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Amid George Floyd protests, US companies stand up for racial injustice

  • June 04, 2020

Protests over the killing of George Floyd, police violence and institutional racism have gripped cities across the United States and around the world, with tens of thousands taking to the streets to demand change. But the movement has now spread beyond individuals, with many companies also expressing solidarity with the protesters.

Read more: Stars show solidarity with George Floyd protesters

“Racism continues to be at the root of so much pain and ugliness in our society — from the streets of Minneapolis to the disparities inflicted by COVID-19,” wrote Mark Mason, the chief financial officer of Citigroup bank, in a corporate blog post last week. Mason is one of very few black executives to have made it to the top of a global corporation. According to Boston Consulting Group, only three of the 500 biggest companies in the US are headed by an African American. One of them, Kenneth Frazier, has been CEO of the pharmaceutical giant Merck for nine years. “Our society is more divided than it’s ever been,” he said in a recent interview with CNBC.

People loot a Nike store in New York

Despite being targeted by looters, many top brands have shown their support for the protests

Coffee chain Starbucks, global asset manager BlackRock, sporting goods manufacturer Nike, bank JP Morgan and the Disney Channel have also spoken out against racial injustice.

“We stand with our fellow black employees, storytellers, creators and the entire black community. We must unite and speak out,” Disney said in a statement posted to its various social platforms. 

Twitter changed the color of its logo from blue to black, using the hashtag # BlackLivesMatter, while Netflix issued a statement saying: “To be silent is to be complicit.” Reebok, a subsidiary of German sporting goods giant Adidas, wrote on Saturday: “We are not asking you to buy our shoes. We are asking you to walk in someone else’s.”

Other companies have announced changes to their internal policies. Grindr, a dating app that describes itself as the “world’s largest social networking app for gay, bi, trans, and queer people,” said it would remove the ethnicity filter from its next release.

General Motors CEO Mary Barra announced she would chair a new advisory board featuring top executives and external community leaders, to promote equality and make her company one of the most inclusive. “There comes a time when we are compelled to stop diagnosing what is wrong and start advocating for what is right,” she said earlier this week.

Read more: African Americans face deadly endemic police violence in US

On Tuesday, gaming giant Activision said it would postpone the release of new content updates in order to leave space for the campaign for equality and justice. And Universal Music also announced plans to set up an internal task force to counter racial injustice.

‘Important change’

Wendy Melillo, an associate professor at the American University in Washington D.C. who focuses on strategic communication, said it was good for companies’ images to say they would do something against inequality and injustice. She said consumers, particularly those of the younger generation who have been out en masse, expected companies to show social responsibility.

“This is an important change that’s happened in American society,” she said. She cited Kellogg’s and Apple as just two of the companies which had been publishing reports about their corporate responsibility for years. “Many companies actually have a strategy about how to approach these needs.”

However, some attempts to show solidarity have fallen flat. Louis Vuitton artistic director Virgil Abloh was widely criticized on social media for his response to the looting of shops in Chicago and Los Angeles that has accompanied some of the protests, and for only donating $50 (about €46) toward protesters’ legal expenses. He later apologized on Twitter.

Melillo said department store chain Nordstrom, which has been the target of extensive looting, also hadn’t struck the right tone. “Nordstrom put out a vague message in which they said, ‘We continue to have conversations about these important topics’,” she said. “Where is the action message, the will to change something?”

Melillo said people were sick of talk without change, and that companies that wanted to make a difference really had to follow up on their words with action.

Read more: Germany ‘shocked’ by George Floyd killing, calls for end to violence

Jumping on the bandwagon

Some companies have followed through with donations and pledges. On Tuesday, Bank of America announced it would commit $1 billion over the next four years to help fight racial inequality, develop workforces and improve economic mobility in local communities.

Beauty multinational Sephora has donated more than $1 million to support organizations like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Californian tech companies have given more than $20 million and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has pledged an additional $10 million to support civil rights groups.

But for Keni Thacker, the founder of 100 Roses from Concrete, “a network for men of color in the advertising, marketing media and public relations industries,” these companies are just jumping on the bandwagon. “This money, these campaigns, this sympathy won’t change society,” he told DW. “It’s too late for that.”

Read more: Opinion: Systemic racism is the real ‘American carnage’

Money cannot reverse centuries of racism in the US, he said, and society has never shown respect to black people. “And suddenly, everybody is pretending to care about us.”

Thacker said a mere glance at the makeup executive boards was enough to see hypocrisy of the current debate. US companies are not proactive, they are reactive, he said, adding that first of all, something has to happen and then companies and then people finally act. He said companies were also responsible for the situation that they now wanted to change with generous donations. “That’s just a PR stunt!”

Melillo was less pessimistic, citing Nike and Target as positive examples. She pointed out that Nike’s new ad, which changed its famous slogan, “Do it,” to “For once, don’t do it!” was in line with the company’s past anti-racism campaigns.

