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Tyre Nichols killing goes race for Twin Cities community leaders
Many in communities across the country find themselves speechless at what’s unfolding in Memphis, Tennessee.
MINNEAPOLIS — As wounds amid a racial reckoning continue to heal,
“It’s okay to take time to rest and recuperate whenever you can,” said Dr. Alvin Akibar, director with the Urban League Twin Cities Center for Social Justice Research.
Many in communities across the country find themselves speechless at what’s unfolding in Memphis Tennessee.
“I don’t really have words, I just can’t imagine what the family and community are dealing with,” said Justin Terrell, Executive Director of the Minnesota Justice Research Center.
Yet the trauma of police brutality involving another unarmed Black man, killed by five Black police officers is top of mind once again for Terrell.
“How we do law enforcement it shouldn’t matter what color the person is wearing the uniform, they have a duty and a responsibility to help people, to help build safe communities,” said Terrell.
Communities like the one at 38th and Chicago, which was ground zero nearly three years ago, initiating the start of this country’s racial reckoning.
“We know that on 38th and Chicago, right around the corner it was an Asian officer, and a mixed officer who aided and abetted Derek Chauvin when he lynched a Black man,” said Marcia Howard, who’s been out at George Floyd Square since day one.
While there is a racial component tied to the death of Tyre Nichols,
“I think it’s definitely going to be an important part of the conversation here,” said Dr. Akibar.
The issue this time around for some, is much deeper than race.
“Five black men? They’re blue, they’re blue. The culture of policing is what lead to the death of George Floyd, it lead to the death of Tyre Nichols,” said Howard.
She went on to say, “this nation has to deal with the fact that the culture of policing is predicated upon anti-blackness, and until we fully deal with it we’ll continue to have the brutality that we are seeing on film.”
“Everyday the work matters to build a more just criminal legal system to ensure that we’re building safe communities,” said Terrell.
Despite the killing of Nichols, some point to the progress being made by the men and women in blue who truly do care about the well-being and safety of those in our community.
“They can’t do this work if we continue to allow for this kind of behavior, and we can’t help them be better at their jobs if we don’t reckon with the history that got us to this point,” said Terrell.
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Aitkin County crash leaves 2 dead, others hurt
The crash happened when a Suburban pulling a trailer failed to stop at a stop sign, Minnesota State Patrol said.
WAUKENABO, Minn. — Two people from Minnetonka died in a crash Friday in Aitkin County while others, including children, were hurt.
According to Minnesota State Patrol, it happened at the intersection of Highway 169 and Grove Street/County Road 3 in Waukenabo Township at approximately 5:15 p.m.
A Suburban pulling a trailer was driving east on County Road 3 but did not stop at the stop sign at Highway 169, authorities said. The vehicle was struck by a northbound GMC Yukon. Two other vehicles were struck in the crash, but the people in those two cars were not injured.
In the Suburban, the driver sustained life-threatening injuries, according to State Patrol. Elizabeth Jane Baldwin, 61, of Minnetonka, and Marlo Dean Baldwin, 92, of Minnetonka, both died. Officials said the driver of the vehicle, a 61-year-old from Minnetonka, has life-threatening injuries.
There were six people in the Yukon when the crash occurred. The 44-year-old driver, as well as passengers ages 18, 14, and 11, sustained what officials described as life-threatening injuries. The other two passengers have non-life-threatening injuries.
Alcohol is not believed to be a factor in the crash, but officials said Elizabeth Jane Baldwin had not been wearing a seatbelt.
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Runner shares his journey with addiction ahead of Twin Cities Marathon
Among those at the start line this year will be Alex Vigil.
Read the original article
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Minnesotan behind ‘Inside Out 2’ helps kids name ‘hard emotions’
Pixar’s second installment of the movie features characters we’ve already met — Joy, Sadness and Anger — and gives them a new roommate named Anxiety.
MINNEAPOLIS — Pixar’s “Inside Out 2” universe plays out inside the mind of the movie’s adolescent protagonist, Riley.
She plays a kid from Minnesota whose family uproots her life by moving to San Francisco. But did you know that what plays out in Riley’s mind actually comes from the mind of a real-life Minnesotan?
“You are one of us!” said Breaking the News anchor Jana Shortal.
“Yes, I am!” said Burnsville native and the movie’s creator and director, Kelsey Mann.
Mann was chosen for the role by ANOTHER Minnesotan — Pete Docter, the man behind the original movie, “Inside Out.”
“I don’t know if Pete asked me to do this movie because I was from Minnesota and he was from Minnesota … I just think it worked out that way,” Mann said.
How two guys from the south metro made a pair of Pixar movies that would change the game is a hell of a story that began with Docter in 2015.
“He [Docter] was just trying to tell a fun story — an emotional, fun story — and didn’t realize how much it would help give kids a vocabulary to talk about things they were feeling because they are feeling those emotions, but they’re really hard to talk about,” Mann said.
Some parents, counselors and teachers might even tell you it did more good for kids than just entertain them. It unlocked their emotions and begged for what Mann set out to create at the beginning of 2020.
“That part was fun, particularly fun,” he said. “I think the daunting part was following up a film that everyone really loved.”
But Mann knew what he wanted to do with the movie’s follow-up, “Inside Out 2.”
“Diving into Riley’s adolescence … that was just fun,” he said.
This time around, Riley is 13, hitting puberty and facing all of what, and who, comes with it. The franchise’s second installment features characters we’ve already met — Joy, Sadness and Anger — and gives them a new roommate named Anxiety.
“I think that’s what’s fun about the ‘Inside Out’ world: You can take something we all know and give it a face,” Mann said. “We can give anxiety a name and a face.”
The film follows Riley’s emotions fighting it out for control of her life. Joy wants Riley to stay young and hold on only to joy, while anxiety is hell-bent on taking over Riley over at the age of 13 because as a lot of us know, that’s when anxiety often moves in.
“I always pitched it as a takeover movie, like an emotional takeover,” Mann said. “Anxiety can kind of feel like that; it can take over and kind of shove your other emotions to the side and repress them.”
For a kids’ movie, it’s hard to watch this animation play out, even when an adult has the keys to decide.
“I’m making a movie about anxiety and I still have to remind myself to have my anxiety take a seat,” Mann said.
All of our individual anxieties have a place in this world.
“The whole movie honestly is about acceptance. Both acceptance of anxiety being there and also of your own flaws,” said Mann.
Even for our kids, we have to remember that this is life.
Anxiety will come for them; it does for us all.
The “Inside Out” world just shows them it’s so.
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