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Showing posts with label JUSTICE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JUSTICE. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Five days until early voting in Texas!!

 


Real Justice


FIVE DAYS. That’s how much time is left until Texans start casting their ballots for the March 1st primaries.

That means five days until people can start voting for the slate of AMAZING candidates we are supporting in partnership with Grassroots Law PAC. If you’re ready to help this slate win, rush a donation to their campaigns now!

  • Albert Roberts for Tarrant County District Attorney
  • John Creuzot’s reelection campaign for Dallas County District Attorney
  • Joe Gonzales’ reelection campaign for Bexar County District Attorney
  • Zohaib “Zo” Qadri for Austin City Council, District 9*
  • Bob Libal for Travis County Commissioner, Precinct 2
  • Susanna Ledesma-Woody for Travis County Commissioner, Precinct 4

*Zo’s not up in the primary, but powering his campaign NOW means he’ll have what it takes to win in November!

I can’t say it enough. Texas is GROUND ZERO in our fight.

We have a chance to elect — and reelect — people who are paving the way when it comes to transforming our justice system. We must stop the absolutely VICIOUS cycles of mass incarceration which has been the result of decades of policies that criminalize our communities.

Please Let’s help our slate turn out the voters to help them WIN! Make your best possible gift right now. 100% of your contribution goes directly to their campaigns. There’s never been a more important time to show our support!!

When we talk about building upon the incredible work we’ve done at Real Justice, this is what we mean.

Our opponents are working more than ever before to stop all of our hard-fought progress.

But we’re not intimidated. We are tilling the soil for future wins. County by county. City by city. State by state. THAT’s how we transform our justice system.

There’s just five days until people start voting — which means there’s no time to waste in making sure our slate has the resources they need to win.

Rush a donation to this incredible justice slate and be a part of making history for transformative justice in Texas. Let’s do this!!!

Love and appreciate all your help,

Shaun

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Pol. Adv. paid for by Real Justice PAC, realjusticepac.org. Authorized by John Creuzot Campaign, Joe Gonzales Campaign, and Albert Roberts Campaign. Not authorized by any other federal, state, or local candidate or candidate’s committee.

Email us: info@realjusticepac.org




Sunday, February 6, 2022

Operation Lone Star

 

Real Justice

You may have heard about ‘Operation Lone Star’.

It is an insidious, racist effort launched by Texas Governor Greg Abbott last March which deployed THOUSANDS of law enforcement officers to the Southern border and gave them wide authority to arrest migrants if they were suspected of criminal trespassing on state or private property.

This means that people could be arrested for misleading charges and then detained for MONTHS without ever being given a chance to get legal representation or to apply for asylum.

But Travis County DA José Garza, a DA that we helped elect, just successfully argued on behalf of someone who was arrested under Operation Lone Star. The judge in charge of the case ruled the operation as unconstitutional in this specific case, laying the groundwork for future challenges to the program elsewhere.

DA Garza has been doing absolutely incredible work, and this is just another example in which he has followed through on his promise to challenge powerful actors who violate peoples’ rights.

If a different DA had been in place, it’s likely this would never have happened. Operation Lone Star could have been able to continue without interruption, endangering the lives of thousands of migrants and creating a separate, underground legal system with no limits.

We know the truth. It’s people like you that helped DA Garza win his election — and together, we’ll make sure he can continue delivering on his promises. Will you join us in standing with DA José Garza and split a contribution between his reelection campaign and Real Justice today?


Our opposition is scared.

They see our successes.

They see what we are able to accomplish when we come together to elect progressive DAs who aren’t afraid to challenge the worst actors in our so-called ‘justice system’ and build a new kind of justice system that cares for our communities, instead of incarcerating us.

DA José Garza is doing exactly what he set out to do. Now we need to have his back as he inevitably faces even more attacks and attempts to roll back the progress he has made as Travis County DA.

Split a contribution between his reelection campaign and Real Justice today to keep up the fight for transformative justice.

Gratefully,

Real Justice

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Paid for by Real Justice PAC, realjusticepac.org. Authorized by José Garza Campaign. Not authorized by any other federal, state, or local candidate or candidate’s committee.

