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August 28
Author: Raine    Date: 08/28/2013 13:38:18

Many of us will be thinking and remembering the anniversary of the March on Washington 50 years ago today. 58 years ago, something else happened:

In August 1955, a fourteen-year-old black boy whistled at a white woman in a grocery store in Money, Mississippi. Emmett Till, a teen from Chicago, didn't understand that he had broken the unwritten laws of the Jim Crow South until three days later, when two white men dragged him from his bed in the dead of night, beat him brutally and then shot him in the head. Although his killers were arrested and charged with murder, they were both acquitted quickly by an all-white, all-male jury. Shortly afterwards, the defendants sold their story, including a detailed account of how they murdered Till, to a journalist. The murder and the trial horrified the nation and the world. Till's death was a spark that helped mobilize the civil rights movement. Three months after his body was pulled from the Tallahatchie River, the Montgomery bus boycott began.
Emmitt wasn't a civil rights activist, he was a child. He was one of many martyrs who sacrificed life and brought awareness to the struggle. It's wasn't just a dream, it's a movement that still continues today. Take some time to remember them:

May 7, 1955 · Belzoni, Mississippi
Rev. George Lee, one of the first black people registered to vote in Humphreys County, used his pulpit and his printing press to urge others to vote. White officials offered Lee protection on the condition he end his voter registration efforts, but Lee refused and was murdered.

August 13, 1955 · Brookhaven, Mississippi
Lamar Smith was shot dead on the courthouse lawn by a white man in broad daylight while dozens of people watched. The killer was never indicted because no one would admit they saw a white man shoot a black man. Smith had organized blacks to vote in a recent election.

August 28, 1955 · Money, Mississippi
Emmett Louis Till, a 14-year-old boy on vacation from Chicago, reportedly flirted with a white woman in a store. Three nights later, two men took Till from his bed, beat him, shot him and dumped his body in the Tallahatchie River. An all-white jury found the men innocent of murder.


October 22, 1955 · Mayflower, Texas
John Earl Reese, 16, was dancing in a café when white men fired shots into the windows. Reese was killed and two others were wounded. The shootings were part of an attempt by whites to terrorize blacks into giving up plans for a new school.

January 23, 1957 · Montgomery, Alabama
Willie Edwards Jr., a truck driver, was on his way to work when he was stopped by four Klansmen. The men mistook Edwards for another man who they believed was dating a white woman. They forced Edwards at gunpoint to jump off a bridge into the Alabama River. Edwards’ body was found three months later.

April 25, 1959 · Poplarville, Mississippi
Mack Charles Parker, 23, was accused of raping a white woman. Three days before his case was set for trial, a masked mob took him from his jail cell, beat him, shot him and threw him in the Pearl River.

September 25, 1961 · Liberty, Mississippi
Herbert Lee, who worked with civil rights leader Bob Moses to help register black voters, was killed by a state legislator who claimed self-defense and was never arrested. Louis Allen, a black man who witnessed the murder, was later also killed.

April 9, 1962 · Taylorsville, Mississippi
Cpl. Roman Ducksworth Jr., a military police officer stationed in Maryland, was on leave to visit his sick wife when he was ordered off a bus by a police officer and shot dead. The police officer may have mistaken Ducksworth for a “freedom rider” who was testing bus desegregation laws.

September 30, 1962 · Oxford, Mississippi
Paul Guihard, a reporter for a French news service, was killed by gunfire from a white mob during protests over the admission of James Meredith to the University of Mississippi.

April 23, 1963 · Attalla, Alabama
William Lewis Moore, a postman from Baltimore, was shot and killed during a one-man march against segregation. Moore had planned to deliver a letter to the governor of Mississippi urging an end to intolerance.

June 12, 1963 · Jackson, Mississippi
Medgar Evers, who directed NAACP operations in Mississippi, was leading a campaign for integration in Jackson when he was shot and killed by a sniper at his home.

September 15, 1963 · Birmingham, Alabama
Addie Mae Collins, Denise McNair, Carole Robertson and Cynthia Wesley were getting ready for church services when a bomb exploded at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, killing all four of the school-age girls. The church had been a center for civil rights meetings and marches.

September 15, 1963 · Birmingham, Alabama
Virgil Lamar Ware, 13, was riding on the handlebars of his brother’s bicycle when he was fatally shot by white teenagers. The white youths had come from a segregationist rally held in the aftermath of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing.

