æonpax
May 4, 2012, 10:38 AM
A murder occurred in Oakland early Sunday morning. As of this posting, there is exactly one -- count it -- one, article about the incident in the media, at least as measured by Google News hits for Oakland murder.
37-year-old Brandy Martell was sitting behind the wheel of her car around 5:15 a.m. at when one or two men walked up and began a conversation. A witness told ABC7 the conversation was cordial, but then.. one of the men became angry and fired into the car right where Martell was sitting.
"When you don't provide a space in society for people who you think are the other or different, especially transgender women, especially transgender women of color, when you don't provide spaces for them to be in a safe environment or a safe space, whether it's socializing or services, this is what happens," Martell's friend Tiffany Woods told ABC7. Source - http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/04/30/1087705/-Transgender-woman-murdered-in-Oakland-Nobody-Cares-
`
For those of you who actually will click on the source of this article and actually read the entire thing, it's not so much about a transgendered female being murdered but the lack of media coverage about it. The question is; should it have had more coverage?
In the news forum I got this from, that was the discussion. Most said that considering the fact that Oakland, California has a disproportionate amount of murders anyways, what makes it anymore special or different than the other? Does that fact that she is transgendered give it a higher priority or that she was a black and transgendered?
http://i.imgur.com/vqTVz.jpg
Sometimes, it just takes a little nudge for a story to spread. As of right now, 57 media outlets including a few nationals have picked it up. At least one, The San Francisco Gate, referring to this as a "hate crime" ( http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/05/04/BAOT1OD611.DTL&tsp=1 )
My Take - #1. The California LGBT is remarkably silent in this incident considering that I've seen them jump all over incidents involving gays and lesbians. #2. I can't shake the idea that no matter whom we are and what we are, we are all human and important, from the those considered to be the least to the rich and powerful. I will morn this person's passing not becuase she's female, transgendered or black but becuase she's a member of the community of humankind and no person deserves to have their life taken from them.
37-year-old Brandy Martell was sitting behind the wheel of her car around 5:15 a.m. at when one or two men walked up and began a conversation. A witness told ABC7 the conversation was cordial, but then.. one of the men became angry and fired into the car right where Martell was sitting.
"When you don't provide a space in society for people who you think are the other or different, especially transgender women, especially transgender women of color, when you don't provide spaces for them to be in a safe environment or a safe space, whether it's socializing or services, this is what happens," Martell's friend Tiffany Woods told ABC7. Source - http://www.dailykos.com/story/2012/04/30/1087705/-Transgender-woman-murdered-in-Oakland-Nobody-Cares-
`
For those of you who actually will click on the source of this article and actually read the entire thing, it's not so much about a transgendered female being murdered but the lack of media coverage about it. The question is; should it have had more coverage?
In the news forum I got this from, that was the discussion. Most said that considering the fact that Oakland, California has a disproportionate amount of murders anyways, what makes it anymore special or different than the other? Does that fact that she is transgendered give it a higher priority or that she was a black and transgendered?
http://i.imgur.com/vqTVz.jpg
Sometimes, it just takes a little nudge for a story to spread. As of right now, 57 media outlets including a few nationals have picked it up. At least one, The San Francisco Gate, referring to this as a "hate crime" ( http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/05/04/BAOT1OD611.DTL&tsp=1 )
My Take - #1. The California LGBT is remarkably silent in this incident considering that I've seen them jump all over incidents involving gays and lesbians. #2. I can't shake the idea that no matter whom we are and what we are, we are all human and important, from the those considered to be the least to the rich and powerful. I will morn this person's passing not becuase she's female, transgendered or black but becuase she's a member of the community of humankind and no person deserves to have their life taken from them.