WE MUST HAVE A BLACK STANDARD OF BEAUTY BASED ON THE BLACK SKINNED BLACKEST WOMAN
Showing posts with label POLICE KILLINGS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POLICE KILLINGS. Show all posts
Saturday, September 15, 2018
Tuesday, August 04, 2015
BLACK WOMEN!- KILLING US TOO-THE WHITE POLICE!-"COPS SLAM UNARMED BLACK WOMAN ON THE PAVEMENT, KILLING HER IN FRONT OF HER FAMILY!-OGA O!-FROM COUNTERCURRENTNEWS.COM
FROM COUNTERCURRENTNEWS.COM

Cleveland police officers recently killed a 37-year-old African American woman who died after police slammed her head on the concrete, just outside of her family’s home.
Her brother explained that Tanisha Anderson was pronounced dead at Cleveland Clinic after the assault by the Ohio cops. The pronouncement came early Thursday about two hours after the police “take down” caused Anderson to bash her head on the concrete outside of her home.
“They killed my sister,” Joell Anderson, Tanisha’s 40-year-old brother said as he fought back tears. “I watched it.”
Officers came to the house after a call from a family member who thought the police could calm the bi-polar Tanisha down, during an argument.
Police came, responding to the situation as a “disturbing the peace” call. It seemed that everyone agreed Tanisha should undergo an evaluation at St. Vincent Charity Medical Center, police sources told us.
But what happened next is described very differently by police and family members.
“As the officers escorted Anderson to the police vehicle, she began actively resisting the officers,” police spokesman Sgt. Ali Pillow claimed to the local Cleveland publication, The Plain Dealer.
Tanisha changed her mind about the evaluation after police slapped
cuffs on her. She believed she was within her rights to decide whether
she went for a voluntary evaluation. But police, at this point, argued
that it was up to them.
“The woman began to kick at officers,” Pillow said. “A short time later the woman stopped struggling and appeared to go limp. Officers found a faint pulse on the victim and immediately called EMS.”
But Tanisha’s brother Joell gives a very different account than what the police claim.
“She was more of a danger to herself than others,” he explained.
Two male officers escorted Tanesha Anderson, who was prescribed medication for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, to the police cruiser. She sat herself in the backseat but became nervous about the confined space and tried to get out, Anderson said.
As Tanisha called out for her brother and mother, an officer used a “Judo” take down move after having pressed her head down repeatedly in the backseat in what seemed to be a “smothering” manner, Joell Anderson said.
Joell says that after she hit her head on the concrete, and the officer placed his knee on her back, she never opened her eyes or spoke another word.
To add insult to injury, Joell says that his sister’s sundress was lifted above her waist, where it remained as officers refused to administer any aid to the unconscious woman. Joell says that he was forced to go over and use his own jacket to cover her naked lower body, because police would not, even when he asked them to.
“She was outgoing, silly, always joking,” Joell said of his sister. “She just wasn’t doing very well that day.”
The Cleveland Police Department tells us that their Division of Police Use of Deadly Force Investigation Team is “investigating” the case. No officers involved have been fired, reprimanded, nor placed on leave.
(Article by Jackson Marciana; special thanks to The Plain Dealer)
Cops Slam Unarmed Woman On The Pavement, Killing Her In Front of Family
November 16, 2014 3:23 pm·
Cleveland police officers recently killed a 37-year-old African American woman who died after police slammed her head on the concrete, just outside of her family’s home.
Her brother explained that Tanisha Anderson was pronounced dead at Cleveland Clinic after the assault by the Ohio cops. The pronouncement came early Thursday about two hours after the police “take down” caused Anderson to bash her head on the concrete outside of her home.
Officers came to the house after a call from a family member who thought the police could calm the bi-polar Tanisha down, during an argument.
Police came, responding to the situation as a “disturbing the peace” call. It seemed that everyone agreed Tanisha should undergo an evaluation at St. Vincent Charity Medical Center, police sources told us.
But what happened next is described very differently by police and family members.
“As the officers escorted Anderson to the police vehicle, she began actively resisting the officers,” police spokesman Sgt. Ali Pillow claimed to the local Cleveland publication, The Plain Dealer.
“The woman began to kick at officers,” Pillow said. “A short time later the woman stopped struggling and appeared to go limp. Officers found a faint pulse on the victim and immediately called EMS.”
But Tanisha’s brother Joell gives a very different account than what the police claim.
“She was more of a danger to herself than others,” he explained.
