2001

  • A True Story

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    How the mainstream media convicted an immigrant mother of infanticide

    by PNN staff

    The following is about a story that was investigated by the Poverty Journalism class at POOR. The reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle who broke the story manipulated the story to make it seem as though a murder was committed. In a later, tiny back-page story, we saw that the first Chronicle report was incorrect.

    1st article; MOM KILLED HER OWN BABY

    2nd article;Charges dropped against mother of baby

    Process of investigation; The story was analyzed by the class, questions were raised to be answered as we gathered more information. Two letters were sent to Ping Du’s attorney to request more information. Other calls to the jail for more information were made also. Asian activist agencies were contacted to see if they could help Ping Du.

    One of the student journalists has written his interpretation of the Ping Du story. We for now have not heard the last of Ping Du.

    Ping Du, Who Needs to Have Her Story Told

    By Vlad Pogorelov

    An Asian woman dressed in an orange jumpsuit sits on a small narrow bed in her rat-infested cell. She stares at a leaky ceiling from which rusty water drips onto the cement floor, drop after drop. The cell is 6x4 feet, has no windows and through a door composed of thick metal bars she can see a segment of gray wall and piece of dirty tile floor. There is a small toilet in the corner and a sink on the opposite side. A large, German cockroach appears from underneath the sink and makes his way to a water faucet. The insect drinks plenty of water and then slowly returns back from where he came. The woman sees him but doesn’t show any interest in him. She just stares at the gray cement wall above the sink hardly seeing anything. Her face is motionless as a Chinese mask. But if you look more closely at her eyes you see a deep despair and enormous emotional pain.

    An hour passes. And then another hour. A warden opens a window in a cell door and shoves in an aluminum bowl with some mushy green liquid —split pea soup, perhaps, and a slice of “Wonder” bread. But the prisoner doesn’t touch her lunch. She just sits, motionless, and stares into the space in front of her without even blinking. Another hour passes. Suddenly, the woman jumps up and starts hitting her head against a wall. She does it in a methodical fashion with a split second period in between which is almost synchronized with water dripping from the ceiling. She continues to hurt herself until her face is completely covered with blood and all she can see is a red glare. Finally, she collapses on the floor and cries. A warden enters her room and handcuffs her.

    Later, the prisoner is transported into the mental ward of a jail in a neighboring county. She is stripped of her clothes, put into a straight jacket and given a shot of a medication which immediately takes her out of this grim reality and into an infinite blackness. A note on the heavy, thick, glass door, reads “Suicide Watch.” A prison guard is posted to observe the prisoner through the glass door at all times.

    But this woman, whose name is Ping Du, is not aware of the guard or her whereabouts. She is dreaming and in her dream she sees herself playing with her little 6-month-old daughter in the back yard of her house up in Daly City. Her husband, together with her 10-year-old son, is nearby preparing a barbecue. It is a Sunday morning and the sun is shining brightly from the blue California sky above. The air is clean and saturated with happiness and joy. Ping Du’s husband calls her name. She leaves her baby on a blanket in the middle of the lawn and walks to her husband. As she approaches him she sees a big shadow sliding through a yard. When she turns back she sees that her baby girl is seized by a giant eagle that carries her away in its claws. Both parents run toward her, but it’s too late. Their baby is gone. Gone forever.

    Unable to cope with her nightmare, Ping Du wakes up only to find herself restricted by a straightjacket and a realization that her nightmare is not over, but has only really begun. She tries to move her dry lips to ask for water. When she is finally able to say, “Water! I am thirsty. Water, please!” the guard doesn’t understand her—Ping Du has spoken in her native Cantonese. And so she stays thirsty, deeply affected by the despair of her situation in which, within a matter of a few hours, she lost her 9-month-old child, was accused of murder and incarcerated.

    I first heard about Ping Du when the San Francisco Chronicle, on it’s front page, reported the sensational news Mom Killed Her Own Baby. From that article I’ve learned that this 36 year-old mother of two, an immigrant from China, was accused of murdering her 6-month-old baby girl while giving her a bath. Police, who investigated the drowning of Jiawen Young, became suspicious because paramedics were not immediately. Almost immediately Ping Du, who does not speak English, was arrested and put into San Mateo county jail, where, stricken by grief, the immigrant mother had a nervous breakdown. Following deterioration in her mental condition she was transferred into the psychiatric facility at Santa Clara County Jail. When I called the jail in order to schedule an interview with her, I was told that she was inaccessible at the time. “By the way,” an information officer added, “she would require a Mandarin translator, which we could not provide to you.” Apparently her jailers did not even know what her real language was. I was advised to call back the next week. It was clear to me that Ping Du was caught up in an inhumane legal system, uncaring about her tragedy. When I called Santa Clara County Jail the next week I was told that she was no longer there. “She was released to another county,” an officer informed me. “Do you mean that she was released? Perhaps on bail?” I asked. “Oh, no sir. I just told you that she was not released, but released to another county into another jail.”

    As I investigated her story more, I learned that when Daly City Sgt. Donald Griggs questioned Ping Du, she did not have an appropriate translator and, considering that her 6-month old baby just drowned in a bathtub as result of accident, she naturally blamed herself for the tragedy. Without proper facts to back up his story, the Chronicle’s reporter Jonathan Curiel immediately fired up an article which was written in the best traditions of yellow journalism, in which he essentially accused the grief-stricken mother of nothing less than a premeditated murder. The Chronicle, following the “if it bleeds, it leads” logic of the mainstream press, published his report on its front page, titled Mom Killed her Own Baby.

    The reader can see the word “alleged” is not in the title- and when reading the second, smaller back page article, it is easy to see how this report was manipulated by the reporter. As well, Ping Du’s reputation and that of her family was permanently stained if not destroyed, and her older son was taken into a protective custody.

    A few weeks passed and I got the news that Ping Du finally had her day in court, where she was represented by public defender Kevin Nowack. The falsity of the premature conclusions and accusations came to light, and Ping Du’s charge was reduced to involuntary manslaughter. Her bail was set at $50,000. Unfortunately, because her husband Zheng Yang was the only provider for their family, there was no money for her bail. As a result of poverty she remains a prisoner.

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  • VOYAGING ONWARD

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body
    pstrong pbLast Wednesday "Voyager"br / and its intrepid crew found theirbr / way back to the Delta Quadrant./b/p pWithout help of an evolving Kess,br / or beings from the Q-Continuum.br / /p/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Joseph Bolden/p pWe witness the Borg's transwarp nexus and the futuristic Admiral Janeway giving her life to bring all of her crew home. /p pThe Kirk, Spock,Q, Sisco, Picard, Janeway, Crusher, [Westly Crusher]or Archer Time paradoxes cause ripples in time and endless trouble for the Tempest, Entropy, Enterprise and other captains on Timeships. /p pAnother ripple could be in the form of Scott Bakula, formally of "Quantum Leap." /p pA guy "sliding" in and out of his own lifetime could be do well as Captain Jonathan Archer of the First Enterprise. He might know a few secrets, like what the future holds in store for a few budding cadets and their friends, possibly preventing their untimely ends. /p pYou see, Captain Jonathan Archer could be from the distant future and suddenly finds himself stranded on one his time missions, but he must keep mum about this. He accepts paradoxes like captains before and after and is willing to test and outwit fate. OK, it might be farfetched but given what happens in other shows, it could happen. Or could this be the pre sequel to stories about an undiscovered struggling Federation of Planets?/p pZefram Cochrane does what everyone except a few brave, hardheaded people think is impossible; he achieves warp drive. He has a shaky first contact with the seriously logical Vulcans. He is one of many brilliant young men and women of Earth and other alien species who are contributing to empower this weak fledgling federation. /p pBefore a chronoton serum made people immune to chronoton radiation, enabling then to cross time zones, many a ship's captain and crew would be unaware that they were in time loops. With lost legendary captains and their crews, the first mysteries began and some were solved. An older wiser Westly Crusher [Wheaton] might visit from time to time, correcting anomalies like a young Picard dying in an accident that didn't happen in alternate timelines./p pI hope this is enough to get present and future screen and TV writers to think about other Star Trek-inspired shows. Some of those people and crews violate Temporal Imperatives. Some of them are relatives of past star trek crews. Does this help create a few new series for Star Trek franchise? These were just a few ideas. I must beam away now. I have to meet some doctor in an old British phone booth. He said something about a faulty chameleon circuit, whatever that is./p pbPlease send donations to Poor Magazine C/0 Ask Joe at 255 9th St. Street, San Francisco, CA.94103 USA/b/p pFor Joe only my snail mail:br / PO Box 1230 #645 Market St. San Francisco, CA 94102br / Email:askjoe@poormagazine.orgbr / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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  • Our Words... Our Images

