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Community Group Plans March in Protest of Memphis 3.0

A community group in one North Memphis neighborhood has plans to protest on Saturday in opposition of the Memphis 3.0 plan.

The New Chicago Community Partnership Revitalization community development corporation said Thursday that the action, dubbed the “Stop Gentrification 901 March,” is meant to dissuade the Memphis City Council from passing the ordinance approving the comprehensive plan.

“African-American communities in Memphis will march against approval of Memphis 3.0 because we need capital investments, affordable housing, tax incentives, and jobs; not bike lanes and housing that prices us out of our neighborhoods,” the group said in an email.

In a Wednesday Facebook post, Carnita Atwater, president of the New Chicago CDC encouraged attendance of Saturday’s protest: “This opposition against the Memphis 3.0 Plan is too important to sit at home and just talk about it. React as if your life depends on it…and IT DOES if you want to stay in the city of Memphis!

Atwater also said the group is planning a march “in every black neighborhood across this low-down, disrespectful city until justice is served in this city. WE WILL NOT BE QUIET AND WE WILL CERTAINLY will pull the rug from over these low-down city leaders that think that black lives do not matter.”

[pullquote-2] The march is slated for Saturday, March 30th at 9:00 a.m. beginning at the New Chicago CDC headquarters on Firestone. 

Last week more than two dozen New Chicago residents attended the city council meeting to oppose the council’s passing of the plan. As a result, the council delayed the vote until its April 2nd meeting.

Atwater also said last week that she would be filing a $10 billion lawsuit against the city because the plan was not inclusive to North Memphis.

Atwater said Thursday that she is still in the process of filing that lawsuit, as “that’s the only thing that will stop these people.”

“The basis for the suit is racial disparity,” Atwater said. “It’s very clear it’s not inclusive. Why would you pass a plan and there’s no specific details for what they will do for African-American communities that look like war zones. It’s not a black thing or a white thing, but a human rights thing.”

But, Ursula Madden, chief communications officer for the city, said that Atwater “has been a part of the conversation” and that “the city has met with her on numerous occasions.”

[pullquote-1] “It’s unfortunate that Ms. Atwater feels this way,” Madden said in a statement. “Over the last two years, over 15,000 Memphians took the opportunity to share their ideas, any concerns and actively participated in the planning process for Memphis 3.0.

“The New Chicago neighborhood is one of many anchors in our plan and the New Chicago Community Partnership Revitalization CDC is listed as one of our community planning partners based on this group’s input in the plan.”

The Memphis 3.0 plan, which has been in the works for the past three years, is a comprehensive guide for future development and investments in the city, officials have said.

The plan details specific strategies for nurturing, accelerating, or sustaining certain neighborhoods within the city’s 14 planning districts.

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News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall 1435

CHOAS 901

Remember Elvis Week 2016? Gosh, it seems like it was only last week when fans of the King assembled in front of Graceland to light a candle and stream up the hill and through the mansion’s Meditation Garden. And all the Black Lives Matters demonstrators showed up to engage in a bit of modestly disruptive protest, so police showed up in numbers sufficient to ensure there wasn’t any fan base mingling at the party. And it rained like hell. Those were the days, my friend. Or as WMC-TV put it in an alarming all-caps headline: “Elvis Week CHOAS.” As in “Get CHOAS a proofreader” maybe?

What does CHOAS even mean? Is it a run-of-the-mill typo or a new word for something worse than ordinary CHAOS because it’s chaos inside of CHAOS? Is it local TV’s Superman Dam Fool moment? Is it a startling vision of Memphis’ future? Is CHOAS inevitable? Stay tuned.

Verbatim

“We’re devastating people’s lives, and I can’t be part of that.” — Michael Rallings announcing his opposition to loosening marijuana laws during a forum on heroin use because REEFER MADNESS! It’s hard to know whose lives the new police director thinks will be destroyed by loosening current pot laws, since, according to data compiled by the ACLU, 88 percent of the 8.2 million marijuana arrests in the U.S. between 2001 and 2010 were for simple weed-only possession, and blacks were 3.73 times more likely to be arrested in spite of relative equal usage rates. Blue Crush service techs, maybe?

