White people, take responsibility for your Waco thugs: Black Americans are tired of being the country’s conscience

By Mensah Demary

On the uptown R train to Manhattan, I stood in the corner of the crowded subway car, beginning my morning commute like everyone else. Depending on my mood, or space allowed, I might read a book or people-watch as I’m listening to music on my smartphone. On this particular morning, I pulled out my phone and began to read articles I saved to the app Pocket. (I’m not a paid sponsor of Pocket, but I am a fan, and if you are inundated with online articles, Pocket is a lifesaver.) One of the articles, the first in my reading list, was an update on the Twin Peaks shooting in Waco, Texas, where rival bike gangs—thugs— took to the streets and participated in a gunfight, leaving nine bikers—thugs—dead.

I’ve since deleted the article, so I cannot link to it here. I deleted it without reading in full. I deleted it in disgust, and audibly sucked my teeth as I tried to read—maybe I consumed two paragraphs, tops—before giving up altogether. When you’ve read the same narrative over and over, the same tired tropes and words and phrases used, you lose patience with the story and move on. No shade to the article itself, nor toward its writer, but you get tired of seeing other people, other stories, afforded the dignity rarely given to your people—my people—black people.

To be clear, the article was boilerplate. Less “think piece” and more run-of-the-mill journalism, a rundown of facts and the latest information concerning the shooting. On Sunday, May 17, a fight broke out between the Bandidos and the Cossacks, rival biker thugs who have engaged in street warfare since the late 1960s. The article continued to outline the facts: again, nine people dead, at least 170 people arrested with bail—bail??—set at $1 million each. The article moved on to a bit of a history lesson, taking the readers down a veritable memory lane where the origins of the gangs began decades ago.

Read More White people, take responsibility for your Waco thugs: Black Americans are tired of being the country’s conscience – Salon.com.

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Getting Paid To Relax On Memorial Day? You Probably Aren’t A Low-Wage Worker

By Dave Jamieson

Each year, on the last Monday of May, millions of Americans ditch work to hit the beach, light up the barbecue or catch a ballgame in honor of those who died serving our country. To top it off, we typically get paid just as if we’d clocked in for the day — not a bad way to kick off summer.

That is, unless we happen to work on the bottom rungs of the economic ladder. Compared to their better-paid counterparts, American workers in low-wage jobs are vastly less likely to get paid holidays through work. That means come Memorial Day, they face a downer of a choice: Either show up and work the shift, or forgo a day’s pay in order to relax on the holiday.

Among private-sector workers whose pay falls in the bottom quartile, not even half enjoy access to paid holidays, according to the most recent estimates from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Yet more than 90 percent of workers in the top quartile receive such benefits.

The disparity is even greater at the outer edges of the income scale. Barely one-third of workers in the lowest 10 percent see paid holidays, compared to 93 percent of workers in the highest 10 percent.

The inequality should come as little surprise. Paid holidays are a form of compensation, just like wages, health coverage or a 401(k), and low-wage workers tend to get weaker benefits on the whole than middle- and high-income earners. In fact, as you drop down the income scale, workers become less likely to have any form of paid leave at all, be it sick days or vacation time.

Most other advanced economies don’t have the same disparity, because they have laws mandating that businesses provide workers with paid time off. This is most true when it comes to vacation time. In an analysis of laws in 21 countries that are members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a left-leaning think tank, found that all but the U.S. guarantee at least some paid vacation.

Read More Getting Paid To Relax On Memorial Day? You Probably Aren’t A Low-Wage Worker.

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Files show Attica inmates were beaten during 1971 uprising

By Kenneth Lovett

Newly released documents on the 1971 Attica state prison uprising show prisoners were beaten and suffered wounds indicating they were tortured by guards trying to reclaim control of the institution.

Witnesses, including a doctor and a National Guardsman, had said they saw inmates beaten with clubs, and a doctor told of the use of a broken bottle to inflict torture.

The 46 pages of documents stem from a report issued in 1975 by Judge Bernard Meyer, who was appointed by then-Gov. Hugh Carey as a special deputy attorney general to investigate the handling of the Attica uprising.

Meyer had concluded in the report’s 570-page first volume, made public at the time, that there were serious errors in judgment but no intentional coverup of what actually happened at Attica.

Another nearly 400 pages of his report remained sealed until 46 pages were made public Wednesday — two years after state Attorney General Eric Schneiderman went to court to force their disclosure.

Read More Files show Attica inmates were beaten during 1971 uprising – NY Daily News.

