Will Deborah Gist keep her job?


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gist“School systems that have successfully ignited reforms and sustained their momentum have all relied on at least one of three events to get them started: they have either taken advantage of a political or economic crisis, or commissioned a high-profile report critical of the system’s performance, or have appointed a new, energetic and visionary political or strategic leader.”

Rhode Island’s “energetic and visionary” leader, Commissioner Deborah Gist, wants to keep her job when Gina Raimondo takes office next year. The Board of Education meets tonight and it’s not on their agenda, but you can bet it’s on their minds.

education sheepThe passage above is from an influential McKinsey & Company report, quoted by Gist in her doctoral dissertation. Although she was not initially interested in being our education commissioner, she recounts in her research, she was actively recruited by Angus Davis, who painted a rosy picture of Rhode Island as a reform-ready state.

In many respects she found this to be true and she is generous in her praise for the work of ex-Commissioner McWalters and ex-Governor Carcieri’s Board of Regents for creating a base she could build on. A founding member of Jeb Bush’s Chiefs for Change and a graduate of the Broad Academy, Gist was warmly welcomed by Rhode Island’s business community and its Republican governor.

RIDE ‘s development and implementation of a new teacher evaluation system is the focus of her self-study dissertation: “An Ocean State Voyage: A Leadership Case Study of Creating an Evaluation System With and For Teachers”.  Most teachers are not with and for Gist.  Her dissertation discusses her difficult relationship with teachers through the firings in Central Falls and Providence and teachers’ strong resistance to the use of student standardized test scores in their own evaluations.

testingNow that the Common Core has arrived in the suburbs, there is growing discontent with her leadership among parents as well, which is likely to flare up with the the first administration of the PAARC (Partnership for the Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers) test in the spring of this school year.

Gist regarded Carcieri as “reform-minded and open to taking aggressive steps to bring about the necessary changes to Rhode Island’s education system” and, although she didn’t  have the same rapport with Governor Chafee, she made her peace with him after a difficult start.

Given Governor-elect Raimondo’s celebrity as a pension reformer, some assume that she is committed to the entire union-busting privatizing program of corporate reform. The Fordham Institute’s Michael J. Petrilli, for example: “Of particular note is Rhode Island—Rhode Island!—which just elected a pro-education reform, pro-pension reform Democrat as governor and a bona fide charter school hero as lieutenant governor. All while voters in Providence rejected a union-backed convicted felon in favor of a charter supporter. Remarkable!”

moffit-raimondoGovernor-elect Gina Raimondo and her husband, Andy Moffit, are parents of children attending school in Providence and Raimondo has said positive things about public schools and public school teachers.  Moffit is a senior consultant in education with McKinsey & Co. He had a hand in the report, “How the world’s best school systems keep getting better,” that introduces these comments and that Gist quoted in her dissertation.

He was a principle author of Deliverology 101: A Field Guide for Educational Leaders, which Gist admires. After Governor Chafee’s election, the Board of Regents changed significantly which worried Gist.  It must also have dismayed Moffit, who was nominated to the Board by Carcieri but decided not to serve under Chafee. Both Gist and Moffit have interests in large-scale change of school systems and educational organizations. Like Gist, Moffit has serious corporate-reform credentials.  If the two don’t know each other well, at the very least they are professional acquaintances with common contacts.

I don’t know if this connection will work for or against Gist and I’m not even going to guess how the next lieutenant governor’s opinion might figure into the decision.  Certainly Raimondo will not want to add to the the anger and distrust that Rhode Island educators feel over pension issues by retaining an unpopular Commissioner.  Nor will she wish to create the impression that her husband’s career has undue influence on her decision.  On the other hand , her sensitivity to the business community, the input of pro-corporate reform campaign contributors, and a shout-out from Washington could work for Gist.

Ferguson protesters’ tactic of choice: shut down highways


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highway shutdownIt touched a nerve when activists took to Interstate 95 Tuesday night and shut it down for at least 15 minutes.

Blocking traffic has nothing to do with racial injustice, some said. Others worried that an ambulance might be delayed in route to the hospital. It’s plainly dangerous to both protesters and motorists and everyone feels a little uneasy that a few dozen otherwise peaceful people can bring the busiest highway in the nation to a screeching halt.