January 31, 1964 · Liberty, Mississippi
Louis Allen, who witnessed the murder of civil rights worker Herbert Lee, endured years of threats, jailings and harassment. He was making final arrangements to move north on the day he was killed.

March 23, 1964 · Jacksonville, Florida
Johnnie Mae Chappell was murdered as she walked along a roadside. Her killers were white men looking for a black person to shoot following a day of racial unrest.

April 7, 1964 · Cleveland, Ohio
Rev. Bruce Klunder was among civil rights activists who protested the building of a segregated school by placing their bodies in the way of construction equipment. Klunder was crushed to death when a bulldozer backed over him.

May 2, 1964 · Meadville, Mississippi
Henry Hezekiah Dee and Charles Eddie Moore were killed by Klansmen who believed the two were part of a plot to arm blacks in the area. (There was no such plot.) Their bodies were found during a massive search for the missing civil rights workers Chaney, Goodman and Schwerner.

June 21, 1964 · Philadelphia, Mississippi
James Earl Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Henry Schwerner, young civil rights workers, were arrested by a deputy sheriff and then released into the hands of Klansmen who had plotted their murders. They were shot, and their bodies were buried in an earthen dam.

July 11, 1964 · Colbert, Georgia
Lt. Col. Lemuel Penn, a Washington, D.C., educator, was driving home from U.S. Army Reserves training when he was shot and killed by Klansmen in a passing car.

1965
February 26, 1965 · Marion, Alabama
Jimmie Lee Jackson was beaten and shot by state troopers as he tried to protect his grandfather and mother from a trooper attack on civil rights marchers. His death led to the Selma-Montgomery march and the eventual passage of the Voting Rights Act.

March 11, 1965 · Selma, Alabama
Rev. James Reeb, a Unitarian minister from Boston, was among many white clergymen who joined the Selma marchers after the attack by state troopers at the Edmund Pettus Bridge. Reeb was beaten to death by white men while he walked down a Selma street.

March 25, 1965 · Selma Highway, Alabama
Viola Gregg Liuzzo, a housewife and mother from Detroit, drove alone to Alabama to help with the Selma march after seeing televised reports of the attack at the Edmund Pettus Bridge. She was driving marchers back to Selma from Montgomery when she was shot and killed by a Klansmen in a passing car.

June 2, 1965 · Bogalusa, Louisiana
Oneal Moore was one of two black deputies hired by white officials in an attempt to appease civil rights demands. Moore and his partner, Creed Rogers, were on patrol when they were blasted with gunfire from a passing car. Moore was killed and Rogers was wounded.

July 18, 1965 · Anniston, Alabama
Willie Brewster was on his way home from work when he was shot and killed by white men. The men belonged to the National States Rights Party, a violent neo-Nazi group whose members had been involved in church bombings and murders of blacks.

August 20, 1965 · Hayneville, Alabama
Jonathan Myrick Daniels, an Episcopal Seminary student in Boston, had come to Alabama to help with black voter registration in Lowndes County. He was arrested at a demonstration, jailed in Hayneville and then suddenly released. Moments after his release, he was shot to death by a deputy sheriff.

January 3, 1966 · Tuskegee, Alabama
Samuel Leamon Younge Jr., a student civil rights activist, was fatally shot by a white gas station owner following an argument over segregated restrooms.

January 10, 1966 · Hattiesburg, Mississippi
Vernon Ferdinand Dahmer, a wealthy businessman, offered to pay poll taxes for those who couldn’t afford the fee required to vote. The night after a radio station broadcasted Dahmer’s offer, his home was firebombed. Dahmer died later from severe burns.

June 10, 1966 · Natchez, Mississippi
Ben Chester White, who had worked most of his life as a caretaker on a plantation, had no involvement in civil rights work. He was murdered by Klansmen who thought they could divert attention from a civil rights march by killing a black person.

July 30, 1966 · Bogalusa, Louisiana
Clarence Triggs was a bricklayer who had attended civil rights meetings sponsored by the Congress of Racial Equality. He was found dead on a roadside, shot through the head.

February 27, 1967 · Natchez, Mississippi
Wharlest Jackson, the treasurer of his local NAACP chapter, was one of many blacks who received threatening Klan notices at his job. After Jackson was promoted to a position previously reserved for whites, a bomb was planted in his car. It exploded minutes after he left work one day, killing him instantly.

May 12, 1967 · Jackson, Mississippi
Benjamin Brown, a former civil rights organizer, was watching a student protest from the sidelines when he was hit by stray gunshots from police who fired into the crowd.

