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racial profiling

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UCLA Students Detained for Writing “White Supremacy Lives in the System”

by 03/04/2014
written by

To write an unspoken truth with the intent of delivering a message is well within one’s rights. – This holds true when the intent is not to maliciously: deface, destroy, or damage public property. (Refer to California Penal Code 594PC)

 

“How do I make an impact

In a system that teaches me “all is right?”

How do I impact a system

When the system itself is necessary to gain means of making an impact?

How do I make an impact

When my efforts seemingly go unnoticed?

How do I impact a system

That was spawn in corruption?

How do I make an impact

When my brothers rather work the system than change the system?

How do I make an impact…”

 

On March 4th, 2014: Two UCLA students were detained for chalking, “WHITE SUPREMACY LIVES IN THE SYSTEM,” on the wall adjacent to Charles E. Young Drive West.

Although this particular wall is notorious for messages written on it, the two minority students were detained and reported to both UCLA’s Dean of Students and the Los Angeles County Judiciary, and are potentially being charged for vandalism. There seems to be an irregularity in the regulation of “chalking” school property.

“As I bolded the block letters spelling “Supremacy,” I could hear people behind me saying, ‘Well, that’s unfortunate. [And] I wonder when that’ll be taken down.’ Words of understanding were superseded by words of disgust, as though, us writing what most Americans think true, was a forbidden immoral act.

A few hours before, my girlfriend came home shaking in tears – both angry and hurt – displeased that a Caucasian women around her age had “matter of factly” called her a ‘Nigger on welfare [who would be arrested if the confrontation was reported, because she was Black ’]. None aggressive, but instead spoken like a professor giving a lecture, the women asserted an unspoken truth – The system works for Caucasians.

We just felt like, if she can spitefully say it without pause, she (and so many others like her) could bear reading those words— though yet rarely spoken. The message was supposed to make people uncomfortable, especially those who take it for granted. Written in chalk, the message’s purpose was to promote critical thought and revaluation.” ~ [Conscious Advocates]

Attempting to fill in the last letters spelling “SYSTEM”, the same system being condemned for oppression, blatantly displayed its purpose as the students were detained for refusing to stop filling in the letters.

Chalk message left unfinished after police detained the students.

Chalk message left unfinished after police detained the students.

Erased hours later, the “research” institution’s message was made clear, ‘change is unwarranted when counter-intuitive to the well-being of the dominant public’– especially when truth is used to challenge.

Chalk message completely erased in less than 5 hours of police confrontation with student.

Chalk message completely erased in less than 5 hours of police confrontation with student.

~ Get Conscious

03/04/2014 0 comments
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UCLA Professor Creates New Database on Racial Profiling

by 11/04/2013
written by
UCLA Assistant Professor

UCLA Assistant Professor of Pyschology, Dr. Philip Goff

Philip Atiba Goff, an Afrikan American Assistant Professor of Social Psychology at UCLA, and co-founder and president of the Center for Policing Equity, has created a new national database that he hopes will help tackle the issue of racial profiling.

Dr. Goff, who is an expert on racial profiling, received a grant from The National Science Foundation to create the database, which is the first of its kind in the United States.  Goff said that he was motivated to create a racial profiling database after an appeal from law enforcement departments all over the country that requested someone to assist them in tackling the issue.

Goff has also expressed his hopes that the new database will make law enforcement fairer.  Speaking about the database Goff said, “You’re not going to see anybody marching about it, but getting this data all together in one place may be the most revolutionary act in promoting racial equity in law enforcement.”

The killing of Trayvon Martin last year brought the issue of racial profiling back into the spotlight.

Currently, allegations of racial profiling are being made against New York’s luxury retailer Barneys, after two Afrikan American shoppers reported last week that they had been held by police after they had bought expensive items from the store.

Kayla Phillips, 21, has reported that she was surrounded by police at a subway station and ordered to produce her credit card after leaving Barneys in February, having just purchased a $2,500 Céline purse.

Trayon Christian, has also filed a lawsuit against Barneys, and says that undercover NYPD officers stopped him in April after buying a $350 Ferragamo belt from the store in April.  According to Christian, he was then accused of fraud even after he produced his receipt for the transaction.

Civil rights activist Reverend Al Sharpton, speaking about the alleged incidents last week, said, “We’ve gone from stop and frisk to shop and frisk, and we are not going to take it.”  Threatening to launch a boycott against Barneys, Sharpton added that New York’s Afrikan American citizens “Are not going to live in a town where our money is considered suspect and everyone else’s money is respected.”

Evidently something needs to be done to make sure that incidents like these do not occur in the future.  Dr. Goff’s new database is a crucial step in the right direction.  Initially, the database will include data from 30-70 police departments nationwide, covering use of force by the police, vehicle stops and pedestrian stops, with ambitions to later expand it. Hopefully the database will succeed in realizing Goff’s hope, “That the database will help to reduce bias-based policing or the unconstitutional use of race to stop and detain someone.”

Author: Greta Tugwell

Nommo Staff

11/04/2013 26 comments
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