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body
    pstrongOur society is in for a rude awakening and I say, “Bring it on!” /strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/377/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Leroy F. Moore/p pI wonder, are you ready for the next generation? I don’t think so! Our society is in for a rude awakening and I say, “Bring it on!” The creative talents, voices, and the revolutionary stands of disabled youth are doing their Spring cleaning—airing their words, images, and politics for the world to see, feel, taste, and smell. Here is a little taste of what disabled youth are serving up locally, nationally, and internationally. Open wide!/p pIn the arts and entertainment section of the Asian Weekly a couple of months ago an article on the voice of one of the characters in the new Rugrats movie, iRugrats in Paris/i, appeared. Dionna Quan, 22, of San Francisco beat one hundred and forty-seven actors for the part of Kimi in iRugrats in Paris/i. She is visually impaired. Quan began acting at the age of 14 and has taped commercials; CD-ROM games, and an animated series. She has moved to LA where the show is taped./p pStephen Michael Nelson has engulfed the world through his heart and love for mankind, through praise for his mother, honor for his grandfather, and thanks to all the individuals who care for him on a daily basis. This young Native American disabled teen has displayed his first words for the world to read in his book of poetry, iStephen: Letters of Courage and Hope/i. Stephen had more courage than the Wizard of Oz. Stephen spoke through a mechanical device. According to his mother, Chrissy, the writing process was not easy for Stephen. Individual letters were selected one at a time to form each word and resulting sentences. Chrissy wrote that Stephen’s process of writing took hours and sometimes even days to complete a single poem. Unfortunately, Stephen passed away Friday, June 1st, the day before he was expected to promote his book of poetry. For more information contact the Stephen’s Hope Foundation at (630) 235-2245 or HYPERLINK a href="http://www.stephenshope.org" title="http://www.stephenshope.org"http://www.stephenshope.org/a, or a href="http://www.stephenshope.org" title="www.stephenshope.org"www.stephenshope.org/a and let you soul read his words of love, courage, and healing./p pMichael Seal, Jr. of LA has a smile like Magic Johnson, a mind like a business tycoon, and images that will put bright colors back into the gray world we live in. Michael, an African American disabled teen who is a painter and entrepreneur has done what artists have trying to do for decades; he has figured out how to mix the business world with art. Michael has blended the two worlds to create and promote both sides of his reality. I had a chance to talk to Michael at a conference in LA. where he was selling his paintings and talking about future business ventures. Although only in his mid-teens, Michael gets around, I mean AROUND in his sports wheelchair. His photo album reads like a night at the Grammies. This teen has met many stars, politicians, and musicians. But what caught my eye were the colorful imagines he had on display. Michael lectures, gives workshops, and is working on future business plans. He says that everything he does is incorporated into his artwork, i.e. his own personally designed postcards, envelopes, stationary, etc. He is working on his own website. Drop Michael an e-mail at HYPERLINK a href="mailto:okra-head@Juno.com" title="mailto:okra-head@Juno.com"mailto:okra-head@Juno.com/a a href="mailto:okra-head@Juno.com"okra-head@Juno.com/a or 17701 S. Avalon Blvd., #1 Carson, CA. 90746/p pbOn the Political Side/b/p pYou are never too young to be an activist! Nkosi Johnson, a 12-year-old South African boy who contracted HIV during birth, became a young activist in 1997 after battling to force the public school to admit him despite his health disability. He later campaigned to raise AIDS awareness and fought for the government to do more to save other babies from being infected. He also spoke during the opening of the 13th International AIDS Conference in Durban, South Africa. This young man died last month./p pIn the US, disabled students are rocking the boat with revolutionary advocacy, thoughts, and organizing. On February 21st, 2001 the National Disabled Students Union (NDSU) was founded to stop the backlash on our civil rights. Check out the Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama et al v. Garrett et al. NDSU has recognized that the voices of disabled students of all ages have been left out in decision-making, in the media, and even in our own disabled community. NDSU is a national, cross-disability student organization. The main goal of NDSU is to mobilize and organize students with disabilities throughout the nation by bringing them to the table in order to continue the legacy of empowerment and community solidarity that is our heritage. The NDSU held its first nationwide LEAVE OUT demonstration on April 17, 2001 to protest the Garrett case and other attacks on our rights. Disabled students and their allies left their schools, jobs, and homes to remind the government that we mean business when it comes to our legal rights. Check out their website at HYPERLINK a href="http://www.aboutdisability.com" title="http://www.aboutdisability.com"http://www.aboutdisability.com/a, a href="http://www.aboutdisability.com" title="www.aboutdisability.com"www.aboutdisability.com/a, or e-mail or call Sarah Triano at HYPERLINK a href="mailto:strian1@uic.ed" title="mailto:strian1@uic.ed"mailto:strian1@uic.ed/a or a href="mailto:strian1@uic.ed"strian1@uic.ed/a, phone (773) 463-4776./p pI like to leave you with a quote from Mutinda Kimilu, a nine-year-old disabled activist in England. He writes, “We have certain rights! What I need from you is only my rights, not a lot of sympathy.” So I asked you again, are you ready for the next generation? /p pStay tuned for more words and images from disabled youth and young adults./p pbBy Leroy F. Moorebr / Poet and Executive Directorbr / Disability Advocates of Minorities Organization/bbr / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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  • HAVE YOU EVER BEEN CONVICTED OF A DRUG OFFENSE?

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Federal Student Aid policies deny student loans to students who have been convicted of a drug offense.

    by Alison VanDeursen

    I always thought it was a strange question. Tucked between queries about my interest in "work-study" and of my tax return and income (or lack thereof), Question 35 asks bluntly, "Have you ever been convicted of any drug offense?" I haven't, and though I've found it puzzling, I'm usually in a rush to meet some deadline. So I just check "No" and move on through the Federal Student Aid forms without considering the racist and classist implications of this question.

    I went "back to school" four years ago, a change in my life made possible by Federal Student Aid. The grants and low-interest loans have funded my San Francisco State University tuition, as well as my books and some living expenses. I've been able to get by financially working only part-time, allowing me to concentrate on my education full-time each semester. I will be graduating this month- if I get about 15 papers done this week- with skills and experience that I will be valuable to my self and to my community. Sure, I've smoked marijuana from time to time, though I've never been arrested for it. And so what if I had?

    If I had, I've recently learned, I would have been denied my financial aid, and would have been forced to drop out of school. I first read about this in the New York Times this month. Dina Jean Schemo reported that Russell Selker, a student of Ohio State University, was denied financial aid because he had been found guilty of smoking marijuana. He paid his fine, had his driver's license revoked, and was assigned probation and community service. Thinking his debt was paid, Selker was surprised when he received another sort of sentence- a block on his financial aid for college for a year. This punishment was handed down not by a judge, but by a 1998 amendment to the Higher Education Act.

    Every six years Congress revises the Higher Education Act of 1965, which was enacted to provided access to education by way of Perkins Loans, Pell-Grants, and other federal student aid. The 1998 revision, signed by President Clinton, contains many provisions lauded by Congress members for making college more accessible to everyone. Yet the HEA drug provision, spearheaded by Mark Souder, R-Ind, punishes those already at-risk of marginalization: low-income people and minorities. These are people who most depend on financial aid to make education possible. These are also the people most often targeted and profiled in the "War on Drugs."

    My friend Nicholas, while in college, was cited by a cop for possessing marijuana. Lucky for him, this cop let him go without an arrest. The fact that Nicholas is white and attended an Ivy League university in the northeast probably helped sway the officer- the United States Department of Justice reports that African Americans represent 55 percent of drug convictions, though they make up only 13 percent of drug users! Even if Nicholas had been arrested, he would have received a sort of special treatment. His family did not rely on financial aid to send him to college, and so, unlike a low-income student, he would not have lost his right to an education.

    When the question first appeared on Financial Aid Applications, many chose not to answer, and received aid anyway. But Rep. Souder made sure in 1999 that all loopholes were closed, and the question now is followed by a stern warning, "Do not leave this question blank." If left blank, the applicant will not receive aid. If the applicant has had a drug conviction, he or she will lose aid for a period of one year to indefinitely.

    The only way around the penalty is to participate in a federally-approved drug rehabilitation program that includes at least two random urine tests. This is again discriminatory- such drug programs can be difficult to access or prohibitively expensive. As well, people convicted of drug offenses are not necessarily addicts in need of rehabilitation. They may, like myself, be occasional or recreational users. I certainly don't see how the Department of Education is qualified to determine whom is in need of drug treatment programs, especially as it is only the poor and working class whom they scrutinize.

    I'm sure this law was an easy sell- "We're not going to give hand-outs to druggies!" But students who must answer "Yes" to Question 35 are ineligible for ALL federal funding- this includes "work-study," where a student works on campus to earn money for school, and loans, which must be paid back with interest.

    I feel fortunate that I have not been personally penalized by this law and so forced to take a leave from school. As a student who took ten years off from college, I can tell you that momentum is important. The Department of Education reports that over 8,600 students have lost federal aid this school year die to this amendment. It goes without saying that these students are middle and lower income, or else they would not be eligible for assistance in the first place! Wealthy people ARE NOT affected by this legislation, no matter how many drug convictions they may have! And only drug offenses constitute denial of federal aid- no questions are asked about rape, murder, or arson.

    Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass, is at least as outraged by this law as I am! He is reintroducing legislation this year to repeal the HEA drug provision- legislation that failed to pass last year, but with increased awareness, there is hope Question 35 will disappear from the Financial Aid applications before others lose their right to an education. Check out website www.raiseyourvoice.com to send letters to congress and find out more about this issue.

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  • Keep the Poor Poor Pt 2; Waste My Day!

