Saturday, June 27, 2020

Abusing Black Lives Matter: Trump's Tweet of "Treason" Has Deep and Ugly Roots




Black Lives Matter leader states, ‘If U.S. doesn’t give us what we want, then we will burn down this system and replace it’. This is Treason, Sedition, Insurrection!”

President Donald Trump (June 25, 2020)

The Black Lives Matter Global Network is debunking a tweet posted by President Donald Trump wrongly associating the statements of an unaffiliated activist to the group. The New York City activist Hawk Newsome, who is a former president of Black Lives Matter Greater New York, said in an TV interview this week that those protesting the death of George Floyd would “burn down this system and replace it” if activists’ demands weren’t met.

A managing director for the BLM network founded by Black women who coined the slogan issued a statement saying Newsome does not represent the network or any of its affiliate chapters. In a response to The Associated Press, Newsome said no one can claim ownership of the movement.

A BLM spokesperson said ..

As BLM has told Mr. Newsome in the past, and as is still true today, Mr. Newsome’s group is not a chapter of BLM and has not entered into any agreement with BLM agreeing to adhere to BLM’s core principles.”

(Christina Wilkie. “Trump cranks up attacks on the Black Lives Matter movement
for racial justice.” CNBC. June 25, 2020.)

In truth, there exists a history of attacks by nationalist groups on the Black Lives Matter movement. Many of these attacks are politically based and falsely accuse BLM of being akin to a hate group.

Back in 2015, the Editorial Board of The New York Times stated …

The Republican Party and its acolytes in the news media are trying to demonize the protest movement that has sprung up in response to the all-too-common police killings of unarmed African-Americans across the country. The intent of the campaign – evident in comments by politicians like Gov. Nikki Haley of South Carolina, Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin and Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky – is to cast the phrase “Black Lives Matter” as an inflammatory or even hateful anti-white expression that has no legitimate place in a civil rights campaign.”

(The Editorial Board. “The Truth of ‘Black Lives Matter,'”
The New York Times. September 3, 2015.)

In the week before Trump's June 25 tweet, Trump had deployed a racist nickname for the deadly coronavirus, demanded that a toppled Confederate statue in Washington be restored, tweeted context-free videos of black people attacking white people, tweeted a doctored video purportedly showing a “racist baby,” and accused former President Barack Obama of “treason.”

Christie Wilkie of CNBC says …

By cranking up the same culture wars that helped Trump to win the White House in 2016, the president hopes to galvanize his core supporters, and to drive a wedge between suburban middle-class White voters and the activists protesting in cities across the nation.”

(Christina Wilkie. “Trump cranks up attacks on the Black Lives Matter movement
for racial justice.” CNBC. June 25, 2020.)

Black Lives Matter was intended to make Congress and Americans confront the fact that African-Americans were being killed with impunity for offenses like trying to vote, and had the right to life and to equal protection under the law. The movement sought a cross-racial appeal, but at every step of the way used expressly racial terms to describe the destruction that was visited upon black people because they were black.

The Editorial Board says …
Along the way, there was never a doubt as to what the struggle was about: securing citizenship rights for black people. The “Black Lives Matter” movement focuses on the fact that black citizens have long been far more likely than whites to die at the hands of the police, and is of a piece with this history. Demonstrators who chant the phrase are making the same declaration that voting rights and civil rights activists made a half-century ago. They are not asserting that black lives are more precious than white lives. They are underlining an indisputable fact — that the lives of black citizens in this country historically have been discounted and devalued.”
(The Editorial Board. “The Truth of ‘Black Lives Matter,'”
The New York Times. September 3, 2015.)

The Black Lives Matter Global Network started out as a chapter-based, member-led organization whose mission was to build local power and to intervene when violence was inflicted on Black communities by the state and vigilantes. In the years since, the network is committed to struggling together and to imagining and creating a world free of anti-Blackness, where every Black person has the social, economic, and political power to thrive.

BLM’s #WhatMatters2020 is a campaign aimed to maximize the impact of the BLM movement by galvanizing BLM supporters and allies to the polls in the 2020 U.S Presidential Election to build collective power and ensure candidates are held accountable for the issues that systematically and disproportionately impact Black and under-served communities across the nation.

The Black Lives Matter Movement has to be understood in the context of the historical legacy of the ill treatment of blacks by the police and the criminal justice system and American political and social institutions more generally. That legacy is a fact.”