The tactic drew a sharp rebuke from some – many of whom are not otherwise receptive to addressing racially-charged issues – but also managed to propel the protest onto the front page of the Providence Journal and it was highlighted by nearly every local news outlet. As a protest tool, it’s hard to argue it didn’t accomplish it’s objective – which was to call attention to the Ferguson ruling, racial inequality and police brutality.

And it happened all over the country. From San Diego to Providence, police arrested hundreds of people who took to highways protesting the Ferguson ruling.

The 580 in Oakland and the 101 in Los Angeles were shut down on both Monday and Tuesday nights. Lake Shore Drive in Chicago was blocked by protesters, as was the Stemmons Freeway in Dallas. Activists blocked Interstate 75 in Atlanta and in Detroit. Protests took over highways in Nashville, Durham, Baltimore and Cleveland. The FDR Highway and the Brooklyn Bridge both succumbed to protests. In no less than 20 American cities, activists took to the streets this week to stifle traffic.

It’s not a new tactic in the civil unrest that’s broken out since Michael Brown’s death. Ferguson protesters tried it in St. Louis in September and in Atlanta in October. On Saturday, it was used in Ferguson, where 15 people were arrested. The New York Times reports:

“Although the authorities arrested more than a dozen people, the demonstration was far from a repeat of the rioting early in the week, which was defined by gunfire, looting and arson.

Instead, protesters opted for a common and less provocative tactic: blocking traffic along South Florissant Road near Ferguson’s police station, which is now protected by the St. Louis County police and members of the Missouri National Guard.”

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Here’s a roundup of protests that closed roads from around the country….

Providence, RI:


Boston, Mass.:


New York, NY:


Oakland, Calif. –


Los Angeles, Calif.


San Diego, Calif. –


Seattle, Wash –


Portland, Oregon –


Cleveland, Ohio –


Detroit, Mich. –


Chicago, Ill. –


Minneapolis, Minn. –


Atlanta, Georgia –


Nashville Tenn. –


Durham, NC –


Washington, DC –

https://twitter.com/NewsRevo/status/538759761144344576


Baltimore, MD –


Dallas, Texas –


Albuquerque, NM –

Local Ferguson protest takes over Central Avenue – KRQE


Ithaca, NY

What happened in Ferguson: Race, militarization and flawed justice

police-shooting-missouriRegardless of whether or not Mike Brown assaulted the officer, justice was not served  A lot of people want to strictly blame the racial divide, some blame the relationship between the police and citizens, others still blame the clear flaws in the American criminal justice system.

Not one of these factors caused the nationwide protests this week, all of them did.

What is the case in Ferguson, Missouri is not specific to that town, or even the southern United States. At least 170 cities saw protests as thousands of citizens from Los Angeles to New York took to the streets and highways. Citizens feel disenfranchised when it comes to those whom they pay to serve and protect us.

During the first large protest in Ferguson in response to the death of Michael Brown police responded with riot gear, armored patrol vehicle assault weapons and tear gas. This may have quieted the unruly bunch who became violent but it is easy to see how such a show of force greatly exacerbated the perceived disconnect between cops and citizens. How exactly did Ferguson (and many other small police departments) acquire such serious firepower? Through the Pentagon’s 1033 program local law enforcement agencies are given outdated military equipment to local law enforcement agencies. The main goal of a protester is to be listened to and understood. Nothing says, “I hear your pain” like riot shields and combat fatigues.

Now race is much much trickier issue. Al Sharpton and the NAACP are dead wrong, we do not need a new civil right movement, but at the same time Fox news pundits need to stop insisting that racism is dead and that the idea that race may have had something to do with this case is divisive.

Racism  is alive but now, more often than not, it bleeds through subtly. A call for equal protection for for blacks and whites under the law has already been answered, just not enforced as well as it should be. What do they suggest, affirmative action when it come to arrest rates? You may only arrest so many African Americans? As for proof that racism is still a factor, one must only look at the arrest rates: Ferguson has 2.8 times more blacks arrested than whites and some parts of Rhode Island have disparities as high as 9.14 times more black arrests (RI ACLU).