Email us: info@realjusticepac.org





Saturday, February 5, 2022

AMADOU DIALLO 23RD ANNIVERSARY OF HIS MURDER

 

Today is the 23rd anniversary of the murder of Amadou Diallo in 1999. The NYPD fired 41 shots at Amadou, who was unarmed and broke no laws and was a model citizen. And not a single cop was held accountable. They didn’t even lose their jobs.⁣
His murder was my entrance in activism against police brutality. I was a student leader at Morehouse at the time and we all saw Amadou as our peer in many ways. And when I was Student Government President, we organized and fought for justice every way we knew how back then. No social media and hardly even any functional Internet. Organizing was different. More relational.⁣
In some ways it breaks my heart that has police violence is still so horrible after the 23 years I’ve been in this fight. Some of these images I shared could be from today. America is deeply resistant to change. And what’s ugly is that New York’s Mayor is actually bringing back the disgraced unit that did this and caused so much harm. ⁣
Unlike 23 years ago, I’m grateful that we’ve now been able to convict cops across the country and finally have DA’s that stand up to their violence. But the violence shows no sign of ending. ⁣
It has been one of the honors of my life to become friends with Amadou’s dear mother, Kadiatou, and even introduce her to my own family. She’s a queen of a woman. If you’ve ever been in her presence you’d understand.






Tuesday, February 1, 2022

RSN: FOCUS: Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner | Justice

 


 

Reader Supported News
31 January 22

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President Joe Biden in Washington, DC, 2021. (photo: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner | Justice
Dan Rather and Elliot Kirschner, Steady
Excerpt: "We all knew that as soon as there was a Supreme Court vacancy, President Biden's pledge to appoint the first Black woman to the highest court would elicit the bad-faith howls of opprobrium from the political right."

It was as predictable as the phases of the moon, with just as much lunacy.

We all knew that as soon as there was a Supreme Court vacancy, President Biden’s pledge to appoint the first Black woman to the highest court would elicit the bad-faith howls of opprobrium from the political right.

From some, the more uncouth and unabashed, the racism and misogyny has been a blatant foghorn. But even those who try to wrap their true feelings in earnest lectures on equality and color-blindness, cannot hide their true intentions. They might think they were blowing a dog whistle, but no one is fooled.

Let’s start by getting one thing straight - Is there a shortage of Black women with the wisdom, talent, intelligence, savvy, and moral standing to be a worthy justice on the Supreme Court? Of course not.

How dare President Biden use “identity politics” to limit his search, says the political party that reveres President Reagan (or at least used to). Never mind that Reagan pledged, and then delivered, on his promise to appoint the first woman to the Court. Shame in the face of hypocrisy? Yeah, right.

And let’s be clear, as many others have noted, if you look at the portraits of the 115 justices who have served on the Court, 108 have been White men. It’s hard to conclude anything else than that there's some serious identity politics at play. Dig a little deeper into the Supreme Court history and you will hear of such things as the “Jewish seat” and the “Catholic seat.” So spare me. There also seems to be a lot of seats reserved for “presidents who lose the popular vote.”

What should not be lost in this moment is that in many ways this nation has made great strides on race and gender, even as the undertow of bigotry and sexism still pulls strongly at our national sense of justice. I remember when Thurgood Marshall became the first Black justice, and when Sandra Day O'Connor became the first woman. Both were shocks to the system. And both changed the Court for the better. Yes we want our justices to be scholars but we also should want them to reflect the country. And guess what. It turns out they can do both.

With this in mind, I have long worried about how narrow the spectrum of experience and background is among the current and recent set of justices, where almost all have gone to a cadre of elite schools and spent most of their professional careers in government and academia.

As a product of public schools, including college, I would like to see greater diversity of academic background on the court. You can get a great education, learn about life, the law, empathy, and justice, perhaps more so, at a State U too.

Law professors and those who work in government serve important functions in teaching and practicing a certain type of law, but there is something to be said for what it takes to be in courtrooms, as a prosecutor and as a defense attorney - especially a public defender.