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body
    pstrongThe Insiders' Instruction Manual/strong/p pPart two in a series of satirical policy explanations for government and private social service providers. /p p/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/348/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Donna L. Anderson/PNN Texas Correspondent/p piThe prevalence of hypocritical practices in social services leads PNN Texas correspondent Donna Anderson to conclude that there must be an interagency conspiracy to keep the poor poor. The scenarios and statements presented here are based on her actual experiences during 12 years in social services./i /ppPolicy Statement: Keep the Poor Poor/p pStrategy No.2 "Go Ahead, Waste my Day!"/p pThe second strategy in our domestic policy to keep the poor poor, though almost cliché, continues to be highly effective. It is even fun (in a sadistic sort of way) for the many state, local government and non-profit providers who assist in implementing this strategy. What's is it?....................................Keep them waiting. /p pThis strategy is completely unobjectionable, even with the general populous, as everyone knows that poor people have a great deal of time on their hands. Some poor people don't work and those who do have no money to do anything in their spare time. This abundance of spare time cannot be allowed to fester creativity, inspiration, initiative, education and especially not organization among the poor. /p pIn order to keep fertile spare time at a minimum in the life of the poor, we must employ practices that ensure they will always be in the process of managing their poverty. Here are three common practices that most any organization can begin to use with minimal staff training and reorganization. /p p1. Block scheduling. This is a technique used in many Medicaid-frequented healthcare providers, non-profits and state TANF (Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, formerly Welfare) agencies. Rather than assign specific times to each patient/client, the agency selects two times daily, one in the morning and one in the afternoon, and schedules everyone to be seen at those times. Patients/clients arrive, sign in and are seen in order of their arrival. The first to arrive will be seen promptly, but most will have to wait to be seen, even up to several hours. The whole morning or afternoon can be consumed with one appointment in this manner. Exasperating waits tend to produce more apathetic patients/clients. Once they finally are called to be seen, they are so brow-beaten by hours of waiting with a sick child or several screaming and hungry children, that they are unlikely to ask thorough questions or demand anything they are entitled to that might require more time or effort./p p2. The Max. Instead of promptly assessing and acting on each client's needs, like a corporation that depends on its clients' repeat business might do, agencies working with the poor can set maximum time limits for assessment and determination. The state of Texas has a 30-day determination period for new TANF, Medicaid and Food Stamps applications. This means that an application for benefits must either be approved or denied within 30 days. However, it also means the case manager can take up to 30 days to make the determination. Even if the case manager can eyeball the application and determine that the applicant would not be eligible for services, she does not have to inform the applicant for a full 30 days. For example, many states have asset limits for Medicaid, Food Stamps and TANF applicants. An applicant may clearly state that she owns an automobile worth $4,000 ($2,000 over the asset limits). Though the case manager could inform the applicant that she will probably be turned down for benefits because her assets exceed the limit, the case manager can just hold off and let the applicant find this out via formal notification sent after the 30-day determination period. The case manager will have avoided a possible confrontation with a disgruntled applicant and will have succeeded in wasting the applicant's time with additional appointments and the ever-popular paper chase (see number 3 below). /ppThough time limits guarantee the agency some stall time, open-ended time lines can also work if crafted well. Take for instance the case of a TANF applicant in Georgia. In the first week after application she is required to attend a job readiness course. This course will repeat much the same information she has received in other futile "life skills" classes (the topic of an upcoming strategy). After a week of boring classes, she will have one more week to job search. If she does not find a job in that time, she must sit idle, waiting for her case manager to find her an appropriate work activity. With the literally hundreds of cases each case manager handles, the case manager is fully justified in neglecting the case indefinitely. This method deserves honorable mention for creating a win-win time waster. The client will likely begin to receive benefits, which will pacify her, and yet she makes no progress through the system. This is not a very effective way to keep welfare roles down, which tends to upset some of the more extreme (Nazi) legislators. But for the purposes of implementing the "Waste My Day" strategy, it is superb./p p3. The Paper Chase. Quite arbitrarily, agencies can require forms from clients to stall the delivery of services or the determination of benefits. Some popular forms that can be difficult to obtain include birth certificates and shot records for the client and all dependent children under 18, 3 months of bank statements, IRA statements, leases, credit card statements, past check stubs, old tax returns, social security cards, photo ID's and references from past employers, landlords, neighbors, elementary school teachers or anyone, really. The point is not to gather information. Many state systems have databases that can pull up most of this information in a matter of minutes. The point is to buy the system time: time the client spends. /p pOne initiative that is threatening the viability of the paper chase is the push for a "single point of entry," a centralized location with database that state and local government and even non-profits could tap into to access client records. This would make it unnecessary for the client to provide fresh documentation for each benefit or service she seeks and could substantially cut down on the time wasted in applying for services. However, social workers are not renowned for their technical abilities (it is rumored that many actually produced their college term papers with typewriters!). Though a great deal has been spent on consultants to introduce this technology, it is not an immediate threat./p p4. Ya'll come back now. No matter what the business, always schedule frequent appointments for clients. Get them into the office as often as possible. Make note of their days off and working schedules, so meetings can be scheduled at the least convenient times. Be inflexible if they press for a more convenient time. And it goes without saying that appointments should be made during typical working hours. This will keep the poor from using their spare daylight hours to get skills training or look for a better job./p pWith these four techniques in conjunction with poor transit systems of many cities, inflexible day care policies, the difficulty of flex scheduling in hourly wage jobs and countless other inconveniences, we can ensure that obtaining necessary benefits, accessing essential community services and staying healthy will be problematic at least and at best, damn near impossible. /p pAn added benefit to the "Waste My Day" strategy is that it empowers the employees who implement it. It can be used to team-build among employees. Everyone has experienced the frustration of picking the longest line at the grocery store, waiting at doctors' offices and even sitting in traffic. These delays create tension that employees can channel into making the poor wait. There is no greater sense of satisfaction and retribution than being able to inflict personal suffering on to others. Employees can regain control they lose at the grocery store, the doctor's office and in traffic by manipulating the schedules of those who seek their help. /p pEmployees should be trained in some basic skills such as keeping an expressionless face while repeating the phrase, "Please be seated and someone will be with you in a few minutes," as many times as is necessary to make the insolent poor person go away. It is also important, however much glee it might give an employee to make someone wait unnecessarily, that they turn away from the poor person before beginning to smirk, as a matter of good customer service. This strategy is one the entire office can bond around. Use it to not only keep the poor poor, but to boost agency morale as well. /p pStay tuned for the next strategy, "Kiss My Assets!"br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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  • Sacramento PO' Poets

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Poets and writers from S.H.O.C. (Sacramento Homeless Organizing Coalition)

    by Sacramento POOR Poets

    To The Policeman

    Who Went To Church On Sunday.

    I was hungry

    and you took away my ID

    I couldn’t go to a food locker

    I was cold

    and you took away my warm clothes and

    blankets

    I was weary

    and you wouldn’t let me rest

    I was broken hearted

    and instead of giving me comfort you

    Showed your contempt

    I was lonely

    and you wouldn’t give me a kind word

    I was frightened

    and you terrorized and threatened me

    I had had love and compassion

    And you showed me hate

    I showed you respect

    And you treated me as WORTHLESS

    I was homeless and you didn’t care

    Is this really the way you

    want to live your life?

    Sunshine/AKA Billeen Pruett

    P.S. Not all officers are like this--but for the

    Ones who are ____ ____ ____ ____ ____

    ************************

    ************************


    Shelter

    By Leonore Mathews

    Who would know or care

    That I needed shelter

    as the wind and rain

    played games

    on the roof of my old

    "Chevy"

    Winter brought rain drops

    from a leaky roof

    dripping slowly on the front

    seat

    Nesting in a sleeping bag

    usually warm and comfy

    Who would know or care

    that me of all creatures

    needed shelter.

    Early Dawn

    by Leonore Mathews

    Bring back the dawn soon

    but not too late

    so dancing black shadows

    will fade

    as glossy sunbeams kiss

    our faces

    and we can once more

    join the human race

    forgetting we are homeless.

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  • Red Tagged: The Creation of Vehicularily Housed Bill of Rights

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body
    pstrongVehicularily housed residents stage an art-action-rally to demand civil rights and establish a Bill of Rights/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/349/photo_1_feature.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Kaponda/p pVladlen Pogorelov drifts off into the visions of twilight as the inscrutability of night cloaks his metallic motor residence. The continuous thumps on his window forces him to swerve back into the predictability of reality. Like a cub that looks into the eyes of a raging hyena, Vladlen Pogorelov sees the eyes of a police smoldering with anger as he stands with a stick, camouflaged by the night, next to his side. Vladlen knows that he will be ordered to move his 25-foot motor home to another location because it has suddenly become an object of scorn and frequent harassment by the San Francisco Police Department and the Department of Parking and Traffic./p pThe dire circumstances into which Vladlen Pogorelov has fallen brought him and many other vehicularly housed San Franciscans to the steps of City Hall on Wednesday, May 30th, to ask for relief from a law that unfairly classifies, punishes and renders them as criminals because they have a quilt and padding inside their legally owned vehicles. The volley of protests against human and civil rights violations at the event, dubbed, “They Towed My House Away,” by homeless advocates and civil rights attorneys has put the ball back into the court of the Board of Supervisors and George Smith of the Mayor’s Office on Homelessness./p pI asked Paul Boden, director of the The Coalition on Homelessness, who, along with POOR Magazine, coordinated the event, to explain how the San Francisco Police Department can arbitrarily cite vehicles and cause people to lose their housing by having their motor homes towed away, which has become, not unlike oxygen, a necessary condition for a reasonably healthy life?/p p “[The Municipal Police Codes that regulate parking] were designed to make sure that poor people can be legally chased out of communities -- just like its a code that the parks are closed, and a code that people cannot stand on the sidewalk. These are codes that government created in order to chase away and make disappear poverty in our community. We are not talking about people who choose to be out there [in their vehicles],” stated an enraged Boden with the sting of an agitated wasp./p pVladlen Pogorelov, a 31-year old staff writer for PNN who immigrated to the United States from Crimea, was evicted from his apartment in San Francisco during the latter part of last year. He bought a motor home in which he had hoped to eat and sleep as well as survive. Vladlen resided at China Basin, and, according to him, became the target of an aggressive harassment campaign that included citations, illegal tows and seizures of vehicles without due process./p pAdam Arms, an attorney with the Civil Rights Division of the Coalition on Homelessness, in response to my questions to him about statements brought by POOR Magazine, the Coalition on Homelessness and victims of vehicles which have been seized by city officials, stated that the ongoing policy of The City has been to “Criminalize people who sleep in their vehicle.”/p p “To tow their cars and misuse the laws have been the ongoing policy of The City. Also, they have targeted these people for harassment. It has been the ongoing policy. However, in the last six months, this policy has escalated,” stated Arms, as he held a copy of a Vehicularly Housed/Towed Person’s Bill of Rights, which he stated contained language which provides grounds for the city to relent in its ongoing policy to criminalize vehicularly housed residents./p pThe San Francisco Police Department and Department of Parking and Traffic are authorized by law to issue a citation, which is called “red-tag,” to any vehicle that, in their opinion, appears abandoned or broken down, or is not moving for an extensive amount of time. This law has been used to relegate vehicles that are not abandoned to obscure areas in remote tow garages, and leave the victims marooned in a swirl of desperation./p pI attempted to contact the director of the Department of Parking and Traffic (DPT), Fred Hamdun, to inquire about this aggressive policy which the City has adopted. I spoke with Diana Hammond, Public Affairs Director of DPT. I asked Hammond why has The City invested so much energy in going after the 300 to 500 motor homes in the entire city the owners of which have the misfortunate of doubling up their vehicles for transportation and residence? /p pAccording to Hammond, “The SFPD enforces the codes that regulate signs posted around San Francisco for illegally parked vehicles and not DPT. But, if a vehicle is abandoned, then under DPT 37(a), we can cite and tow that vehicle [within the limits of the city], stated Hammond in reference to vehicles that have been put out of mind and out of sight by their owners, like fallen trees in the forest./p pAs POOR Magazine featured the Po’ Poets, who conveyed the significance of the event at City Hall through their spoken words, on a day when the sun sprinkled its torrid rays liberally, I had an opportunity to interact with Vladlen Pogorelov. I asked Vladlen what reasons are given him by police for parking when, according to Dianna Hammond, citations are supposedly only given to vehicles that have been abandoned?/p p “Most times I find that I am red tagged immediately, not too long after I arrive, which constitutes a form of harassment, for me. They oftentimes justify this by stating that someone called to complain about a vehicle,” stated Vladlen./p pI asked Paul Boden about whether he felt that DPT is justified when it follows up on a complaint by a resident about a vehicle in the neighborhood?/p p “I have yet to find a record of the complaints that they keep talking about. The fact that these laws are on the book and that this enforcement is a priority makes it too goddamned easy for the cops or The City or anyone else to say, ‘Oh, well we got a complaint.’ Think about all the times people complaint -- they complain about the weather, but you don’t see them out there trying to change that,” concluded Boden in a passion kindled like the flare of a match./p pI went to Diana Hammond of DPT to ask if she could respond to charges by Paul Boden that he has yet to find a record of the complaints by citizens./p p “I will be happy to provide you with a record of complaints,” stated Hammond. “We record that information in a Complaint Log. Currently, the information is logged in by hand and includes driveway and sidewalk complaints against the over 454,000 regular vehicles. So, it will require extensive copying charges. We are, however, in the process of converting it over to automation,” concluded Hammond./p pMany people at the protest also indicated that “a complaint” was the reason they were given for citations issued by the SFPD. I was unable to contact anyone at SFPD to respond to the allegation of the complaints that Paul Boden suggested were phantom in nature, a device not unlike the throw-away gun that has been a part of the arsenal of corrupt cops to fritter away human and civil rights of poor people across America. /p pAs the protest drew to a conclusion, the crowd prepared to hand-deliver a copy of the Vehicularly Housed/Towed Person’s Bill of Rights to each member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors./p p “Vehicularly housed San Franciscans have the Constitution of the United States to protect them from harassment. The City, however, is not respecting those rights. This is the reason why we are taking the entire thing before the Board of Supervisors and ask them to implement the last three points right away and help people out. The last three points are:/p p 1) The City shall implement a formal fee waiver procedure for indigent lawful owners, possessors, or operators of vehicles whose vehicles are towed;/p p 2) The City shall create a centrally located body at which vehicularly housed people can address issues related to payment of fees and fines, vehicle tows and recovery, and property retrieval; and/p p 3) The City shall not prevent lawful vehicle owners, possessors, or operators from retrieving personal property contained within towed vehicles,” concluded Adam Arms of the Coalition of Homelessness, as he walked into the halls of the seat of government of San Francisco, where weak-minded lawmakers have traditionally earned a reputation of sucking up corporate hush dollars in smoke-filled rooms and repressing the rights of the most neediest of humanity./p pOn Monday, June 4th, representatives of POOR Magazine and the Coalition on Homelessness met with George Smith of the Mayor’s Office on Homeless. According to Lisa-Gray Garcia of POOR Magazine and Adam Arms of the Coalition on Homelessness, there was not even a smidgen of effort by George Smith to write a letter or do anything else of substance to commit government to sign on to providing a remedy to the ongoing policy by San Francisco of its harassment of innocent people. George Smith stated in closing that, “I will look into it.”br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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  • Como Salí Yo....(How I Got Out...)

