The Free Press Network presents; Harvey Wasserman
The Other Side Of The News
With Dr. Robert Fitrakis
As broadcast LIVE! on WGRN 94.1fm
Woman speaking at a podium

The House just passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act (236-181). This legislation is historic and comprehensive in scope. Most importantly, this bill is responsive to the demands being pressed by demonstrators who are calling for policing reform and an end to police brutality. Dozens of member of Congress gathered on the steps of the U.S. Capitol to make clear that this bill is needed to move our nation forward.

Here are the key components of the bill

Details about event

Friday, Saturday & Sunday June 26-28th, 2020
Hosted at https://www.comfest.com/virtual-comfest-2020/ and on our Facebook page
Facebook event
Comfest Facebok page
Featuring performers, workshops, Street Fair vendors, Community Organizations, and a Program Guide for 2020.
 

Details about event

Thursday, June 25, 7:30pm
Online Event
Facebook Event
Watch the movie Just Mercy on your own (streaming free for the month of June on Amazon Prime), then
Join a community conversation with Marcia Miller of Yoga on High and Abraham Bonowitz, co-director of the national group, Death Penalty Action. Abe is a Columbus resident who will share his experience of this work and update us on issues within our own state of Ohio.
Thursday, June 25, 7:30 to 8:45p.

After defying the odds and defeating corporate opponents on Tuesday, the strong progressives Jamaal Bowman and Mondaire Jones are headed to Congress from New York—and there’s no way it would be happening if they hadn’t been willing and able to put up a fight in Democratic primaries. The same was true in 2018 with the election of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar and Ayanna Pressley as they beat the party establishment.

BANGKOK, Thailand -- The Black Lives Matter (BLM) call to action has
come to this Buddhist-majority society which is grappling with
discrimination against dark-skinned Thais, while some foreign black
people say they personally suffer racism here but not as brutally as
in the US and elsewhere.

In Bangkok, "I've been denied entry to bars, asked to pay at
restaurants before even getting the food, denied service in shops,"
Zipporah Gene said in an interview.

"I am British but of Nigerian and Egyptian heritage. My previous
hometowns include London, Cairo, and Kingston, Jamaica," said Ms. Gene
who has worked in Thailand for about a decade in media-related jobs.

Thais often call her 'kohn pew dam' which translates as 'person with
black skin.'

"While it’s not necessarily derogatory, it focuses on my skin color --
a lot -- which I‘ve always found quite weird.

"I could always tell when it was derogatory because some people would
scream it at my face, they’d have a hostile tone, or just spit after

Maybe CHOP won’t last, but something is changing. Our national groupthink, as maintained with such stalwart certainty over the last half century by centrist politics and the mainstream media, seems to be crumbling before our very eyes.

And as the groupthink crumbles, a larger awareness opens. Progressive thinking is finding its way back into the collective conversation, allowing the nation to begin transcending situation normal — you know, militarized policing keeps us safe, racism is a thing of the past, etc., etc. — and opening up the possibility that we can begin creating a complexly compassionate future.

This small beginning has emerged from the police murder of George Floyd and the global uprising that followed. The media and many political and corporate leaders, instead of uniting to marginalize the protesters, as they have always done in the past (with the help of the police, of course), are sitting there in a stunned semblance of agreement: Yeah, something’s wrong. We’ve got to make changes.

Pages

Subscribe to ColumbusFreePress.com  RSS