The Supreme Court is asked to rule about labor issues and the environment, science and the economy, business and criminal justice. I hope we can find more justices who share this kind of broad knowledge, and lived experience. And while we’re talking about having justices who understand the injustice this nation has wrought, I hope sometime we will find one of Native American ancestry.

In a quirk of timing, the Court announced it will soon hear a challenge to affirmative action, and likely with the new justice in place. Most observers believe the justices will strike down the practice as it applies to education, which will likely lead to affirmative action being struck down more generally.

Now a detailed discussion of what affirmative action is, how it is used, and some of its complexities is best left for another column. But for the sake of contextualizing it in relation to this current moment for the Court, I think it is fair to say that if we lived in a truly equal society the practice would not be necessary. And I also think that there are some aspects of its current practice upon which those acting in good can have honest disagreement.

But good faith is not the strong suit of those attacking affirmative action. They like to argue that it is discriminatory to make choices on the basis of race. That presupposes many arguments that turn out to be fallacies. For one, it suggests that affirmative action is the only way race is considered in how people are hired or accepted to school.

This ignores the historical legacy, as well as the overt and inherent biases that are indelibly imprinted in American culture. And if we really wanted a level playing field around such things as college admissions, then let’s do away with “legacy” admissions, as in those that favor children who have a parent (or in some cases many generations) of alumni at a given institution (like Brett Kavanaugh). And by most accounts Jerod Kushner’s dad bought him into Harvard. Right, there is never a consideration of money or who your parents are when people get into college or get a job (sarcasm intended).

Let’s cut through a lot of the underbrush here and state a couple things. America is a land of opportunity. It is a place where people can come from nothing and become something. My own life’s journey offers some evidence of that. But it is also an inherently unequal society. This is due in large part to the shadows of our history which still darken the life opportunities for many.

One thing that I have learned, with lessons coming in every chapter of my life, is that we are a stronger country, a better country, a country more aligned with our highest ideals, when we embrace our differences. That we can learn from others, hear their stories, come to understand and love people very different from ourselves, this is a feature of the United States that we should embrace.

Bringing more diversity into our schools, our workplaces, our government, our courts, and our lives, doesn’t just help those who now have access they didn’t have before, it helps all of us. It helps the United States. And it is the symbol we can be for the world that a multi-ethnic, multicultural grand communal experiment can be successful. And thus, by extension, we can learn to live with each other on this precious, precarious planet.

If there was only one college that was any good, if there was only one kind of mind that made for a good justice, if there was only one job path that was each of our destinies, then this would be a different conversation. But that isn’t how the world works. Not by a long shot.

We go through life enriched by our experiences, and our experiences are enriched when we are exposed to different ways of thinking from people very different from ourselves. We need someone on the Supreme Court to be able to say, “that’s how you may see things, but this is where I am coming from. And you have no choice but to listen.”

Everyone, even the vast majority of us who will never wear the black robes of a Supreme Court justice, would do well to listen more to the wonderful diversity of voices that make up our beloved United States. This is, after all, a vital part of what really makes America great.


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Monday, January 24, 2022

Let me tell you what the news is not reporting

 

Real Justice


Let me tell you what the news is not reporting⁣

If you were to look in almost any news publication in the past year, they’d have you believing that murder rates are rising across the country and that to fix that, we need to invest MORE money in police and in prisons.

They would have you believe that policies aimed at harm reduction by getting rid of sentencing on low-level crimes are what’s causing this ‘lawlessness’.

That’s not true.⁣

First of all, murder rates were down, WAY down, in many large cities across the country in 2021. In Boston, they were down 26%. In St. Louis, they were down 25%. In Miami, they were down 15%. In Seattle, they were down 22%.

Second of all, a perceived increase in crime is EXACTLY what our opponents use to fuel a frenzy of fear to invest more money in a system that endangers the lives of poor, working class people — especially Black and brown people.

Instead of addressing the root causes of injustice and harm, their solutions are to increase funding for police officers, invest in opening new jails and prisons, and fuel the ongoing crisis that is mass incarceration.

