Is “White Lives Matter” a movement or white supremacist group?

The organizer of Sunday's protest outside an NAACP office said the group is not racist, but their clothing and signs may send a different message. Video provided by Newsy Newslook
The organizer of Sunday’s protest outside an NAACP office said the group is not racist, but their clothing and signs may send a different message. One of the protestors held a sign that simply said “14 words,” in reference to the white supremacist slogan: “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.”

Armed protesters donning ‘White Lives Matter’ signs stood outside the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People’s Office in Houston on Sunday in protest of the organization’s response to the Black Lives Matter group, according to local reports.

The small group of 20 or so people held Confederate battle flags and waved signs in protest against the way they say the NAACP has handled the Black Lives Matter movement, which protestors deem a hate group.

“We came here because the NAACP headquarters is here and that’s one of the most racist groups in America,” Scott Lacy, a White Lives Matter member, told KPRC-TV.

Lacy was identified as a member of the Aryan Renaissance Society by Fox 4 News and The Southern Poverty Law Center.

One of the protestors held a sign that simply said “14 words,” in reference to the white supremacist slogan: “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.”

NAACP President and CEO Cornell William Brooks said to his knowledge the White Lives Matter group has not reached out to the NAACP beyond the protests over the weekend.

“It is not a welcome mat for engagement to brandish a Confederate flag and bring an assault weapon to the NAACP,” Brooks said in a phone interview.

But while the group touts that it formed organically as a direct response to the Black Lives Matter movement, which is a civil rights campaign against police killings of black men across the country, White Lives Matter actually has roots in white supremacy, according to Mark Potok, senior fellow at Southern Poverty Law Center.

“It’s not a real movement at all,” Potok said. “These are a few very small Neo-Nazi, Klan, and similar groups that have formed to push this narrative into the main stream.”

The Southern Poverty Law Center tracked the group’s inception to 2015, and found that often members of the Texas-based Neo-Nazi group Aryan Renaissance Society (ARS) ran White Lives Matter Facebook pages and encouraged white people interested in White Lives Matter to contact ARS members.

And the protest in Houston was not the first. Potok said they’ve found Aryan Renaissance Society members distributing White Lives Matter fliers around Houston, and several held up signs at the funeral service for a Harris County Sheriff’s Deputy who was gunned down in 2015 by a man who had multiple encounters with law enforcement.

He notes small gatherings of White Lives Matter protests have popped up across the country, though the groups are “small and scattered.”

In Houston, protester Ken Reed told the Houston Chronicle, the NAACP failed to adequately respond to the Black Lives Matter movement, which he and other protestors believe have resulted in the “attack and killing of police officers, the burning down of cities and things of that nature.”

“If they’re going to be a civil rights organization and defend their people,” he said, “they also need to hold their people accountable.”

Brooks said the NAACP has always maintained the Black Lives Matter is not a negation of white lives, but “rather an assertion of our shared humanity.”

He points to the wide variety of Black Lives Matter protestors, with members coming from the Urban League, the NAACP, National Action Network, as well as protestors who don’t belong to any groups.

While a common, though infrequent, criticism of the Black Lives Matter movement has been the sometimes destructive protests, Brooks notes that the White Lives Matter protestors are misguided in blaming the NAACP.

“To blame the violent excess of a small fraction of demonstrators in the country is both logically wrong headed and morally wrong-hearted,” he said. “It doesn’t make sense.”

On social media, many noted that White Lives Matter missed the point of Black Lives Matter.

♦ Culled from USA TODAY Network

White House responds to petition to label Black Lives Matter a “terror” group

Black Lives Matter, the petition said, "earned this title due to its actions in Ferguson, Baltimore, and even at a Bernie Sanders rally, as well as all over the United States and Canada."
Black Lives Matter, the petition said, “earned this title due to its actions in Ferguson, Baltimore, and even at a Bernie Sanders rally, as well as all over the United States and Canada.”

After days of violence and heightened racial tensions in the U.S., the White House responded this week to an online petition asking the federal government to formally label the Black Lives Matter movement as a “terror group.”

