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sheshe2

sheshe2's Journal
sheshe2's Journal
March 2, 2014

Black Like Me, 50 Years Later

John Howard Griffin gave readers an unflinching view of the Jim Crow South. How has his book held up?

By Bruce Watson
Smithsonian Magazine



John Howard Griffin, left in New Orleans in 1959, asked what "adjustments" a white man would have to make if he were black. (Don Rutledge)




John Howard Griffin had embarked on a journey unlike any other. Many black authors had written about the hardship of living in the Jim Crow South. A few white writers had argued for integration. But Griffin, a novelist of extraordinary empathy rooted in his Catholic faith, had devised a daring experiment. To comprehend the lives of black people, he had darkened his skin to become black. As the civil rights movement tested various forms of civil disobedience, Griffin began a human odyssey through the South, from New Orleans to Atlanta.

snip

“Black Like Me disabused the idea that minorities were acting out of paranoia,” says Gerald Early, a black scholar at Washington University and editor of Lure and Loathing: Essays on Race, Identity, and the Ambivalence of Assimilation. “There was this idea that black people said certain things about racism, and one rather expected them to say these things. Griffin revealed that what they were saying was true. It took someone from outside coming in to do that. And what he went through gave the book a remarkable sincerity.”

snip

Across the South in the summer of 1959, drinking fountains, restaurants and lunch counters still carried signs reading, “Whites Only.” Most Americans saw civil rights as a “Southern problem,” but Griffin’s theological studies had convinced him that racism was a human problem. “If a white man became a Negro in the Deep South,” he wrote on the first page of Black Like Me, “what adjustments would he have to make?” Haunted by the idea, Griffin decided to cross the divide. “The only way I could see to bridge the gap between us,” he would write, “was to become a Negro.”

snip

As the civil rights movement accelerated, Griffin gave more than a thousand lectures and befriended black spokesmen ranging from Dick Gregory to Martin Luther King Jr. Notorious throughout the South, he was trailed by cops and targeted by Ku Klux Klansmen, who brutally beat him one night on a dark road in 1964, leaving him for dead. By the late 1960s, however, the civil rights movement and rioting in Northern cities highlighted the national scale of racial injustice and overshadowed Griffin’s experiment in the South. Black Like Me, said activist Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture), “is an excellent book—for whites.” Griffin agreed; he eventually curtailed his lecturing on the book, finding it “absurd for a white man to presume to speak for black people when they have superlative voices of their own.

Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/black-like-me-50-years-later-74543463/#ixzz2ulJcEouv

February 20, 2014

Dear White America: Its time to get the message

For decades now, black people have been trying to tell us white folks something. Here's how it looked in the 1960's:

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-7KL92FCAugE/UwJLTRY2KdI/AAAAAAAAB0Y/nD8M6PZgwU0/s1600/I+am+a+man.jpg


With the advent of social media, the same message was communicated following the acquittal of George Zimmerman for the murder of Trayvon Martin via the hashtag #HeIsNotASuspect.


MsKaiTweets @KaiH23
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@essencemag #HeIsNotASuspect he is a scholar and helper! And Will Not leave this earth before his time purpose
1:49 PM - 20 Jul 2013

Today, we're seeing black people doing their best to communicate the same thing via the hashtag #dangerousblackkids.


View image on Twitter
Val Rice @RiceVal
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#DangerousBlackKids getting ready to steal
12:06 PM - 17 Feb 2014


nealcarter @nealcarter
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The Gaithersburg high chapter of B.R.O.T.H.E.R.S. Inc is dangerous beause they feed the homeless #dangerousblackkids
11:31 AM - 16 Feb 2014


bugsact @bugsact
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My sons looking super scary! One serves his country other serves student athletes w disabilities #dangerousblackkids
11:01 AM - 17 Feb 2014

Hey white folks...its time to wake up and get the f*cking message!!!!!

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-wOt-ykIWK3k/UwJPBPxXSKI/AAAAAAAAB0k/KerQ9ZXVrN4/s1600/Black+lives+matter.jpg




http://immasmartypants.blogspot.com/2014/02/dear-white-america-its-time-to-get.html

February 16, 2014

My Music is Not a Weapon


Count 1 – Murder One – Mistrial. Can be retried.

Count 2 – 2nd Degree Attempted Murder – Guilty – 20 years minimum sentence.

Count 3 - 2nd Degree Attempted Murder – Guilty - 20 years minimum sentence.