What could explain the fact that blacks are stopped and arrested multiple times more frequently when the rates of crime are relatively close besides an issue of race? The way out of this is a long term change of image which will take decades, sadly fires and lootings and Ferguson do the exact opposite of what level headed blacks desire.

The crux of the matter, however, is the way crime and criminals are handled by the American criminal justice system. We have for profit prisons which donate to the government in order to garner support for laws that would favorably affect their business such as drug laws and mandatory minimum sentencing. It costs tax money to house and feed individuals in jail, why do we find excuses to throw people in them for a consensual use of a substance not worse but merely different than alcohol? People are making money for locking others in cages.

Let’s assume that Officer Wilson’s account is correct, however unlikely it may be. He asks the suspect to get out of the street and is immediately assaulted, Brown sustains a bullet wound then flees and is shot at several more times before deciding to turn around and charge at the police officer aiming a gun at him. The happenings after this are no less than a travesty of justice. After the incident Officer Wilson’s statement is not recorded, The crime scene is not photographed, and there was not a proper chain of evidence documented on the gun. All of these things are protocol after a police shooting and are cause for suspicion. They were bypassed for frivolous reasons such as “the cameraman had dead batteries.”

During the hoax of a grand jury trial the the prosecutor acted more like a defense attorney doing such things as allowing the defendant to testify, after the autopsy no less. This may seem normal but U.S. Supreme Court Justice Scalia wrote “neither in this country nor in England has the suspect under the investigation by the grand jury ever been thought to have a right to testify or to have exculpatory evidence presented. The prosecutor gave the grand jury copies of a 1979 state law that allowed police to use any force to stop a suspect just because they are fleeing. This law was deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1985. Officer Wilson said he feared for his life after being punched twice, I have come out of High School football games looking worse than the red mark he got on the right side of his face. The right side of his face…how did that get injured when he claims to be punched while in the driver’s seat (exposing only his left side)?

Officer Wilson may very well be innocent of all wrongdoing, no one knows the whole truth as there were 60 conflicting eyewitness accounts (also never presented by a prosecutor who actually wants and indictment), but out of 160,000 federal grand jury cases, only 11 did not get indictments. When asked if he would change anything given the chance to do the situation over again, he replied he would do everything over again.

Buy Nothing Day Winter Coat Exchange: You should have been here


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2014-11-28 Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange 7600The idea is simple: give away donated coats to people who need them, while at the same time challenging the consumerism that marks Black Friday, an annual sales frenzy fomented by big box and mall retailers the day after Thanksgiving. The Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange, set up on the lawn of the State House, acts as a conscience and counterpoint to the sales driven capitalism inside the Providence Place Mall.

Greg Gerritt, who has been organizing the annual Buy Nothing Day Coat Exchange for 18 years, told me that I had missed the big rush at the 8am opening when I arrived at 9am. Hundreds of people had preceded me and received free coats and winter wear. Dozens of volunteers had arrived to organize the chaos as best they could. When I showed up at 9am, it still seemed pretty busy, but Gerritt assured me that the pace was settling down and that the rest of the day would be much easier.

As I was preparing to leave, a woman arrived with a bag of donations and her teenagers in tow. “We’re here to volunteer,” said the woman. The teenagers were smiling. That’s the kind of holiday spirit even an atheist appreciates.

Was there anything I should tell the public about the event I asked, given that by the time this piece hits the Internet, it will be all over?

“Yeah,” says Gerritt, smiling, “Tell them they should have been here.”

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Black Friday Walmart protest in Providence


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2014-11-28 Wallmart Protest 7334About ten people turned out in the freezing cold in Providence Friday morning to protest the low wages and immoral business practices of Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer. Organized locally by members of Occupy Providence and attended by group members and allies, the small protest made an oversized impression with the public, if the honking of horns and positive response of the passing motorists was any indication.

The eye catching paper maché wolf, which made its first public appearance at the People’s Climate March in New York City in September was brought by Pia Ward of FANG (Fighting Against Natural Gas.)

This year’s Black Friday Walmart protests were organized nationally by OUR Walmart (Organization United for Respect at Walmart), a group fighting for a $15 minimum wage and fair scheduling practices of the kind recently enacted into law as the Retail Workers Bill of Rights in San Francisco. The organization of Walmart workers in Rhode Island has been lagging as compared to efforts in some states.