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    A very low income immigrant family seizes the American dream

    by Donna Anderson

    My family has known Israel Hernandez, his wife Vitalina and their two daughters Diana and Maria for many years. The first house that Israel refers to below was next door to my grandparents. Israel's life began in a poverty we hardly know in the United States, Third World poverty. With very little education and some dreams that some might call unrealistic, Israel brought his family to the United States to begin a different life.

    For his entire career since coming to the United States, Israel has worked in the cotton industry. He has always earned a low wage, taking advantage of the long hours of the harvest to increase his earnings. Israel demonstrates that with speaking very little English, without degrees or even a good wage, one can be successful. His secret? A united family, determination, patience and God as his guide. Israel now has 3 cars, including his favorite project, an old Mercedes, a beautiful home and another home he rents out, all without debt. But I am sure that his inner peace is more valuable than any of his possessions.

    Where are you from?

    Guapeo, Mexico. In Guapeo, if they killed a chicken, they had a party because they seldom ever killed a chicken. It was a special day.

    What were the economic conditions of your childhood like?

    They were very sad. We were a family of nine children, with Papa and Mama, we were eleven. Only my father worked and sometimes my older brother. We all could help a little, but never enough. The conditions of my childhood were too sad. We lived in the country. There was a school, but it only went to sixth grade. I was in school. The boys, friends of mine that could, went to study in the nearby town (county seat). They could go there and continue with school.

