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do-over:
“ tsaphanbabe:
“ thresholdofzero:
“ eastloscarosie:
“ rollingwaves-woodencaves:
“ blackmalefashion:
“ This put me damn near in tears; read this encounter with police that professor Steve Locke went through, and it will explain everything you...
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do-over:

tsaphanbabe:

thresholdofzero:

eastloscarosie:

rollingwaves-woodencaves:

blackmalefashion:

This put me damn near in tears; read this encounter with police that professor Steve Locke went through, and it will explain everything you need to know about being black in 21st century America. If you dont get it from this then really I’m wasting my time trying to explain it.

“This is what I wore to work today.

On my way to get a burrito before work, I was detained by the police.

I noticed the police car in the public lot behind Centre Street. As I was walking away from my car, the cruiser followed me. I walked down Centre Street and was about to cross over to the burrito place and the officer got out of the car.

“Hey my man,” he said.

He unsnapped the holster of his gun.

I took my hands out of my pockets.

“Yes?” I said.

“Where you coming from?”

“Home.”

Where’s home?”

“Dedham.”

How’d you get here?”

“I drove.”

He was next to me now. Two other police cars pulled up. I was standing in from of the bank across the street from the burrito place. I was going to get lunch before I taught my 1:30 class. There were cops all around me.

I said nothing. I looked at the officer who addressed me. He was white, stocky, bearded.

“You weren’t over there, were you?” He pointed down Centre Street toward Hyde Square.

“No. I came from Dedham.”

“What’s your address?”

I told him.

“We had someone matching your description just try to break into a woman’s house.”

A second police officer stood next to me; white, tall, bearded. Two police cruisers passed and would continue to circle the block for the 35 minutes I was standing across the street from the burrito place.

“You fit the description,” the officer said. “Black male, knit hat, puffy coat. Do you have identification.”

“It’s in my wallet. May I reach into my pocket and get my wallet?”

“Yeah.”

I handed him my license. I told him it did not have my current address. He walked over to a police car. The other cop, taller, wearing sunglasses, told me that I fit the description of someone who broke into a woman’s house. Right down to the knit cap.

Barbara Sullivan made a knit cap for me. She knitted it in pinks and browns and blues and oranges and lime green. No one has a hat like this. It doesn’t fit any description that anyone would have. I looked at the second cop. I clasped my hands in front of me to stop them from shaking.

“For the record,” I said to the second cop, “I’m not a criminal. I’m a college professor.” I was wearing my faculty ID around my neck, clearly visible with my photo.

“You fit the description so we just have to check it out.” The first cop returned and handed me my license.

“We have the victim and we need her to take a look at you to see if you are the person.”

It was at this moment that I knew that I was probably going to die. I am not being dramatic when I say this. I was not going to get into a police car. I was not going to present myself to some victim. I was not going let someone tell the cops that I was not guilty when I already told them that I had nothing to do with any robbery. I was not going to let them take me anywhere because if they did, the chance I was going to be accused of something I did not do rose exponentially. I knew this in my heart. I was not going anywhere with these cops and I was not going to let some white woman decide whether or not I was a criminal, especially after I told them that I was not a criminal. This meant that I was going to resist arrest. This meant that I was not going to let the police put their hands on me.

If you are wondering why people don’t go with the police, I hope this explains it for you.

Something weird happens when you are on the street being detained by the police. People look at you like you are a criminal. The police are detaining you so clearly you must have done something, otherwise they wouldn’t have you. No one made eye contact with me. I was hoping that someone I knew would walk down the street or come out of one of the shops or get off the 39 bus or come out of JP Licks and say to these cops, “That’s Steve Locke. What the FUCK are you detaining him for?”

The cops decided that they would bring the victim to come view me on the street. The asked me to wait. I said nothing. I stood still.

“Thanks for cooperating,” the second cop said. “This is probably nothing, but it’s our job and you do fit the description. 5′ 11″, black male. One-hundred-and-sixty pounds, but you’re a little more than that. Knit hat.”

A little more than 160. Thanks for that, I thought.

