Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Dangerous Black Kids


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There are people who still don’t “get it” about why black and brown folks, and our allies don’t think Michael Dunn getting convicted of attempted assault on a car, but not for murdering Jordan Davis was “justice”.

There are people telling us we should be satisfied with Angela Corey, the prosecutor, and the jury, who did manage to convict Dunn for attempted murder of the teenaged passengers of the car who are alive.  

Well…we are angry. We are not satisfied. The twitterstorm that erupted after the verdict is still raging at #DangerousBlackKids  


Know your meme reported:

Within 24 hours of @thewayoftheid’s tweet, the hashtag #DangerousBlackKids was used on Twitter more than 16,000 times. On February 16th, several websites reported on the hashtag campaign and compiled some of the most popular examples, including The Huffington Post, Buzzfeed, and Complex. Also on February 16th, @TheObamaDiary, a Twitter account about Obamacare, tweeted the hashtag with childhood photos of President Obama and the First Lady.

The pics posted to twitter tell the story.

I really don’t have much more to say today.  

When armed white guys can kill our kids and get away with murder, and are given a

license to kill by Stand Your Ground laws, the only thing I can say, with certainty, is that we need to redouble, triple and quadruple our efforts to vote the people out of office who have enacted those racist laws and laws which were enacted to take away our right to vote.

And I’m really not interested in hearing from one more person who purports to be from “the real left” whose message is “don’t vote”.

Telling our folks not to vote when we’ve died to get the chance to do so is tantamount to being an accessory to our continuing oppression and deaths.

What I really want to say to these @!%^#***’s is unprintable.

Use your imagination.

Cross-posted from Black Kos


13 comments

  1. I loved seeing all the kids faces (and Barack and Michelle!!). But really, Dee, is it awful to think about them being targets.

    I saw a political cartoon this morning that made me want to cry:

  2. Portlaw

    will remember it


    Telling our folks not to vote when we’ve died to get the chance to do so is tantamount to being an accessory to our continuing oppression and deaths.

  3. Diana in NoVa

    We don’t want to bring them up to be racist. My family is fortunate to live in Northern Virginia, which is highly multicultural. My little one attends a preschool with Chinese and African-American children and in my neighborhood we have multicultural families.

    You know, I confess to being ignorant in this matter, but I wonder whether there is a book of profiles of great black people in history, written especially for children? I’m thinking not only of Americans but people in other centuries, like the Black Count, Toussaint L’Ouverture, and others. And of course it would include great people in entertainment, like Josephine Baker and Paul Robeson, just to name a few. I’m still stunned that I never heard of Josephine Baker until I was in my forties.

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