Icon from a picrew by grgikau. Call me Tir or Julian. 37. He/They. Queer. Twitter: @tirlaeyn. ao3: tirlaeyn. 18+ Only. Star Trek. Sandman. IwtV. OMFD. Definitionless in this Strict Atmosphere.

nevaehtyler:

Richmond, California. Police Chief Magnus: Why I Joined a Protest Against Police Brutality.

The police and the community share a common goal. We want peaceful protests to be something that people feel comfortable participating in and to understand that the police are guardians, because we should be protecting people’s constitutional rights.

But we also want to send a message that we care about everyone in the community. This needs to be a partnership between police and persons of color, black, brown, whatever. We need to be working together.

This is what I like to see - police officers that are actually woke and support Black Lives Matter movement. This also goes to show that it’s not that hard to be a good person and a good cop. Unfortunately a lot of his colleagues don’t share the same way of thinking with him and not only do they embarrass themselves, they make us think that there are no decent officers left who actually will to protect people and not abuse them. Keep it up, police. #We need to be working together!

#BlackLivesMatter

thetrippytrip:

#ChokeHoldOnTheCity marked the one year anniversary of the non-indictment of Pantaleo, the NYPD officer who choked Eric Garner, ignoring his last words “I can’t breathe”. 

Activists from Justice League NYC gathered outside Gracie Mansion to demand that Mayor Bill DeBlasio and Commissioner Bill Bratton fire Daniel Pantaleo immediately.

erikaswyler:
“ thebombbag:
“ ARTISTS against POLICE BRUTALITY (APB), my new anthology co-edited by Bill Campbell and John Jennings, comes out this Monday from Rosarium Publishing. All proceeds from the book go towards The Innocence Project. This book...

erikaswyler:

thebombbag:

ARTISTS against POLICE BRUTALITY (APB), my new anthology co-edited by Bill Campbell and John Jennings, comes out this Monday from Rosarium Publishing. All proceeds from the book go towards The Innocence Project. This book was born out of anger on the evening of December 3rd, 2014, when a Grand Jury opted not to indict Daniel Pantaleo in the death of Eric Garner, and after talking about how we would do such a book, we opened submissions on December 15th, 2014. We compiled over 50 comics, cartoons, pin-ups, essays, and short stories from over 60 creators and, on 9/11/2015 (10 months later), the book went to print.

I’d like to talk about five pages from the book. The first two pages (which are the first two pages of the book), make up a two-page pin-up by the amazing Ashley A. Woods. Titled “Family Portrait,” this piece shows 12 victims of recent (at the time) police violence: John Crawford, Tamir Rice, Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Carry Ball Jr., Amadou Diallo, Tanisha Anderson, Miriam Carey, Yvette Smith, Rekia Boyd, and Aiyana Stanley-Jones. Woods’s piece, which was one of the first pieces we received, knocked us right out with its simple yet powerful approach to saying names and remembering the deceased. 

Over the ten months we spent compiling this collection, we saw more and more reports of police violence and increasing tensions between communities. #blacklivesmatter was hijacked by #bluelivesmatter and #alllivesmatter, the conversation we were supposed to be having was turning into a group of people thumbing their nose at the issues while kids were getting beat at a pool party in McKinney, Texas. While Freddie Gray’s back was being broken in Baltimore. While Sandra Bland was dying in a jail cell in Waller County, Texas.

So that brings me to the next three pages I want to talk about. When the book was finished, I told Bill Campbell I had three pages left. “Don’t put ads in it,” he said, “This isn’t the right book for that.” He gave me carte blanche, so I put together three pages that I felt closed the book out in a way that Woods’s piece opened it. By saying names. 881 names, to be exact. The 881 people killed by police between the time we opened submissions and the the time we went to print. 881 people in ten months.

I hope you think about picking up a copy of APB. Whether you buy your own or get it at the library. The anthology is meant to highlight the issues. To move the conversation along. To say names. And, remember, all proceeds benefit The Innocence Project. We felt, from the start, that no profit should be made on this book. It should be used as a weapon of improvement, from the contents to the profits.

Thanks for listening.

Jason Rodriguez

APB will be available at local booksellers and libraries, and online at Amazon.

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I don’t need to tell you why this is important.

This is good work. This is work we need.

odinsblog:

If I Die In Police Custody…

In 2k15 America, Black people now have to proactively and publicly declare for the record that we, like anyone else, would neither lynch ourselves nor commit suicide while in police custody. 

This is (apparently) necessary now because if we are caught being human and - even once - state that we were even momentarily sad or depressed, that single statement alone can and will be used against us by corporate media and the police to blame us for our own murders…at the hands of the police.

#SandraBland  #SayHerName#BlackLivesMatter #JusticeForSandra 

(to hear all of these Black women’s voices and to watch their full videos, please go to the tumblr or twitter of youth activist/organizer, millennialau. see full videos here)

micdotcom:

Sandra Bland is one of many black women who have died in police custody.

Tanisha Anderson was a 37-year-old woman struggling with mental illness who died after Cleveland police slammed her head into the pavement outside of her family’s home in 2014.

Miriam Carey was a 34-year-old dental hygienist who made a wrong turn near the White House and was fatally shot by federal law enforcement officers in 2013.

Yvette Smith was a 47-year-old woman who was shot and killed by Texas police officers as she opened the door to her home for police in 2014.

Natasha McKenna was 37 years old when she was restrained by Virginia police, shackled at the legs and shot with a stun gun four times earlier this year. She stopped breathing and died at a hospital several days later.

Rekia Boyd was a 22-year-old woman living in Chicago when she was shot and killed by an off-duty police officer.

Mya Hall was a 27-year-old transgender woman who was shot and killed by National Security Agency guards after crashing a car into a government facility.

Shelly Frey was a 27-year-old mother of two who was shot by Wal-Mart security who accused her of shoplifting.

Darnisha Harris was only a teenager when Louisiana law enforcement officials fired two shots into the car she was driving in 2012.

Malissa Williams, 30, died after Cleveland police fired 137 times into the car that she was riding in with Timothy Russell.

Alesia Thomas was 35 when she was kicked to death by a Los Angeles Police officer.

Shantel Davis was 23 when she was shot and killed by plainclothes New York Police officers in Brooklyn in 2012.

Shereese Francis, 29, had mental illness and died after NYPD officers arrived at her home to help her family transport her to a local hospital. Four officers pressed on her back to handcuff her, and lawyers for the family later sued, saying they suffocated Francis.

Aiyana Stanley-Jones was only 7 when Detroit police officers barged into her family’s home with their guns drawn, shooting her in the head.

Tarika Wilson, 26, was killed and her 14-month-old son was wounded in 2008 after Ohio police opened fire in her home.

Kathryn Johnson was 92 years old when she was shot and killed by Atlanta police officers in a botched 2006 raid.

Alberta Spruill was 57 when she died after NYPD officers mistakenly threw a stun grenade into her home.

Kendra James was 21 when she was killed by Portland police officers in 2003.

These are just some of their names. We must say them and remember them for all women of color.