Professor Daniel Nagin, Teresa And H. John Heinz III University Professor Of Public Policy And Statistics at Carnegie Mellon

Asia A. Carter-Lamb of Roger Williams University tells about the biggest misconceptions associated with Black Lives Matter.

Carter-Lamb says the most dangerous misconception is that by declaring that black lives matter, the group is actually claiming that other lives do not matter, thereby elevating black lives to a superior status. Carter-Lamb exposes the extent of the false belief …

This fallacy is even believed by former NYC mayor Rudy Giuliani, who claimed that the movement was 'inherently racist.' However, this belief directly contrasts one of the BLM guiding principles, which states that the movement is 'committed to acknowledging, respecting and celebrating differences and commonalities.' This is why many protests by BLM have drawn notably diverse participants.”

(Asia A Carter-Lamb. "Black Life Mater: Debunked!"
New and Dangerous Ideas: Vol 1, Article 8. 2018.)

Another misconception cited by Carter-Lamb is that BLM encourages needless violence against police officers. In the article “More Hypocrisy from Black Lives Matter,” Ian Tuttle details the story of Micah Johnson who opened fire during a march in Dallas, which resulted in the death of five police officers. Although Johnson attended the protest, it was later discovered that his alignment with violent black nationalists is what spurred his violence. Though his extreme actions do not represent the values of the movement, they are now intertwined with its reputation.

Violent acts committed in the name of the movement have led the movement to creating Campaign Zero in association with social activist DeRay Mckesson, explicitly outlining the changes they wish to see in modern policing. Their initiative shows the true intentions of BLM, which is not to attack police officers, but to collaborate with them in order to make all citizens feel safe.

Carter-Lamb concludes …

Out of these gross misconceptions, the Blue Lives Matter counter-movement has sprung. Though their mission statement does not contradict the BLM movement, it directly attacks the movement, even claiming that the purpose of Black Lives Matter is the “vilification of the law.” … By contradicting us, bigots only create more division, more intolerance, and more hatred between us. This leaves society stagnant.”

(Asia A Carter-Lamb. "Black Life Mater: Debunked!"
New and Dangerous Ideas: Vol 1, Article 8. 2018.)

The Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture affirms that the Black Lives Matter movement has been and remains explicitly and strongly anti-violence. The Black Lives Matter movement seeks restorative, not retributive, justice. The society says, “There are a few in any crowd who are angry and hurt and who don’t respect what the movement would prefer they do. The actions or words of that few do not speak for the many.”

Demonstrators clash with police near the Seattle Police Departments East Precinct shortly after midnight on June 8, 2020 in Seattle, Washington. 

At what risk to themselves do Black Lives Matter protesters hit the streets?

Out of the blue, they started breezing pepper spray into the crowd. There was one officer on the median who was spraying as well. Then they started with tear gas. Someone who was right in the front – who had a tear gas canister hit his head – started running back. And we were trying to help him, flushing his eyes and then he just fainted and started having a seizure.”

Lizzie Horne, a rabbinical student who was tear-gassed in Philadelphia on June 1, 2020

Amnesty International has documented 125 separate examples of police violence against protesters in 40 states and the District of Columbia between May 26 and June 5 2020, a period when hundreds of thousands of people in the USA and other countries protested against racism and police violence and to demand that Black lives matter.

To evaluate these incidents, Amnesty International’s Crisis Evidence Lab gathered almost 500 videos and photographs of protests from social media platforms. This digital content was then verified, geolocated, and analyzed by investigators with expertise in weapons, police tactics, and international and US laws governing the use of force. In some cases, researchers were also able to interview victims and confirm police conduct with local police departments.

The analysis shows that law enforcement officers violated human rights daily out on the streets instead of fulfilling their obligations to respect and facilitate the right of people to peacefully protest.

Brian Griffey, USA Researcher/Advisor at Amnesty International, reports …
“This unlawful use of force included beatings, misuse of tear gas and pepper spray, and the inappropriate firing of less-lethal projectiles, such as sponge rounds and rubber bullets. Those abuses were committed by a range of security forces from state and local police departments, federal agencies, and the National Guard.”

Brian Castner, Senior Crisis Advisor on Arms and Military Operations at Amnesty International, says …

“The analysis is clear: when activists and supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement took to the streets in cities and towns across the USA to peacefully demand an end to systemic racism and police violence, they were overwhelmingly met with a militarized response and more police violence.”

(Brian Griffey. “USA: End unlawful police violence against Black Lives Matter protests.” Amnesty International. June 23, 2020.)