February 8, 1968 · Orangeburg, South Carolina
Samuel Ephesians Hammond Jr., Delano Herman Middleton and Henry Ezekial Smith were shot and killed by police who fired on student demonstrators at the South Carolina State College campus.

April 4, 1968 · Memphis, Tennessee
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a Baptist minister, was a major architect of the Civil Rights Movement. He led and inspired major non-violent desegregation campaigns, including those in Montgomery and Birmingham. He won the Nobel peace prize. He was assassinated as he prepared to lead a demonstration in Memphis.
There are more names that can be added to this list. (see additions below) There are more that didn't meet death, but were jailed, beaten and terrorized. The civil rights movement was brutal, ugly and dangerous.

It still is today. We've witnessed the lynching of James Byrd and the brutal murder of Matthew Shepard. Trayvon Martin is dead. I could go on; I want to go on, but this blog cannot accommodate the list of people who have died for simply being an 'other'.

Striving to achieve racial and gender equality, economic equality, social justice was, and still is, dangerous and sometimes quite literally, deadly. While we celebrate today it is easy to forget these things. Dr. Martin Luther King's words are what many remember, but that march, those speeches were about a far bigger idea. It was a clarion call for radical change in America and we aren't there yet. We need more jobs and we need more freedom.

http://prospect.org/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/ap6308280160.jpg
http://hereandnow.wbur.org/files/2013/08/0826_march-washington-624x383.jpg


http://www.splcenter.org/sites/default/files/4girls.jpg
http://www.splcenter.org/sites/default/files/chaneyetc.jpg


http://www.biography.com/imported/images/Biography/Images/Profiles/T/Emmett-Till-507515-1-402.jpg

http://trayvonmartinfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/TrayvonMartinHooded.jpg






and
Raine

Additions:

December 25, 1951-Coco, Florida
Harry T. Moore and Harriette Vyda Simms Moore had their house blown up by the KKK. They are considered the first martyrs on the modern civil rights era.

The Forgotten.

 

55 comments (Latest Comment: 08/28/2013 22:13:17 by trojanrabbit)
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Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 13:24:32
Morning

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 13:31:31
Hello all.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 13:41:38
Blog is posted, but still being edited.

good morning.

Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 14:01:45
YOu know my mom and fam lived in NoVA during this time - I asked her if she went to DC that day. She said no, she was in HS then and her mother (my granma) would not have been happy if she missed school. When I said it was the 60's there were tons of High Schoolers there, her response was that they didn't have her mother.

I swear there I days when I think I experienced more of the 60's then she did.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 14:04:22
Quote by wickedpam:
YOu know my mom and fam lived in NoVA during this time - I asked her if she went to DC that day. She said no, she was in HS then and her mother (my granma) would not have been happy if she missed school. When I said it was the 60's there were tons of High Schoolers there, her response was that they didn't have her mother.

I swear there I days when I think I experienced more of the 60's then she did.
I can totally identify with that, Mala.


Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 14:06:26
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
YOu know my mom and fam lived in NoVA during this time - I asked her if she went to DC that day. She said no, she was in HS then and her mother (my granma) would not have been happy if she missed school. When I said it was the 60's there were tons of High Schoolers there, her response was that they didn't have her mother.

I swear there I days when I think I experienced more of the 60's then she did.
I can totally identify with that, Mala.


Thanks Sis


Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 14:28:08
Two more names for the list, Raine.

December 25, 1951-Coco, Florida
Harry T. Moore and Harriette Vyda Simms Moore had their house blown up by the KKK. They are considered the first martyrs on the modern civil rights era.


Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 14:28:56
Quote by Mondobubba:
Two more names for the list, Raine.

December 25, 1951-Coco, Florida
Harry T. Moore and Harriette Vyda Simms Moore had their house blown up by the KKK. They are considered the first martyrs on the modern civil rights era.
Thank you! I'll edit.



Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 14:29:19
Most.moving.blog.ever.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 14:30:54
Quote by Mondobubba:
Two more names for the list, Raine.

December 25, 1951-Coco, Florida
Harry T. Moore and Harriette Vyda Simms Moore had their house blown up by the KKK. They are considered the first martyrs on the modern civil rights era.

Do you have a link for that? I only grabbed what was on the list at SPLC's site.

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 14:30:57
My co-worker, the douchey one, not the cool nerd one, just said America isn't a racist nation.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 14:35:44
Quote by Mondobubba:
Most.moving.blog.ever.
Really? Thank you.


Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 14:38:26
Quote by Mondobubba:
My co-worker, the douchey one, not the cool nerd one, just said America isn't a racist nation.


I don't think its a racist nation either I think we strive to ideally be better then that. I do however think we have douche bag racists.


Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 14:41:21
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
My co-worker, the douchey one, not the cool nerd one, just said America isn't a racist nation.


I don't think its a racist nation either I think we strive to ideally be better then that. I do however think we have douche bag racists.
I think we still have institutionalized racism -- things like the School to Prison pipeline is one example.
"Zero-tolerance" policies criminalize minor infractions of school rules, while high-stakes testing programs encourage educators to push out low-performing students to improve their schools' overall test scores. Students of color are especially vulnerable to push-out trends and the discriminatory application of discipline.




Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 14:48:38
Quote by Raine:
Quote by wickedpam:
Quote by Mondobubba:
My co-worker, the douchey one, not the cool nerd one, just said America isn't a racist nation.


I don't think its a racist nation either I think we strive to ideally be better then that. I do however think we have douche bag racists.
I think we still have institutionalized racism -- things like the School to Prison pipeline is one example.
"Zero-tolerance" policies criminalize minor infractions of school rules, while high-stakes testing programs encourage educators to push out low-performing students to improve their schools' overall test scores. Students of color are especially vulnerable to push-out trends and the discriminatory application of discipline.




Oh I don't disagree there are elements, and maybe I'm way to naive, but I still think we strive to be better then this. It's all a work in progress and we're going to fall flat on our faces but we still pick our selves up and push forward to something brighter.



Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 14:51:20
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Two more names for the list, Raine.

December 25, 1951-Coco, Florida
Harry T. Moore and Harriette Vyda Simms Moore had their house blown up by the KKK. They are considered the first martyrs on the modern civil rights era.

Do you have a link for that? I only grabbed what was on the list at SPLC's site.



A like to Harry T on Wikipedia it likes to Mrs Moore

Comment by clintster on 08/28/2013 15:01:35
Great blog, Raine. Thank you!

Comment by clintster on 08/28/2013 15:02:46
Meanwhile, Glenn Beck has become a "Captain Planet" eco-villain.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 15:04:01
I should probably add this to the blog as well. The forgotten.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 15:12:51
Quote by clintster:
Meanwhile, Glenn Beck has become a "Captain Planet" eco-villain.
Seriously, he's a f8cking idiot.


Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 15:13:21
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Mondobubba:
Two more names for the list, Raine.

December 25, 1951-Coco, Florida
Harry T. Moore and Harriette Vyda Simms Moore had their house blown up by the KKK. They are considered the first martyrs on the modern civil rights era.

Do you have a link for that? I only grabbed what was on the list at SPLC's site.



A like to Harry T on Wikipedia it likes to Mrs Moore
Added that link, thanks Mondo.


Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 15:26:44
I'm telling you, Listening to Hal sparks is amazing.

I would LOVE it if Randi considered him as a fill in host sometimes.

Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 15:32:07
Quote by Raine:
I'm telling you, Listening to Hal sparks is amazing.

I would LOVE it if Randi considered him as a fill in host sometimes.


agreed!


Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 15:32:08
Quote by clintster:
Meanwhile, Glenn Beck has become a "Captain Planet" eco-villain.



Beck's descent in tertiary syphilitic madness continues.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 15:36:51
Remember that time long ago (last Friday) when I said I wsa tired of debunking shit?

Remember when truthout.org was a decent site?

Well... read this, and please tell me if I need to debunk -- again.

(I want people to keep in mind that TruthOut is a select group of publications that Freedom of The Press Foundation is raising money for)

I smell something here, and I don't like it.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 15:44:21
Quote by Raine:
Remember that time long ago (last Friday) when I said I wsa tired of debunking shit?

Remember when truthout.org was a decent site?

Well... read this, and please tell me if I need to debunk -- again.

(I want people to keep in mind that TruthOut is a select group of publications that Freedom of The Press Foundation is raising money for)

I smell something here, and I don't like it.
I have long been highly skeptical of Inter Press Service as a whole, to be clear.






Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 15:47:35
honest questions:

Is there a difference between analysis and reporting?

Is there a difference between analysis and opinion?

Comment by BobR on 08/28/2013 15:49:26
Quote by Raine:
honest questions:

Is there a difference between analysis and reporting?

Is there a difference between analysis and opinion?

I think analysis is the bridge between reporting and opinion

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 15:59:57
Quote by Raine:
Remember that time long ago (last Friday) when I said I wsa tired of debunking shit?