    /ppbWhat did you do after sixth grade?/b/p p/ppI went to work because we needed to live and we had to quit school. /p p /ppbWhat was your work?/b/p p/ppWell, the fields. To be specific, my older sister got married when she was 16 and her husband had a piece of land that he worked and I went with them to work, to help, and it worked out well for me. I remember that we planted and he gave me half of what we harvested. That was a marvelous thing. That was my pay. All that we got from that land was marvelous for me and my family. /p pLiving with my sister and her in-laws.that family had something wonderful among themselves and I liked their way of relating to each other. Later, when I was 16 years old, I received God. I remember a verse that family showed me, "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and its righteousness and all these things will be added unto you." And that is what I did. I believed with my heart that there was a God and He would help me. /p p /ppbWhat were you dreams during that time?/b/p p/ppLike all youth that want a house, want to have a family and want to do better in everything possible. But it seemed like time passed and things didn't change. /p p /ppbHow much time passed?/b/p p/ppAfter I was 24, I got married. I had a wife and two children and things weren't as bad, but they still were not good. My dreams were still unrealized. But I had confidence in God and had hope that they would come true. Then I got another job with the Federal Electrical Commission, but I didn't earn much. Economically, we were still in difficult times. /p p /ppbHow were you able to improve your economic situation? /b/p p/ppDuring that time, I worked with a church group. We were invited and we went to Reynosa for 3 days. In those 3 days, I had the opportunity to go half way across the bridge between Mexico and the United States. I only could see the United States, but there I dreamed again that some day I might be able to go into the United States and that my life might improve. /p pShortly afterwards, the government in Tamaulitas created a tourist pass to the United States that was available to all who lived in Tamaulitas. Thank God my wife and I got one of the passes and we had permission to come to Corpus Christi, to San Antonio, to wherever we could go. /p pI remember that after a hurricane, they were needing workers to help reconstruct what the hurricane had destroyed. That was my first time to come to the States for work. I worked in Corpus. After that, a man from Corpus always called me during the cotton harvest to come and work and I always did, every year. /p pFinally, there was a problem with the friends I worked with in Mexico. It seemed as though they shut the door on me. I made my decision to come to the United States. I really didn't have any other choice. I remember that day in 1980 that we came to live in Corpus Christi and we began a different life in this country. /p pI remember once that we decided that we wanted to buy our first house. We didn't have any money for a down payment, but we were interested in saving money to buy a house. $20 a week, we put aside. We needed those $20 for other things, for going out and eating, but we decided that we would put it aside because we wanted to buy a house. And we kept on saving $20 a week. When we had the chance to buy a house, our first home, we had $7,000 saved. Really what makes us prosper is when we really want to prosper and we have a vision and, of course, a family to support us. I believe we can go far when we work together. /p p /ppbWas there something special in your life without which you know your life would be different now?/b /p p/ppThat point occurred when my friends closed the doors for me. We believed that the world had caved in on us. Really, without the legal documents to live in the United States, we came anyway. What happened to us, happened for our good. Even though when it happened it was a disaster. It was something that was going to finish us off, kill our spirit, and we didn't want to talk to anyone. There was no way of getting out of it. I always believe, "Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and all these things will be added unto you." That problem that happened to us, instead of being bad, it was what helped us. /p p /ppbWhat advice would you have for someone who wants to better him or herself economically?/b /p p/ppI believe what has helped me in my life has been that as a family, I have always believed that my wife is not my property and I am not her property. My daughters are not my property and I am not theirs, but we are all borrowed. One day we will have to separate, whether it is by death or some other means and we have always tried to live in agreement with each other. What we have been able to do, we have done between the two of us. /p pIf someone has a family and the wife says, "I work but what I earn is mine and what you earn is yours," I think that you won't get very far that way. But if they work together, putting together the little they have, it's better. If three or four can put what they have together toward the same goal, they will prosper. Of course I think that the most important of all is to follow God. And God will take care of you. /p p /ppbWith that kind of security, you don't have to worry, do you?/b /p p/ppThat's right. God will take care of tomorrow. When God sent manna from the heavens to the Israelites in the dessert, He did not give them 2 or 3 day's food. He gave them for one day only. God will take care of tomorrow. /p pTo be successful in life, I have to have faith and love. These go hand in hand. Faith in God, love God and love each other. Live today with those around you as if you were going to die tomorrow. Tomorrow will have its problems, its good and its bad. But today is the day to make decisions. /p p/pp /ppbComo Salí Yo: Gente Ordinaria Saliendo de la Pobreza /bbr / /ppbpor Donna L. Anderson/b/p p/ppMi familia ha conocido a Israel Hernandez, su esposa Vitalina y sus dos hijas Diana y Maria, por muchos años. La primera casa a que se refiere abajo está al lado de la casa de mis abuelos. La vida de Israel empezó en una pobreza de la cual apenas encontramos en los Estados Unidos, la pobreza del Tercer Mundo. Con poca educación y unos sueños, que algunos llamarían "no realisticos", Israel trajo su familia a los Estados Unidos para empezar una vida diferente. /p pPor todo su carrera, Israel ha trabajado en la industria del algodón. Siempre ha ganado un sueldo bajo y se ha aprovechado de las largas horas de la cosecha para augmentar el sueldo. Se demonstra como sin hablar bien el ingles, sin licenciatura o un sueldo grande, se puede tener éxito. ¿Su secreto? Una familia unida, determinación, paciencia y Dios como su guía. Tiene 3 autos, incluyendo su proyecto favorito, un viejo Mercedes, una bonita casa y otra casa de arriendo, sin deuda. Pero estoy segura de que la paz con que vive le vale más que cualquiera de las posesiones. /p p /ppb¿De dónde eres?/b/p p/ppGuapeo, Mexico. En Guapeo si mataron una gallina, hicieron una fiesta porque nunca se matoron una gallina. Era un día muy especial. /p p /ppb¿Como eran las condiciones económicos de tu niñez?/b /p p/ppPues eran muy tristes. Eramos nueve de familia, mas Papá y Mamá eramos once. Solo Papá trabajaba y a veces mi hermano el mayor. Nosotros todos podíamos ayudar un poco, pero no era suficiente. Fue demasiado triste la vida económica de mi niñez. Vivíamos en el campo. Había escuela pero solo hasta sexto grado. Estuve en la escuela. Los muchachos, compañeros míos que podían, iban a estudiar al municipio. Ellos podían ir al municipio y seguir con la escuela. /p p /ppb¿Despues del sexto qué hiciste?/b/p p/ppMe fui a trabajar, porque necesitabamos vivir y tuvimos que dejar la escuela. /p p /ppb¿En qué trabajabas?/b/p p/ppBueno...en el campo. Precisamente, a los 16 años, se casó mi hermana, la mayor, y su esposo tenía un terreno donde él sembraba y me fuí con ellos a trabajar, a ayudarle, y me fue muy bien. Recuerdo que sembramos y él me dió la mitad de la cosecha. Eso fue mi pago. Fue maravilloso para mi y para mi familia a lo que recibimos de pago de esa tierra. /p pViviendo con mi hermana y mi cuñado...la familia de él tenía algo bonito entre ellos y me gustó su confidencia. Luego, a los 16 años mi converti a Dios. Recuerdo de un texto que esa familia me enseñó, "Buscad primeramente el reino de Dios y su justicia y que todo lo demás os serán añadidas." Y esto fue lo que yo hice. Creí con todo mi corazón que había un Dios y que Él me ayudaría. /p p /ppb¿En ese epoca de la adolesencia, tenías sueños?/b /p p/ppComo todos los jóvenes que queiren tener una casa, quieren tener una familia, y quieren mejorar en todo lo más posible. Pero parece que pasó el tiempo y las cosas no cambiaban. /p p /ppb¿Cuanto tiempo pasó?/b/p p/ppDespués de que tenía 24 años, me casé. Tuve una esposa y dos hijas y las cosas no estaban malas, pero no estaban muy bien. Todavía mi sueño estaba por realizarse. Pero yo tenía la confianza en Dios y tenía la esperanza que podría. Después tuve otro trabajo con La Comisión Federal de la Electricidad, pero no se ganaba mucho. Económicamente estabamos todavía en tiempos dificiles. /p p /ppb¿Describe como llegaste cambiar tu situación económica? /b/p p/ppEn ese tiempo yo trabajaba con un grupo de una iglesia, como obrero. Fuimos invitados y venimos a Reynosa por 3 días. En esos tres días tuve la oportunidad de llegar hasta la mitad del puente de los Estados Unidos, entre Reynosa y Hidalgo. Solo podría mirar para los Estados Unidos, pero allí soñé nuevamente que algún día quizás podría pasar a los Estados Unidos y que mi vida posiblemente iba a mejorar. /p pDesde esa fecha, el gobierno en Tamaulitas había facilitado un pasaporte tourista para venir a los Estados Unidos, a todos que vivieron en Tamaulitas. Gracias a Dios que me tocó con mi esposa recibir una de esos pasaportes y con permiso podríamos venir a Corpus Christi, a San Antonio, a cualquier lugar que pudieramos. /p pRecuerdo que en una ocasión, en el tiempo de un huracán, estaban solicitando trabajadores que venieron a ayudar a reconstruir lo que el huracán había [destruido]. Esta fue mi primera vez de venir a los Estados Unidos de trabajo. En Corpus, trabajé. Y desde entonces un señor siempre me llamaba cada temporada del algodón que veniera a ayudar, y siempre lo hacía cada año. /p pY al fin, hubo un problemita con los amigos con quien trabajamos allá en Mexico. Parece que me cerraron la puerta. Hice mi decisión a venirme a los Estados Unidos. Es decir no tenía otra salida. Recuerdo ese día en 1980 en que venimos a Corpus Christi y empezamos una vida diferente en este pais. /p pMe acuerdo de una vez cuando hicimos la decisión de que queríamos comprar la primera casa. No teníamos para dar el engancho, pero teníamos el interés de juntar dinero para comprar una casa. $20 por semana, los apartabamos. Nos hacía falta esos $20 para algo más, para salir y comer, pero decidimos que ibamos a apartarlo porque era para comprar una casa. Y seguimos guardando esos $20 por semana, cuando nos vino la oportunidad de tener una casa, nuestra primera casa, teníamos $7,000. Realmente lo que nos hace prosperar es cuando tenemos ganas de prosperar y una visión y desde luego una familia que nos apolla. Yo creo que se llega lejos cuando estamos de acuerdo. /p p /ppb¿Hay algo especial en tu historia sin lo cual todo hubeira sido diferente en tu vida? /b/p p/ppEse punto se sucedío cuando mis amigos nos cerraron las puertas. Creíamos que el mundo se nos echó encima. Realmente sin tener los papeles legales para vivir en los Estados Unidos, así nos venimos. Lo que nos pasó, creo que nos pasó para bien. Aunque cuando nos pasó fue un disaste. Fue algo que iba a acabar con nosotros, el ánimo y no teníamos ganas de hablar con nadie. No había una manera de escapar. Yo siempre he creido, "Primero el reino de Dios, luego lo demás os serán añadidas." Ese problema que nos pasó, en vez de que haya sido para mal, fue lo que nos ayudó. /p p /ppb¿Qué consejo podrías dar al alguien que quiere mejor su situación económica? /b/p p/ppYo creo que lo que me ha ayudo en mi vida ha sido que como familia yo siempre he creido que mi esposa no es propiedad mia, ni yo soy propiedad de mi esposa, sino que estamos prestados. Que mis hijas no son mi propiedad, ni yo soy propiedad de ellas, sino que estamos prestados. Un día vamos a tener que seperar, sea por muerte o sea por lo que sea, y siempre hemos tratado de vivir como un acuerdo de los dos. Lo que pudieramos hacer entre los dos, hicimos entre los dos. /p pSi alguien tiene una familia y la esposa dice, "Yo trabajo pero lo que yo gano es mío y lo que tú ganas es tuyo," yo pienso que así no vamos a llegar a ninguna parte. Sino que si se juntan entre dos, juntan lo poquito que ganan, es mejor. Si entre tres o cuatro, se juntan con el mismo fin, van a prosperar. Desde luego yo creo que lo primero, lo primero es buscar a Dios. Y Dios se encargará a uno. /p p /ppbY con esa seguridad, uno no tiene que preocuparse, no? /b/p p/ppClaro que Dios se encarga del manana. Cuando Dios manadaba el maná del cielo a los Israelitas en el desierto, no les daba dos o tres días. Se les daba por un día no más. Dios se encargará del manana. /p pYo creo que para tener éxito en la vida, debo tener fé y amor. Estos van de la mano. Fé en Dios, amor por Dios y después por nuestro semejante. Y tenemos que vivir el día de hoy como si fueramos a morir mañana. Porque el mañana traerá sus afanes, sus cosas negativas y positivas. Asi que hoy es el día para hacer decisiones. /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p

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  • GROWING UP FREE IN AMERICA - a book review

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body
    pstrongReViewSfortheRevOlutioN- a PNN review column for all your literary, visual and audio art needs/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/350/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby George Tirado/p pWhat can you say about a piece of work so volatile, that just reading the back cover of the book will make 80% of P.C. America cringe in their boots? "I own nigger . I purchased it with the blood of my fathers. I stole it from the mouths of my masters. I created it in the soul of my sons. It is mine. I am it's god......." This is only a taste of what there is to expect from bGrowing up Free in America/b by Bruce Jackson. /p pWhat Bruce Jackson has done is to take the pretty out of art, poetry and short prose, and instead of creating something nice for the reader, he has given us a loaded gun filled with bullets of reality./p pWhat makes Bruce Jackson's work important, especially now, is this war on poverty. This is a war in which there are no winners, and each person who is fighting to survive is not really living. The pain is real, the addiction is real , the violence is real , and the outcome is also very real. If you give into it you die, but sometimes it's easier to quit. "There is brutal silence in the night. Listen. They are screaming. Black is the fire in the city below the dark of the sky. Black is inhaling fire, exhaling smoke into base pipes hissing gripped liquid crack, burning until the hissing explodes...."/p pThis is a view of America from the eyes of a Black man, cold and angry. Here is a man who is not afraid to write about gentrification, racism, poverty, drug addiction and violence. Not only violence by police, but by his own race. This is a book in which the main character is not human, but a being driven to extinction by his own hand. What is the point of writing like this? It's the truth found in between the lines; he makes you work for it. This book is great in that it falls in line with other revolutionary writings such as uSolidad Brother/u by George Jackson, uOn a Mission/u by The Last Poets, and uAn Autobiography of Malcolm X/u . /ppThis book is for everyone. This book will open your eyes and challenge something inside of yourself: something called Freedom.br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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  • Birthday Jam

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    by Leroy Moore

    Happy birthday to Disability Advocates of Minorities Organization, DAMO! DAMO turns four years old on March 30th, 2001. Party at St. Anthonys. 5-8pm. 121 Golden Gate in S.F.
    For info please call: Leroy F. Moore Jr., Founder of Disability Advocates of Minorities Org.,
    DAMO at (415)586-2047

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  • <p><b>Cloning Part 2

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Here's part two on cloning. I’ve thought, read some books, searched the web for opposing views, and found equally radical views as Dr. Seed’s claim that he’ll clone himself with his wife’s help.

    by Staff Writer

    My views are three fold:

    1) Grow and separate the brain stem, keeping the body and it parts in cold storage until parts are need. The clone: essentially bag-a-flesh.

    2) Regenerate some or all body parts in artificial, sterile environments,
    modified genes improves and makes younger, stronger, more resilient, longer lasting regenerative parts that slowly makes us better built humans.

    3) A full body clone with tougher, improved, longer lasting, regenerative
    adaptive powers would have full brain function though in a mechanized coma until the neural net of a healthy or dying human can place her or his electrochemical personality in the perfectly functioning clones brain.

    The machine maintaining the simulated Coma State is disconnected in stages
    as the original person’s brain patterns placed in the clone.