Marcia Taylor entered the store and attempted to deliver a letter to the store manager. She tells her story in the video below.

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Thoughts on Black Friday/Buy Nothing Day


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Buy Nothing DayToday is Black Friday. Shopping malls and major retailers across the U.S. have deals to incite a holiday shopping frenzy. Thanksgiving, a day meant for family and reflection, becomes a memory as we head into the frigid night air to stand in line and fight crowds to get a $200 LED television or a $50 blu-ray player.

Is that what all the excitement is about? Is it a competitive drive to be first, to get the best deals? And is it worth taking part in denying low-wage workers the opportunity to have a day with friends or family? Or worse, being part of the mayhem that is responsible for taking a life, just to save a few dollars?

In 2008, a Walmart worker was trampled to death at a Long Island, NY store, and two men shot each other to death in California.  In 2011, shoppers walked over a man who had the audacity to lay dying in an aisle in Target, and in Los Angeles, a woman pepper sprayed other shoppers. Stores in Connecticut, New York, North Carolina, and several other locations reported fights, as well. Last year was no different, with stabbings, shootings, and a myriad of fights.

This does not seem to faze the investors or CEO’s; stores are opening earlier than ever this year, drawing underpaid workers away from a family holiday that is sacred to many. In an effort to increase profits for those who least need them, many large retailers are opening as early 5 or 6 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day, and a few are open as early as Thanksgiving morning.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-JAxow6NQwg&feature=youtu.be

Still, the allure of excitement and energy around Black Friday shopping can be contagious. If you find that is the case, consider shopping at a locally owned business. While the specific numbers may vary, there is no question that shopping at a locally owned business is good for your community. Some estimates suggests that nearly 70% of each dollar spent at a local business stays in the local economy. By contrast, only 40% or less of each dollar spent at non-local businesses remains in the local economy. It is also more likely that your local shopkeeper will offer direct benefits to his or her community.

And for those who find this consumerism generally disconcerting, there is the Buy Nothing Winter Coat Exchange at the Rhode Island State House. Events like this help our neighbors, help our environment (by not making more stuff and not filling landfills with old stuff), and are representative of what this season is supposed to be about: kindness, thoughtfulness, and caring.

In defense of blocking the highway


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DSC_7292“Flag burning? They think that helps their cause?”

“So what does blocking a highway and making ambulances late do to stop racism?”

These are real statements from those who would rather have seen Tuesday night’s Ferguson protest against police violence and systemic racism here in Rhode Island relegated to its usual three paragraphs next to a car advertisement on page six of the ProJo. Had the protesters in Providence not taken over the southbound lane of I-95, few media outlets would have covered the event in any depth.

DSC_7247To be fair, some see this as a tactical issue, and debate whether or not closing down the highway was the best course of action, but others feel that attention getting stunts like this are wrong because effectively highlighting the existence of racism brings about the possibility of system change, and with such change comes insecurity, uncertainty and fear for the privileged.

Better that black and brown people continue to die than one white person suffer insecurity, uncertainty or fear, I guess.

So those who benefit most from the present system (or think they do) lash out, and attempt to make huge issues out of relatively minor events.

DSC_7035Let’s get one thing out of the way right now: burning the American flag is a symbolic gesture that hurts no one and is completely protected speech under the first amendment. If a burning flag offends you more than the idea of the police gunning down a twelve year old carrying a BB gun or shooting a man in the toy aisle of a Walmart, your priorities are out of whack, and this piece isn’t written for you.

DSC_6715This piece is for the rest of us.

Blocking the highway was dangerous. The protesters could have been hurt. They could have caused an accident, or delayed an ambulance bringing someone in need to the hospital.

Yet accidents slow down the highways all the time. So does construction. So does a deer that’s lost its way. Somehow, ambulances make it through, take different routes, or go to different hospitals. And as a good friend said to me on Facebook, how many people complaining about the protesters closing the highway will vote for Chris Christie if he runs for President?

DSC_7231One potential Christie voter, Robert Paquin III, of the RI GOP, said, on Channel 10’s Wingmen, that, “The protesters were acting no better than the people they are accusing of being unfair.”

