Brian McLaren knows how it feels to grow up “born again”. Raised within the legalistic and apocalyptic tenets of the Plymouth Brethren, McLaren grew up worshipping an omnipotent Christ who would soon return to wreak vengeance on the enemies of God. Gradually, over a period of decades, McLaren’s theology fell apart. Then, just as gradually, it was replaced by what he calls “a new kind of Christianity.” In fact, that’s the title of his latest book. (more…)
Wow! This took a lot of guts. The national gay debate features plenty of allegations and counter-allegations, but very few words of confession and repentance. Law professor, and Friends of Justice board member, Mark Osler is a blessed exception to the general rule. AGB
In the wake of several suicides of gay teenagers, one response has been through the “It Gets Better” project, which tells the story of gay and lesbians who have a story of hope — one in which things, over time, got better for them. (more…)
New York Times columnist Charles Blow asks why Democrats have shown such loyal support for a drug war that targets one of its core constituencies. Here’s the salient quote:
“It is, in part, callous political calculus. It’s an easy and relatively cheap way for them to buy a tough-on-crime badge while simultaneously pleasing police unions. The fact that they are ruining the lives of hundreds of thousands of black and Hispanic men and, by extension, the communities they belong to barely seems to register.”
Exhibit A is the Obama administration’s staunch support for the Byrne Grant program. The Tulia drug sting (which created Friends of Justice) was funded with Byrne money. This partly explains why George Bush made drastic cuts to the program–it had embarrassed the Lone Star State. Barack Obama knows that most Byrne funding is channelled into statistic-generating narcotics programs that (a) lock up disproportionate numbers of poor black men and (b) do absolutely nothing to address the harms associated with drug abuse.
Tragically, support for the drug war has always been a cheap way for democrats to play the tough-on-crime card. (more…)
You have probably heard that Juan Williams has been sacked by National Public Radio. I have mixed feelings.
Like Bill Cosby, Juan Williams panders to white America (and a large portion of prosperous black America) by wailing on the black under-caste. For instance, Williams recently penned a screed lamenting the sorry state of black America: “Enough: The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America–and What We Can Do About It”.
Williams is an authority on the civil rights movement and has been involved with some excellent work in this connection, most notably PBS’s “Eyes on the Prize” series. But, like far too many civil rights aficionados, he is inordinately fond of comparing the courage, intelligence and resilience of the civil rights generation with the irresponsible, dependent and self-destructive tendencies on display in poor black neighborhoods. (more…)
Fifty years ago, Hank Thomas entered Parchman prison as a Freedom Rider. I highlighted this distressing chapter of the Mississippi civil rights struggle in a post designed to establish historical context for the Curtis Flowers case. Recently, I shared a personal encounter with Parchman when I unsuccessfully attempted to visit Curtis Flowers. Last week, Hank Thomas was greeted with smiles and handshakes; in 1961 he was welcomed to Parchman by sneering guards.
Reilly Morse, a senior attorney and a founding staff member in the Biloxi office of the Mississippi Center for Justice, has shared his reflections on Hank Thomas’s return to the notorious plantation prison. Hank’s personal account is pasted below. Both articles appear in the most recent edition of Facing South, a publication of the Institute for Southern Studies. (more…)
The Frontline treatment of the Cameron Todd Willingham saga is gripping, balanced and provocative. Don’t worry if you missed it; you can watch the entire program online.
Hour-long documentaries are frequently crammed with fluff and filler, but the Willingham case demands in-depth treatment to be understood and “Death by Fire” delivers. Here are some of the conclusions: (more…)
The PBS program Frontline will be airing a program on the Cameron Todd Willingham story, “Death by Fire“, beginning October 19. Click on the link to watch a 30 second promo. I have pasted the text version of the teaser below.
Several controversial death penalty cases are currently under examination in Texas and in other states, but it’s the 2004 execution of Cameron Todd Willingham — convicted for the arson deaths of his three young children — that’s now at the center of the national debate.
In Death by Fire, FRONTLINE’s season premiere, airing Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2010, at 9 P.M. ET on PBS (check local listings), FRONTLINE gains unique access to those closest to the Willingham case — meticulously examining the evidence used to convict Willingham, offering an in-depth portrait of those most impacted by the case, and exploring the explosive implications of the execution of a possibly innocent man. (more…)
District Judge Robert Mohoney has dropped all criminal charges against Mark Richardson, Vergil Richardson, Jermichole Richardson and Xavier Richardson, bringing a three-year legal nightmare to an end.
This ruling comes as no surprise. Once Judge John McCraw Jr. forced the presiding judge, John Miller, to recuse himself, the outcome was virtually automatic. Judge Mahoney was appointed to replace Miller and it didn’t take him long to make the only sensible call available to him.
The big surprise in this case is that charges were filed against these defendants in the first place. No one has ever accused the Texas Attorney General’s office of being soft on drug crime, but when Nicole Habersang reviewed the facts she knew what she had to do. That’s when things got really strange. When Ms. habersang filed a motion requesting that charges against all but one defendant be dropped, Judge Miller refused to cooperate. (more…)
A three-judge pane representing the 3rd Court of Appeals in Austin has ordered Judge Charlie Baird to put an immediate stop to a hearing into the case of Cameron Todd Willingham.
Here’s the good news: Judge Baird’s hearing concluded just before the order arrived.
Now the bad news: Judge Baird will not be able to hand down a formal ruling until the stay is lifted. (more…)