    This process recreates a better, longer lived and possibly smarter human if extra and improved brain cells can also be added.
    There are more ideas on this but these are some of my views.

    The above might offend many of religious, scientific, or philosophical on ethical grounds.

    Please have dialogues, discussions on this an other emerging applied technologies so proper guidelines and laws will be in place before… ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE… AGAIN!

    Please send donations to Poor Magazine C/0 Ask Joe at 255 9th St. Street, San Francisco, CA. 94103 USA

    For Joe only my snail mail: PO Box 1230 #645
    Market St. San Francisco, CA 94102
    Email: askjoe@poormagazine.org

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  • bio

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    by Joseph Perryman

    HAVE YOU EVER SEEN AH CALM
    OCEAN

    AN OASIS OF UNTAMED THOUGHTS

    FLOWING THROUGH EARTHLY POSSESSIONS

    DEEP LIKE THE CORE

    CONCERNED WITH PLANETARY DISFUNCTION

    HURTING WITH HEARTFELT EMOTIONS

    UPSET WITH MANKIND AT THIS TIME

    WILLING TO WALK DOWN THE STREET ARMS OPEN
    AND EYES CLOSED

    CAUSE YOU ARE MY PEOPLE


    JOE PERRYMAN

    1619

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  • The misconceptions of Poverty

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    The Womens Economic Agenda Project leads The Poor People’s Human Rights Campaign across country- organizing and educating poor folks in every city it reached.

    by Kaponda

    The underbrush that had cluttered the highway to desegregation was cleared by the apostles of the Civil Rights Movement. They plowed through the heartland of Jim Crow in a Greyhound bus. Those Freedom Rides of 1961 were driven by a 1946 Supreme Court ruling that struck down segregation as a violation of the United States Constitution.

    Violations of economic and human rights led to the fueling of the engine of another freedom bus in November of 2000. Throughout the country, and in the state of California, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, an instrument certified by the United Nations and signed by the United States, had been trampled upon and treated with contempt. Many people in America had been lulled into believing that poverty was their lot in life.

    An organization with an 18-year history of fighting social injustices, the Women’s Economic Agenda Project (WEAP) was prepared to chart the movement to eliminate poverty. The meat and potatoes of the movement was the Freedom Bus Tour. It was modeled after the same Freedom Rides of the Civil Rights Movement. Many people were recruited in Oakland, California to travel as Freedom Riders to educate impoverished people through testimonials, teach-ins, presentations, speak-outs, panel discussions, videos, meetings, rallies, protests, marches and going door-to-door. The men, women and children who were recruited came from all walks of life but shared the philosophy that food, housing, health care, education and a living wage are basic economic rights for every person in the world, according to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    The Social Justice Coordinator and one of the brain trust of WEAP, Blanche Mackey, discussed the myths about organizing poor people. ”I felt that getting together a group of poor people to go around the state was an amazing experience, because there is the stigma that poor people cannot be organized. We learned that we can be organized, and we can follow instructions.”

    The Freedom Bus Tour was essentially a school on wheels. The Freedom Riders, nearly 40 men, women and children, were educated about their own misconceptions of poverty through discussions and videos while traveling over 2,900 miles and 20 towns and cities m California. The jumping-off principle that was taught to everyone was that, “I do not deserve to live like this. I deserve a better life.” When that principle had begun to journey through the mind of each individual, they became much more effective during their interaction with people in other towns.

    From the unprovoked attacks on peaceful demonstrators in Birmingham, Alabama to the hundreds of thousands of tents set up by Freedom Riders on the Mall during their March on Washington, the Freedom Riders were united in their conviction to cast the spotlight on the glaring economic and human rights violations during their travels in the 1960’s.

    Not unlike the Freedoms Riders of the 1960’s, the Freedom Riders of 2000 traveled extensively, also. Their tour took them from Northern California, to Central California onto Southern California in order to drive home their message of hope to the hundreds of thousands of people whose humanities have been continually systematically stripped away. Each day, according to some of the accounts of the experiences of the Freedom Riders, a little more of the quality of the life of a poor person had been forgotten because “Many people in this country believed that the poor do not deserve a better life.”

    A story that was shared during the tour about a certain woman who saw a line full of people one day. The woman went to the end of the line because she thought that she was going to miss out on something. After waiting for a long time, she reached the front of the line only to realize that it was the line for men waiting to take a shower.

    The Freedom Riders’ tour was a very carefully thought-out process. Every conceivable eventuality had been thought over and over again. Diana Polson, the California Coordinator of WEAP, stated to me during an interview after I had asked her about the scope of poverty that is experienced by poor people in California and which of the many images she had seen had clung to her heart during the Freedom Ride? She continued by stating that, “There are so many people in this country who are suffering in silence and struggling in poverty.”

    “Entering into the Central Valley, the Freedom Riders met with union organizers, other Freedom fighters, migrant workers, members of the Green Party and churches. The many migrant workers we met with and talked to faced economic human rights abuses on a daily basis. Many companies flock to the Central Valley because they know there are a plethora of migrant workers who will work for little money. These migrant workers have their hands tied in numerous ways because they have so much fear of being reported to the authorities. They work for little money, in no-benefit jobs and in destitute circumstances, but cannot organize or demand anything better for fear of being deported. The owners of these companies and land have complete control over the lives of these workers, getting cheap labor and not having to live up to any standards. On many farms, owners will give workers little shacks to live in and charge them high prices for rent, so the migrant workers have no money left after a paycheck. Some people we talked to have been injured on the job, have contracted cancer due to working with pesticides in the fields and are left to suffer and die by these employers because they do not offer health insurance. The employers use migrant labor for their own benefit, with little thought about the well-being of the worker.”

    “We need to stop managing poverty and work towards eliminating it,” continued Polson. “That will happen by joining forces amongst poor and working people of all walks of life. It will happen when they come together to add what they can to this movement and educate themselves about the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights.”

    Not only did WEAP educate communities and towns about the UN Declaration of Human Rights, but also about the new movement of the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign (PPEHRC), created to address and shatter through education notions such as the poverty of people is directly proportionate to their failings. Also, the Just Health Care Campaign was the arm of the body that the Freedom Riders used to address the dire health care status in California. Fact sheets were handed out on the need to conduct Just Health Care training.

    Mackey stated that she felt the tour was a wonderful enlightenment for all of the people who were present, the people who were touched and the communities that were contacted. Mackey further stated that, “It has always been said that you can choose your friends, but you can’t choose your family, and we became a family on that bus.”

    Their camaraderie grew as they sang many songs along the route. “We Who Believe in Freedom” was a song that had been especially enjoyable by many of the 20 women Freedom Riders and a “Rich Man’s House” was an equally liked song by the other 10 children and 10 men.

    The Freedom Rider tour arrived in Los Angeles to an unprecedented 42,000 poor and homeless people who occupied the community known as Skid Row. That is the largest enclave of homeless people in America.

    The entire Freedom Ride Bus Tour documented over 500 economic human rights abuses. Seventeen Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Committees were established throughout the tour, and according to WEAP, the Freedom Ride Bus Tour 2000 was overwhelmingly successful.

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  • NO TURN AWAY!!!

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    HOMELESS FAMILIES RAISE THEIR VOICES AT CITY HALL

    by Challa Tabeson

    Some 80 San Francisco homeless families marched on City Hall last Tuesday,
    where all three freshmen supervisors-Sandoval, Newman, and Maxwell-were
    holding hearings. The protesters, loud and unstoppable, called for the
    abolition of Mayor Brown's "Merry-Go-Round" policy which forces homeless
    families with children out of city shelters. They also called for the implementation of a citywide "No Turn Away" policy at shelters that serve homeless families.

    Homeless parents and their children demanded a home to call their own. "We
    want permanent housing! We need permanent affordable housing!" Right now!
    Currently, no less than one hundred homeless families walk the dark and
    dangerous streets of San Francisco on any given night. Looking at the
    1999/2000 census, over 50 percent of homeless children are under the age of
    five, as documented by the SF homeless advocacy group Connecting
    Point(Gateway). The total number of homeless children is just over 4,041.

    Homeless children and their families are among the fastest growing segments
    of the city's homeless population. These children are often forced to live
    inunsafe and unhealthy conditions because of lack of shelter space. They
    are more likely to have poor health compared to other children. They are
    four times more likely to have delayed development-homeless families are
    often subject to hunger and malnutrition. Homeless children and youth also
    face multiple barriers to educational achievement.

    The facts seem terribly troubling, considering that 14,675 people are
    currently on the Section 8 waiting list for public housing units, with
    another 9,700 waiting for rental vouchers or certificates. An average San
    Francisco family on welfare receives $611 per month; a full-time minimum
    wage earner would have to work 53 hours per week to pay for the average one
    bedroom apartment, leaving $0 for other expenses.

    The Department of Human Services has been quietly working with the Mayor's
    Office on Homelessness to limit the use of hotel vouchers, making them
    valid only at the Family Resource Center (FRC), which is situated out in
    the Bayview Hunters Point District of San Francisco. This would stifle
    citywide access for homeless families using hotel vouchers. "But it wasn't
    fair to pit the Homeless Coalition against Bayview's Connecting Point...all
    we wanted was to find out what Sojourner Truth was doing with
    children from the Child Protective Services," responded Bianca, of SF Shelter Outreach Projects. Under this model program, the hotel vouchers would be available only to those families in need of housing who are engaged in family preservation services at the FRC.

    Director of Department of Homeless and Housing, Maggie Donahue, towed the
    party line during the hearing sessions, by blatantly interrupting
    testimonies on abuses homeless families had suffered at the hands of some
    homeless protective programs. The mayor's strong-armed lieutenant, spoke at
    length about a five-part scheme to confront the San Francisco housing
    struggle which included phasing out the Hotel Vouchers Program at
    Connecting Point(CP) started early last year.

    "We feel that the Connecting Point program was never designed to be what it
    became via the hotel vouchers--a provider of temporary shelter for families
    throughout the Bay Area," according to a February 20 memo from Donahue to
    the Coalition on Homelessness. She went on to make light of what effect
    this would have on homeless families, "CP will now be able to more
    productively utilize staff time and resources to act as a broker for
    emergency services, prevention services, and other information and referral
    services for families who are in crises."