Let that sink in for a minute. The protesters are literally fighting for the lives of black and brown persons who are dying at the hands of an ever more militarized police. We have police officers getting away with murder. We are talking about centuries of racial oppression.

DSC_7243Somehow, according to Paquin, blocking traffic for twenty minutes on a Tuesday night is “no better.”

Providence Public Safety Commissioner Steven Pare wants protesters to inform him of their plans, so that the protests can become safe and predictable. Pare’s concern is public safety. Activists are concerned with establishing a more just society. The commissioner and the activists are at cross purposes. Society will not change when protesters ask politely, and there is little safety in change.

Our own history is full of dangerous and stupid actions that are steeped in violence, rather than non-violent disruption. RI Future editor Bob Plain, debating Paquin in the Wingmen segment, mentioned the burning of the Gaspee, an event celebrated every year in Rhode Island in which smugglers burned a British ship as a prelude to the American revolution. One might ask, “What does burning a ship and killing sailors have to do with democracy?”

DSC_6825So what has come out of the blocking of the highway? Conversation. Some of it is angry: privilege lashes out when uncovered, like a tiger pulled away from its young. Some of it is pointless: too many are so enmeshed in the privileges the current system confers upon them that they will never allow for the uncertainty of change.

But some conversations will shape future tactics, shake convictions, rock comfortable world views and bear fruit. Then the problem of criminalizing black and brown bodies will no longer be “their” problem but “our” problem, and we can work together to find solutions.



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NBC 10 Wingmen: Ferguson


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In the most heated NBC 10 Wingmen segment in some time, Rob Paquin and I debate the Ferguson protests with Bill Rappleye.

News, Weather and Classifieds for Southern New England

wingmen

Video: PVD activists burn American flag


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DSC_7294If the protesters in Tuesday night’s Ferguson March in Providence hadn’t marched out onto the highway and blocked traffic, the most confrontational and controversial action of the evening would have been the burning of an American Flag in front of the Providence Public Safety Complex. After the flag starts burning, protesters noticed a silhouetted figure in the windows of the complex, raising a fist in solidarity. Then, towards the end of the video, as the protesters try to decide what they should do next, someone suggests blocking the highway

Here’s a fuller video, which includes the protesters arriving at the Providence Public safety Complex to see a phalanx of police officers guarding the entrance.

Attentive RI Future readers might recognize Adrienne Jones in this clip.  Adrienne was fired from the Providence Hilton for her efforts in trying to organize a union there.

And for people who enjoy 70 minutes of jittery, random, nonstop imagery: Here’s all 71 minutes of the actual march, from the beginning, right up to the marches entry into the Public Safety Complex parking lot.



This was the most complete coverage you’re likely to find, anywhere.

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PVD Police Commissioner on Ferguson protest, John Prince, body cameras


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ferguson providence public safetyProvidence Public Safety Commissioner Stephen Pare said there were between 400 and 600 protesters in Providence last night, and “100 or so” who occupied and shut down Interstate 95 southbound for between 15 and 30 minutes.

“When we started getting reports they were heading down the the highway,” he said, “we had some concerns about those efforts. We were with the state police. Once we learned they were heading to the highway there were additional troopers who responded.”

There were 4 or 5 activists arrests by state police, he said, and two arrested by Providence police – which had more than 50 officers on duty prepared to respond to the incident.

In an wide-ranging interview he spoke about the dangers of shutting down an interstate, the John Prince assault accusation and the potential for Providence police officers to wear body cameras, which he supports.

Highway shutdown

John Prince

In September, unrelated to Ferguson protests in particular, DARE activist John Prince says Providence police officers prevented him from videoing them and took his camera. Pare avoided speaking about Prince’s complaint because it under investigation. But he did talk about how the investigation happened, and conceded the process leaves something to be desired.

Body cameras

Activists in Providence want police officers to wear body cameras. Pare says he supports the idea, and says within three to five years officers will wear body cameras as a matter of course, as they now have cameras in their vehicles. He says they often help police exonerate themselves.

Photos from the Providence Ferguson March


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More than 300 people (a conservative estimate, I think) marched in Providence Wednesday night to protest the verdict in Ferguson, MS that exonerated the police officer who shot and killed Michael Brown, an unarmed black man. Last night I photographed an emotional crowd filled with righteous anger, but it was a crowd that was, to my eyes, entirely nonviolent. Sure they were loud, they occupied space and they were confrontational, but they were peaceful.

