Tag Archive for murder

Wintertime Viewing Choices

DID YOU SEE THAT?  The “good guy” is a murderer, the “heroine” can’t live without sex until the next commercial, and we’re supposed to cheer at the explosions and torture of the “bad guys.”  Such is typical TV and movie fare.  Violence, cruelty, and lust not only sell, they also demean life.  And they feed our culture of violence/cruelty/life-is-cheap. Our refusing to watch these programs and movies is a personal step away from that negative, harmful culture. Going another step forward, we can explain to our kids why our family doesn’t watch them, thus raising a more caring, sensitive next-generation.  One more step is to write letters to the theater, TV station, film-maker, and advertisers, reminding them that their profits depend on giving us what we want to see.  If I do that, and so do you, and our friends, and their friends….  It’s the snowball-effect. What better time than now, during the cold of winter, to get that snowball rolling?

Help Save a Life

[This is a plea from Susan Sarandon.  I think it’s important enough to get the word out to as many people as possible.]

Sister Helen Prejean, who I played in “Dead Man Walking,” is fighting her every waking hour to save an innocent man Oklahoma plans to execute in just 26 days. We need your help—and we need it right now.

Sign our petition asking Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin to stop the execution of Richard Glossip.

Richard is scheduled to be executed on September 16. He was convicted of murder solely on the testimony of Justin Sneed, who confessed to the murder but claimed Richard had hired him to do it—even though there is not a shred of physical evidence to support his claim. By implicating Richard, Sneed avoided the death penalty himself and is serving a life sentence in a medium-security prison.1

Ten men on death row in Oklahoma have been exonerated in the past 35 years, four of them convicted based on the false testimony of criminals who had their sentences reduced in exchange for their testimony.2

Despite this, Gov. Fallin has said the state will go ahead with the execution.3 Our only hope is that a groundswell of public outrage forces the governor to issue a 60-day reprieve—giving Richard’s pro bono lawyers time to prove his innocence.

Add your voice to help save an innocent man’s life. Click here to add your name, and then pass it along to your friends right away.

Sneed’s own daughter wrote to the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board last October that she “strongly believe[s]” Richard is innocent. “For a couple of years now, my father has been talking to me about recanting his original testimony,” she wrote. “I feel his conscience is getting to him.”4

Decades of research and investigations show that the death penalty is discriminatory and is used disproportionately against people who are low-income (like Richard), and Black, and in cases where the victim is white.5

As Reverend Adam Leathers of Oklahoma City said, “Sixty days is a small price to pay to avoid killing an innocent man.”6

Thanks for all you do.

–Susan Sarandon

Sources:

1. “Save Richard Glossip!” Ministry Against the Death Penalty, accessed August 7, 2015
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=305872&id=129822-28025447-Opva7Rx&t=5

2. “What Happened in Room 102: Oklahoma Prepares to Execute Richard Glossip,” The Intercept, July 9, 2015
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=305994&id=129822-28025447-Opva7Rx&t=6

3. “Fallin says state is prepared ‘to hold [Richard Glossip] accountable,’ activists plead for his life,” The City Sentinel, August 10, 2015
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=305986&id=129822-28025447-Opva7Rx&t=7

4. “Clemency letter from O’Ryan Justine Sneed,” Scribd, October 23, 2014
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=306051&id=129822-28025447-Opva7Rx&t=8

5. “Death Penalty 101,” American Civil Liberties Union, accessed August 14, 2015
https://www.aclu.org/death-penalty-101

6. “Fallin says state is prepared ‘to hold [Richard Glossip] accountable,’ activists plead for his life,” The City Sentinel, August 10, 2015
http://www.moveon.org/r/?r=305986&id=129822-28025447-Opva7Rx&t=9

 

 

“Black-on-Black Crime”–a Biased Oddity

As a word person, I usually spot language oddities that have underlying bias that often goes unnoticed.  Here’s one that I’ve missed, although I don’t understand why.  I feel foolish for having let it slide by my radar.

It’s when the media talks about “black-on-black” crime.  It’s never “white-on-white” crime.  So why mention “black-on-black”?

Daily Kos says it better than I can.  Read their short article.  It has some interesting figures on inter-rational vs. same-race crimes–like how likely you are to be murdered this year by a black or white person.

The Kos article is a quick read and makes an excellent point.

 

 

 

Innocent Man is Released but Imprisoned

Imagine this: You’ve been totally cleared of murder after spending 21 years in prison.  Your state lets you out but makes you–a legally and actually innocent person–wear an ankle monitor and keep you on the books as a murderer.  That’s what’s happening to an Illinois man, Tyrone Hood.

Read a short summary of the situation, in his own words.  For more details, click on the links he gives you.  Then do something to help this man who is caught in an unjust system.  On the page giving his summary, at change.org, is a place where you can sign a petition to free him totally.  Politicians respond to pressure.

If this can happen to him, it can happen to any of us accused of any crime.