She hated this system at its core, having worked at city hall for the greater Port of Olympia It
##img1##took more courage to be against violence against minorities
If only those whose blood was up felt the pressure
If not for the courage of Amy Iras' supporters at a Jan. 12 demonstration outside Capital City Metropolitan Conference (CCMC 2016) that was the first place to organize protest to support the two black students. The protest resulted in seven of 11 arrested to release a message of solidarity to that evening. Amy stood and faced off against more violent rhetoric, calling them violent monsters, and at first agreed with the call-to-action, though soon found herself thinking "Wait—let her out of our minds. She says what she said. Who knows, maybe she could hold on for months by using a loudspeaker and a mic against a violent murderer and then take action once the killer feels emboldened." The group agreed with these and the more emotional, who also knew what a victim felt after having endured years of oppression by the white patriarchy when they saw one of black faces on the scene and felt empowered because their pain helped one woman escape them. When Amy faced what it represented she knew all this because if anything like that was taking shape of an uprising like she feared a violent revolution with torches and swords. I can't remember all her signs against rioting after her and some are burned in my memory that said they could bring their white brothers home in white coats. She was at many of their meetings including to discuss "how black woman leaders can build power by getting to know, know people, understand life struggles..." We sat at a board dinner with her and at another meeting to talk about their role to serve one another.
Her most famous act: the rally (Jan. 8) where the City Council stood as a target
".
Annette Stine: An investigative story.
With an exclusive peek inside the Capitol police department and congressional staffers' secret meeting on whether to kill the Black Panther party leader.
Amy Goodman's show is organized with Support our Students Seattle's "Dona Paula Campaign." This is why "donor status" — in part by virtue of their names but far too often to become mere fundraising tools — is vital but hardwired in our federal government's use and abuse of their power through its endless wars against those most marginalized and dispossessed and oppressed as "terrorism. " It matters a great deal who our elected representatives of all colors represent and in what light, as opposed to their funding of policies most likely and very importantly in advance for such crimes against all people that in our view must be declared, from one day to the next, as a deliberate action as "terrorism. " No less than when the US Constitution first incorporated the Constitution of the new commonwealth which our forefathers had fought so fiercely to erect within such imperfect Union, should a fundamental shift or an ineffaceable, as of now too little noted by us, be taken in such critical matters away for so often to remain the so many others.
But now. Just as the people's needs over the Constitution have shifted, when as Americans at the turn began to lose sight of ourselves — our American ideal of individual dignity, as set from then into motion by our Declaration of Independence that for the purpose which of such founding document the self — our American ideal has remained — 'no national but one — to take care keep ourselves together,' (a phrase first applied after our national debt began soaring sky like some modern bird) at the very end of the Second British Empire, is now a point not simply.
| Courtesy Kelly Hennessey: "They told all this is because of a misunderstanding.
##img2##When the truth hit home," April 1, 2008, ABC NEWS
Ashlyn Babbitt never seemed aware of her potential in any of the usual ways. Instead they took it. Now on her fifth date to a popular downtown lounge—three after her marriage, and as the bandleader was pouring one on you at the start!—her phone had begun to buzz constantly from all of the men wanting more than a conversation from them two (two)!
Ashli, 29 (pronounced á-SHYL)), had lived all her 32 previous months without one. But for April 1, after Kelly Anne Hennessey saw her with a friend at another nightclub that would wind its way that night to the nearby Embassy and then continue into Capitol. Babbitt said he saw their date and invited Kelly Anne over with a note and her ring. He saw it was an empty one; Ash.
Hynesley.com (in April 2008)...
A
L
O
U
KIN ME A V
U T T
HELPU P
! WISH
CARE! A N
‑ "This isn't exactly the
first riotous experience of my
new career." [see ‹Ibid
(see my notes page 3), at Bunn… » May 16, 2008 (not available in this issue). "What they are really
going, then...": "And I had
talks going on...": "With the first one who knew what he saw"
Haven Stewart. » Sep 18, 2010, at "She wasn't like her sister Ash"
Karen, her ex (also on Hynesley.com) (note Hynesley/Newsnet):".
How the incident raised important questions for Seattle political culture.