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News News Blog

Memphians Oppose Missouri Grand Jury Decision, Plan Protest

After months of deliberation, a Missouri grand jury decided Monday that Darren Wilson, the Ferguson police officer responsible for fatally shooting unarmed teen Michael Brown in August, would not be indicted.

The decision reportedly sparked protests in Ferguson, Chicago, New York, Oakland, Washington, D.C., and Seattle.

Protests are also slated to take place in Memphis.

This evening, locals opposed to the grand jury’s decision will hold a peaceful demonstration at the intersection of Poplar and Highland. The protest is scheduled to begin at 5 p.m.

Representatives from Mid-South Youth Collective, Enough is Enough Memphis, and The Brotherhood & Sisterhood are spearheading the gathering, which seeks to help cease the use of excessive force by law enforcement and racial profiling.

“The unjust murder of Michael Brown Jr. is only a small glimpse into growing issues surrounding police violence,” said Sha’ona Coleman of the Mid-South Youth Collective in a statement. “The use of excessive force on unarmed black and brown people of color in America has been increasing. We have to challenge and address the system of how white supremacy in America shapes rules and regulations of our police departments. There is no reason I should fear the people that are put in place to protect me.”

In the light of the possibility that violent protests would occur following the Missouri grand jury’s announcement, Memphis Police Department (MPD) had its day shift officers work later to increase available manpower on Monday night. However, things remained peaceful. 

“I anticipate the citizens of our great city to exercise their right to free speech and demonstrate in wake of the Ferguson, Missouri’s grand jury decision not to indict; however, it is expected that our citizens will do so in a lawful manner,” said MPD Director Toney Armstrong in a statement. “The Memphis Police Department will be visible during such demonstrations and in the unlikely event that unlawful conduct arises, the men and women of this Department are prepared to take the necessary action to prevent violence and maintain public safety. While the public has the right to demonstrate, by no means will violence and lawlessness be tolerated.”

On August 9th, Wilson, 28, reportedly stopped Brown and his friend Dorian Johnson as they walked down the middle of a two-lane street. While in his Chevrolet Tahoe police vehicle, Wilson requested for the two to get on the sidewalk. After an exchange of words, a tussle ensued between Wilson and Brown.

During the struggle, Wilson’s weapon was reportedly un-holstered and discharged inside his SUV, according to an autopsy obtained by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. After being grazed in the hand by one of the bullets, Brown began to run up the street; Wilson chased after him.

Brown eventually turned around and started charging toward Wilson, according to reports. Wilson then reportedly drew his weapon and discharged it 10 times at Brown. The 18-year-old high school graduate was struck multiple times, including in the head, chest, and right arm, according to the autopsy.

Brown’s death sparked months of protests and looting in Ferguson, along with a public outcry against police brutality and racial injustice.

The U.S. Department of Justice is currently in the process of investigating whether Wilson violated Brown’s civil rights as well as the practices of the Ferguson Police Department.

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News

Dixie Chicks’ Natalie Maines Issues Call to Protest Convictions of West Memphis Three

Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks is the latest celeb to take up the cause of the West Memphis Three — Damien Echols, Jesse Miskelley, and Jason Baldwin — who were convicted for allegedly murdering three eight-year-old boys in 1993.

Maines writes on the Dixie Chicks website: I’m writing this letter today because I believe that three men have spent the past 13 years in prison for crimes they didn’t commit.

On May 5th, 1993 in West Memphis, Arkansas three 8 eight-year-old boys, Steve Branch, Christopher Byers, and Michael Moore were murdered.

Three teenage boys, Damien Echols, Jesse Misskelley, and Jason Baldwin were convicted of the murders in 1994. Jason Baldwin and Jesse Misskelley received life sentences without parole, and Damien Echols sits on death row.

I encourage everyone to see the HBO documentaries, Paradise Lost and Paradise Lost 2 for the whole history of the case.

I only discovered the films about 6 months ago, and … I immediately got online to make sure that these three wrongly convicted boys had been set free since the films were released. My heart sank when I learned that the boys were now men and were still in prison. I couldn’t believe it.

