Here is today’s schedule at Memorial Park, for those interested. I’m speaking with organizers on site.
One organizer of the Memorial protest today is @Westside66 rising junior Elise Smith, 16, pictured, middle. She says she wanted to organize a protest that addressed her parents’ safety concerns and offered a chance to peacefully talk about issues of inequality, loss and change.
That’s her dad, Richard Smith, 57, in yellow. He says he’s proud his daughter and others are standing up for what they believe in.
Also attending today and hoping to speak is #JamesScurlock’s sister RaJeanna Scurlock, 20. She says she feels a responsibility to give people who support her brother a little of his voice, since he can’t use his own.
She says people need to know he was a good person, not the person some people make him out to be. She says he is the person she saw on the video of his shooting death trying to save people around him from a man with a gun.
She says it was important to bring her son Marquis, 2, to the protest today for as long as he can last in the 90-degree heat. She wants him to see change is possible, change in attitudes and change in action.
He’s in red.
Scurlock said of her brother, James: “I want them to know he sacrificed himself for other people. He wanted to disarm that man to help them.”
The folks @OmahaPolice are here talking to organizers about how to safely get them across Dodge to Elmwood Park for a brief march after a balloon release.
Among the police contingent here taking to a handful of protesters is Deputy Chief Ken Kanger, @OPDDCKanger, pictured here talking with Anthony Johnson Jr. of Omaha, 28. Johnson said he was pleased to see important discussions reach a wider community.
Many members of the Scurlock family have arrived, including two of his brothers, wearing memorial shirts.
One of the people in a tent handing out bottled water is @UNMC_DrKhan, in the back.
Handful of folks taking cover under trees. Most gathering near a tent.
Small but enthusiastic crowd so far.
Organizers and members of the Scurlock family fill balloons for a planned balloon release.
Folks milling about waiting for the scheduled start.
Here’s a panoramic shot to give you an idea of the crowd size so far.
Nicholas Harden, one of Scurlock’s brother, speaks about how his family never imagined they would be put on a list of people who have lost their lives in such a terrible way. “This is peace and equality, and we need to reach it, and let’s reach it as a team.”
Scurlock started the rally, which has drawn about 100-150 people.
Balloons have been released.
Organizers let Marquis, 2, release the last one. He is Scurlock’s nephew.
Now @UNMC_DrKhan of @unmc is talking now about the need to speak up against institutional and systemic racism. He says he is a priveleged man who has faced uncomfortable comments and slurs. He has never feared for his life like black Americans, who fear for their lives daily.
Khan says nearly 7 million black Americans are currently locked up. He says there is no clearer evidence of systemic racism. When do we say enough is enough, that there will be no peace without justice. (He thanked the young organizer for hosting a family friendly event.)
Khan said it’s not a real protest if you’re privileged and you’re not uncomfortable. He said that protests also need chants. So Elise led one.
Khan says you can’t stop racism from your couch. Asks people to find an organization they support who does work on causes of equality. Says people can volunteer. Says it’s not up to their friends who are people of color to explain racism in America. Go and learn yourself.
A view of the crowd from the shade so I can tweet. (Phone was getting hot.)
Peggy English, 22, right, and Maddy Driscoll, 22, left, said they came Friday so their friends would know they support the cause of #BlackLivesMatter. English said she was tired of feeling helpless and wanted to do something. Driscoll said she wanted to support Scurlock’s family.
Festersen now talking. Says he’s happy to welcome people to his district, and he’s looking forward to marching over to Elmwood Park. Says the city hears them, that we must work on justice and equality together, and peacefully.
Now speaking is @karaforcongress, who says she’s running to represent all of the people here today. She says people have to realize the system suppression and racism because of a lack of political will. What you are doing in peacefully exerting our voices is working.
Says her race is one where showing up to vote could make a difference, in her race for Congress against @DonJBacon. Bacon attended a rally this week in North Omaha.
Organizer Elise Smith thanks people for coming to the event. She is the founder of the #BlackLivesMatter Omaha group. She said it was her dream to become a civil rights activist. The drive for change has never left my heart. I was daydreaming about the 70s.
Smith said she now sees that children and grandchildren will talk about the 2020s as a decade of change. Floyd’s death was not the start of this movement. He was the straw that broke the camel’s back.
Smith: I don’t want another name on another list. I don’t want to fear every time I see a gun and a badge. I need this movement. My dad. People down the street. It’s way past time to see black lives matter.
Smith: Of course all lives matter. But when there is a clear inequality, something has to change. If you have one kid who scraped his knee and one who was hit by a car, who needs help first? That’s why black lives matter.
About to start the march.
While we wait I want to thank people for following along. I’ll try to post some videos during the march if my phone can handle the heat. If not I’ll do it when it cools down. #OmahaProtests
Here they go, led by a high school junior to be, Elise Smith.
Crossing Dodge, headed to the Elmwood Park pavilion.
Crowd line outside the Tim Walz rally in La Vista.
Here’s the inside of the venue.
As long as signal allows, I'll live tweet. Here's what's going on today. Nebraska native Tim Walz, the Minnesota governor who Vice President Kamala Harris chose as her running mate, has come back.
The #Nebraska Legislature after dark tonight is discussing an unfriendly amendment to LB 1300 that opens the possibility of a test vote for the potential of changing the way the state awards its Electoral College votes. Most do not see the votes to clear a filibuster. (THREAD)
For people just tuning in: Many of the Democrats and a progressive registered nonpartisan in the officially nonpartisan unicameral (one-house) Legislature are extolling the virtues of continuing to split up Nebraska's electoral votes by congressional district.
At issue for some, including former President @realDonaldTrump, is that the Omaha-based 2nd Congressional District remains one of the nation's most competitive. It voted for President @JoeBiden in 2020, sending one of the state's five electoral votes to the Democrat over Trump.
At the presser for the Support Our Schools group that says they have gathered nearly double the signatures they needed to get on the #Nebraska’s 2024 general election ballot. They’ve been delivering boxes to Sec of State.
Will try to tweet a little of the presser.
NSEA president Jenni Benson says the sheer number of signatures “sends a powerful message to elected officials and Nebraskans need them to listen. Nebraskans support public schools.”
Thread today @NEGOP’s State Central Committee meeting in Norfolk. They’re discussing typical party business. Some of the focus will be on a party constitutional amendment proposal to remove the voting power of four GOP-affiliated groups from state party’s Executive Committee.
The proposal from a 3rd District member, would make advisory members instead of voting members out of the Federation of Republican Women, Young Republicans, College Republicans and High School Republicans. The GOP chair could then exclude any of them from certain exec meetings.
This likely sounds like gobbledygook. Essentially, some partisans say they want to take away these votes because the groups side more often with the traditional wing of the GOP or the Ricketts wing. Some rural folks think the groups give unfair power to urban and suburban areas.
The folks handling Capitol Security and the redcoats are taking the step today of separating the supporters and opponents of Legislative Bill 626, a proposal to ban abortions in the state after an ultrasound detects embryonic cardiac activity.
There are already some folks here standing in the Rotunda who say they are against LB 626.