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Robin DiAngelo, Whiteness, and Police Brutality

By Conor Friedersdorf

Last week, Gawker interviewed Robin DiAngelo, a professor of multicultural education at Westfield State University. She discussed aspects of her thinking on whiteness, which are set forth at length in her book, What Does it Mean to be White? I’ve ordered the book.

Meanwhile, her remarks on police brutality piqued my interest. Some of what Professor DiAngelo said is grounded in solid empirical evidence: blacks and Hispanics are disproportionately victimized by misbehaving police officers; there are neighborhoods where police help maintain racial and class boundaries. And if our culture, which she calls “the water we swim in,” contained fewer parts racism per million, I suspect that police brutality would be less common.

But a core part of her analysis is very much at odds with conclusions that I’ve drawn after years of writing against police misconduct and pondering how to reduce it.

First, consider her remarks with an open mind.

Interviewer Donovan X. Ramsey asked, “What have been your thoughts on the national conversation happening around police brutality and the role that whiteness plays into it?”

She answered as follows:

We have to change the water officers swim in. We can bring in different tools, even officers of color, but if we don’t change the water that they swim in, that we all swim in. The water is the unexamined whiteness, the everyday whiteness. Unexamined whiteness is right now probably the most hostile for people of color. There are the extreme incidents of violent and explicit racism that we take note of, but the everyday racism is also so toxic.

I think our everyday coded language around “good neighborhoods” and “bad neighborhoods” is what allows for tremendous violence to happen… When you label a neighborhood “bad” and avoid it, then you don’t know and don’t see what goes on there. And there’s no human face to interrupt that narrative. So, we see outrage around figures like Michael Brown because suddenly there’s a face. But, for the most part, we don’t know and we don’t care as long as the police keep “them” from “us,” so our schools can be better and we can feel safe at the top of the hierarchy. I think we use the police to maintain those boundaries.

Read More Robin DiAngelo, Whiteness, and Police Brutality – The Atlantic.

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6 Baltimore police officers indicted in Freddie Gray’s death

By Amanda Sakuma

No conflict of interest in Freddie Gray case, says Baltimore state's attorney | US news | The GuardianA Baltimore grand jury has indicted all six police officers involved in the arrest and death of Freddie Gray, State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby announced Thursday.

The indictments come just under three weeks after Mosby filed multiple charges against each officer, finding that Gray’s spine was severely severed while in police custody after officers handcuffed and shackled the 25-year-old and placed him head-first into a police van without a seat belt. Gray died from his injuries a week later.

The charges brought by the grand jury vary only slightly from those Mosby announced on May 1. The most serious charge, second-degree depraved heart murder, remains against officer Caesar Goodson Jr., who was behind the wheel of the police van that transported Gray for 45 minutes.

Read More 6 Baltimore police officers indicted in Freddie Gray’s death | MSNBC.

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What Do Millennials Want?

By Amita Kelly

We know all the stereotypes about millennials and politics: they aren’t engaged, don’t vote, and are distrustful of Washington. But we also see another side to the generation — they care about issues like criminal justice, the economy and same-sex marriage.

A new poll of millennials from Harvard’s Institute of Politics (which surveyed young Americans 18-29 years old) finds some truth to those notions, and some surprises. Here are five things we learned:

1) They don’t feel politically engaged

Asked if they consider themselves to be “politically engaged or politically active” a whopping 79 percent of young Americans answered no.

2) But, they vote

Nearly 70 percent of respondents said they are registered to vote. And 60 percent said they voted in the 2012 election. That count is self-reported though, and the actual number of people 18-29 who voted is actually lower — around 50 percent, according to 2012 exit polls.

Still, that turnout is higher than their Generation X predecessors, which was around 40 percent.

Read More What Do Millennials Want? : It’s All Politics : NPR.

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How to Get Our Sh** Together (The Power of Personal Responsibility)

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20 Signs You’re Succeeding In Life Even If You Don’t Feel You Are

By Carol Morgan

Silhouette of man and sunshine

Silhouette of man and sunshine

We all feel like failures from time to time. While this is a normal feeling, you have to find a way to see yourself and your life from a different perspective. Sometimes we ignore the “little things.” Just because you are not a millionaire, don’t live in a mansion, and you don’t drive a fancy car, that doesn’t mean you’re a failure. In fact, it’s quite the contrary.

Here are 20 signs that you are succeeding in life:

1. Your relationships are less dramatic than they used to be.

Drama is not maturity. As we age, we should develop maturity. So maybe your relationships were drama-filled in your past, but if you have moved beyond that, then you are successful.