Two male officers escorted Tanesha Anderson, who was prescribed medication for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, to the police cruiser. She sat herself in the backseat but became nervous about the confined space and tried to get out, Anderson said.
As Tanisha called out for her brother and mother, an officer used a “Judo” take down move after having pressed her head down repeatedly in the backseat in what seemed to be a “smothering” manner, Joell Anderson said.
Joell says that after she hit her head on the concrete, and the officer placed his knee on her back, she never opened her eyes or spoke another word.
To add insult to injury, Joell says that his sister’s sundress was lifted above her waist, where it remained as officers refused to administer any aid to the unconscious woman. Joell says that he was forced to go over and use his own jacket to cover her naked lower body, because police would not, even when he asked them to.
“She was outgoing, silly, always joking,” Joell said of his sister. “She just wasn’t doing very well that day.”
The Cleveland Police Department tells us that their Division of Police Use of Deadly Force Investigation Team is “investigating” the case. No officers involved have been fired, reprimanded, nor placed on leave.
(Article by Jackson Marciana; special thanks to The Plain Dealer)
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Tuesday, May 05, 2015
KRS-ONE SAID ABOUT BLACKS LEAVING amerikkka,the slave plantation,AND MAKING ANOTHER COUNTRY GREAT SINCE WE ARE ABUSED IN amerikkka!- THIS BROTHER TALKS ABOUT AMERIKKKA BEING NO COUNTRY FOR BLACK MEN-FROM EBONY.COM

“We helped to make America great, so why can’t we help to make another country great? Anywhere we go, we are going to bring our African-American culture with us and transform the place we decide to live in. Why do we believe the United States is the only place where we can live and prosper? Is this not a slave’s mentality?”
Read more at EBONY http://www.ebony.com/news-views/no-country-for-black-men-999#ixzz3ZGIcxiOp
Follow us: @EbonyMag on Twitter | EbonyMag on Facebook
FROM EBONY.COM
04
December
2014
No Country for Black Men
After the grand jury decision not to indict Eric Garner’s killer, EBONY.com’s Miles Marshall Lewis reflects on why, as a Black man, he once left America for several years
By
Miles Marshall Lewis
Arts & Culture Editor
Related Tags
- trayvon martin
- eric garner
- michael brown
- ferguson
- akai gurley
- tamir riceThe thing is, James Baldwin came back.Various social media timelines of mine have exploded in outrage since the Ferguson verdict last week, like the timelines of most Black folks. But in 2004, I left Harlem to live in Paris for seven years, mostly for personal reasons but partly over Iraq War politics. My “followers” know this, and they’ve been raising their voices louder to me lately about leaving the country themselves. How else to deal with a nation that continually batters the psyche of its Black population like an abusive lover? Enough, people are saying. The tide of lives lost over the racist agenda of America’s police forces is too massive. They say they want to leave, they’re looking for my ex-pat advice, and I can’t blame them.
KRS-One, one of my top-five MCs, said something in his 2003 Ruminations essay collection that always resonated with me:
HE AND HIS WIFE AND CHILD IN PARIS
I felt that; I spent my 30s living that idea abroad for almost a decade. I was following in Baldwin’s footsteps.
In 1948, he left Harlem for Paris himself, escaping a claustrophobically oppressive Jim Crow culture that made him feel like he’d die if he stayed. The most I can say is that I felt voiceless under the Bush administration—I’d personally protested the ramp up to the Iraq War. I was impassioned and principled and didn’t want my tax dollars paying for America’s bullets and bombs. So I left.
But, Baldwin eventually came back. He returned to the U.S. years later for the Civil Rights Movement. He couldn’t and didn’t ever really abandon America or, of course, African-Americans. His fleeing, like mine, was a personal reprieve, but not one that divorced him from the souls of Black folk. Add to that the fact that France sounds great on paper, but one turns a blind eye to history like the Paris massacre of 1961 at his own peril. (French police gunned down anywhere from 70 to 200 peaceful African protestors demonstrating against the Algerian War, dozens of bodies dumped in the Seine River.) I experienced nothing but love in my time there—the city adores American Blacks to the point of fetishization—but Paris is no utopia. As far as I can tell, there doesn’t seem to be one for people of color.
Even Baldwin’s example shows he returned to usher his beloved America into a better tomorrow. So what’s the modern-day role of the Black American artist in 21st century struggle?
