*Google “Matt McGorry Tale of Two Cities” for full vid/article** # This past Monday night, on April 16, 2018, I was arrested and later released on the charge of disorderly conduct by the NYPD during a non-violent protest. # “A Tale of Two Cities: Making Black Lives Matter in the ‘Liberal Bubble’” # Racial oppression isn’t a red or blue problem, it’s an American problem # Monday was my fifth time marching with @nyc_shutitdown since the direct action organization began a little over three years ago. NYC Shut It Down has taken to the streets weekly on Monday nights, in actions called People’s Monday, to uplift the stories of Black and Brown people killed by the police and to call attention to the danger and displacement that gentrification — and its accompanying police presence — causes in communities of color. # I attended my first People’s Monday three years ago. At the time, we were highlighting the story of Eleanor Bumpurs, a Black woman in the middle of a mental health crisis who was killed with a shotgun by the NYPD while they were trying to evict her from her apartment. This past Monday night, we were lifting up the name of Decynthia Clements, a Black woman who was murdered by police on March 12, 2018, in Illinois. Clements also suffered from mental illness, experiencing hallucinations and suicidal thoughts, and was inhumanely handled by police in the same way we see too many people of color treated. Like many other Black women who lose their lives at the hands of police abuse, her story received minimal media coverage. The compounding effects of both racism and sexism often ensure that the stories of women of color are not heard, even when they are murdered by the police. # Finding myself back in New York City briefly last Monday, I made my way out to join the NYC Shut It Down action. Sometimes the group is smaller, as it was on this occasion, with fewer than 15 protestors. This makes the group — especially the organizers, who are people of color — more vulnerable to police harassment, abuse, and brutal arrest, all of which happens regularly. Every week the NYPD finds and meets at the People’s Monday location... # **FULL VIDEO AND LINK TO ARTICLE IN BIO**

mattmcgorryさん(@mattmcgorry)が投稿した動画 -

マット・マクゴリーのインスタグラム(mattmcgorry) - 4月24日 06時50分


*Google “Matt McGorry Tale of Two Cities” for full vid/article**
#
This past Monday night, on April 16, 2018, I was arrested and later released on the charge of disorderly conduct by the NYPD during a non-violent protest.
#
“A Tale of Two Cities: Making Black Lives Matter in the ‘Liberal Bubble’”
#
Racial oppression isn’t a red or blue problem, it’s an American problem
#
Monday was my fifth time marching with @nyc_shutitdown since the direct action organization began a little over three years ago. NYC Shut It Down has taken to the streets weekly on Monday nights, in actions called People’s Monday, to uplift the stories of Black and Brown people killed by the police and to call attention to the danger and displacement that gentrification — and its accompanying police presence — causes in communities of color.
#
I attended my first People’s Monday three years ago. At the time, we were highlighting the story of Eleanor Bumpurs, a Black woman in the middle of a mental health crisis who was killed with a shotgun by the NYPD while they were trying to evict her from her apartment. This past Monday night, we were lifting up the name of Decynthia Clements, a Black woman who was murdered by police on March 12, 2018, in Illinois. Clements also suffered from mental illness, experiencing hallucinations and suicidal thoughts, and was inhumanely handled by police in the same way we see too many people of color treated. Like many other Black women who lose their lives at the hands of police abuse, her story received minimal media coverage. The compounding effects of both racism and sexism often ensure that the stories of women of color are not heard, even when they are murdered by the police.
#
Finding myself back in New York City briefly last Monday, I made my way out to join the NYC Shut It Down action. Sometimes the group is smaller, as it was on this occasion, with fewer than 15 protestors. This makes the group — especially the organizers, who are people of color — more vulnerable to police harassment, abuse, and brutal arrest, all of which happens regularly. Every week the NYPD finds and meets at the People’s Monday location...
#
**FULL VIDEO AND LINK TO ARTICLE IN BIO**


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