Mike Espy talks about Jacob Blake

Meredith,

Earlier this week, a young Black man named Jacob Blake was shot in the back seven times at close range by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin. It happened in front of his children. Jacob’s father now says his son is paralyzed from the waist down.

This is the kind of unnecessary, violent injustice that Black people see every day. People ask, what can we do?

But no matter the amount of technology, no matter the training, no matter the amount of money to improve police departments, the reason we still see this injustice is because of inherent bias. We have police officers who may devalue the life of Black people. And that’s what we have to change.

I want to tell you a quick story. I’m the proud father of three Black children. My oldest son played for the NFL, until he got hurt and opened a gym here in Mississippi. He trains young athletes and inspires them to chase their dreams, playing football in college and professionally.

One day, my son was training a client in a private gym where he owned a membership. There were only three people in the whole gym: My son, his athlete, and a white off-duty Ridgeland policeman. The policeman wore no uniform — he was in gym clothes.

Now, like a lot of us, my son sometimes utters profanities when helping people lift weights, to rile them up to lift more. In this case, he was cursing as his client lifted a barbell.

But the off-duty officer approached my son and said, “If you don’t quit cursing, I’m going to arrest you.”

My son didn’t know if this guy was telling the truth — he was wearing gym clothes, not a badge.

My son said, “Well, do it then.”

All of sudden, police cruisers arrived at this private gym. Police officers arrested my boy, handcuffed him, and took him to the jail overnight. An African-American, former NFL player, whose dad was a congressman and cabinet secretary.

It doesn’t matter who you are, who you’re related to, or what the technology is. It goes back to the inherent bias. It matters if you think the color of your skin gives you more rights than another human being. And that’s what we have to change.

After George Floyd was murdered, I went with both my sons to a Black Lives Matter march in Jackson organized by young Black Mississippians. There were protests organized all over Mississippi, the country, and the world. At the march I attended in Jackson, 200 marchers were expected — but 3,000 showed up.

We marched to make sure that people in Mississippi understand that we no longer stand for lawlessness from law enforcement, and we’ve seen the groundswell after that march. There is a direct line from the Black Lives Matter march in June to taking down that Mississippi flag in July.

All week, I’ve thought of Jeremiah’s words: “They have treated the wounds of My people like they were not serious, Saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace.”

I will continue to demand action on this issue. And I pray for Jacob Blake, his mother, his sister, and his children. The violence against unarmed Black people — names we know, and names we don’t know — must end.

— Mike Espy

Independent Bookstore Day with Meredith Etc, an online retailer

Meredith Etc black & female owned

Meredith Etc, an online book retailer based in Jackson, Mississippi invites readers to explore its collection. This small press was established in February of 2013. Since inception, it has accumulated 25 titles. “Over a dozen of our collection including several textbooks featuring the black experience,” said Publisher/Acquisition Editor, Meredith Coleman McGee. The collection offers diversity as authors are young, middle aged, older and consist of different races.

The company’s book collection includes children activity, reference, and chapter books; biographies and memoirs; historical fiction and novellas, poetry and prose; and more. Shop now. https://meredithetc.com/

The company publishes memoirs, autobiographies, biographies, books of poetry, short story anthologies, historical fiction, novellas, mystery novels. Other genres are considered on a case by case basis. see Author Submission Guidelines https://meredithetc.com/author-submissions/

Our books are available where ever you buy books! You may also shop now from this site.
Meredith Coleman McGee is facilitating “Publish My Book” seminar, Sept 8, 2020 via Zoom from 12:30 to 1:30 pm central time zone. The event is free an open to the public.

Happy reading my friend

Happy reading my friend. Thank you for purchasing print copies of “James Meredith: Warrior and the America that created him” and “Social Justice and Christianity.”

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1793405255

Review of “James Meredith: Warrior and the America that created him and his generation.”

was an honor to obtain a review from a relative.

Meredith Etc ... OFFICIAL SITE, online bookstore/publisher, Jackson, MS's avatarMeredith Etc

Aaron Timoteo

Hello, Ms. McGee! I recently received a copy of your biography of your uncle, and I just want to thank you for all the research and passion you poured into that project. I’m a first cousin twice removed from Mr. Meredith (a fellow descendant of William & Roxie Patterson through Esau Patterson’s line), and I have been amazed at all the family history you’ve collected. The stories that were passed down are inspiring, tragic, and hope-giving all at once, and I’m so grateful that you’ve captured them. (And that’s just after reading the first chapter!) So I just wanted to express my deep appreciation for your work, and I pray God blesses whatever you do next.

Slightly smiling face

🙏🏾

Best hopes from one distant cousin to another, Aaron T. Sheppard

Relative of the author and James Meredith leaves review after learning new information about the family.

View original post

Review of “James Meredith: Warrior and the America that created him and his generation.”

