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(85,996 posts)
Sat Aug 23, 2014, 05:03 PM Aug 2014

The Man Who Loved Ferguson


Walter Rice embodies the triumphs and tragedies of this embattled Missouri town - Stephen Yang for Newsweek


_____ Rice says he does not remember much racism from his youth. He says his parents taught him from a young age that “we had a place.” His goal was to rise gradually, inconspicuously. This was the way of Booker T. Washington, not W.E.B. Du Bois. Say what you will, but it worked. Rice graduated high school with a 1.1 GPA. He is unashamed of that fact, proud that he graduated at all. Of the 21 blacks who started high school in his class of 300, only two others did.

Rice kept working in grocery stores, hoping to become a butcher: He figured the impending integration of Local 88, the meat-cutters’ union, could assure him a comfortable job and a decent life. But then Vietnam became more than just a distant nuisance, and Rice was drafted into the Army in 1962. He was trained as an electronics expert in Germany and worked at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida. In 1972, he was sent to Vietnam for nine months to retrieve electronic equipment. He recalls “rockets all the time” and is reluctant to say much more. He was awarded a bronze star, but doesn’t want to reveal for what, other than that it involved “hostilities.”




Ryan J. Reilly @ryanjreilly · 3h
8/21 #Ferguson -Vietnam vet wants police to "take this shit home" and "get that Army crap out of here."


After leaving the Army in 1982, Walter Rice did not move to a beach cabana on the Florida Panhandle or a ranch house abutting a Phoenix golf course. “I love Ferguson,” he says. So he came back there, went to Florissant Valley Community College to learn to “speak proper English” and started working for the Defense Mapping Agency, which he did until 2002. In all, Rice spent nearly 40 years toiling in the service of his nation and is as proud of its flag as the most rabid Tea Party acolyte . . .

Rice, who had major heart surgery in 2000, was not looking for a fight in the summer of 2014. He has his garden to tend to, his history to work on. He was not looking to revisit the racial grievances that he had seemingly transcended so long ago. But the killing of Brown has left Rice rattled, driving him out into the streets to protest, along with Nation of Islam true believers from St. Louis and Occupy Wall Street activists from Chicago, although neither group would appear to be his natural allies.



Stephen Yang for Newsweek


“We screwed up,” Rice says of what he sees around him today. It is a condemnation that seems to include white and black residents of Ferguson alike: the whites for abusing their power, the blacks for not wielding theirs until it was too late.

“I’m down there because I want peace,” says Rice of his long days of protest on Ferguson’s main strip. All that walking in all that heat cannot be good for his repaired heart. But until Ferguson is made right, he will keep waving his flag . . .


read more: http://www.newsweek.com/man-who-loved-ferguson-266031



Emily Kassie @emilykassie ·
8/21 #Ferguson - "I want these tanks out of here"
9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The Man Who Loved Ferguson (Original Post) bigtree Aug 2014 OP
I was watching him the night he confronted the police. He is my idea of a hero. jwirr Aug 2014 #1
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Aug 2014 #2
The clearly unconstitutional requirement that protesters and journalists keep moving, never stopping tblue37 Aug 2014 #3
I saw this gentleman on a live feed the other day. stage left Aug 2014 #4
rec! SammyWinstonJack Aug 2014 #5
K&R pinboy3niner Aug 2014 #6
I love this man. TNNurse Aug 2014 #7
K&R ReRe Aug 2014 #8
Thank you Thespian2 Aug 2014 #9

tblue37

(65,342 posts)
3. The clearly unconstitutional requirement that protesters and journalists keep moving, never stopping
Sat Aug 23, 2014, 05:51 PM
Aug 2014

to rest, pray, or conduct interviews or take pictures, makes it difficult and dangerous for older people and/or those with disabilities to exercise their right to assemble and to petition the government for redress of grievances--or for journalists to exercise their constitutionally protected function.

I am 64, overweight, and not in great health. I use a cane and have high blood pressure and heart problems. If I lived nearby, I would absolutely want to join the protests, but I cannot stand or walk for long periods. I would need to have a portable seat of some sort and to take breaks from standing and walking--but doing that has gotten protesters arrested in Ferguson, as has participating in brief group prayer circles. Journalists and protesters have also been arrested when they pause for a picture or a short interview.

For someone like me--or like this brave, decent man--being forced to continue marching for hours, with no opportunity to rest, especially in the horrendous, humid heat of a Missouri summer, is brutal and potentially lethal. I kept thinking of the death marches forced on prisoners by both the Nazis and the Japanese in WWII!

Oh, sure, that man could always just go home, and if I were there, so could I. But to make it virtually impossible to engage in peaceful protest except for very limited time (and in a manner so convenient for the repressive authirities one wishes to protest against!) is to defang protest altogether and to essentially deny many people any right at all to participate.

The ACLU has briefly mentioned this aspect of the violation of protesters' (and journalists') rights, but the emphasis has been mostly on the assault on press freedom, not on the fact that this "keep moving" rule is so obviously and brutally unconstitutional.

Even worse, some idiot of a federal judge refused to strike down that disgusting rule. At least the ACLU did say in its press release that this rule denied the First Amendment rights of older people, sick people, and people with disabilities. I hope there is a big lawsuit that focuses specifically on this aspect of the authoritarian suppression of the protesters' and journalists' rights, so that it doesn't get lost in the shuffle.

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