“Terrorism is defined as ‘the use of violence and intimidation in pursuit of political aims,'” read the “We The People” petition, created July 6 on the White House website. “This definition is the same definition used to declare ISIS and other groups, as terrorist organizations.”

Black Lives Matter, the petition said, “earned this title due to its actions in Ferguson, Baltimore, and even at a Bernie Sanders rally, as well as all over the United States and Canada.” It asked the Pentagon to recognize the group as such “on the grounds of principle, integrity, morality, and safety.”

Because the online document received at least 100,000 signatures — at the time of this reporting, it had garnered over 141,000 names — the White House was automatically prompted to respond.

The “We the People” team noted that “The White House plays no role in designating domestic terror organizations,” nor does the U.S. government “generate a list of domestic terror organizations.”

“[T]herefore,” the response read, “we are not able to address the formal request of your petition.”

The White House then went further: Acknowledging that it was a “difficult time” for the country — and that the debate remains a “charged” one — the statement additionally prompted petition signers to consider President Obama’s words calling for compassion towards the movement.

“I think it’s important for us to also understand that the phrase ‘black lives matter’ simply refers to the notion that there’s a specific vulnerability for African Americans that needs to be addressed,” the president said last week, talking to a Washington, D.C. gathering of enforcement officials, civil rights leaders, elected officials and other activists on the issue of racial disparities in the criminal justice system. “We shouldn’t get too caught up in this notion that somehow people who are asking for fair treatment are somehow, automatically, anti-police, are trying to only look out for black lives as opposed to others. I think we have to be careful about playing that game.”

The petition came on the heels of deadly officer-involved shootings in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and Falcon Heights, Minnesota, and after days of Black Lives Matter protests for more police accountability.

On July 7, one day after the petition published online, seven law enforcement officers policing a BLM demonstration in Dallas, Texas were shot and killed in a shower of sniper-like fire. And on Sunday, three more policemen were shot and killed in Baton Rouge.

Black Lives Matter protesters condemned the massacre in Dallas, and prominent members did the same after Sunday’s Baton Rouge shooting of police officers.

One public voice of the movement, DeRay McKesson, urged peace after news of the Louisiana deaths broke.

“I’m waiting for more information like everybody else,” McKesson told the New York Times. “I have more questions than answers.”

“The movement began as a call to end violence,” he said. “That call remains.”

 

After leading in Black Lives Matter, DeRay Mckesson finds himself trailing in his bid to become Baltimore mayor

Activist DeRay McKesson is running for mayor in Baltimore.
Activist DeRay McKesson is running for mayor in Baltimore.

 

Hunter Walker, Hunter Walker/

BALTIMORE — There was one moment during protests in Ferguson, Mo., when DeRay Mckesson says he feared a casual gesture might cost him his life.

According to Mckesson, the incident occurred in the first few days of the demonstrations that engulfed the city following the Aug. 9, 2014, shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown by a Ferguson cop. Mckesson said the protesters were suddenly rushed by one of the police forces who were aggressively cracking down on the nightly unrest. As the cops surged in, Mckesson said, the crowd dispersed — and his phone cord began to fall from his pocket as he ran.

In the weeks of protests that followed Brown’s death, the demonstrators frequently ran with their hands up. It was an effort to dramatize the gesture of surrender Brown allegedly made before he was shot. The posture was also a precaution for the protesters who didn’t want to join Brown and the other young black men who have died after being perceived as threats by police officers. With his phone cord slipping out of his shorts, Mckesson found himself making a crucial choice — should he lower his hands to secure the charger, or would moving toward his pocket get him shot?

Mckesson told Yahoo News he went for the cord because he “won’t live in fear.” He recounted the moment when he spoke to a room of students at University of Maryland, Baltimore County on Friday and explained why he decided to go from protesting against the system to trying to become part of it.

Mayoral candidate DeRay Mckesson, right, and campaign staffer Maria Griffin canvass in the Charles Village neighborhood of Baltimore on March 26, 2016.
Mayoral candidate DeRay Mckesson, right, and campaign staffer Maria Griffin canvass in the Charles Village neighborhood of Baltimore on March 26, 2016.