I searched for answers as to what had been done and what was being done to correct this injustice. I donated to the defense fund and received a letter from Damien Echols wife, Lorri. She is a lovely woman who has dedicated her time and heart to her husband. I was glad to hear that after so many years of fighting for justice it looked like things were finally happening. Below, I have written what the DNA and forensics evidence shows. I hope after reading it and looking at the WM3.org website, you will know that the wrong guys are sitting in jail right now, and feel compelled to help.

Go the Dixie Chicks website to read the rest. And to read a Flyer story on the WM3, go here.

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Letters To The Editor Opinion

Letters to the Editor

Class War?

President Bush’s visit to Memphis this week was a real eye-opener. I have read that the war in Iraq being waged by this administration is a class war, but I had not seen it so blatantly played out.

I was holding a sign that read “STOP THE WAR” as I took part in a peaceful protest. Bush was attending a political fund-raiser nearby for Republican senator Lamar Alexander.  The ticket price was $1,000, and if you wanted to super-size, you could spend $10,000 and get your picture taken with the man himself.

Guests for the Bush event parked at the Pink Palace lot. I couldn’t help but notice that every car that pulled in was a brand-new BMW, Mercedes Benz, large SUV, or Cadillac. They were all luxury cars. And the occupants, in their expensive dark suits, starched white shirts, and red ties, all looked spit-shined and neat, just like their vehicles. The women were dressed to kill, hair just so, accessorized and tanned. It was really weird how neat and perfect they all looked. They all seemed giddy with anticipation and didn’t give us the time of day. They were there to support the president.

In contrast, the 60 or so people I was standing with looked very different. We were a bedraggled bunch, mostly college students standing up for our right to assemble and speak our opposition to this mess that has been created in Iraq against our will. There wasn’t anyone among us in a suit. Where we parked, there were no shiny cars, just used vehicles. And there were a lot of us on bikes.

Polls say that two-thirds of Americans are against the war. That means there should have been more of us standing on the corner than there were attending the fund-raiser, but we were outnumbered at least four to one. Maybe it was because people who have a lot of money have more flexible schedules. Maybe it was because we just weren’t organized enough and nobody got the word. Maybe meeting the president seemed more important than standing on a corner holding a sign for peace.

Whatever the case, I found myself very comfortable with the people I was standing with, even if we were the minority. I firmly believe that what we did was the right thing to do. But I sure hope more people show up to stand with us next time. Maybe even somebody in a suit.

Billy Simpson
Memphis

The “Seniorphobic” Flyer?

It has been a while since the Flyer has rattled my cage, because someone has decided that all of us at the Frayser-Raleigh Senior Center don’t need to read your paper anymore.

Has the Flyer become “seniorphobic”? I would find that hard to believe, but nevertheless, I haven’t had my Flyer fix in three weeks.

Now, I can’t sit in my easy chair and smoke my pipe while listening to “Axis Bold As Love” and reading the only Memphis newspaper that seems to truly care about this city.

Please correct this travesty and don’t leave this faithful reader and some of his friends out in the cold.

Frank M. Boone

Memphis

Editor’s note: We will look into the situation and make sure your senior center remains on our delivery list.

Bush and the Devil

Americans need to wake up to the fact that President Bush has been making deals with the devil.

We know how the State Department has protected the killers at Blackwater, but there are more sinister killers that are coming to light. Arms dealers like Tomislav Damnjanovic, who operated out of Belgrade under Slobodan Milosevic during the Bosnian conflict, is now being paid with our tax dollars to run arms into Iraq and Afghanistan. While doing this, he is also running arms to terrorists linked to al-Qaeda in Somalia. This is according to U.N. investigators.

Damnjanovic also helped supply Libya’s air force and army with illegal arms shipments. In fact, almost anywhere people are being murdered by rebels or their own governments, this dealer of death is shipping arms and making money.

This is the man that our professed born-again Christian president is doing business with.

If you support Bush, you might want to start asking some tough questions of your senators, such as, why they have not protested or asked why America is doing business with killers who have no respect for freedom or the American way of life.

Jack Bishop

Cordova

Categories
News News Feature

Women in Black

It’s straight-up noon on a hot Memphis Wednesday and Pamela McFarland is the first to arrive at the front steps of First Congregational Church in Cooper-Young. Dressed in black, she has come here to join the Women in Black vigil almost every Wednesday since the invasion of Iraq. “Because,” she says, “it is something I can do.”