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The Providence Ferguson protesters, in their own words


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DSC_6682There’s going to be a lot of discussion in the next few weeks about the protests in Providence held in the wake of the verdict of the grand jury in Ferguson, MS. There will be discussions about systemic racism, police profiling, protesting tactics, flag burning, highway blocking and the rising tide of a politicized youth movement with an agenda quite different from that of the previous generations.

But what of the voices of the protest? I can’t claim to have any special insights. I can only present what ten of the 400 to 500 protesters said that night, before the protest started. Think of me working here as a megaphone, amplifying their voices.

This is what Democracy looks like.

“I’m tired of turning on the news and seeing people get shot down for something that is not right…”

“This is a lesson for all of us in our community: Stop killing our people!”

“I’m here because it’s time for colonialism to end. It’s time to have an honest dialog about the history of the United States of America, about how it’s built on a system of injustice…”

“I’d just like to show respect to a few other names that are on the list of slain, young black men by police officers…”

“Young people, get into politics. Call your local officials. Let them know what troubles you. Then vote! Then, run for office….”

“That’s  literal and metaphorical. We want to surround our youth with the protection they need to survive in this capitalist system…”

“The images the media is trying to portray of him [Michael Brown] is a total lie. I knew him. He was totally a gentle giant.”

“We’re all affected by this because we found out about it on social media. CNN’s not telling us all of it. We’re seeing it live, we’re seeing it on Instagram, we’re seeing it on Twitter…”

“We can change everything with this power that we have. We have new tools that they didn’t have the last time we had to do this, in the sixties. We have grandparents who are alive now who are saying, that this looks the same, but it’s in color…”

“I want to take this moment to talk about the statement ‘Black Lives Matter.’ When I heard this list of names being read out earlier, it was all black, cisgender men… It is crucial that we honor not just the black men who have been killed, but also the black women and girls…”


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VIDEO: Providence Ferguson protesters block I-95


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DSC_7263This is my take. I was there, this is what I heard and saw, but there were hundreds of perspectives at last night’s Ferguson Rally in Providence, so don’t think of mine as definitive. I’ll do more than one piece on this, but I think it makes sense to start near the end, with the protesters jumping over the fence and descending onto the highway, Route 95, where the protesters blocked southbound traffic for about twenty minutes.

After a long march, we found ourselves at the Providence Public Safety Complex, where police officers blocked the entrance, and the protesters proceeded to demonstrate outside. After doing chalk outlines on the pavement like those drawn around murder victims, and after burning an American Flag, (which would surely have been the most controversial moment of the night, had the protesters not taken the highway) there was a small moment of silence as the protesters tried to reach consensus as to what to do next.

Someone said, “We could block the highway.” It sounded like an afterthought.

The statement electrified the crowd.

Almost immediately the crowd dispersed, and a significant number of them, between 100 and 150 by my count, crossed the street towards the highway, jumped the fence, and descended onto the highway en masse.

I might have followed, but I was burdened with a backpack, a video camera on a tripod, and a still camera around my neck. Also, I wasn’t entirely sure I could climb back.

I saw the protesters successfully block southbound traffic, and watched as they attempted to block northbound traffic as well. A state police car appeared almost immediately, and as more and more troopers arrived, they managed to keep the north bound lane clear. I watched from a patch of grass that runs along the outside of the fenced highway, about the width of a sidewalk.

A police officer unsuccessfully tried to tell those on the legal side of the fence that they had to move away, but I held my place, because I was trying to get the incident on video. I was warned several times that I would be arrested if I stayed where I was, but I was breaking no laws. (and was not arrested.)

Down below, on the highway, the protesters were confronting the police. I was told the following by a person who was down there, a white male:

“It was crazy. There were like five of us, three white guys and two black guys. The police, when they came at us, went right after the black guys. They weren’t interested in me at all, and I was right there.”

The police started to make arrests. I’m not sure what the criteria for who was arrested and who was not. I saw at least two people being arrested, but I was constantly being jostled by fence hoppers (now passing both ways) and being pushed from behind by police officers attempting to clear the fence, so I apologize for the shaky footage.