One of the most high-profile figures in the Black Lives Matter movement, Mckesson, a 30-year-old who was born in Baltimore, has for three months been running a long-shot campaign for mayor of his hometown. In his unlikely effort to bring the movement from the streets to City Hall, Mckesson, wearing his distinctive blue vest, has tried to turn the name he made for himself documenting the unrest in Ferguson into a springboard to leading a city facing similar strife.

Starting last April 18, riots rocked Baltimore after it was revealed Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old African-American man, suffered severe spinal injuries while being taken into police custody. Gray eventually died as a result of his injuries, and the state’s attorney filed criminal charges against the six officers who were involved in his death. The case is still ongoing, but the initial reaction in the city led to a state of emergency, curfews, and the National Guard being called in. Mckesson, who had previously returned to the city, was on the streets during the upheaval.

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, a Democrat, faced intense criticism for her handling of the riots, and last December, she announced she would not seek reelection. Her decision set the stage for the crowded race featuring Mckesson and 12 other candidates in today’s Democratic mayoral primary. And in a city where the electorate is overwhelmingly registered in the party, the Democratic primary is tantamount to the general election.

At a town hall on Saturday, President Obama praised Black Lives Matter for being “really effective in bringing attention to problems” of racial injustice. But, he suggested, the group “can’t just keep on yelling.”

“The value of social movements and activism is to get you at the table, get you in the room,” Obama said.

Mckesson clearly is making an effort to bring Black Lives Matter out of the streets and into the halls of power. With a majority of African-American residents and clear concerns about law enforcement in the community, Baltimore seems like the ideal setting for that effort. However, Mckesson’s campaign has faced a unique set of obstacles due to his prominence in the movement, and his bid seems to have resonated more with rich Baltimoreans than residents of poor black neighborhoods, where many have abandoned electoral politics.

Speaking to the students at UMBC last week, Mckesson explained some of his rationale for running for office. He contrasted this perspective with that of others in the movement, whom he described as “addicted” to protesting rather than working within the system.

“We also need to be the people who are on the boards and commissions … in actual power. The status quo that we are resisting is super organized on the inside, and an outside-only strategy, I think, is not a strategy to win. I think it’s a strategy to fight forever and ever,” Mckesson explained. “Our goal is not to fight forever and ever, and I do worry that, in the movement space, that there are people more addicted to fighting than winning.”

President Obama speaks at a meeting with civil rights leaders — including Mckesson, right — at the White House on Feb. 18, 2016.  (Photo: Carolyn Kaster/AP)
President Obama speaks at a meeting with civil rights leaders — including Mckesson, right — at the White House on Feb. 18, 2016. (Photo: Carolyn Kaster/AP)

Mckesson described this dichotomy as “a split around reform and revolution that happens in the movement” with revolutionaries fighting for “100-year goals,” such as establishing new political parties, in lieu of bringing “change today and tomorrow.”

Mckesson, who regularly describes his mayoral campaign platform as being focused on “concrete change,” has no problem being identified as a reformer rather than a revolutionary. He believes long-term political goals should be pursued in conjunction with realistic programs for criminal justice reform, education, and affordable housing, he told the UMBC students.

“If getting more people out of jail makes me a reformer, then like, I’m all about it. Right? And if ending cash bail tomorrow is like, ‘I’m a reformer,’ then fine, right?” he said.

Mckesson burst onto the national scene by documenting the Ferguson protests on social media and in a newsletter. When Brown died, Mckesson was living in Minneapolis, Minn., where he worked as the director of human capital with the city’s public school system. Mckesson says he decided to drive to Ferguson in an attempt to square the different narratives he was seeing on Twitter and television, and said that being hit with tear gas inspired him to join the protests. He basically never left.

