorce unless we do so.

...my take...a) the outcome would have possibly been different had the wife kept running her mouth...afterall, she was drunk, but in no way does this take away from her behavior. I beleive that if she was 100% sober...she still would've mouthed off to the cop....b)Since when does sexual assault become part of the job description of the police?...I'm pretty sure she was gonna sue their asses...and c)..really, people with the mindstate of the previous paragraph are obviously insecure (at least, that's how they're coming off to me)....they're also not taking into account all factors assocated with so-called "independent women".....they've intimidated by them on the notion that black women benefit the most from Affirmatiive Action issues, so we really have nothing to complain...

...uh...excuse me?

...watch the move "Dirty" with Cuba Gooding too...you'll get my drift

Labels: , ,

follow me on Twitter