She also said retailer Target had said it would try to address the problem of inequality, despite being a target of looting in recent days.

“Standing strong although stores are being targeted: That’s a way to respond in an authentic way.”

  • A protester faces police when Black Lives Matter protesters clash with NYPD officers

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    ‘I can’t breathe’

    Tense protests over decades of police brutality against black people have quickly spread from Minneapolis to cities across the US. The protests began in the Midwestern city earlier this week, after a police officer handcuffed and pressed a knee on the neck of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, until he stopped breathing and died.

  •  mural of George Floyd painted by the artist eme_freethinker on a wall at Mauerpark in Berlin

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    A ‘gentle giant’

    Floyd grew up in Houston, Texas, and moved to Minneapolis in 2014 for work. Before his death, he was looking for work after having been laid off from his job as a security guard at a Latin bistro due to Minnesota’s stay-at-home coronavirus restrictions. Standing 6 feet, 6 inches (1.98 meters) tall, his friends described him as a “gentle giant.”

  • A man pleads with officers as crowds protesting the killing of G. Floyd clash with police in the blocks just north of the White House

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    From peaceful to violent

    Protests were mostly peaceful on Saturday, though some became violent as the night wore on. In Washington, D.C., the National Guard was deployed outside the White House. At least one person died in shootings in downtown Indianapolis; police said no officers were involved. Officers were injured in Philadelphia, while in New York two NYPD vehicles lurched into a crowd, knocking people to the ground.

  • A man carries a large chain out of the jewelry store Realm of the Goddess on Melrose Avenue after the front window was smashed in

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    Shops destroyed, looted

    In Los Angeles, protesters faced off with officers with shouts of “Black Lives Matter!” as police confronted crowds with batons and rubber bullets. In some cities including LA, Atlanta, New York, Chicago and Minneapolis, protests have turned into riots, with people looting and destroying local shops and businesses.

  • A man plays guitar next to a graffiti sign with When the Looting Starts the Shooting Starts

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    ‘When the looting starts…’

    President Donald Trump has threatened to send in the military to quell the protests, saying his “administration will stop mob violence and will stop it cold.” Trump’s response has inflamed tensions across the country. He blamed the rioting on alleged far-left groups, but Minnesota Governor Tim Walz told reporters he had heard multiple unconfirmed reports of white supremacists stoking the violence.

  • Demonstrators protest the killing of George Floyd outside of the city's 5th police precinct

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    Media in the crosshairs

    Many journalists covering the protests have found themselves targeted by law enforcement. On Friday, CNN correspondent Omar Jimenez and his crew were arrested while covering the story in Minneapolis, and several reporters have been hit with projectiles or detained while on air. DW’s Stefan Simons was fired at by police twice as he reported on the unrest over the weekend.

  • Anti-racism protests at US Embassy in Berlin / Tod von George Floyd (picture-alliance/dpa/C. Soeder)

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    Going global

    North of the US border, in Canada, thousands of protesters took to the streets in Vancouver and Toronto. In Berlin, American expats and other demonstrators gathered outside the US Embassy. In London, protesters kneeled in Trafalgar Square before marching past the Houses of Parliament and stopping at the British capital’s US Embassy.

  • Protesters hold their hands up in front of law enforcement personnel as demonstrators rally at the White House

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    At Trump’s front door

    Protests raged in the US capital, Washington, after the district began its 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew on Sunday. More than 1,000 demonstrators gathered in Lafayette Park, across from the White House, with some lighting fires outside the president’s residence. The New York Times reported that Secret Service had brought Trump into a bunker as a safety precaution.

  •  law enforcement officer takes position as a building burns

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    Curfews in major US cities

    Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, Detroit, Washington D.C. and other US cities extended curfews as protests entered a sixth night on Sunday. The state of Arizona in the west instituted a statewide, weeklong curfew after demonstrators clashed with police. Around 5,000 troops from the National Guard also have been deployed in 15 US states.

  • Trump holds a Bible up outside a church by the White House (Reuters/T. Brenner)

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    Trump threatens to bring in US military

    In the face of renewed protests on Monday, Trump threatened to deploy the military if states failed to “defend their residents.” As he made his remarks, security authorities used tear gas and rubber bullets to force protesters from nearby Lafayette Park. Trump then walked from his residence to a church in the park, where he held a Bible aloft during a photo opportunity.

  • Protesters lay on the ground with their hands behind their back

    In pictures: US protests over George Floyd, police killings rage in dozens of cities

    Peaceful demonstrations

    Many protests in the US have remained peaceful, with groups of demonstrators standing together against police brutality. In Manhattan’s Times Square on Monday, protesters lay on the ground with their hands behind their back, mimicking the position Floyd was in when he was killed. Though some people have resorted to violence, several US mayors and governors have praised the protests.

    Author: Martin Kuebler


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Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/amid-george-floyd-protests-us-companies-stand-up-for-racial-injustice/a-53690932?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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