During the first half of last year, Mckesson traveled around the country to cities where young African-Americans died at the hands of the police, and other locations where protests erupted — such as Charleston, S.C., where a white supremacist killed nine people at a black church, and Missouri, where racial issues led to mass demonstrations at the state’s flagship public university. Along with participating in protests, Mckesson helped found a group that crafted a Black Lives Matter policy agenda. Though he was not part of the organization that originally coined the phrase, Mckesson’s relentless tweets and trademark blue Patagonia vest eventually made him one of the most recognizable faces of the movement, and drew in more than 340,000 Twitter followers.

Mckesson’s past as a high-profile protester has given him unusual resources for a first-time candidate. But at the same time, his visibility within Black Lives Matter movement has generated a harsh spotlight, including backlash from other activists. And while Mckesson’s unique brand of political celebrity has brought him donations from all 50 states, high-powered allies and intense national press coverage, his position at the bottom of the polls indicates it hasn’t translated into the support necessary to win the race.

Black Lives Matter hasn’t been the central element of his pitch to voters.

He spends much more of his time talking about his background as a teacher with high-level administrative roles at large public education agencies. In addition to his position with the school system in Minneapolis, Mckesson worked in human capital for Baltimore City Public Schools from August 2011 until the end of 2013. He also helped lead an afterschool program in Baltimore a few years after his 2007 graduation from Bowdoin College.

And police reform is only a small portion of his platform, which is largely focused on a series of what he describes as “tangible things that we can do that might not be the most sexy.”

Among other things, Mckesson wants to get mayoral control over city schools and, in the meantime, establish adult and childhood literacy programs. He wants to employ strategies to fill Baltimore’s blighted blocks of vacant homes that are tailored to specific neighborhoods and coupled with a plan to address urban food deserts. He is calling for creating cultural opportunities for the city’s young people like movie theaters, arts programs, and dirt bike parks. And yes, Mckesson also talks about plans for crime and policing, including establishing needle exchanges, mandating drug tests for officers involved in shootings and banning chokeholds.

Mckesson was the last high-profile Democratic candidate to officially enter the race. He filed his candidacy on the evening of Feb. 3, minutes before the deadline on the final day to register. On the campaign trail, Mckesson has attributed his late entry to the time he spent putting together his platform and the difficulty of finding an election lawyer who was not already tied to one of the other candidates.

“I spent a lot of time on the policy platform because I didn’t want to be a personality candidate,” Mckesson said to a crowd at a campaign event last Thursday night, adding, “Logistically, you know, there’s so many people running for office in this city that it actually took some time to find an election lawyer who was not conflicted.“

This delay meant Mckesson had just 83 days to campaign, when many of his rivals had been running for months. The time crunch was exacerbated by the fact many Baltimoreans participated in early voting. And this wasn’t the last time Mckesson’s status as a political newcomer cost him.

In his campaign appearances, Mckesson sounds something like a local version of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. He calls himself “an outsider to the establishment” and “an insider to the city,” and touts the fact he has raised more than $200,000, largely from small donors. In fact, Mckesson uses the same firm that helped rope in the online donations that have fueled Sanders’ insurgency in the presidential race. However, the money Mckesson has raised is still far less than the funds raised by his top rivals, some of whom have seven-figure war chests. And his team, which includes just three paid staffers, is much smaller than his opponents’ operations.

While Mckesson’s activist career earned him meetings with President Obama, Sanders, and a slew of celebrities and Silicon Valley luminaries, he doesn’t have the endorsement of a single local elected official. His campaign manager, Sharhonda Bossier, told Yahoo News Mckesson hasn’t sought “political favors from politicians.”

“Our work has been rooted in connecting with as many voters as possible,” Bossier said.

And Mckesson has a lot of work to do on that front. The most recent Baltimore Sun poll showed he had the support of less than one percent of voters.

Mckesson chats with bicyclists as he canvasses in Charles Village, Baltimore, on March 26, 2016. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
Mckesson chats with bicyclists as he canvasses in Charles Village, Baltimore, on March 26, 2016. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Mckesson and his team argue that the polls have understated his following. They cite the unusually high turnout in early voting and the fact the mayoral race is coinciding with a presidential primary as reasons the electorate will be fundamentally different than it has been in the past. Still, his loss Tuesday now seems a foregone conclusion.