Soon the police corralled the protesters off the highway and then shouted and yelled for them to get on the other side of the fence or be arrested. The police officers were either very angry or pretending to be. There was only a certain speed at which that many people could hop over a fence, and screams and threats were not going to make it go any faster.

After the highway was cleared, I learned that six people had been arrested – four by state troopers and two by Providence police. One young man wearing a white hoodie, was pointed out by the police, who proceeded to surround and restrain him, over the protests of the crowd. The officers put the young man into the back of a police cruiser, but the opposite window of the cruiser was rolled down, so the man jumped through the window and made a run for it.

Here are my photos:

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Photo essay: America stands with Ferguson


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@creativemedia7 tweeted out this amazing collection of protests across America tonight calling attention to racial injustice in light of a Ferguson grand jury decision not to charge a police officer for killing Michael Brown.

Rhode Island reacts to Ferguson ruling


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Across America people are processing news that the Ferguson police officer who killed Michael Brown will not be held criminally responsible. There have already been protests at PC and at URI. Tonight at 7pm there is a protest at Central High School in Providence.

We reached out to several local Black leaders and asked for their reactions. Here are the responses we got:

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Jim Vincent

I am both saddened and frustrated with the no indictment decision of the Ferguson Grand Jury.

The disrespect given to the African American community in Ferguson is appalling.  All along the community wanted a special prosecutor so that there would be a fair and impartial process. The fact that a special prosecuter was not selected speaks volumes as to the arrogance by Missouri public officials as to the feelings of the Ferguson community.  This clearly was a missed opportunity to bridge the racial divide.

The NAACP Providence Brsnch urges everyone to respect the wishes of the Brown  family and our President and calls for indivifuals to act responsubility at this difficult time.

– Jim Vincent, executive director, NAACP Providence chapter

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Lisa Ranglin

The Rhode Island Black Business Association is deeply saddened by the decision of the Grand Jury in Ferguson, Missouri. However, we are aware that the legal process does not always end as we would like and the decision reflects review of the evidence presented to the Grand Jury and their thoughtful deliberations.

We understand the frustration, anger and fear expressed through violence by some in Ferguson. But we deplore the fact that this violence occurs at all and further, we know that this violence destroys neighborhoods physically and divides communities. Violence is not a solution.

However, it must be recognized that the use of deadly force against an unarmed young black man in Ferguson raised serious questions about the role of the police in every black community. And, based on recent highly publicized examples of other similar tragedies, this question must be addressed at both the national and local levels – It is a national problem. At a minimum, we believe there is a need to continually train police officers in the need for constraint before deadly force is authorized or used against anyone. Violence is not a solution.

– Lisa Ranglin, founder/president Rhode Island Black Business Association

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Michael Van Leesten

Needless to say, It is a very complex matter that is rooted deeply into American culture. Given the history of verdicts related to Black men being killed by the police and the prosecutor becoming a defense lawyer for the accused police officer, the verdict came as no surprise. The resulting street violence, while abhorrent, was quite predictable.

There will be more Fergusons in the future for there is no apparent leadership will to deal with the logic of cause and effect and that color really does matter and continues to be the primary source of all that’s bad. Crisis sets the stage to move toward a solution. It becomes a leadership matter on all levels. Real applied fairness and justice, while difficult to attain, is the only long term cure.

– Michael Van Leesten, I-195 Commission member, Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame inductee

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Leah Williams Metts
Leah Williams Metts

With the events that transpired yesterday I am saddened to see that justice was not served.  Although working in law enforcement is a very difficult profession, law enforcement officers are public servants and do not have the right to operate above the law. In fact, I believe police officers should be held to a higher standard, and be true to their mandate, “to protect and serve”. Clearly in the case of Michael Brown, no one was protected and justice was not served.

The African American community has suffered from police abuse for hundreds of years. The “proactive” policing tactics touted by police commissioners across the US have resulted in countless tragedies such as the one in Ferguson. As NYC commissioner Raymond Kelly learned first hand from the students at Brown University, “Stop and Frisk” is not an acceptable form of routine law enforcement, and it has no place in American society.

