Spotlight PR brings quality public relations assistance into reach for mission-driven causes as well as socially conscious entrepreneurs, celebrities and executives.

Black Southern Women’s Collaborative Member in Memphis: We Will Not Go Back to the Same Oppressive Systems. We Will Move, March, Protest, Organize, Power Build, and Strategize Until Demands Are Met

For Immediate Release

Jan. 28, 2023

Black Southern Women’s Collaborative Member in Memphis: We Will Not Go Back to the Same Oppressive Systems. We Will Move, March, Protest, Organize, Power Build, and Strategize Until Demands Are Met

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Today, Tameka Greer, executive director of Memphis Artists for Change (MAC) and a member of the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative (BSWC), vowed that activists will continue organizing, mobilizing, and strategizing until communities are free from oppressive systems that harm. Greer released the following statement on behalf of MAC and the BSWC:

“Last night community organizers, community activists, community members and concerned people of the city of Memphis, not only honored the wishes of Tyre Nichols’ parents and family, but we also stood in alignment and solidarity with them. Our greatest hope is that this message is heard loud and clear: We will not stop, and we will not go back to business as usual. We will not return to the same oppressive systems that have continually hurt our community. The family made demands and the community has made demands. We will move, march, protest, organize, power build, and strategize until those demands are met.”

The family’s demands include:

  • Releasing body cam footage,
  • Charging the officers,
  • Naming all officers and public personnel on the scene the night Tyre Nichols was brutally beat, and
  • Releasing the files of the officers involved.

The community’s demands include:

  • Passing the Data Transparency ordinance,
  • Ending the use of pre-textual traffic stops,
  • Ending the use of unmarked cars and plainclothes officers,
  • Dissolving the SCORPION, OCU and MGU and other task forces, and
  • Removing police from traffic enforcement entirely.

###

Race Forward Urges Systemic Change in Light of Police Killing of Tyre Nichols; Continued Police Violence Against People of Color

For Immediate Release

Jan. 27, 2023

Race Forward Urges Systemic Change in Light of Police Killing of Tyre Nichols; Continued Police Violence Against People of Color

NEW YORK – Race Forward today decried the killing of Tyre Nichols at the hands of five Memphis Police Department officers. The organization provided the following statement:

“Our hearts break for the family of Tyre Nichols,” said Glenn Harris, president, Race Forward. “No family should have to bury a loved one due to reckless and inhumane treatment from those sworn to protect and serve. And as we send condolences to Nichols’ family, we simultaneously continue to call for police accountability and systemic changes to policing, particularly in communities of color.”

“Race Forward works to dismantle systems of inequity because we know racism is structured not only through skin color and ethnicity, but also through systems and structures of power,” said Charlene Sinclair, chief of staff and publisher of Colorlines. “In this country, racist power within policing allows those in these systems to make life-and-death decisions. These systems create environments of terror, violence, and oppression against Black people and people of color. When trauma and tragedy such as the killing of Tyre Nichols occurs, we must not only challenge person-to-person racism, but also the racism that is embedded within structures and systems.”

 

“The immediate firing of the officers involved in Tyre Nichols death is not historically what we’ve seen,” Sinclair said. “Typically, the officers are put on administrative leave, and later absolved.) And while there must be individual accountability, this is bigger than the termination of individual officers. We must also demand change of the systems that permit the continued killings of Black people and people of color so there can be different outcomes.”

“We not only want justice in this individual case, but we want to see a world where oppressive systems are eliminated and where the health and dignity of all people of color is upheld and prioritized,” Harris added. “To ensure freedom for communities of color, we demand accountability and a completely transformed system.”

###

Founded in 1981, Race Forward brings systemic analysis and an innovative approach to complex race issues to help people take effective action toward racial equity. Race Forward is home to the Government Alliance on Race and Equity, a national network of local governments working to achieve racial equity and advance opportunities for all. Race Forward publishes Colorlines and presents Facing Race, the country’s largest multiracial conference on racial justice.

 

 

Plan & Secure the Media Spotlight You Deserve. Download our 2025 Editorial Calendar.