Dr. Mileah Kromer, who directs the Sarah T. Hughes Field Politics Center at Baltimore’s Goucher College, which conducts polling in Maryland, said she doesn’t believe there are enough unique factors in this year’s race for Mckesson to come from so far behind and pass the two frontrunners: former Mayor Sheila Dixon and Maryland State Senate Majority Leader Catherine Pugh.

“While I do think there’s a real possibility for him to outperform the one percent which he’s polling at, I don’t think it will make up for the thirty-point gap,” Kromer told Yahoo News.

Given his trailing position in polls, Mckesson has drawn few attacks from the top candidates. Neither the Pugh nor the Dixon campaign responded to requests from Yahoo News to comment about Mckesson. He has polled too low to even enter several debates, and Dixon, when initially asked about Mckesson’s candidacy, said she had never heard of him.

While his actual opponents are ignoring him, Mckesson has been under relentless attack online. He is constantly on his phone, fielding an exhausting stream of Twitter messages, including vicious insults from conservatives.

Along with online sparring, Mckesson believes he’s taking unfair hits in the press. His mayoral bid has generated substantial coverage, but much of it has focused on his poor poll numbers and background as a protester rather than his platform.

Late last month, Mckesson began an effort to reach out to 30,000 voters in the final 30 days of his campaign. He says he has far exceeded that goal with mailers, phone calls, events, and by knocking on nearly 2,000 doors per day with a combination of his staff, volunteers and paid canvassers. However, Mckesson doesn’t believe he’s being credited for this ground work and the impact it could have.

Mckesson lamented the public perceptions surrounding his campaign when he spoke to the class at UMBC last week, saying people don’t believe he’s out meeting voters unless he documents it.

“The social media presence is a good thing and a bad thing sometimes. It does a lot to amplify the message in a way that is powerful. The hard part is that if I don’t put it on Twitter, people like literally act like it doesn’t exist,” Mckesson said, adding, “No other candidate has to prove every single thing they do.”

Some local activists have been reluctant to embrace him, and view him as insufficiently tied to the community. This opposition has also drawn substantial attention in the press.

Dr. Lawrence Brown, a local activist and professor at Baltimore’s historically black Morgan State University, attributed the critiques Mckesson has faced from other activists to the city’s “insular” nature.

“Home grown — you know, born, raised, and what people call ’doing the work’ here, you know — it like really, really means a lot. And he was born and raised here, but people haven’t necessarily seen him doing the work … in terms of maybe activism or protesting, you know — being visible in that regard,” Brown told Yahoo News. “So I think like he’s being penalized for Baltimore’s very unique sense of insularity … not really wanting outsiders to get a lot of credit or to hog the limelight.”

As a result of the bad press, Mckesson is guarded. When Yahoo News asked him about the benefits and disadvantages of his high-profile association with Black Lives Matter, he barely answered the question.

“The movement is made up of many people doing incredible work all across the country,” Mckesson said. “I’m proud to stand with them and I’m proud to be a part of this community. That’s my whole comment on the record.”

In his defensive posture, Mckesson prefers to let his platform and campaign work speak for itself. He sticks to the details of his platform in almost all conversations. The data points tumble out of him in a rapid-fire patter. His eagerness for people to hear the policies seems apparent. Mckesson also wants the world to know he’s out pounding the pavement looking for votes — and to see the reaction he’s getting in his travels around the city.

Last Thursday and Friday, Yahoo News tagged along as Mckesson spoke to the UMBC college class, a group at a local senior citizens center, and a forum for young local leaders. Mckesson generally generated an enthusiastic response. On Friday evening, he visited the Federal Hill neighborhood and spent a few hours walking a stretch of more than half a mile that is densely populated with quaint brick homes, and he and his team knocked on hundreds of doors. Several people he encountered were familiar with his activism.

“You’re a big deal! Thanks for stopping by!” said one man who seemed shocked to find Mckesson on his doorstep. “I admire your Twitter awesomeness actually. I really like your platform, and I’m a fan.”

