BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18779682
SEQUENCE:18904765
CREATED:20151105T132700Z
DESCRIPTION:11/28 SF Forum-Stop Hanging Noose Incidents And Terrorism On The Job-12/10 
 Action At SF Recology\nSaturday November 28, 2015 1:00 PM\nBayview Library 
 5075 3rd St,/Revere\nSan Francisco\n\nIn 2013 a hanging noose was placed on 
 a conveyor belt at the San Francisco Recology plant. When IBT 350 member 
 Darrell Washington spoke out about it he was retaliated against by the 
 company. The use of hanging nooses to intimidate and terrorize African 
 American workers and others is not new. There is an epidemic of such 
 instances including others in San Francisco at SFO, South East Sewage plant 
 and UCSF. There is also a national epidemic of these incidents.\nThis forum 
 will look at why this is taking place and what should be done about it. If 
 you have similar experiences please come and speak out to stop these acts 
 of terrorism on the job.\n\nAlso there will be a rally at \nSF Recology  on 
 December 10, 2015 at 5:00 PM at 501 Tunnel Avenue San 
 Francisco\n\nSponsored by United Public Workers For Action UPWA.info\nFor 
 more information call\n(415) 832-9480 or (415)282-1908\n\nFor more 
 information\nhttp://youtu.be/g5PBHHR2m38\nhttp://sfbayview.com/2015/06/recology-noose-update-daryle-washington-rejects-settlement-without-policy-change/\nhttp://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2001/08/16/MNL120088.DTL\nhttp://youtu.be/K1x7H81Llc8\nhttps://youtu.be/2bOFW1weg5U\n\nIn 
 Jena and Beyond, Nooses Return as a Symbol of 
 Hate\nhttp://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/19/AR2007101902543_pf.html\nBy 
 Darryl Fears\nWashington Post Staff Writer\nSaturday, October 20, 2007 
 \n\nWhen he reached his third-story workstation at a construction site near 
 Pittsburgh two weeks ago, Errol Madyun saw the noose -- thick, neatly 
 knotted and strong enough to hang a man.\n\n"It was intimidating," said 
 Madyun, a black ironworker.\n\nMore than 400 miles south in North Carolina, 
 Terry Grier, superintendent of Guilford County Schools, saw the same type 
 of noose last month at predominantly black T.W. Andrews High near 
 Greensboro.\n\n"It was huge," Grier, who is white, said of a noose he 
 discovered hanging from a flagpole, one of four nooses placed at the 
 school. "I became very angry. Part of what you think is it's a copycat of 
 Jena."\n\nLaw enforcement authorities, including the Justice Department, 
 are expressing concern over a recent spate of noose sightings in the 
 aftermath of events in Jena, the small Louisiana town that has been 
 engulfed by racial strife and was the scene of a recent civil rights 
 demonstration.\n\nNooses have been looped over a tree at the University of 
 Maryland, knotted to the end of stage-rigging ropes at a suburban Memphis 
 theater, slung on the doorknob of a black professor's office at Columbia 
 University in New York, hung in a locker room at a Long Island police 
 station, stuffed in the duffel bag of a black Coast Guard cadet aboard a 
 historic ship, and draped around the necks of black dolls in the Pittsburgh 
 suburbs. The hangman's rope has become so prolific, some say, it could 
 replace the Nazi swastika and the Ku Klux Klan's fiery cross as the 
 nation's reigning symbol of hate.\n\n"I think the noose is replacing the 
 burning cross in the minds of many white people as the primary symbol of 
 the Klan," said Mark Potok, editor of Intelligence Report, a magazine 
 published by the Southern Poverty Law Center that examines hate 
 groups.\n\nLast week, the Justice Department called the placing of nooses 
 "shameful" and deplored the fear and intimidation they are meant to arouse. 