Police won’t be able to solve the crimes we need to be solved — like murders. In fact, the rate of them solving these crimes are HORRIBLE.

It’s heartbreaking. We see this pattern over, and over, and over. As I’ve said before — it causes more arrests, more incarceration, more poverty, more despair, which leads to more drug use, which leads to a vicious cycle of mass incarceration that is inescapable.

We at Real Justice have to put a stop to this. And the good news is, the work we have done to combat this horrific harm has been working.

In the places where we have already elected good DA’s, we are succeeding in enormous ways. It’s not always perfect. But it’s progress.

Those DA’s are prosecuting violent cops who never would’ve faced accountability of any kind without those DA’s in office.

They are freeing the innocent, mostly Black men who have been wrongfully imprisoned.

They are overhauling what true public safety actually means in their cities.

And they are working hard to undo policies that contribute to mass incarceration.

We have big plans for this work in 2022. We are helping lay the groundwork for future wins, but we are also defending the progress we’ve made. District by district. City by city. All across the country.

We can’t do it without you. Please, I’m asking if you’ll make your best gift to Real Justice, to make sure we can hold our opponents accountable and elect justice champions who understand the root causes of crime and are doing everything they can to transform what justice looks like in this country.

Love and appreciate you,

Shaun


Pol. Adv. Paid for by Real Justice PAC, realjusticepac.org

Not authorized by any federal, state, or local candidate or a committee controlled by a candidate.

Email us: info@realjusticepac.org





Tuesday, January 4, 2022

The Philadelphia DA’s Office, led by @LarryKrasner, just exonerated their 24th wrongfully convicted person.

 

Shaun King 

BREAKING: The Philadelphia DA’s Office, led by @LarryKrasner, just exonerated their 24th wrongfully convicted person. This is right here is why we do the work we do. ⁣
Willie Stokes, seen kneeling in this photo, has been in prison for 37 years for a murder he didn’t commit. He’s been in there since 1984. ⁣
While his conviction has just been vacated, Willie might remain in jail for a few more weeks or months until everything is finalized. ⁣
What’s so painful, is that the ONLY man that testified against Willie was later found guilty of perjury, for lying ABOUT WILLIE, but prosecutors hid this from Willie and his attorneys. ⁣
It’s crazy. Every officer and prosecutor on this case should be penalized. They should lose their pensions and law licenses. ⁣
Not only that, but it has been discovered that the @PhillyPolice were offering incarcerated men SEX with women they’d bring in, or offers to reduce their time, if they’d provide false testimony against men they didn’t even know.
May be an image of 4 people and people standing


Tuesday, November 30, 2021

The dangerous joke of the Chesa Boudin recall

 

Progressive District Attorney Chesa Boudin is being subjected to a RECALL.

Progressives are charting new territory in their attempts to restore JUSTICE by eliminating CASH BAIL, refusing to prosecute petty crimes and much else. Mistakes will be made, but there will be exonerations of INNOCENTS as well.

It's important to pay attention to the $$$ sources.
This case bears watching.