2. You are not afraid to ask for help and support any more.

Asking for help does not equal weakness. In fact, it is a strength. No person has ever succeeded in isolation. It takes teamwork to accomplish goals. Asking or help is a sign that you have grown as a person.

3. You have raised your standards.

You don’t tolerate bad behavior any more – from other people, or even yourself. You hold people accountable for their actions. You don’t spend time with the “energy vampires” in your life anymore.

4. You let go of things that don’t make you feel good.

No, this is not narcissistic even though it might seem like it. Self-love is success. Love yourself enough to say ‘no’ to anything that doesn’t make you happy, doesn’t serve your purpose, or drags you down.

5. You have moments where you appreciate who you see in the mirror.

Ideally, you should appreciate who you see in the mirror at every moment. But even if that doesn’t happen, if you do it more than you used to, then that is success. Love yourself. You are awesome.

Read More 20 Signs You’re Succeeding In Life Even If You Don’t Feel You Are |Higher Perspective.

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Beyond Hashtag Activism

By David A. Graham

Protest For Freddie Gray (photo by Bill Hughes)If you’ve heard of Joseph Kent, you probably only learned his name in the last couple of days. Late Tuesday night, a CNN camera caught a spooky video of Kent being arrested in Baltimore: As Kent walked in the street, a humvee drove between him and the camera, just as a line of police lunged at the young man. Then he wasn’t heard from again for 24 hours. Talib Kweli tweeted a demand to know where he was, and Kent’s name trended on Twitter. Dark conspiracy theories suggested he’d been kidnapped or disappeared.

It turned out that Kent, a 21-year-old student at Morgan State University in Baltimore, was waiting in a holding cell in the city jail. The facility was so crowded with people swept up by police during unrest that he hadn’t been booked, which meant his name wasn’t in the jail’s system yet and so no one could find him. His attorney, Steve Beatty, was able to locate him Wednesday and to get him released on his own recognizance that night.

Kent is, in fact, more easily recognizable in Baltimore. City Paper, the local alternative weekly, profiled him in November 2014, in a piece about how the aftermath of Michael Brown’s shooting in Ferguson, Missouri, was creating a new cohort of civic leaders. Reporter Baynard Woods recounted Kent maintaining peace during a tense situation, near the end of a march in Baltimore protesting a grand jury’s decision not to charge Officer Darren Wilson for Michael Brown’s death:

“We been peaceful all day, and now everybody want to show your ass,” Joseph Kent, a 21-year-old student from Morgan State University, said from the center of the crowd near the end of Tuesday’s protests over the grand jury decision in Ferguson, Missouri. “We’re not here for that.”

Read More  Joseph Kent, DeRay McKesson, and the New Civil-Rights Leaders After Ferguson – The Atlantic.

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Why the Good Jobs Numbers Are Misleading

By Paul Vigna

jobsFor months now, the data on the U.S. economy has displayed an odd schism. Most of the data has been pointing to a weak economy – except for the jobs numbers, which have consistently pointed toward a strong economy. Most observers, from Street denizens to the punditry to the practitioners of the dismal sciences, have written off downbeat data as somehow misleading, and expect those figures to eventually jibe with the stronger jobs numbers.

Thursday’s jobless claims provided the latest instance of a strong labor market. The four-week moving average of weekly jobless claims – a measure that smooths out some of the volatility of the weekly numbers and provides a clearer picture – fell to 274,000, a 15-year low. Claims have not been this low since April 2000. In terms of the other major sounding – the monthly jobs report – the unemployment rate is so quickly approaching what usually constitutes “full employment” that some are suggesting the threshold of “full employment” should be lowered.

But what if it’s the jobs numbers that are misleading?

“Falling claims have been sending a false economic signal,” SouthBay Economics’ Andrew Zatlin wrote in a report. “Jobless claims are falling for non-economic reasons.” One big reason he points to is that many states tightened the rules and time frames for unemployment benefits, so people who previously could or were claiming benefits were dropped off the roles. This has had a marked impact on continuing claims.

Beyond that, many states simply aren’t reporting the full data, Mesirow Financial economist Diane Swonk said this morning on the MoneyBeat show. Ms. Swonk said she was in Washington last week talking to the stats people who put together the claims data, and was told that the states aren’t submitting complete reports, for various reasons. “So it’s not clear how good that data is anymore, and that’s worrisome as well.”

Read More Why the Good Jobs Numbers Are Misleading – MoneyBeat – WSJ.

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