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The same day that President Barack Obama addressed the state of race relations in the United States and less than a week after George Zimmerman was acquitted on self-defense grounds for killing the unarmed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, the local nonprofit Community Coalition hosted a neighborhood reunion called “Our Sons Matter” to discuss reactions to the verdict and develop next steps to move forward.

The reunion, held at Community Coalition’s headquarters, was highly emotional and served two important purposes: on the one hand, it was a place where people could speak their minds, express their feelings and heal their wounds; on the other hand, it was also a brainstorming session where people provided ideas on what they can do as a community to react to the recent acquittal.

In order to give everyone a chance to participate and contribute their thoughts, the neighbors who assisted at the event were separated into groups from around eight to ten people. Each group, led by a moderator, had approximately 20 minutes to communicate their thoughts and formulate suggestions on how to move ahead and address the situation.

When this was done, the groups shared their suggestions. Changing state and local gun laws such as “Stand Your Ground” was one of the ideas that most resonated with the participants. Coincidentally, this was also one of the ideas proposed by President Obama on Friday. He said he thought it would be useful to examine certain laws to see if they are designed in such a way that they encourage the kind of altercations and confrontations that were seen in the Florida case.

“I just ask people to consider, if Trayvon Martin was of age and armed, could he have stood his ground on that sidewalk? And do we actually think that he would have been justified in shooting Mr. Zimmerman, who had followed him in a car, because he felt threatened? And if the answer to that question is at least ambiguous, then it seems to me that we might want to examine those kinds of laws,” said President Obama.

Another important idea proposed during the meeting was that it is necessary to improve the relationship between the community and the police. President Obama also addressed this issue and suggested that it is important to work with law enforcement to reduce racial profiling.

During his speech, Mr. Obama said that mayors, governors and the Justice Department should “work with law enforcement about training at the state and local levels in order to reduce the kind of mistrust in the system that sometimes currently exists.”

A few other ideas that community members came up with included the importance of inspiring civic engagement as well as creating a sense of self-worth among the community. Along similar lines, President Obama said he was thinking of ways to empower African American young men.

“There are a lot of kids out there who need help who are getting a lot of negative reinforcement,” President Obama said. “And is there more that we can do to give them the sense that their country cares about them and values them and is willing to invest in them?”

We Matter

Toward the end of the community gathering, participants were encouraged to share pictures of someone they love that matters to them and explain why that person has been so important in their life. This intimate, moving and heartwarming moment symbolized the unity of the community. Residents are standing together and looking ahead to the future with hope.

 

Los Angeles after Trayvon



OPINION: Trayvon’s class of 2013



Black scholars At Black Skeptics Los Angeles’ scholarship ceremony, my colleagues and I had the honor of awarding scholarships to five brilliant youth of color who are first generation college students. They are 17 and 18 year-olds who have known more struggle and sacrifice than many adults have known in their entire lives. They have each battled the dominant culture’s view that they are not white, male, straight, wealthy or smart enough to be genuine college material. They have all seen their neighborhoods—South L.A. communities powered by hard working people, students, activists, educators from all walks of life—portrayed as ghetto cesspit jungles where violent savages roam, welfare queens breed, and drive-bys rule. They have all mourned the absence of young friends and relatives who did not live to see their high school, much less college, graduation ceremonies. Looking around the room at their bright young faces, surrounded by proud family members, teachers, and mentors, the collective sense of duty and obligation everyone felt toward this next generation of intellectuals, activists and scholars was evident.

Because the ceremony occurred in the midst of national anxiety over the murder trial of George Zimmerman it was both a celebration of promise and a bittersweet paean to the burning loss and betrayal communities of color routinely experience in this racist apartheid nation. Trayvon Martin would’ve been 18 this year, a graduate of the class of 2013. He might have been college-bound, anxious, bracing against the fear of the unknown, heady with anticipation about the future. He might have been mindful of the psychological and emotional miles he’d have to travel to be freed from the prison of society’s demonizing assumptions. He might have experienced all of these feelings while grieving the untimely deaths of his own friends and being told that young black lives don’t matter.

Zimmerman’s acquittal for his cold-blooded murder is a turning point and baptism by fire in the cultural politics of colorblindness. It is a turning point for every middle class child of color who believes their class status exempts or insulates them from criminalization. It is a turning point for every suburban white child whose lifeblood is the comfort and privilege of presumed innocence. It is a turning point for every Talented Tenth parent of color who has deluded themselves about the corrupt creed of Americana justice. And it is a turning point for a collective historical amnesia in which race and racism are soft-pedaled through imperialist narratives of progress, enlightenment and transcendence.

For black people who have had faith in the criminal justice system and due process it is no longer possible to pretend that black life is worth more than that of a dog killed in broad daylight on a city street. People who kill dogs—or those who run vicious dog-fighting rings like NFL football player Michael Vick—receive longer prison sentences than do law enforcement officials (or their surrogates) who kill black people. For a predominantly white female jury that did not see the crushing loss in the murder of a young man pursued by a predator who was expressly told not to leave his vehicle by law enforcement; the life of a dog was apparently more valuable.

This is one of the indelible lessons in “democracy” and American exceptionalism that Trayvon’s class will take with them to college and hopefully spend their lives fighting to upend.

Sikivu Hutchinson is the founder of Black Skeptics Los Angeles and the author of the new book Godless Americana: Race and Religious Rebels.

OPINION: Could Superintendent Deasy be replaced with an iPad?



David LyellJuly 2, 2013, wasn’t just another day. On that day, there was a LAUSD School Board meeting unlike any other in recent memory.

Each year, at the first LAUSD Board meeting in July, the seven School Board members (laschoolboard.org) vote to elect a president. While the School Board president doesn’t have expanded powers, the position affords an opportunity to set the tone, run Board meetings, and work closely with the superintendent to determine meeting agendas.

At the July 2 Board meeting, three members began a four-year term: District 2 Board Member Monica Garcia, District 4 Board Member Steve Zimmer, and District 6 Board Member Monica Ratliff. [Read more…]

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