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Media “discovers” Jena Six 30 seconds after Sharpton, Jackson

This first appeared at Too Sense. dnA writes:

Last week, I came to the realization that the relationship between the Media’s interest in a story about racial inequality is directly proportional to the degree that Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson is involved. Simply put, while the two above men are often derided as camera chasers, it is perhaps more accurate to say that the cameras chase them.

The New Orleans Times-Picayune has its first and only article on the Jena Six dated August 2, the subject of which is Sharpton’s impending visit to Louisiana, and noting Jesse Jackson’s comments. Despite being a four hour drive from Jena, the editors at the Times-Picayune decided they’d leave this one to the Associated Press:

JENA, La. (AP) — Rev. Al Sharpton will speak in a Jena church on Sunday in support of six black students — some still facing attempted murder charges in connection with the beating of a white school mate.

Sharpton is scheduled to speak at the Trout Creek Baptist Church in Jena Sunday.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, calling the charges against the six black teens known as the “Jena Six” “disgraceful” said he was coming to Jena to spread a message of “reconciliation rather than retaliation.”

Of course, the BBC, which is a news organization based in an entirely different country across the Atlantic Ocean, felt the story of the Jena Six was newsworthy three months ago. Louisiana’s biggest paper decided to do a story only after they found out Jesse and Al were going to show up.

The Washington Post has given the best coverage of the event so far in the American mainstream media, but their first real article on the subject comes two days after the announcement of Sharpton and Jacksons’ visit.

Finish here.

Posted at 8:05 AM, Aug 06, 2007 in News | Permalink | View Comments


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This is SO true. I complained about this during the Imus incident at school.

Posted by: April | August 6, 2007 8:26 PM

An Open Letter To The Jena Six
By Joseph Young
Dear Mychal,
I keep thinking about you. I also think about the other young men who have fallen prey to racial hatred. Its existence, more than a century after Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, makes me fearful for your life, your safety. The freedom that it promised was tenuous.
It was not entirely without strength. In the proclamation, issued three years into the Civil War, Lincoln declared, at the urging of Frederick Douglass, that the former slaves would be accepted into the Union Army and navy, making the liberated the liberator. By the war’s end, almost 200,000 black servicemen had fought for freedom and saved the Union.
Your generation, like mine, is being denied this freedom our ancestors risked life and limb, so that we may live as free men and women. You can call them heroes, but they were not thinking of themselves when they displayed courage and self-sacrifice on the battlefields of America.
Today, then, to guard against the impending doom of American civilization, is not only opposition to racism, but also the determination to secure the civil rights for which many Americans have paid a heavy toll. Of all the civil rights, the right to learn is the surest prevention from ignorance. If at any time, children are instructed with anti-black bias; and they are made to learn what is not true and what the dominate forces in their lives want them to think is true; there’re guilty of impeding the march toward American civilization.
Astonishing as it is that those students would hang three nooses from the tree at Jena High School as a racial taunt, including calling the black students ‘niggers’; you would think that America would never again want to see a black person hang from a tree, or behind bars. The nooses show that we, Americans, have not come that far from the cruelties and barbarity of slavery as we think. (Between 1882 and 1968, an estimated 5,000 people, mostly blacks, met their deaths at the hands of lynch mobs.) And this also is an unfortunate comment upon the belief that our schools are the great path to progress, the great equalizer. If our schools are the great path to progress, they must be the freest of our institutions, opposed bitterly to the attempt to indoctrinate our children with racial hatred.
Well, Mychal, as you and the others wait behind bars because of a racially biased and an over zealous prosecutor, it is for us on the outside to continue the unfinished work of our fathers, to set you free. All of you were willing to fight racial hatred, and you know people of goodwill are beside you. If the Confederacy couldn’t stop us, the opposition we now face will fail. When history is written your detractors will get little note, but you will be remembered for standing up for what’s best of the American creed. You are part of a legacy in which our slave forebears fought to birth a new nation. You, Mychal, are a child of America’s destiny.
It was Martin Luther King who said if a man doesn’t have something worth dying for he is not fit to live. Freedom is worth dying for. Justice is worth dying for. Equality is worth dying for. A child is worth dying for, because our job as parents is to protect children.
Mychal, when you feel complete frustration and your narrow jail cell is closing in on your spirit and mind; remember the message of the old slave preacher to his flock whose resistance to oppression might have been completely in vain:
“You are created in God’s image. You are not slaves, you are not ‘niggers’; you are God’s children.”
Godspeed Mychal,
Your brother in the struggle, Joseph

Posted by: joseph young | August 16, 2007 6:26 PM