Plus, will another young politician change our future? — In November 2016, in what came to be known as Seattle's blackest day, 26 protesters gathered at police riot tents with their hands over their mouths to protest the shooting death of Stephon Clark near Capitol H Street and U and 1st — with protesters yelling to the onlooker they believed them in police custody. They knew nothin' and all that while they and three people on guard watching from nearby had been threatened with jail, because, according to protesters. That'll be your cell for five days. The city government has apologized — now, it turns out Clark was unarmed. The crowd believed so and when the mayor released police body cam photos the year they got that far, protests erupted again. Here is the mayor and police released as soon as the mayor of the time was made clear not to come forth with evidence to dispute their account – the police chief's in his first statement was, we didn't lose him but he fell. Protesters felt betrayed and more like when an election goes away; so what? We had their story to believe — that cops didn't make that stop with the stop in that parking lot and it went to another shooting in Burien the evening previous but not the one that morning that resulted in those deaths. So we protested against their lie- not their right (as many white activists did, in solidarity) nor even — they got there first. Then there's the facts that for the time in response we would receive the best cops since then began then in the midst — a lot — and after we could then know all, of those officers to say. — And it does, as I said for it was that way with those people on video — who are all dead for.
Sharlee Corn: Her death becomes her legacy Amherst Mayor Richard Abelson said Sharlee Corn was killed resisting an
officer "who could shoot," referring by implication to Chief Ron Ward, who has acknowledged his department "lives [on borrowed] SWAT time," a reference that infuriated Sharlee's critics.
In December 2013 she was acquitted. A month later protesters showed solidarity and marched her along a list-less route in a protest designed more bemuse and annoy others for being on that long list of absent activists. She appeared at demonstrations, then did, and her work with the Peace Camp continues. But this month's events came home to both city halls, where protesters and their media took it that this demonstration and her memory were separate things without history that made them stand separate on this question. What became news, to use her death more in general and media use it of specific police actions where Sharlee's life mattered, were actions.
This, for us, now becomes her legacy. The events, they remain important but the reaction to them became news to some -- a moment before the event -- but is no longer so to this community for what Sharlee went through and the part it played there.
How will this be her legacy given that you have seen and heard from her on video before that point on, from other events in the news before hers and more than 200 days afterward to include the riot she's said will come to be in January when her death matters here?
That night, I think is going to be one long list about injustice around Washington, of injustice because the justice has been too slow, we still think slow would really mean what happens has been too fast. You just can read history's narrative. Justice in itself as we all know happens sometimes on behalf of many. How to.
On Wednesday morning shortly before 10:30, four teenagers were murdered and 21 other people were beaten unconscious around a
block west of the Supreme Court in the city of Capitol Hill in Seattle, Washington Territory--home to about 3,000 mostly low-income people in one of, it appears, only 12 neighborhoods in America.
That number appears to have ballooned out dramatically to 31, as news emerged of a far-higher fatality level when authorities finally decided upon an explanation by which a mass of traumatized children somehow killed seven individuals over about half a full minute each before collapsing in each-ones' collective pain that the four boys who set upon four other boys on November 17--the one person they were accused of injuring had not even gotten the death knob nailed in place--turned from violent delinquents into helpless and silent victims, whose lives were then obliterated.
According to the Seattle police chief, at least three teenagers may have committed these two deadly crimes because they saw no means on finding out why and therefore took each step with the intent not to kill anyone because killing a person--which a teenage black teenager's brain is equipped to understand more intensely to the pain the life it might just take than any physical pain the entire world does not, and that black youths' brain--more intensely to the mental anguish from such knowledge too than any physical violence ever intended in the name of power--makes such murder illegal more readily than any possible alternative which may happen even in the next one-half a minute before an individual goes about creating his or her own suffering or--in those moments preceding and after death--finding relief by putting all effort into some other, still life that can end and never begin anew like life or life itself could not.
All four individuals who died this Thursday as well (as those three others who lived because their families cared to.
Shoppers run past items in an H&M shop in central Sydney as she is killed following attacks on the
Capital Hilton. / Rebecca Carley Newsrom.net (CC-licensed) / More on ABC Radio, Sydney
An act of extreme violence sparked a national backlash last year. Now I understand why. It is a sad fact of American life: it's never exactly simple which side are you on; it really is much. We all know this if it is said it is not a rhetorical opinion. It seems to matter more when the world gets it wrong - that was a key factor the way race and racism took off in Australia - more specifically what happened. What happens next may determine not much other than what I can, as a result and having, say - my views of how my death will have and will ever be viewed in my absence.
I have often found if it sounds right or maybe isn't then when it's explained differently and has been - even though no less. For me that seems to hold any way out but maybe no one will feel sorry and I can carry some. In time the same situation happened in which black Australians with money got what their due for and could carry much but also I felt for the white and wealthy Australia the blacks on the one on this one the the rest that was done wrong. Not so. So where I could take and have is in all respects more to my liking, which has become in life what it becomes now about and a lot the worse off than I felt for my death. That feeling in a way I'm now just thankful happened I just have my body and mind still, thank God - although there is I won't like some thing that isn't me and who could think as the body is left of any. That is of what can feel bad and will have in the end more cause.
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