During the evening, one person shut the door on Mckesson, though they only did so after offering a terse, “Thanks!”

A Johns Hopkins science professor ran into the street to meet Mckesson after hearing from his wife that the candidate was in the neighborhood.

“She said you were out here, so I figured I’d come out and meet the celebrity,” the professor said.

Like several other enthusiastic supporters, the professor alluded to the poll numbers and expressed hope that Mckesson would remain in the city and stay involved even if he loses the election.

“You’re not going to disappear, right?” he asked.

Though Mckesson said he had no “plans to move,” he noted he wanted to be “transparent” and said he desired an impactful position in local government, and was concerned he might not be able to attain one if he’s defeated by certain unnamed rivals.

“This is why I’m running for mayor, right? It’s like the one position that actually allows for you to have maximum impact,” Mckesson explained. “I think that … there are some people that, if they win, I won’t have a place.”

The neighborhood where he made the rounds on Friday evening is a relatively well-off, mostly white section of the city. In her conversation with Yahoo News, Bossier, his campaign manager, acknowledged that wealthier Baltimoreans are a key part of Mckesson’s base.

“The places where we didn’t have to do as much education around who he was … predominately white, middle-income communities. … People who watch MSNBC or are on Twitter and so know him from that and, like, read the New Yorker and so kind of know who he is from that kind of work,” Bossier said. She added, “And then middle-income and upper-income black folks know who he is — again, probably mostly because of his social media presence and activism.”

In general, poor and minority voters tend to vote less, and Baltimore has had a recent history of especially low turnout that experts have attributed to pessimism and apathy among residents.

On Saturday, Yahoo News visited the Gilmor Homes, the public housing project where Freddie Gray lived before his fatal arrest. The development is located in the Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood, a place where the streets are dotted with vacant homes and the statistics are grim. Last year, the poverty rate in Sandtown-Winchester was over 30 percent, almost a quarter of people were out of work, and the murder rate was almost twice the average for the rest of Baltimore even as the number of homicides in the city hit record highs.

The Gilmor Homes are a series of three-story apartments that open on to common areas. Some of the units are empty and boarded up. On Saturday, music blasted in the courtyard and people sat outside on stoops chatting with each other. Many of the residents we attempted to talk to declined to speak with us. None of the people we spoke to said they were aware of Mckesson, and almost all of them didn’t plan to vote.

One man, who declined to give his last name or spell out his first, complained about the condition of his home and a lack of support from the housing authority.

“I’m about to move out of here because they ain’t treating these people around here right, man. … Every time the mayor ask to shake your hand, they want to get voted. … They get voted in office … and you don’t see them no more,” the man said, adding, “There ain’t going to be no change … I’m going to change and get away from here.”

Shawnrice Kelly sat nearby with her sister. She echoed the man’s sentiments.

“I did vote. I did before, it ain’t interesting how it used to be when I was young, when I first started to vote. … I’m still going to be f***** at the end, whatever who wins,” Kelly said. “Everything’s still going to be the same. They say they’re going to help. Of course you’re going to say what you say to get your votes, but nobody cares. You got to make it out of this jungle on your own.”

Mckesson said he understands the “sense of disinvestment” among some voters in Baltimore’s poorer neighborhoods.

“For so many people, the government has not proven itself to be a productive force,” Mckesson said. “In so many ways, the government needs … to prove itself to people so they can be invested again. And I’m ready to do that as mayor. I know that that work isn’t necessarily quick work. It’s the right work, and it doesn’t happen overnight.”

Another man who spoke to Yahoo News in the Gilmor Houses and declined to give his name had no comment about the mayoral election. However, he did offer an observation on the national political scene.

“I just came home from prison. I’m going to be honest: If the president of the United States becomes Donald Trump, it’s going to be hell out here,” the man said. “It’s already hell, but it’s going to transform into the real version.”

If the man’s prediction comes true and “hell” breaks out in Baltimore this November, it’s safe to say we’ll see Mckesson there in the streets. For now, it seems far more likely he’ll be there as a protester rather than a politician.

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