Official Protest Thread...

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Camille

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Black Famers

A Black farmer sits on a tractor. (Image: twitter/@XercesSB)



Black farmers made up 14% of the U.S. farming population in 1910, but today they make up just 1.4% of the population and discriminatory practices within the government are to blame.

Agricultural communities across the country were suffering before the coronavirus pandemic, as former President Donald Trump’s trade wars with China hurt the industry in more ways than one. However, Black farmers have had to deal with a whole different set of issues.
Black farmers told the Associated Press that in addition to the many challenges White farmers face, they have to deal with less access to credit and technical support, which make it harder for them to update equipment, purchase seed, operate their farms and buy more land. Black farmers also said they have to deal with racial bias at almost every level of government that has pushed them off their land.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Farm Service Agency typically relied on local loan authorities to make loan decisions. Many of these authorities were in majority White rural areas leading to discriminatory and racist practices.
“They do not want Black farmers to have any farm ground whatsoever. Farm ground gives you power, not a lot, but it gives you some power,” Rod Bradshaw, a Black farmer who raises wheat, cattle and milo told the Associated Press.

The Pigford Settlement in 1999 worth $1.25 billion was intended to support farmers who said discriminatory practices kept them from obtaining loans and other government assistance, but few, if any Black farmers have benefitted.
The Trump Administration didn’t help either as the former president never filled the position of assistant secretary of civil rights.

The agency announced in October 2020 that it would commit $19.1 million to support disadvantaged, veteran farmers and ranchers, but farmers say it’s not enough and aren’t positive the funds will reach them. The few minority farmers left in the U.S. are now hoping the Biden Administration will pass the Justice For Black farmers Act.
The bill, which is co-sponsored by Senators Cory Booker (D-NJ), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), will enact policies to end discrimination within the USDA, protect current Black farmers from losing their land, and provide land grants for a new generation of Black farmers.
“Overtly discriminatory and unjust federal policy has robbed Black families in the United States of the ability to build and pass on intergenerational wealth,” Senator Booker said in a statement. “When it comes to farming and agriculture, we know that there is a direct connection between discriminatory policies within the USDA and the enormous land loss we have seen among Black farmers over the past century. The Justice for Black Farmers Act will work to correct this historic injustice by addressing and correcting USDA discrimination and taking bold steps to restore the land that has been lost in order to empower a new generation of Black farmers to succeed and thrive.”
 

Politic Negro

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Officer Who Quit Wisconsin Police Job Under Pressure Joins Nearby Sheriff's Dept.
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January 28, 20214:39 PM ET
BILL CHAPPELL
Twitter

Protesters and police face off in Wauwatosa, Wis., in October, after the district attorney refused to charge Officer Joseph Mensah in the shooting death of Alvin Cole early last year.
Morry Gash/AP
Joseph Mensah, who quit his job as a police officer in Wauwatosa, Wis., after shooting and killing three people in the line of duty over a five-year period, has a new job as a sheriff's deputy. Sheriff Eric Severson of neighboring Waukesha County says multiple authorities concluded Mensah's controversial use of force was both legal and in line with his training.
In announcing the hire, Severson acknowledged that "some have expressed concerns about Mr. Mensah's past uses of force." But he said Mensah had gone through "an extensive, thorough and exhaustive hiring process."
The sheriff added that Mensah's work with the Waukesha County Sheriff's Office will start with a supervised field training program.
Mensah, who is Black, was the subject of intense protests in Wauwatosa last October, after the Milwaukee County district attorney announced no charges would be filed against him in the shooting death of 17-year-old Alvin Cole on Feb. 2. The prosecutor's office concluded Mensah had acted in self-defense.
Despite that finding, Mensah resigned in November after a months-long suspension from the Wauwatosa Police Department in suburban Milwaukee.

Cole was the third person to have been shot and killed by Mensah since 2015, according to multiple reports.
"Mensah's two earlier shootings had also been found to be in self-defense, and the officer was not disciplined," as NPR's Brakkton Booker reported.
 
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