Remember when truthout.org was a decent site?

Well... read this, and please tell me if I need to debunk -- again.

(I want people to keep in mind that TruthOut is a select group of publications that Freedom of The Press Foundation is raising money for)

I smell something here, and I don't like it.



In what alternate reality is this happening? :headscratch:

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 16:31:37
Quote by Mondobubba:
Quote by Raine:
Remember that time long ago (last Friday) when I said I wsa tired of debunking shit?

Remember when truthout.org was a decent site?

Well... read this, and please tell me if I need to debunk -- again.

(I want people to keep in mind that TruthOut is a select group of publications that Freedom of The Press Foundation is raising money for)

I smell something here, and I don't like it.



In what alternate reality is this happening? :headscratch:
I;m not sure. The author is legit, I looked into that.

I'm still going back to what I sad yesterday about BushCo™ poisoning the well wrt to anything we may do as intervention.

People keep talking about gas -- they are ignoring the rape and torture.


Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 16:33:06
The other thing I am noticing is this:

Kerry is NOT a war hawk.

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 16:33:07
Quote by Raine:
honest questions:

Is there a difference between analysis and reporting?

Is there a difference between analysis and opinion?



Yes and yes.

Comment by BobR on 08/28/2013 16:37:11
Hey Scoopster - sorry, but I had to delete your comment. I have no idea why it was causing the DB query to puke, but once I deleted it, everything is working again.


Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 16:37:37
Quote by BobR:
Quote by Raine:
honest questions:

Is there a difference between analysis and reporting?

Is there a difference between analysis and opinion?

I think analysis is the bridge between reporting and opinion



agreed.

Comment by Raine on 08/28/2013 17:16:43
We are heading into DC.

Talk to y'all tomorrow. I;m so sorry I am the last part of the missing Laura Flanders interview.

Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 17:17:58
Quote by Raine:
We are heading into DC.

Talk to y'all tomorrow. I;m so sorry I am the last part of the missing Laura Flanders interview.



have fun!

Comment by livingonli on 08/28/2013 17:18:14
Good day, folks. The more I sleep late, the harder it is to get things done.

Comment by TriSec on 08/28/2013 17:21:51
http://www.quimper.fr/uploads/Image/0e/IMF_LARGE/GAB_QUIMPER/16490_530_LOGO-Miles-Davis_352.jpg


Comment by livingonli on 08/28/2013 17:46:15
It's raining at the US Open but hasn't reached me yet.

Comment by Scoopster on 08/28/2013 18:04:21
Quote by BobR:
Hey Scoopster - sorry, but I had to delete your comment. I have no idea why it was causing the DB query to puke, but once I deleted it, everything is working again.

See.. I knew it was me who crashed el bloggie. It was only a youtube video!

Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 18:13:53
Benedict Cumberpatch Name Generator.

Crumplesack Moldyspore

Butawhiteboy Cantbekhan

Comment by TriSec on 08/28/2013 18:16:06
So, my friend on the left coast writes the "Happy Healthy Vegan" blog.

I think I'm going to have to counter that with the "Big Pieces of Meat" blog.



Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 18:27:41
Quote by TriSec:
So, my friend on the left coast writes the "Happy Healthy Vegan" blog.

I think I'm going to have to counter that with the "Big Pieces of Meat" blog.




You forgot "dripping blood"

Comment by Scoopster on 08/28/2013 18:36:18
Bubba's on the mic!

Comment by Scoopster on 08/28/2013 18:50:31
I feel really bad.. she's completely hidden behind the podium!

http://images.bluegartr.com/bucket/gallery/8a2130b3354e29445a31d10369bf8563.PNG


Comment by Scoopster on 08/28/2013 18:52:48
Oh and if you thought Fox News wouldn't have coverage...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/files/2013/08/fox_march.png


Comment by Mondobubba on 08/28/2013 18:59:24
Quote by Scoopster:
I feel really bad.. she's completely hidden behind the podium!

http://images.bluegartr.com/bucket/gallery/8a2130b3354e29445a31d10369bf8563.PNG



Fantastic hat, though.

Comment by Scoopster on 08/28/2013 19:06:39
Obama's up!

Comment by Will in Chicago on 08/28/2013 19:31:18
First, I was swamped yesterday and busy today so:

HAPPY BELATED BIRHTDAY, VELVEETA!!!



Comment by wickedpam on 08/28/2013 19:37:23
I've given up on talk radio this afternoon - over on spotify listening to Gin Wigmore instead