Aaron Timoteo

Hello, Ms. McGee! I recently received a copy of your biography of your uncle, and I just want to thank you for all the research and passion you poured into that project. I’m a first cousin twice removed from Mr. Meredith (a fellow descendant of William & Roxie Patterson through Esau Patterson’s line), and I have been amazed at all the family history you’ve collected. The stories that were passed down are inspiring, tragic, and hope-giving all at once, and I’m so grateful that you’ve captured them. (And that’s just after reading the first chapter!) So I just wanted to express my deep appreciation for your work, and I pray God blesses whatever you do next.

Slightly smiling face
🙏🏾

Best hopes from one distant cousin to another, Aaron T. Sheppard

Relative of the author and James Meredith leaves review after learning new information about the family.

Enjoy a free audio book Tragedy, Yet, Triumphant

Please enjoy one free audio review copy of Tragedy, Yet, Triumphant, now available on Audible. Redeem the one-time use code below at https://www.audible.co.uk/acx-promo

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Enjoy a free audio download of Starkishia: Estrella

Please enjoy one free audio review copy of Starkishia: Estrella, now available on Audible. Redeem the one-time use code below at https://www.audible.co.uk/acx-promo

7K6G3LA8C3N2Y

free download of Tragedy, Yet, Triumphant

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08DP3T4VQ/ref=tmm_aud_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr= Audible.com

3AYZXKEN52WJ9 use code to get a free download of Tragedy, Yet, Triumphant

we lost giants of the Civil Rights movement, John Lewis, Emma Sanders, Charles Evers, and C.T. Vivian

“We have a mission and a mandate to be on the right side of history.” —John Lewis

“People do not choose rebellion, it is forced upon them. Revolution is always an act of self- defense.” —C.T. Vivian

In the past weeks, we lost giants of the Civil Rights movement, John Lewis, Emma Sanders, Charles Evers, and C.T. Vivian. Leaders who blazed a trail for our current uprising in defense of Black lives.

Elders who made it possible for us to reimagine public safety, be bold enough to demand we #DefundPolice, and set forth an unflinching vision for Black lives now and for generations to come.

Our work will always honor and uplift the ancestors and elders who illuminated our path.

I’ve been sitting with this moment of great loss, dreaming about what comes next, and imagining how we can live up to the faith and sacrifices made by Lewis and Vivian in dedicating their lives to Black liberation. They hailed from small towns in the South and Midwest, challenging the authority of white supremacy their whole lives..

What will we—those of us who hopefully have decades of fight left in us, those of us who are still here even as the entire system is designed to kill or limit us—do to honor their memories and uphold their legacies?

It is our turn to carry on the mandate that Lewis, Vivian, and so many more left for us. We honor all the women and men, the queer, trans, nonbinary, disabled, and poor folks—all the freedom fighters without whom the Movement for Black Lives would not be possible.

Poll after poll in recent weeks tells us that the American people are ready for change. The New York Times found that support for our movement has grown faster in the last month than it has in the last two years.

We’ve been charting a course from protest to power to the polls to build toward this summer’s Black National Convention. Since May, the U.S. has seen one of the longest series of protests in the country’s history. We learned from our elders that protests are a necessary means to reach our goals. The 1963 March on Washington was one of the largest political rallies in U.S. history, and it helped pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

  • Now, we are poised to make the BREATHE Act, a modern-day civil rights bill that will defund the police and invest in Black communities, a reality.
  • This week, we joined partners at SEIU, Rising Majority, and more to Strike for Black Lives, mobilizing tens of thousands in 160 cities and 12 countries to demand justice and an end to racism and exploitation throughout our society, economy, and workplaces.
  • Next month, we’ll host the 2020 Black National Convention where we’ll set a Black agenda to lead our work, no matter who sits in the White House in January 2021.
  • During Black August, we will also launch our full Vision for Black Lives policy platform to clearly state our demands for how we win and build the world of our dreams.

We’re gearing up for a Freedom Summer to build local power toward the vision for Black lives, continuing the legacy of John Lewis, C.T. Vivian, Charles Evers, Emma Sanders, and the Freedom Summer of 1964.

We’re inspired by the bravery and resilience of our ancestors. We’re taking risks, along with the necessary precautions, to transform our communities—not only for ourselves but for the next generation. We seek to leave the same legacy for them that our elders left for us.

Help us build the world our ancestors dreamed of. Take action with us today!

  • Register for the 2020 Black National Convention at BlackNovember.org.
  • Share our posts on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.
  • Text DEFEND TO 90975 to receive our calls to action.
  • Support the demands of Chicago’s #DefundCPD campaign by amplifying their action tomorrow on Facebook and Instagram

In solidarity,

Kayla Reed, Co-Founder and Political Strategist
Electoral Justice Project of the Movement for Black Lives