 "Many of these cowardly actions may also violate federal and state civil 
 rights and hate crime laws," acting Attorney General Peter D. Keisler said 
 in a statement. "The offenders should be aware, and the American people can 
 trust, that the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of 
 Investigation . . . are actively investigating these incidents."\n\nBut the 
 Justice Department could not point to any recent arrests on hate-crime 
 charges as a result of incidents involving nooses, and at a House Judiciary 
 Committee hearing this week Democrats sharply criticized department 
 officials for not aggressively pursuing such cases.\n\nThe noose's status 
 as an emblem of terror is well known. It became infamous during a 
 half-century of lynching that started in the United States in the late 19th 
 century. More than 2,500 African Americans lost their lives, often by 
 hanging.\n\n"A noose is a symbol of America's oldest form of domestic 
 terrorism," said Hilary O. Shelton, director of the NAACP's Washington 
 office. "It was held up as an example to show that whoever you are, you 
 could be taken this way."\n\nAt the construction site near Pittsburgh, 
 Madyun said his white supervisor waved off his complaint: "He told me it 
 was just a joke."\n\nCompany officials could not be reached for comment, 
 but in a statement released shortly after the incident, according to 
 Pittsburgh TV stations' Web sites, they said: "Zambrano Corporation 
 deplores these actions and is investigating this offensive conduct. We're 
 taking immediate measures to stop any further incidents of this 
 nature."\n\nSoon after the noose was found, a black co-worker told Madyun 
 that a noose was left at his workstation the day before. "Obviously, it was 
 a type of ethnic intimidation," Madyun said. "At the time, there were only 
 three black workers at the site."\n\nThe chief of police of O'Hara 
 Township, where the incident took place, confirmed that it had occurred but 
 said his department is too small to carry out investigations. Madyun's case 
 was referred to detectives with the Allegheny County police. A spokesman 
 there did not return phone calls.\n\nDuring the years of widespread 
 lynching between 1882 and 1930, Congress rebuffed appeals by civil rights 
 groups to pass an anti-lynching law. Meanwhile, thousands of black people, 
 mainly men, were killed for offenses such as theft, assault and murder, as 
 well as over accusations such as "voted for the wrong party," "argued with 
 a white man," "demanded respect," "lived with a white woman," "tried to 
 vote" and "sued a white man," according to the book "A Festival of 
 Violence," a history of lynching written by two professors.\n\nIn June 
 2005, the Senate passed a resolution apologizing for not passing 
 anti-lynching legislation that could have helped quell the violence.\n\nAnd 
 yet, said Naomi C. Earp, chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity 
 Commission, nooses are still being used to intimidate African 
 Americans.\n\nEarp said the number of racial harassment cases filed at the 
 EEOC since 2000 has surpassed the total number of cases filed in the 
 1990s.\n\nHarassment cases often involve nooses, but the commission does 
 not keep track of specific allegations unless they are settled or 
 prosecuted in courts.\n\nSince 2001, the commission has filed two dozen 
 lawsuits in racial harassment cases involving nooses. In one case, white 
 employees in Texas placed a rope around a black worker's neck and choked 
 him.\n\n"It's time for corporate America to be more proactive in preventing 
 and eliminating racist behavior in the workplace," Earp said. "The EEOC 
 intends to make clear that race and color discrimination in the workplace, 
 whether verbal or behavioral, is unacceptable and will not be 
 tolerated."\n\nBut across the country, opinions regarding the impact of 
 nooses appear to differ widely. When the Greensboro News-Record ran a story 
 about the four nooses at Andrews High School, an anonymous writer posted an 
 angry comment on the newspaper's Web page.\n\n"Once again . . . over 
 reaction to a childish prank," the comment said. " . . With the over 
 reaction will probably come more copycats."\n\nIn Louisiana, the LaSalle 
 Parish schools superintendent had similar thoughts when nooses were hung at 
 Jena High School last year.\n\nThree white students tied them to the 
 schoolyard's "white tree" -- where only white students gathered -- after 
 the school's principal told a black student it was okay to sit 
 there.\n\nRather than expel the offenders, in accordance with the wishes of 
 the principal and black parents, the superintendent and school board 
 members, all white, voted to suspend the students for three days and force 
 them to attend a week of disciplinary classes.\n\nBy contrast, Grier, the 
 North Carolina superintendent, vowed to track down those who hung the 
 nooses at Andrews High. If they turn out to be students, he said, they will 
 be harshly punished.\n\n"I would recommend long-term suspension, which can 
 be between 11 and 365 days," Grier said. "It was very bothersome and 
 upsetting. It was a cowardly act."\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/11/05/18779682.php
SUMMARY:SF Forum-Stop Hanging Noose Incidents, Racism And Terrorism On The Job
LOCATION:Bayview Library 5075 3rd St,/Revere\nSan Francisco\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2015/11/05/18779682.php
DTSTART:20151128T210000Z
DTEND:20151128T230000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