Count 4 - 2nd Degree Attempted Murder – Guilty - 20 years minimum sentence.

Count 5 - Deadly Missile charge carries a minimum penalty of 15 years.

Michael Dunn is 47 years old. This is in essence a life sentence.



Ronald Davis and Lucia McBath


Dowels show the trajectory of bullets that were fired during the shooting incident involving Michael Dunn and Jordan Davis JSO







http://theobamacrat.com/


February 15, 2014

Our Future~ These Women are Awesome



About

the farmer's market at your door.
Description

fresh, local, organic food delivered weekly. anywhere in the pioneer valley and now BOSTON!
General Information

Our mission is to support local farms and producers, to help their products reach consumers, and to make local, healthy, delicious food as accessible as possible to a wide range of consumers.

Valley Green Feast has been a women owned business since 2008 and has been organized as a worker owned co-operative since 2010. That means that everyone that works for Valley Green Feast owns an equal share in the company. We make decisions by consensus and all have unique skills and areas of expertise to offer the co-op.





Our partners at Boston Collective Delivery bringing fresh flowers to some lovebirds today. We them!
Even though there is ice and snow everywhere we can't help but feel the warm fuzzies for some of today's deliveries. Happy Valentine's Day! #deliveredfresh





Happy Valentine's Day! Hope your day is filled with so much lovin'!




#Boston orders due into our website by noon today! Local, organic produce, meat, cheese, yogurt, baked goods and so much more delivered right to your door…even in a blizzard!

www.valleygreenfeast.coop



We made it through the wilderness, somehow we made through! What a wild, snowy day yesterday was but all of our orders made it safely from Western, MA to Boston and then to homes, tables, and bellies!

Grateful for our awesome partners at Boston Collective Delivery for braving the storm on their bikes!



https://www.facebook.com/ValleyGreenFeastCollective
February 13, 2014

It's Been Over 100 Years Since An Artist Has Done This In America.

The Tacoma Art Museum

Photographic Proof of Contemporary Indians:
Matika Wilbur's Project 562

[url=http://postimage.org/][img][/img][/url]

Washington photographer Matika Wilbur, a member of the Swinomish and Tulalip tribes, showcases her work-in-progress, a new collection of images of contemporary American Indians. Her goal is to photograph members of all 562 federally-recognized tribes in the United States. This artistic and spiritual journey has already taken Wilbur on a 1,000-mile adventure across the country. She began her project in the Northwest and has traveled extensively through California and the Southwest. Her work on Project 562 has been featured in Seattle Met Magazine, The Stranger, NBC.com, and Indian Country Today.

"I had this incredible experience at the bottom of The Grand Canyon. The elders appointed a teenage boy to help me carry my equipment to photo shoots (since there aren't cars down there, and I'm clumsy on a horse). He was kind of quiet at first, standoffish even.

But after the first interview and photoshoot, he was excited for the next one. He started suggesting ideas. I could see him listening as we spoke to his elders.

That evening, he revealed that he had walked a despairing path, having struggled with depression and his own sense of Tribal identity. As I was leaving, he shyly pulled me aside, and told me that this project gave him a new sense of hope. He said that he believed in me. He said that I was the first lady that he'd ever met that had went on to "do something". He thanked me for giving him hope. He said that his experience with Project 562 had meant more to him than he could articulate."

-Matika Wilbur

Organized by Tacoma Art Museum. This exhibition was generously sponsored by ArtsFund, KeyBank, and Tulalip Tribes Charitable Fund. Additional support provided by Helen and Peter Bing.

http://www.tacomaartmuseum.org/Page.aspx?nid=513

More than a century has passed since a photographic journey explored Native Americans with such a broad scope and in this amount of detail. In 1906, photographer Edward S. Curtis was commissioned by J.P. Morgan to capture the “disappearing” race.

In 2014, to change perceptions about Native Americans, photographer Matika Wilbur believes we have to update the kind of imagery we're looking at when we think of her race. It's a beautiful — and important — idea.