The attempt to recall San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin exemplifies how loud, angry political minorities are deepening divisions and obstructing elected officials. (Kevin N. Hume/The Examiner)
Among the problems with the attempt to recall San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin is that the election makes San Francisco look like a joke.
The point is not that Boudin has been flawless in his job. Rather, he has done some good things, made some mistakes, pleased some constituents, displeased others and been subject to events in San Francisco that have been out of his control. In that regard, Boudin is more or less like every elected official ever.
The recall effort, on the other hand, is not spurred by some egregious mistake or crime that Boudin has committed. Rather, it is happening because many of the people who did not support him when he ran in 2019 see an easy and relatively cost-free way to have a political tantrum.
Nonetheless, the recall will go forward and will be a major political story here for months, even though we know how this will play out. Between now and the recall election, local, and more importantly, conservative national media, will rant about how the recall effort demonstrates that progressive forces are too strong in San Francisco, crime is out of control and the left has turned The City into some kind of radical dystopia. These reactionary talking points will be sanitized by self-proclaimed serious and moderate voices who will kibitz earnestly about how even San Francisco recognizes the need to rein in the far left.
And then when Boudin defeats the recall, the national media will agree that the recall never had a chance anyway in left-wing San Francisco.
None of this is good for San Francisco, not for any particularly ideological reason, but because having an election and then seeking to recall the winner before less than half of his term is over is absurd. It makes The City look unserious, directionless and unwilling to follow through on its progressive rhetoric. That perception will endure because the recall effort will get a lot more attention than its eventual defeat.
Boudin’s election in 2019 was part of a wave, which is still growing, of progressive district attorneys who include Philadelphia DA Larry Krasner, elected in 2018, and Chicago DA Kim Foxx, elected in 2016. These district attorneys have brought a new approach to the job, advocating for progressive policies like eliminating cash bail, reducing jail sentences for some crimes and overturning wrongful convictions. The effort to recall Boudin makes San Francisco seem like the majority of its residents never really meant to support these approaches and is thus more dilettante than progressive. Despite the recall being supported by a loud minority, liberal wishy-washiness is how the rest of the country will see The City.
This turn of events is possible because supporters of the recall can pursue the referendum easily and have nothing to lose. Although there is expense associated with qualifying a recall for the ballot, nobody is going broke making that happen. There are plenty of powerful and well-heeled interests happy to foot the bill.
Similarly, there is no political downside for supporters of the recall. The most likely outcome is that it will fail, but if that happens the conservative forces behind the effort will have lost nothing and will attribute the defeat to San Francisco’s progressive electorate. In the extremely unlikely event that the recall succeeds, the losers of the last campaign will have found a way to get a DA they like after failing to elect one.
We should also keep in mind that if Boudin is recalled, his replacement would be appointed by Mayor London Breed. Ironically, when Boudin was elected, he did it by defeating Suzy Loftus, a district attorney appointed by the mayor after ​​George Gascón resigned to take the DA job in Los Angeles. Recalling Boudin would give Breed an opportunity to further consolidate political control over The City — and over the DA’s office.
It is also important to look a bit closer at who is behind the recall. It is true supporters of the recall include major donors to GOP causes such as William Duhamel, Dede Wilsey and William Oberndorf — the latter is one of Mitch McConnell’s most generous benefactors — as well as benign sounding organizations such as Neighbors for a Better San Francisco, which enjoy strong financial support from right-wing donors. In short, there are several political organizations, individuals and forces providing the energy and resources behind the recall. However, it is impossible to ignore the role of the Police Officers Association as one of the prime movers in the recall attempt.
The same POA loudly calling for Boudin’s recall has been a singularly destructive and reactionary force in San Francisco politics for decades. From fighting efforts to racially integrate the police in the 1960s and 1970s, to its cozy relationship with Dan White after he killed George Moscone and Harvey Milk, through its longtime opposition to police reform and their opposition to the Black Lives Matter demonstrations, the POA has been a pillar of reactionary politics and opinion in San Francisco. While San Francisco liberals and progressives may disagree about the job Boudin is doing as DA, there should be little disagreement about the impact of the POA in this city. If the POA is for it, forces of progress, tolerance and justice should be against it. That should be axiomatic for all but the most reactionary San Franciscans.
Following the expensive debacle that was the failed attempt to remove Gov. Gavin Newsom from office, there has been increased attention to reforming the recall process. Reform is indeed needed, but a better and cleaner approach might be to abolish recall elections altogether. Most recalls fail, but they do enduring damage to the civic fabric by villainizing the recall target in a way that is much more direct than a campaign between two politicians. In our current polarized, and increasingly violent, political environment, this is particularly harmful.
Recalls are not a tool that is necessary for a functioning democracy. Many states and cities do not have them and no such voting option exists at a federal level. In our current system and political climate, recalls are little more than an opportunity for loud and angry political minorities to deepen divisions, hamstring elected officials and drive media attention. The attempt to recall Chesa Boudin is just one example of this damage.

 

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