The Rev. Cheryl Cornish, First Congregational’s pastor, rests several black foam boards against the base of one of the church’s columns. As Julia Hicks, the church’s director of missions, sets up a conga drum, more women arrive. Some they know; some are strangers, here for the first time. Each reads through the available signs: “Women in Black”; “Stop the Violence”; “Be a Peacemaker”; “Stop the War on Iraq”; “Grieve the Violence”; “Around the World Women Stand for Peace.” Each chooses a sign and takes a place in front of the church.

Every Wednesday since March 2003, Memphis Women in Black have gathered on the church steps. During the buildup to the war in early 2003, they held daily vigils. “People from all over the world voiced their opposition to this war,” Cornish says. “There were over 3,000 protests globally between January 3rd and April 12th of 2003, involving over 36 million people. And yet, we invaded.”

The vigils, now held from noon to 12:30 p.m., are a way to connect with the global movement for peace.

“It was the women of Israel and Palestine who needed to express their grief. Women are the ones most affected by war and the ones who are most left out of the decision-making process,” Cornish says.

Women in Black began in January 1988, a month after the first Palestinian intifada, when 15 Israeli women began gathering weekly at a major traffic intersection in Jerusalem. They dressed in black to denote their grief. They raised black signs that read, “Stop the Occupation.” Palestinian women joined the Israeli women. Within months, women were holding similar vigils throughout Israel.

As word spread, women in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Australia held solidarity vigils. Soon, Women in Black in other countries were protesting local issues as well. In Italy, it was organized crime. In Germany, the women gathered to grieve the violence of neo-Nazism, racism against guest workers, and nuclear arms. In Belgrade, Women in Black maintained their nonviolent opposition to the Milosevic regime. In March 2001, the Belgrade women were awarded the Millennium Peace Prize for Women from the U.N. Development Fund for Women.

As Julia Hicks begins drumming, retired consultant Dave Lindstrom takes his place in the shade of the porch, holding the “Blessed are the Peacemakers” sign. He and another man stand in the background, a supporting role. A longtime peace advocate, Lindstrom marched on Washington in 1963, where he heard Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech. Lindstrom has stood on the steps of First Congregational Church almost every week since the vigils began. It’s as much a part of his life as brushing his teeth. And when there’s a cold north wind blowing freezing rain? “You just remember to wear a black raincoat.”

“Sometimes it seems pointless,” McFarland says. “But regardless of what you think of war, still, kids are dying. Kids and people and old women are dying and nobody wants little kids to die.”

Judy Bettice, a member of Pax Christi and St. Patrick Catholic Church, saw a flyer about the Memphis group. Since she was teaching full-time in a Memphis city school, she could only join the vigils during school breaks. Undaunted, the proponent of nonviolence told her high school students about Women in Black and that she planned to wear black to school every Wednesday in solidarity. “Many weeks later, when I forgot it was a Wednesday, students asked me why I wasn’t wearing black that day!” she says.

“Women in Black is first of all a statement of grief,” Cornish says. “Grief for all the fallen children, women, men, soldiers, and citizens around the world who have been victimized by violence. It has been moving and healing to wear black and to name our grief — first of all, at the 9/11 attacks. We wear black to grieve every soldier lost in Iraq, every Iraqi citizen and child victimized by this war. We grieve that families have been separated; futures devastated by this war.” 

 

There’s not as much traffic on South Cooper in the middle of the weekday. For the most part, drivers are watching traffic. A few slow down to read the signs. Most of them honk or give a thumbs up. Walkers tend to just keep walking. Now and then someone will comment — like the man who strolls by with three young children. He reads all the signs, then says, “I agree with every one of them.” The Women in Black smile and nod in response.

“I wish passersby knew the actual power of their responses,” Hicks says. “When we get negative responses — which is quite rare — it simply reinforces our conviction to continue this presence for peace and nonviolence. But the positive response — even just a slight wave — is a joyful reminder that we’re not alone and that we’re standing for many, many people who either don’t have the time or maybe the readiness to stand on the street for themselves.”

For Cheryl Cornish, “Women in Black has been a way that I have expressed my faith and my commitment to live after the way of Jesus. When I stand on the street with a sign saying ‘No to War,’ I am living my faith and trying to say to others that there is another way to live.”