Watch the video here.

https://d2pq0u4uni88oo.cloudfront.net/projects/824212/video-331460-h264_high.mp4

http://www.upworthy.com/its-been-over-100-years-since-an-artist-has-done-this-in-america-about-time-someone-did-it-again?g=2&c=upw1

February 9, 2014

Justice Department To Launch Push For Full Recognition Of Same-Sex Marriage

This was posted in GD, yet am posting it here~

In an assertion of same-sex marriage rights, Attorney General Eric Holder is applying a landmark Supreme Court ruling to the Justice Department, announcing Saturday that same-sex spouses cannot be compelled to testify against each other, should be eligible to file for bankruptcy jointly and are entitled to the same rights and privileges as federal prison inmates in opposite-sex marriages. The Justice Department runs a number of benefits programs, and Holder says same-sex couples will qualify for them. They include the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund and benefits to surviving spouses of public safety officers who suffer catastrophic or fatal injuries in the line of duty.

Tweets

Evan Pérez ✔ @evanperez
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AG Eric Holder about to expand fed recognition of same-sex marriages "to the greatest extent possible under the law."
2:00 PM - 8 Feb 2014

Shimon Prokupecz ✔ @ShimonPro
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More from AG Holder: "As Attorney General, I will not let this Department be simply a bystander during this important moment in history."
2:18 PM - 8 Feb 2014

Only4RM @Only4RM
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.@glaad What PIONEERS look like. MT @TheObamaDiary They've done more for LGBT rights than anyone in American history. pic.twitter.com/GR0KKddoLp
4:58 PM - 8 Feb 2014



“In every courthouse, in every proceeding and in every place where a member of the Department of Justice stands on behalf of the United States, they will strive to ensure that same-sex marriages receive the same privileges, protections and rights as opposite-sex marriages under federal law,” Holder said in prepared remarks to the Human Rights Campaign in New York. The advocacy group works on behalf of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equal rights.



http://theobamadiary.com/

It's Our Time Now, to make this right! To love who we want when we want and how we want.

















Thank you President Obama and AG Holder!

January 23, 2014

"I Have the Audacity..."

January 22, 2014

Thank you Mrs Obama~ Picture heavy

Thank you Mrs. Obama. You are a wonderful First Lady and represent our country so well. You will never know how deep you are in our hearts, and how much they swell every time you step into the spotlight. We are blessed to have you and for you to be the bedrock of our wonderful First Family.







































[url=http://postimage.org/][img][/img][/url]


Many more here~

http://3chicspolitico.com/2014/01/17/happy-50th-birthday-to-our-wonderful-first-lady-michelle-lavaughn-robinson-obama/#more-52098

Ebony said it all Power Passion Purpose.

A beauty indeed, as is her soul. An amazingly strong woman, I love that about her.

As for the media that bashed her after the photos at Mandela's wake. Take a long look at the last picture.





January 19, 2014

She's the One!














Let's do it! Awesome! Tell us what Women need now.

https://www.facebook.com/MissREVOLutionaries
January 16, 2014

The Wisdom and Grace of Martin Luther King~





I first posted these here.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1002&pid=4337286

King’s True Legacy



This month will mark the 85th birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Across the nation and throughout the world community, millions of people will pay tribute and celebrate the birth of one our greatest freedom fighters and most effective leaders. The legacy of Dr. King is more than a federal holiday although we should never forget the protracted but successful struggle that was required to get that holiday recognition signed into law.

The legacy of Dr. King is more than a tall magnificent statue that now stands on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. King’s legacy is also more than a faint remembrance of the past sacrifices and victories of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. The living legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. should be a legacy of present-day continuing the good fight for freedom, justice, equality and economic empowerment in America, Africa and everywhere in the world. Yes, today that is a big order and a tremendous challenge.

As a young, statewide youth organizer from 1963 to 1968 for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in my home state of North Carolina, I witnessed first hand the incredible genius and courage of Dr. King. I also remember his militant band of preachers, community organizers and student leaders who had become impatient with the status quo of systematic racial injustice in the United States. Golden Frinks, the N.C. state field secretary of SCLC recruited and introduced me to Dr. King and SCLC. Working with Dr. King changed my life for the better.

Today, my purpose is simply to apply what I believe is the living legacy of Dr. King to some of the most pressing issues that oppressed people face nationally and internationally. Remember when Dr. King spoke out against the atrocities of the Vietnam War in 1967, there were many in the African American community who could not readily make the connection that saw between the issues of racial and economic oppression in the United States and the issues of war and peace in southeast Asia. One of Dr. King’s famous quotes was, "An injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." It was only after Dr. King’s tragic assassination in 1968 that many shared his opposition to the Vietnam War.

snip/

http://forwardtimesonline.com/2013/index.php/editorial/item/819-king%E2%80%99s-true-legacy

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