Which leads me to Eric Garner, Ferguson, Tamir Rice, Akai Gurley and the endless atrocities that go down between Black people and law enforcement in the U.S. on a regular basis. My sister-in-arts, the poet jessica Care moore, had this to say yesterday after the failure to indict officer Daniel Pantaleo, Eric Garner’s killer, and it stayed ringing in my head:
“We don’t have the luxury of just BEING. just LIVING. just MAKING ART. just being WRITERS. the work of being a Black artist in America is daunting, polarizing, sad, painful, beautiful, amazing and fu*king necessary.”
I feel many things about the lack of even an indictment for choking Garner in cold blood, but surprise isn’t one of them. Of course I feel frustration and the same helplessness I experienced when Bush attacked Iraq after I protested in the streets with millions of others around the world to make our voices heard. But the main, recurring thing on my mind seems to be: what are we supposed to do now?
Black America is dying slowly, not just from law enforcement, but from the cumulative effects of White supremacy. The stress levels, depression, hypertension, psychological damage and more that stem from Living While Black in the U.S. shaves a good five years off our life expectancy compared to White Americans. Any politically conscious Black person stays stuck on the constant horrors committed against us with a mental energy that could manifest who knows what if we had the luxury of focusing it on the law of attraction (for example), self-actualization or whatever other positivist attitude. We’re robbed of that constantly, and that’s almost what angers me the most: this notion of White supremacy taking permanent root in our heads, in our bones.
This isn’t my lane. I’d much rather be talking about the Paul Thomas Anderson movie dropping next week. But resistance and protest can’t afford to not be my lane, not anymore, not for quite a while now. I don’t fly to Ferguson, lay in the street for die-ins, hashtag #blacklivesmatter/ #icantbreathe, wear Travyon Martin hoodies or do the hands-up thing (until recently anyway). I’m guilty of being a cynical forty-something, and unsure about the effectiveness of any of this these days.
From the political to the personal, my wife and I are raising two Black boys in the heart of Harlem. We don’t own a television, and at ages 7 and 9, they’ve never heard of Michael Brown or any of the other victims. They could be the envy of my social media timelines, able to jet to Paris with their dual nationality one day and stay put someplace where the police don’t freely gun down innocent Blacks. I am a race-man by nature and nurture, but am I wrong for trying to maintain some kind of post-racial innocence for them? To postpone the possibility they’ll feel “less than” after I school them on how to deal with police and teach them that this country doesn’t give a fu*k about their lives?
Shielding innocence is one thing, but we know post-racial anything is a farce. What I know too is that expatriation isn’t the true solution to these times, and that even Baldwin’s example shows he returned to usher his beloved America into a better tomorrow. And so what’s the modern-day role of the Black American artist in 21st century struggle? It’s a question I’m willing to live, to grow into the answer.
Miles Marshall Lewis is the Arts & Culture Editor of EBONY.com. He’s also the Harlem-based author of Scars of the Soul Are Why Kids Wear Bandages When They Don’t Have Bruises, There’s a Riot Goin’ On and Irrésistible. Follow MML on Twitter and Instagram at @furthermucker, and visit his personal blog, Furthermucker.
Read more at EBONY http://www.ebony.com/news-views/no-country-for-black-men-999#ixzz3ZGdjBPIP
Follow us: @EbonyMag on Twitter | EbonyMag on Facebook -
The thing is, James Baldwin came back.
Various social media timelines of mine have exploded in outrage since
the Ferguson verdict last week, like the timelines of most Black folks.
But in 2004, I left Harlem to live in Paris for seven years, mostly for
personal reasons but partly over Iraq War politics. My “followers” know
this, and they’ve been raising their voices louder to me lately about
leaving the country themselves. How else to deal with a nation that
continually batters the psyche of its Black population like an abusive
lover? Enough, people are saying. The tide of lives lost over the racist
agenda of America’s police forces is too massive. They say they want to
leave, they’re looking for my ex-pat advice, and I can’t blame them.KRS-One, one of my top-five MCs, said something in his 2003 Ruminations essay collection that always resonated with me:
“We helped to make America great, so why can’t we help to make another country great? Anywhere we go, we are going to bring our African-American culture with us and transform the place we decide to live in. Why do we believe the United States is the only place where we can live and prosper? Is this not a slave’s mentality?”
I felt that; I spent my 30s living that idea abroad for almost a decade. I was following in Baldwin’s footsteps.
In 1948, he left Harlem for Paris himself, escaping a claustrophobically oppressive Jim Crow culture that made him feel like he’d die if he stayed. The most I can say is that I felt voiceless under the Bush administration—I’d personally protested the ramp up to the Iraq War. I was impassioned and principled and didn’t want my tax dollars paying for America’s bullets and bombs. So I left.