I believe that this country has come a long way since the days of segregation. We have abolished racial profiling from our laws, but now it is time to abolish racial bigotry from our hearts and minds. Martin Luther King peacefully pushed for change. His words ring as true today as they did when he spoke them over a half century ago,”Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars.”

– Leah Williams Metts, community/political organizer

This post will be updated as we receive more responses. Please comment your reactions below.

Godless billboard and bus ads appear in Rhode Island


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RiCoR Bus AdThe Rhode Island Coalition of Reason (RICoR) launches today with six RIPTA bus ads and a large billboard in North Kingston that says, “Godless? So are we.”

RICoR is a new organization comprised of seven non-theistic (atheist and agnostic) groups in the state, including the Atheist Humanist Society of Connecticut and Rhode Island, Camp Quest New England, Humanists of Rhode Island, Rhode Island Atheist Society, Rhode Island Skeptics, Secular Coalition for Rhode Island and Secular URI.

When asked about the response of the press to the new signs, Tony Houston, the local director of RICoR,  said, “It shouldn’t be news that there are atheists. This isn’t about attracting attention. I think we’d all just prefer to live in a world where we could retire the word ‘atheist.’ The fact that there’s a story tells us that there’s work to be done.”

Houston added: “Non-theistic people are your family members, friends, neighbors and co-workers. We may not believe in a deity or the supernatural, but we are compassionate, ethical members of this community. We would like to encourage local atheists, agnostics, freethinkers, skeptics, secularists and humanists to stand up and be counted. If you are a Rhode Island nonbeliever, know that you are not alone.”

“The point of our national awareness campaign is to reach out to the millions of humanists, atheists and agnostics living in the United States,” explained Dr. Jason Heap, national coordinator of United CoR, the national group sponsoring the ads. “Non-theists sometimes don’t realize there’s a community for them because they’re inundated with theistic messages at every turn. So we hope our effort will serve as a beacon and let them know they aren’t alone.”

“Being visible is important to us,” Heap concluded, “because, in our society, non-theistic people often don’t know many like themselves.

UnitedCoR has sponsored similar billboards, bus ads or Internet campaigns in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and West Virginia.

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Students join librarians to demand fair contract at Brown


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DSC02511At a November 14th rally in support of library workers at Brown, University President Christina Paxson emerged from an event in the newly renovated Rockefeller Library and told a crowd of protesters demanding fair wages and a good contract for union workers, “Thank you for supporting our library workers.”

Paxon’s words of thanks, says Brown student and activist Stoni Tomson, “is an attempt to co-opt our movement and our struggle… this is the tactic of some of the most insidious and abusive elements on this earth.”

DSC02485Tomson was speaking yesterday at a rally to demand that Brown University engage fairly in talks with the Brown Library Union.

Despite Paxon’s appearance of support, so far the University has failed to agree to a contract with library workers. It seems as though Paxon is fond of the counter-cultural reputation this kind of student/worker activism garners Brown, but actually following through on the ideals the protesters represent are another thing altogether.

Mark Baumer
Mark Baumer

As Brown graduate and library worker Mark Baumer says, “all [the university] is offering us is takeaways.” Workers are expected to accept cuts to their contracts every time they are up for discussion. “They keep chipping away a little bit with every contract, and eventually that will be a lot.”

As part of the protest demonstrators delivered a petition to President Paxon’s office, as well as several Thanksgiving themed holiday cards, with sentiments such as “Don’t Gobble Union Jobs” and “Don’t Squash Benefits.”

According to the protesters, “For workers, understaffing and lack of training/advancement opportunities remain key issues. While the University and workers remain in a deadlock, key administrators including the head of the library and members of the Organizational Planning Group are not even present at the bargaining table.”

There were many speakers at the event, but attendance was lower than normal because of the Thanksgiving break.

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VIDEO: PC students protest Ferguson ruling

pc fergusonAfter a grand jury acquitted police officer Darren Wilson for killing Michael Brown, protests – some violent – broke out in Ferguson, Missouri, where the incident happened in August. Other actions occurred across the country with protests and clashes with the police in New York, Oakland, Seattle and Chicago, among other cities.

In Rhode Island, there was a peaceful protest at Providence College. Video thanks to Rhode Island State House page and PC student/journalist Andres Taborda:


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