An older white woman walked behind me and up to the second cop. She turned and looked at me and then back at him. “You guys sure are busy today.”

I noticed a black woman further down the block. She was small and concerned. She was watching what was going on. I focused on her red coat. I slowed my breathing. I looked at her from time to time.

I thought: Don’t leave, sister. Please don’t leave.

The first cop said, “Where do you teach?”

“Massachusetts College of Art and Design.” I tugged at the lanyard that had my ID.

“How long you been teaching there?”

“Thirteen years.”

We stood in silence for about 10 more minutes.

An unmarked police car pulled up. The first cop went over to talk to the driver. The driver kept looking at me as the cop spoke to him. I looked directly at the driver. He got out of the car.

“I’m Detective Cardoza. I appreciate your cooperation.”

I said nothing.

“I’m sure these officers told you what is going on?”

“They did.”

“Where are you coming from?”

“From my home in Dedham.”

“How did you get here?”

“I drove.”

“Where is your car?”

“It’s in the lot behind Bukhara.” I pointed up Centre Street.

“Okay,” the detective said. “We’re going to let you go. Do you have a car key you can show me?”

“Yes,” I said. “I’m going to reach into my pocket and pull out my car key.”

“Okay.”

I showed him the key to my car.

The cops thanked me for my cooperation. I nodded and turned to go.

“Sorry for screwing up your lunch break,” the second cop said.

I walked back toward my car, away from the burrito place. I saw the woman in red.

“Thank you,” I said to her. “Thank you for staying.”

“Are you ok?” She said. Her small beautiful face was lined with concern.

“Not really. I’m really shook up. And I have to get to work.”

“I knew something was wrong. I was watching the whole thing. The way they are treating us now, you have to watch them. ”

“I’m so grateful you were there. I kept thinking to myself, ‘Don’t leave, sister.’ May I give you a hug?”

“Yes,” she said. She held me as I shook. “Are you sure you are ok?”

“No I’m not. I’m going to have a good cry in my car. I have to go teach.”

“You’re at MassArt. My friend is at MassArt.”

“What’s your name?” She told me. I realized we were Facebook friends. I told her this.

“I’ll check in with you on Facebook,” she said.

I put my head down and walked to my car.

My colleague was in our shared office and she was able to calm me down. I had about 45 minutes until my class began and I had to teach. I forgot the lesson I had planned. I forget the schedule. I couldn’t think about how to do my job. I thought about the fact my word counted for nothing, they didn’t believe that I wasn’t a criminal. They had to find out. My word was not enough for them. My ID was not enough for them. My handmade one-of-a-kind knit hat was an object of suspicion. My Ralph Lauren quilted blazer was only a “puffy coat.” That white woman could just walk up to a cop and talk about me like I was an object for regard. I wanted to go back and spit in their faces. The cops were probably deeply satisfied with how they handled the interaction, how they didn’t escalate the situation, how they were respectful and polite.

I imagined sitting in the back of a police car while a white woman decides if I am a criminal or not. If I looked guilty being detained by the cops imagine how vile I become sitting in a cruiser? I knew I could not let that happen to me. I knew if that were to happen, I would be dead.

Nothing I am, nothing I do, nothing I have means anything because I fit the description.

I had to confess to my students that I was a bit out of it today and I asked them to bear with me. I had to teach.

After class I was supposed to go to the openings for First Friday. I went home.”

~Steve Locke

Source: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10205682939701484&set=a.1039056825387.2009198.1494534450&type=3

Yo…. Boston cops ain’t ish for this

Honestly, if any person of color sees something like this please stay and comfort them. We need to protect our black brothers and sisters. They are a target in this racist shitty country. We don’t need another innocent life taken away.

Any time I see cops interacting with someone on the street, if I have time, I’ll sit and watch.

Every time.

Cops are here to serve us. They are paid to protect and serve us.

Stay vigilant because the only thing standing between a cop getting away with assault and battery is often the people watching.

Tears. I never thought about this before. Maybe sticking around if I see a black person detained by the police is something I can do. I know the police won’t hurt me (white woman). Maybe the police will behave better if they know I’m watching?