But, Baldwin eventually came back. He returned to the U.S. years later for the Civil Rights Movement. He couldn’t and didn’t ever really abandon America or, of course, African-Americans. His fleeing, like mine, was a personal reprieve, but not one that divorced him from the souls of Black folk. Add to that the fact that France sounds great on paper, but one turns a blind eye to history like the Paris massacre of 1961 at his own peril. (French police gunned down anywhere from 70 to 200 peaceful African protestors demonstrating against the Algerian War, dozens of bodies dumped in the Seine River.) I experienced nothing but love in my time there—the city adores American Blacks to the point of fetishization—but Paris is no utopia. As far as I can tell, there doesn’t seem to be one for people of color.
Even Baldwin’s example shows he returned to usher his beloved
America into a better tomorrow. So what’s the modern-day role of the
Black American artist in 21st century struggle?
Which leads me to Eric Garner, Ferguson, Tamir Rice, Akai Gurley and the endless atrocities that go down between Black people and law enforcement in the U.S. on a regular basis. My sister-in-arts, the poet jessica Care moore, had this to say yesterday after the failure to indict officer Daniel Pantaleo, Eric Garner’s killer, and it stayed ringing in my head:
“We don’t have the luxury of just BEING. just LIVING. just MAKING ART. just being WRITERS. the work of being a Black artist in America is daunting, polarizing, sad, painful, beautiful, amazing and fu*king necessary.”
I feel many things about the lack of even an indictment for choking Garner in cold blood, but surprise isn’t one of them. Of course I feel frustration and the same helplessness I experienced when Bush attacked Iraq after I protested in the streets with millions of others around the world to make our voices heard. But the main, recurring thing on my mind seems to be: what are we supposed to do now?
Black America is dying slowly, not just from law enforcement, but from the cumulative effects of White supremacy. The stress levels, depression, hypertension, psychological damage and more that stem from Living While Black in the U.S. shaves a good five years off our life expectancy compared to White Americans. Any politically conscious Black person stays stuck on the constant horrors committed against us with a mental energy that could manifest who knows what if we had the luxury of focusing it on the law of attraction (for example), self-actualization or whatever other positivist attitude. We’re robbed of that constantly, and that’s almost what angers me the most: this notion of White supremacy taking permanent root in our heads, in our bones.
This isn’t my lane. I’d much rather be talking about the Paul Thomas Anderson movie dropping next week. But resistance and protest can’t afford to not be my lane, not anymore, not for quite a while now. I don’t fly to Ferguson, lay in the street for die-ins, hashtag #blacklivesmatter/ #icantbreathe, wear Travyon Martin hoodies or do the hands-up thing (until recently anyway). I’m guilty of being a cynical forty-something, and unsure about the effectiveness of any of this these days.
From the political to the personal, my wife and I are raising two Black boys in the heart of Harlem. We don’t own a television, and at ages 7 and 9, they’ve never heard of Michael Brown or any of the other victims. They could be the envy of my social media timelines, able to jet to Paris with their dual nationality one day and stay put someplace where the police don’t freely gun down innocent Blacks. I am a race-man by nature and nurture, but am I wrong for trying to maintain some kind of post-racial innocence for them? To postpone the possibility they’ll feel “less than” after I school them on how to deal with police and teach them that this country doesn’t give a fu*k about their lives?
Shielding innocence is one thing, but we know post-racial anything is a farce. What I know too is that expatriation isn’t the true solution to these times, and that even Baldwin’s example shows he returned to usher his beloved America into a better tomorrow. And so what’s the modern-day role of the Black American artist in 21st century struggle? It’s a question I’m willing to live, to grow into the answer.
Miles Marshall Lewis is the Arts & Culture Editor of EBONY.com. He’s also the Harlem-based author of Scars of the Soul Are Why Kids Wear Bandages When They Don’t Have Bruises, There’s a Riot Goin’ On and Irrésistible. Follow MML on Twitter and Instagram at @furthermucker, and visit his personal blog, Furthermucker.