Freelance writer Austa Somvichian-Clausen says many have compared the current Black Lives Matter movement to the events of the Stonewall Riots in 1969, when history was made after the first brick was thrown to protest the injustice being faced by the LGBTQ+ community. Somvichian-Clausen reports, “Just as the Stonewall Riots catalyzed a movement and changed the course of the narrative for LGBTQ+ rights in the U.S., these past two weeks have already made changes that certainly should go down in the history books.”

(Austa Somvichian-Clausen. “What the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests have achieved so far.” thehill.com. June 10, 2020.)

In conclusion, Trump on June 25, seizing on a quote by a man who runs a fringe Black Lives Matter knock-off group, and a chant that is not popular with protesters, suggested in tweets that the loosely organized racial justice movement poses a threat. Donald Trump has a history of opposing Black Lives Matter.
In September 2015, Trump, the Republican presidential candidate, said during a Fox News interview with Bill O'Reilly:

"I think they're (Black Lives Matter) trouble. I think they're looking for trouble …

I looked at a couple of the people that were interviewed from the group. I saw them with hate coming down the street last week talking about cops and police, and what should be done to them. And that was not good. And I think it's a disgrace that they're getting away with it …

"I think it's disgraceful the way they're being catered to by the Democrats. And it's going to end up kicking them you-know-where. I don't think it's going to end up good. The fact is all lives matter. That includes black and it includes white and it includes everybody else …

"He's wrong. (Trump was speaking about former Secretary of State Colin Powell, a prominent African-American Republican leader and former military general, who defended Black Lives Matter.)

He's totally wrong. It's 'All Lives Matter,' and that should be the theme of this country, frankly, or one of the themes. So he's obviously catering to somebody. I don't know who he's catering to."

(Colin Campbell. “Donald Trump trashes Black Lives Matter: 'I think they're trouble.'”
Business Insider. September 9, 2015.)

Then, in 2016, Trump addressed the fallout from deadly police shootings of black men in Louisiana and Minnesota, and the killing of five police officers in Dallas, during both an interview with Fox News and a rally in Westfield, Indiana.

Even as he expressed concerns over the police killings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, describing videos of the encounters as “tough to watch”, Trump blamed Barack Obama and Black Lives Matter as primarily responsible for divisions over race.

In 2016, Trump told Fox News host Bill O’Reilly that he opposes the phrase “black lives matter”

I think it’s certainly, it’s very divisive and I think they’re hurting themselves. (in reference to the phrase 'black lives matter' and the movement leading national demonstrations for criminal justice reform) …

The first time I heard it I said ‘You have to be kidding. I think it’s a very, very, very divisive term. There’s no question about it.”

(Sabrina Siddiqui. “Donald Trump strikes muddled note on 'divisive' Black Lives Matter.”
The Guardian. July 21, 2016.)

In this blog entry, I am presenting the statements and the facts as they pertain to Black Lives Matter and Donald Trump. It is up to you to decide the truth of the matter as it pertains to Trump's emotional evaluation of their actions as “Treason, Sedition, and Insurrection!”

There is no doubt Trump's displeasure with the movement has much deeper roots than the words of Hawk Newsome in 2020. You can question Trump's claims “he has done more for black community than any president since Lincoln.”

In fact, you may want to evaluate his boisterous claim in the light that he took out ads for the execution of the teens who comprised the so-called “Central Park Five,” whose convictions were later vacated after they spent seven to 13 years in prison, and the city paid $41 million in a settlement to the teens. Remember, Trump in October 2016 said he still believes they’re guilty, despite the DNA evidence to the contrary.

And, if that's not enough, remember the 1991 book by John O’Donnell, former president of Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, who quoted Trump’s criticism of a Black accountant: “Black guys counting my money! I hate it. The only kind of people I want counting my money are short guys that wear yarmulkes every day. … I think that the guy is lazy. And it’s probably not his fault, because laziness is a trait in blacks. It really is, I believe that. It’s not anything they can control.”

(German Lopez. “Donald Trump’s long history of racism, from the 1970s to 2020.”
Vox. June 24, 2020.)


And who could forget this timely statement? in August 2017, Trump repeatedly said that “many sides” and “both sides” were to blame for the violence and chaos that ensued – suggesting that the white supremacist protesters were morally equivalent to counterprotesters who stood against racism. He also said that there were “some very fine people” among the white supremacists.

I rest my case. The jury of American citizens must now decide.

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