    Not a few hopes were dashed upon the phasing out of the Hotel Voucher
    Program at Connecting Point in March. The opening of the family shelter at
    260 Golden Gate, which can boast only 6 new beds for the hoard of waiting
    homeless families is hardly an answer. Or should we be speaking of the
    three new medical hotel rooms at Hamilton Family Emergency Center, which
    provide a "net gain of 103 beds to the system after the CP closed the doors
    to its hotel rooms?" as stated by DHS

    "They (CP) don't even go by what they say..." rebuked TJ, who, with wife,
    who is six-months pregnant, recently found refuge at St. Joseph House, a
    center for homeless families with special needs, "They turned us away when
    me and my wife couldn't make it any other way."

    According to Sondra Stewart of Family Rights and Dignity, "City Hall is
    playing a shell game-robbing Peter to pay Paul..." No less than a 100
    families wait for emergency shelter every night here in the city of San
    Francisco, "...this is just one more proof of how the City de-prioritizes
    families." The massive number of homeless mothers and children certainly
    had a unified voice at City Hall, as they spoke out against the forced
    merry-go-round they have been on, and called on the Finance Committee of
    the Board of Supervisors to fully implement the "No Turn-Away Policy" for
    families with children at risk.

    The vision was that an additional family shelter would increase existing
    shelter beds for homeless families, not that it would replace the Waller
    Street location or the Hotel Voucher Program. Instead of the proposed 35
    family total capacity, only 15 emergency beds placements were made
    available to the City for homeless families with children. Where do the
    rest go from here?

    In a united effort to ensure that supervisors take appropriate steps to
    address the ever-growing housing crisis among homeless families in San
    Francisco, homeless advocacy organizations-including the Civil Rights
    Committee, Family Rights & Dignity, Hogares Sin Barreras, Shelter Outreach,
    Street Sheet, POOR Magazine and Substance Abuse & Mental Health coalitions-have taken the matter to City Hall. These organizations joined forces with homelessfamilies present at the Tuesday hearings, demanding that the City enact their outlined "twelve commandments."

    Along with several homeless advocacy coalitions in San Francisco, the
    homeless families presented numerous stipulations that the Board of
    Supervisors should reimplement the 1998 No Turn Away resolution designed to ensure that no child will ever be abandoned to the mean streets.

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  • DESCENDANTS OF ACUBALON

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    by Joseph Perryman

    I WAS AN AFRICAN BUT THEN I WAS A NIGGER AND THEN I WAS A NEGRO THEN I BECAME AN AFRO AMERICAN OH AND THEN I WAS A BLACK MAN OR SO THEY SAY AND HERE IT IS AGAIN AFRICAN AMERICAN

    LET’S SEE HERE I WAS AN AFRICAN STRONG BELLICOSE BELLIGERENT BENEFICENT BENEVOLENT AND DECORATIVE AND THEN NIGGER ONE LAZY ASS MUTHAFUCKA ALSO IGNORANT DUMBER THAN AH BOX OF ROCKS ON AH HOT SUNDAY AND NOW NEGRO...

    MOST OF US RECENTLY FREED FROM CHAINS BUT STILL REMAIN ON PLANTIONS NOW CALLED GHETTOS DEFINITION A PLACE TO WHERE A GROUP OR RACE OF PEOPLE ARE SENT OFF TO DIE OK NOW CHECK THIS OUT NEXT AFRO-AMERICAN AFRO AH HAIR-STYLE MY HAIR-STYLE MY NATURAL HAIR-STYLE....

    AND THEN NAMED BY AH STOLEN LAND WHICH I MIGHT NOT HAVE SUPPOSED TO BE BORN IN AND AIN’T THIS AH BITCH THEN I WAS AH BLACK MAN BLACK BLACK BLACK BLACK MAN DIRTY EVIL WITH BAD INTENT UNTRUST WORTHY THE DICTIONARY READS INDIGENOUS PEOPLE OF AFRICA AND THIS STILL GETS ME AFRICAN AMERICAN...

    NO LONGER AM I BEING IDENTIFIED BY MY HAIR-STYLE BUT ALSO CAN’T SPORT IT WHETHER I BRAID IT OR HAVE IT COMBED NICELY THEY SAY IT’S NOT A CLEAN LOOK YOU LOOK LIKE THUG IT’S LOOKS STUPID OR IT LOOKS UNTRUST WORTHY AND THE WHITES OOP CAUCASIANS NOBODY IS PURE HAVEN’T CALLED US AFRICAN SINCE 1619 THE BEGINNING OUR BEGINNING AND THEN THIS WORD AMERICA AMERICAN AMERICA WHO AND WHAT THE FUCK IS AMERICA VERSPUCHI A MAN WHO TOLD STORIES OF A LAND REALLY CALLED TURTLE ISLAND NEVER BEEN TO THE PLACE JUST TOLD STORIES ABOUT IT AMERICANS A GROUP OF PEOPLE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE MOST HEINOUS CRIMES IN HISTORY A PEOPLE WHO HOLDS THE WORLDS RECORD FOR THE BIGGEST HOLOCAUST IN HISTORY AND THEY WANNA POINT THE FINGER AT HITLER... THAT MUTHAFUCKA AIN’T GOT SHIT ON GEORGE WASHINGTON AND ABE LINCOLN HIS DECISION TO FREE US WAS STRATEGICAL NOT ETHICAL SO WE FREED OURSELVES BUT HAVE DIED AND ARE STILL DYING FOR NOTHIN MORE THAN FALSE FREEDOM...

    SO WHO ARE WE REALLY THE RULES SAY IF YOU’RE BORN IN A LAND YOU’RE FROM THAT LAND BUT I CAN NOT BE AN AMERICAN I HAVE NOTHIN TO DO NOR WANT NOTHIN TO DO WITH ROBBING PEOPLE OF THIER LAND AND KILLING THEM OFF TO ENSLAVE ANOTHER..

    50 STARS FOR 50 STATES MORE THAN 50 TRIBES ONLY 5 RECOGNIZED BY THE U.S.GOVERMENT AND NONE FOR ME AND MINES AND I CAN’T BE AH NIGGER CAUSE I BUILT THIS COUNTRY AND STILL HOLD IT UPON MY SHOULDERS TO THIS DAY AND NEGRO JUST DOESN’T DESCRIBE MY PEOPLE WE AIN’T GONNA EVEN TALK ABOUT AFRO-AMERICAN AND I FOR DAMN SURE AIN’T DIRTY EVIL UNTRUST WORTHY OR HAVE BAD INTENTIONS UPON ANYONE...

    I HATE EVERYBODY EQUALLY AND LOVE EVERYONE THE SAME SO I’M NOT BLACK AND AFRICAN AMERICAN IT’S HALF RIGHT THE AFRICAN PART THAT IS BUT WE JUST CAN’T BE AFRICANS CAUSE WE WAS NOT BORN THERE OCCORDING TO THE RULES SO I SAY WE ARE AFRICAN DESCENDANTS CAUSE WE WAS BORN HERE NOT AFRICA ACUBALON IF YOU REALLY WANNA GET DOWN TO IT..

    MY AFRICAN PEOPLE YOU HAVE GOT TO REALIZE THAT THERE IS ONE LAST CHAIN TO BE BROKEN AND IT’S IN OUR MINDS THE WILLIE LYNCH PROGRAM IS STILL IN AFFECT 5 DEGREES OF SEPARATION IF WE ARE FIGHTIN EACH OTHER THEN WE ARE NOT FOCUSING ON THE THREAT... REMEMBER WHAT WE STILL FIGHTING FOR OUR FREEDOM UNDERSTAND THAT WE ARE ALL WE GOT AND WE HAVE GOT TO FREE OURSELVES IN ORDER TO FREE EACH OTHER IT WILL NOT WORK ALONE
    WHEN YOU SEE EACH OTHER SO LOVE NO MATTER WHAT BE GLAD THAT THEY MADE IT ON THIS LONG HARD JOURNEY AND IT AIN’T OVER....

    I DEDICATE THIS TO MY BROTHER KENNY G. BORN FEB 26,1975 TO APRIL 30,2000 ALWAYS IN MY HEART ANOTHER AFRICAN WARRIOR LOST TO THIS AMERICAN BULLSHIT..ARE YOU AN AMERICAN ?

    JOE PERRYMAN

    1619

    Tags
  • The Constitutionality of Living Outside

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    PNN staff writer fights the constitionality of the “lodging” laws

    by Charles Atkins ( Post Newspaper Group)

    It was sad to see former UC Berkeley teacher, Ken Moshesh, facing his second charge after being arrested by a UC Berkeley officer for an October 27th “lodging” warrant. ( i.e., a warrant for sleeping or “lodging” outside)

    Moshesh called the POST to attend his hearing this week after he had been charged with sleeping outside the stairless porch of an abandoned boarded up structure on January 18th owned by the First Presbyterian Church.

    Moshesh was told that he had to appear on January 14th to see if charges had been filed, from the original incident, from which he was placed on probation, with the judge telling him that if he went back there again, the probation would restored.

    In an interview outside the Berkeley Municipal court house, Moshesh said, “ If I don’t sleep outside there, I’ll be sleeping outside somewhere else. Then the same scenario will continue to occur until I’m back in jail. Why should I have to continue to justify my freedom simply because I sleep outside,” said Moshesh, “I am being criminalized for my homelessness when there is no where inside to go, decent or not. Perhaps it is also because I am outspoken in words, action and went to the media about this paradoxical situation in this land of promise and plenty. Moshesh continued, “did my homelessness also strip me of my freedom of expression along with my civil rights?”

    This week Moshesh, who is also a staff writer for PoorNewsnetwork, was back in court with attorney Osha Neumann of Community Defense Inc, POOR Magazine editorial staff, and representatives from B.O.S.S., asking for permission to file a demurrer to the petition to revoke his probation. The case has once again been given another date, with the Public Defender saying that he doubts Moshesh will be sent to jail. Moshesh and his attorney would like to have the #647 statute defined so human beings are not criminalized for being homeless, on the grounds that it is a violation of human rights to penalize people for being poor. Neumann said Moshesh is one of the rare individuals who clearly understands the predicament of the homeless, and is willing to fight to get the state statute changed.

    In a workshop last December, Berkeley Police Chief Dashchel Butler, while addressing the relationship between police and homeless people said “homelessness is a societal problem that cannot and should not be dealt with by police. He further said that police should be of aid to the homeless population by providing referrals to social services.