Read more at EBONY http://www.ebony.com/news-views/no-country-for-black-men-999#ixzz3ZGdjBPIP
Follow us: @EbonyMag on Twitter | EbonyMag on Facebook
Sunday, April 19, 2015
BLACK BRAZIL! -77% OF YOUNG PEOPLE KILLED IN BRAZIL ARE BLACK!-FROM FACEBOOK-BLACK GENOCIDE NOW
from facebook-blackgenocidenow
45 mins ·
A Global Problem
Linton Kwesi Johnson se importa. E você? Assine o manifesto 'Queremos ver os jovens vivos!' www.anistia.org.br/jovemnegrovivo
Mais fotos da ação de ativismo no Back2Black > http://on.fb.me/1LGBMFg
Mais fotos da ação de ativismo no Back2Black > http://on.fb.me/1LGBMFg
#JovemNegroVivo
#ChegaDeHomicÃdios
#EuMeImporto
(Foto: Adair Aguiar/ Anistia Internacional)
#ChegaDeHomicÃdios
#EuMeImporto
(Foto: Adair Aguiar/ Anistia Internacional)
Linton Kwesi Johnson cares. And you? Sign the manifesto ' we want to see the young people alive!' Www.anistia.org.br/ jovemnegrovivo
More pictures of the action of activism in Back2Black Regards http://on.fb.me/1LGBMFg
#JovemNegroVivo
#ChegaDeHomicÃdios
#EuMeImporto
(photo: Adair aguiar / amnesty international)
More pictures of the action of activism in Back2Black Regards http://on.fb.me/1LGBMFg
#JovemNegroVivo
#ChegaDeHomicÃdios
#EuMeImporto
(photo: Adair aguiar / amnesty international)
Sunday, December 14, 2014
BLACK PEOPLE!- MARCH ON NYPD IN NYC FOR BLACK KILLINGS-FROM HUFFINGTON POST NEWSPAPER
December 14, 2014 Huffpost
Black Voices
Tens Of Thousands March On NYPD Headquarters To Protest Police Killings
Posted:
Updated:
The crowd began to wind its way through Manhattan. A large labor union contingent was present, including members of the Communications Workers of America wearing red shirts and AFL-CIO supporters waving blue signs.
In contrast to other marches over the past weeks, this large, orderly demonstration took place during the day. A number of families with children took part, and demonstrators followed a pre-planned route. The march made its way uptown to Herald Square, then looped back downtown, with thunderous chants of "Hands up! Don't shoot!" and "Justice! Now!" echoing down Broadway. The demonstration culminated at One Police Plaza, the New York City Police Department's Lower Manhattan headquarters.
Organizers estimated that 30,000 demonstrators participated in the march. The NYPD told The Huffington Post that, as of the official end of the march, no arrests had been made.
Protesters held up 8 panels depicting Eric Garner's eyes, created by an artist known as JR. "The eyes were chosen as the most important part of the face," said Tony Herbas of Bushwick, an assistant to the artist.
Ron Davis, whose son Jordan was shot dead by a man in Florida after an argument over loud music, was at the head of the march.
"We have to make everybody accountable," Davis told HuffPost. "You can’t continue to see videos of chokeholds, videos of kids getting shot in the back, and say it’s all right. We have to make sure we have an independent investigator investigate these crimes that police carry out."
Michael Dunn, the man who killed Jordan, was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life without parole in October. Davis said Saturday that Dunn's conviction proves it's possible that justice can be served in racially charged cases.
"We ended up getting a historic movement in Jacksonville," Davis said. "We had an almost all-white jury, with seven white men, convict a white man for shooting down an unarmed boy of color."
Also at the front of the march were New York City Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez and New York state Assemblyman-elect Charles Barron.
Matthew Brown, a 19-year-old who is African-American and Hispanic, marched down Broadway with his mother, aunt and other family members.
"I'm trying to support a movement that really needs young people like myself," said Brown. "I'm here to speak for Mike Brown."
The teenager said part of his motivation for making the trek from West Orange, New Jersey, with his family was his own personal experience. He's encountered racist verbal abuse from police in Jersey City, he said, who have called him "spic" and monkey."
Citing the cases of Michael Brown, Eric Garner and Tamir Rice, Brown said part of the reason he wanted to speak out was because of the way police represent encounters with African-Americans. "I just see so many lies after lies."
He also attended the People's Climate March in September. But this march felt more intense to him. "This is one that's really affecting people on a deep, emotional level," Brown said.
Krystal Martinez, a 23-year-old schoolteacher, said she attended the march to send a simple message: "I don't want my students' names chanted at any of these events."
Because she teaches at a charter school that serves students from Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights, Martinez said, she was painfully aware of the challenges black youth face in interactions with police.
Martinez, a Harlem resident, pointed to a sign held by a colleague with a quote from a 13-year-old girl who had been stopped by police: "The first time I was stopped and frisked I was so scared I didn't leave my house for a week."