I can do that. I can watch. As a white woman with a *very* strong court process background, my testimony would be highly credible.

This I can do, and this I will do.

(via do-over)

  • 9 years ago > blackmalefashion
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Today I judged a Christmas ornament contest at the office with a $1000 prize.


When I was selected as judge a few weeks ago by our CEO, I jokingly insinuated a Lie-Nielsen shoulder plane may help me chose the winner. 

One ornament  consisted of a picture of WBUR’s Tom Ashbrook (W’BUR’s a client) whose Rudolf-like nose was a button that, when pressed, delivered this message. 

So, yeah. It won.

  • 10 years ago
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Dug out.

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Q:I think i might have misunderstood something. I just saw something about MSSNG and the video made by autism speaks, and i understood it as they say there are pieces missing in the research on autism - not autistic persons. Have i gotten it all wrong?

Image uetisk-blog

autisticadvocacy:

Specific to the research: Here’s the reality about research funding:  Most of it ALREADY goes to stuff like cure, prevention, and genetic testing. That funding for it? ALSO NOT MISSING! Instead research for things that will help Autistics in the here and now is underfunded- things like establishing the research basis of supports for community, education, and employment. Things like the sort of research that will allow states to better fund things that actually help- many states require the stuff they fund to have a basis in research. Things like developing technologies that will allow those with complex motor and communication support needs to be integrated into the community.

There’s other things that are missing that will help people right now as well- things like adequate supports. Things like access to long term supports and services without having to live along the poverty line. Things like simplified funding avenues for medical and supportive and adaptive equipment. Things like lifting service caps under medicaid/medicare, and things like lifting or removing the asset limit for PwD who are on medicaid in order to access LTSS. Or how about ending the waiting lists for home and community based services in the states that still have them, or closing the institutions and funding appropriate supports in the community? How about truly inclusive education instead of shipping students off to different schools because the local school district refuses to provide appropriate supports or end bullying (which is covered under the FAPE provision of IDEA?) Or what about community based diversion programs for people who have police interactions? There are a lot of better and more immediate uses for their funding than to invoke pity and fear or fund the prevention, cause, cure research that is already well funded comparatively. 

In the end, though, this is about a lot more than a single project- it is about the way that they are using fear and pity to approach goals that were not set by autistics. They were set instead by people whose leadership calls us burdens and whose words of fear, pity, and hate have convinced people to commit atrocities. These words deny hope, and encourage people to set lower bars rather than different methods for autistic lives. This rhetoric also frames us, often, as dangerous- did you know that their contribution to the initial incident for Neli Latson was to issue a brief claiming that autism makes us inherently violent? This rhetoric does HARM. 

There is a long history of the “missing child” imagery from Autism Speaks. A LONG history. Alluding to someone being missing, or that there’s something missing from someone, is a tactic they’ve used for a very long time to invoke pity and fear. And there is a long “wake” it has left behind in the lives (and deaths) of the people who heard it as their only option.

Saying there are “pieces missing from the autism puzzle” is not somehow “better” either. Autism is a key part of our brains. We are not puzzles, and Autistics have been objecting to the Puzzle imagery for quite a while. Just because someone doesn’t understand us, doesn’t mean there is a piece missing. 

To invoke #NotMssng is about all of this, not just this particular, offensively named catalyst. It is time to speak out. Let’s just hope people can hear us.

  • 11 years ago > autisticadvocacy
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A month.

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ladyh8rs:
“ U.S. supreme Court Justices Anthony Kennedy, Antonin Scalia, Samuel Alito, John Roberts and Clarence Thomas
In Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores they ruled that the Affordable Care Act’s mandate that employee health plans cover...
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ladyh8rs:

U.S. supreme Court Justices Anthony Kennedy, Antonin Scalia, Samuel Alito, John Roberts and Clarence Thomas

In Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores they ruled that the Affordable Care Act’s mandate that employee health plans cover contraceptives can be ignored if the use of contraceptives violates company owners’ religious beliefs.

(link)

(via ladyh8rs)

  • 11 years ago > ladyh8rs
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