"Eighty-five percent of my students are black and this is their lives," Martinez said, emphasizing that she spoke for herself and not her school. "I'm out here because of my kids."
Some protesters arrived with concrete policy proposals. Marcia Dupree, a homecare supervisor, came bearing a sign that read, "We must change the law ... no grand jury!!!"
"The root of the problem," Dupree said, was the closeness between grand juries and police. In the wake of two grand juries' decisions not to indict officers in the Michael Brown and Eric Garner deaths, the idea of abolishing the institution has gotten a lot of attention from both the media and policymakers, including the chairman of Missouri's Legislative Black Caucus.
Dupree added that she'd never really considered herself much of an activist before. Serving on the board of her local library in Mount Vernon, New York, was "as political as I got." But she said she has been moved to protest out of concern for her 13-year-old daughter -- who was marching in crutches by her side -- and her 21-year-old son.
"I feel like I need to stand up," said Dupree. "It could be my son."
At times, the march blurred surreally with Santacon -- the sloshy daytime celebration of Christmas (and drinking) that New Yorkers hate on every year.
A number of Santacon participants joined the march. Others were less enthusiastic. "I love cops, seriously," one man in a Santa cap told an impassive officer. "I hate these people." Then he walked off with his fellow revelers.
Saturday's day of action came in response to two separate grand jury decisions not to indict police officers for killing unarmed black men. On Nov. 24, a St. Louis County grand jury voted not to indict Police Officer Darren Wilson, who fatally shot Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Less than two weeks later, a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict Officer Daniel Pantaleo, who killed Eric Garner by putting him in a chokehold.
Brown's death on Aug. 9 triggered months of protests in Ferguson against police killings -- protests that have since spread nationwide.
One group of marchers turned into a street protest choir, singing, "We're not gonna stop, until people are free."
"It's not really about your voice," Davies said. "It's about your voice, right?"
But she tries to push back against that disconnect, she said, because "at end of the day it's what you're seen as."
Davies saw the march as her chance to answer the question of what she would have done if she had been alive during the civil rights protests led by Martin Luther King Jr.
After hundreds of years of slavery, Jim Crow and more, Davies said, "People continue to get killed. ... It's frustrating. We have to be here so people can see it."
Sebastian Murdock contributed reporting.
This story has been updated.
-
John Minchillo/AP
Demonstrators march in New York, Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014, during the Justice for All rally and march. In the past three weeks, grand juries have decided not to indict officers in the chokehold death of Eric Garner in New York and the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. The decisions have unleashed demonstrations and questions about police conduct and whether local prosecutors are the best choice for investigating police. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
John Minchillo/AP
Demonstrators march in New York, Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014, during the Justice for All rally and march. In the past three weeks, grand juries have decided not to indict officers in the chokehold death of Eric Garner in New York and the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. The decisions have unleashed demonstrations and questions about police conduct and whether local prosecutors are the best choice for investigating police. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) -
wilfish99/Instagram
Thousands march in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
John Minchillo/AP
Demonstrators march in New York, Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014, during the Justice for All rally and march. In the past three weeks, grand juries have decided not to indict officers in the chokehold death of Eric Garner in New York and the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. The decisions have unleashed demonstrations and questions about police conduct and whether local prosecutors are the best choice for investigating police. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
raphaelangenscheidt/Instagram
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
msjoannaj / Instagram
Thousands march along 5th Ave. in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
christesc/Instagram
Thousands march in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
John Minchillo/AP
Demonstrators march in New York, Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014, during the Justice for All rally and march. In the past three weeks, grand juries have decided not to indict officers in the chokehold death of Eric Garner in New York and the fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. The decisions have unleashed demonstrations and questions about police conduct and whether local prosecutors are the best choice for investigating police. (AP Photo/John Minchillo) -
Carly Schwartz/Huffington Post
Thousands march on Broadway in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
brentaxthelm/Instagram
Protesters make their way up fifth avenue in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
andysimpzon/Instagram
Thousands march along 5th Ave. in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
jesslynyovita / Instagram
Thousands march along 5th Ave. in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Jnobianch / Twitter
Thousands march along 5th Ave. in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
TRMacM/Twitter
Thousands march on Broadway in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
mollyhein / instagram
A man dressed up as Santa for SantaCon walk by protesters on 5th Ave. on Dec. 13, 2014 in New York City. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
mothertuckermurray / Instagram
Thousands march along 5th Ave. in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014. -
Emily Kassie/Huffington Post
Thousands gather in Washington Square park in New York City on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014.
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