    Although Berkeley police are considered much more humane than most in the Bay Area, reality is that they too have shown what some say is an appalling disregard for human life and dignity, as well as what some say is abuse of human rights of the home- less people.

    As a Participant Observer and Staff writer at POOR Magazine, Ken Moshesh, Community Defense Inc. and POOR staff in coalition with several other civil rights and economic justice organizations such as BOSS, Street Spirit, Coalition on Homelessness, Women’s Economic Agenda Project, and Copwatch are attempting to overturn the existent “lodging” laws, i.e., the laws that facilitate the criminalization of poverty and homelessness in the U.S. based on their unconstitutionality. For more on this story, read Ken’s stories; Arrested Artistry and Arrested Artistry II; The Set-up Continues on www.poornewsnetwork.org/index

    If you are interested in getting involved in this effort, please contact POOR at ( 415) 863-6306. or email poormag@sirius.com
    The next court date of this precedent setting case is April 12 at Berkeley Municipal Court dept. 201

    Tags
  • Just Trying to Sleep

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    A PNN video review

    by Alison VanDeursen

    The opening shot is of a narrow, rocky San Francisco Bay beach. The sky
    is grey; the low, rolling waves fall into the shore, scattering gulls.
    Then a cut to the back of a woman watching the beach, and my own voice
    wonders aloud, "Where did all the birds go?"

    Yes, my voice. I had the honor of participating in Ken Moshesh's artistic
    documentary "Just Trying to Sleep," and I now have the pleasure of
    introducing it to the readers of POOR. I learned more about Ken Moshesh
    and his groundbreaking court case by watching his video. And, I want you
    to know, by knowing and working with Ken Moshesh, I have learned more
    about my self.

    "Where did all the birds go?" rang to us as an accidental but apt metaphor
    for the subject of this video: homeless people of the Bay Area and of the
    entire nation. When the night falls, where do homeless people go to
    sleep? And what happens to them there?

    What has happened to Ken Moshesh in Berkeley are citations,
    criminalization, and incarceration. He spent five days in jail for the
    "crime" of sleeping outside, and faces 45 days for "violating" his
    probation- i.e., sleeping outside again. (Where else can he sleep? The
    shelters are full!) He has been banned from the campus of UC Berkeley,
    where he once taught and where he now produces his award-winning videos.
    ["Endangering the Species", Excellence in Ethnography award, Berkeley Film Festival, 2000].

    The "crime" Moshesh is being charged with is called 647j. It is
    erroneously known as the "Lodging Law," and it targets those who "set up
    lodgings" illegally. One fundamental problem with this law, as outlined
    by Moshesh and attorney Osha Neumann in the video, is that "lodging" is a
    vague term. What it means to "lodge" has never been defined. Thus, this
    law violates the constitutional right to due process. As Neumann says,
    "If you can't tell what the crime is," then how can you be prosecuted for
    it?

    One thing is undeniably true: sleeping is not a crime. It is a fundamental
    human right, let alone a biological need. Moshesh refuses to be bullied by a compassionless and unjust system, andis challenging the constitutionality of the Berekeley law. Read: This is huge, folks. This is history.

    The video highlights the words of some of the major activists in Berkeley
    and the Bay Area, expressing their opinions about homelessness policy in
    general and Ken's case in particular. It is controversial, as my friend
    Dave and I watched the video and spent an hour debating what a "basic
    human right" really is. It is artistic, and my roommate Jonathan, himself
    a documentary filmmaker, found its creativity refreshing. There are lots
    of unusual camera angles- those are my green Converse shot against the
    levee! In my mind, the many shots of shoes and cold, hard ground suggest
    the struggle of homeless folks. This may not be a slick production, but
    it is originally crafted and thought-provoking.

    Perhaps my favorite scene in the video is that of Ken playing drums by the
    beach, the audio overlapping shots of Ken convincing Greg Syren, the
    Public Defender, why this case is so important. The beats are throbbing,
    quick, and unrelenting, both peaceful music and a battle cry. This is Ken
    Moshesh: articulate spokesman for homeless folks within the Berkeley
    courthouse, and an intense musician inspired by our natural environment.

    Ken Moshesh, staff writer and poet for POOR Magazine and www.poornewsnetwork.org is also a filmmaker, musician, a poet, orator, and
    activist. He is also homeless. He is also a wonderful person with a
    generous heart and a teacher's spirit. Ken has encouraged me to explore
    and push beyond my own artistic boundaries, and though I cringe a bit
    hearing my voice reciting his beautiful poetry- and singing(!)- I am proud
    to have been a part of this project- and he won't let me rest! Ken Moshesh
    is a peaceful and inspirational soul and artist, and it would be a true
    crime were he to be incarcerated again for "Just Trying to Sleep."

    Check out this powerful piece on
    Berkeley Public Access Channel 25!!! as well it is available by writing to Po'Products c/o POOR Magazine 255 9th street SF, Ca 94103

    Tags
  • God Lite

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Due to time constraints, this will be a lesson in writing a micro column.

    This is the third week that I have picked up a small multi-colored pamphlet.

    by Joseph Bolden

    The pamphlets were in the following colors: yellow-red, purple-black
    and florescent pink-black.

    The first pamphlet, in yellow and red, says: "Are You Trapped In a Housing Crisis?" A smiling woman, Goldi Lox is her name, offers assistance. I read it and admired the nicely drawn pictures. But at the end I find that it’s NOT about earthly housing crisis, but about "Having a home with God".

    Nice, kind sentiment Ms. Lox but working poor, homeless People who are alone, or especially those who are mothers with children need "Real Homes" to live in while we’re "STILL ALIVE ON EARTH."

    The next two pamphlets ask: Why PDA’s? The drawing is simple, it looks like a hand-held palm pilot . But at the end of the pamphlet, I find out that PDA is Personal Divine Advocate. Folks, do you see a pattern?

    My last pamphlet, in shocking pink, is called "The Ultimate Note Book". On its cover is a drawing of a guy wearing glasses who is opening up his laptop. Again great graphics. Of course "TUNB" is the Bible. At first I’m thinking Catholics. Wrong, it’s a Jews for Jesus pamphlet. Whatever.

    I had to get these pamphlets out of my mind because they are Not helping people struggling to find housing, better education, jobs or healthcare. While they're punning homelessness and access they could also be placing much needed info on free computer classes and where to find "real" affordable housing in and out of San Francisco.

    According to the pamphlets, getting what you want sounds easy: be good, pray, take this shit and when you die, Heaven will have everything you’ll ever need. I know religion is supposed to uplift people spiritually, but if you’re not eating, looking for work, moving from shelter to shelter, with or without General Assistance, Social Security Insurance, or on meager dwindling life savings…THE MESSAGES DON’T HELP…/>

    Whatever you donate to Poor Magazine, others, or myself is a godsend. Thank you all.

    What do you out there think of these and other religion-tinged leaflets? Do they help? Can they be improved upon? Please check our website for the address to send your comments to.[It's late and I'm weary. That's why the column is small and no donation address or private AJ box is here. Gotta go.]

    Tags
  • Unstable Positions

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    70% of Homeless People in Japan are victims of layoffs

    by Homeless People's Network)

    Seventy percent of homeless people in Tokyo lost their jobs
    through restructuring, and 80 percent want to find employment,
    according to a white paper released Friday.

    The report by the Tokyo metropolitan government is the first
    ever published in Japan on the homeless.

    Tokyo government officials in March last year surveyed 1,000
    homeless people who were living in temporary housing, parks or
    alongside rivers.

    The number of homeless in Tokyo is 5,700, which is 1.7 times
    higher than five years ago and accounts for 30 percent of Japan's
    total homeless population, according to the report.

    Fifty percent of Tokyo's homeless are in their 50s, while 90
    percent of the homeless people in the capital are in their 40s,
    50s or 60s, the report said. Ninety-eight percent of the homeless
    are males.

    Two-thirds of the homeless had held stable positions either
    as company employees or as operators of their own businesses.
    Ten percent of these people were white collar workers in management
    or clerical positions, the report said.

    The major reasons cited for being jobless were: resignation
    (30 percent); lack of day labor (25 percent); dismissal (13 percent);
    and sickness or injury (9 percent).

    The Tokyo government concluded that 70 percent of the homeless
    had been dismissed from their jobs.

    The government next fiscal year will pump more resources into
    providing support for the homeless, including increasing self-reliance
    support centers.

    **In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
    is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
    expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
    for non-profit research and educational purposes only.**

    Tags
  • COLD NIGHTS

    09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Medea Benjamin explains to PNN how P.G.&E’s current policies discriminate against large low income households.

    by Takuya Arai/PNN (edited by Dee Gray)

    Currently, I share a house with four other students like myself. As well, on most days there are six or seven more people in our house at any given time because we invite our friends over. Mine is a large household. Since PG&E started charging more for their utility services, we have not been using the gas heater, even for cold nights. Our dishwasher has been unused for weeks. Despite our efforts, the energy bill has kept mercilessly increasing. Everytime I open the PG&E bill, I feel like I am receiving a graded exam from my professor.

    For low-income people, increased energy costs pose the serious threat of losing access to the basic necessities of life. On March 27, as California residents’ discontent heightened, Medea Benjamin from Global Exchange, a non-profit organization based in San Francisco, protested against the approval of the 46 percent rise in electricity prices at the State Public Utilities Commission in San Francisco. Medea Benjamin ran for the U.S. Senate in the last election as a Green Party candidate. Although dealing with the energy crisis was not her agenda, she is now actively involved in it.

    The office of Global Exchange is on Mission Street in San Francisco. Unlike the other parts of the city, the Mission District is filled with the liveliness and vitality of the Latino community. I noticed that there were more people on the street than in other parts of the town and there were different generations of people, such as little kids, young couples, people at work carrying stuff, mothers with babies, and elders on the street. Despite its geographical proximity to my house, I felt like I had come to Latin America.

    The sophisticated arrangement in the office and the multi-racial working environment of Global Exchange impressed me. The receptionist told me that I could sit on the sofa to wait for Medea Benjamin, who was in a meeting. When she came out ten minutes later, I did not recognize her. She looked a lot smaller than the picture I’d seen of her in the New York Times. We both sat on a big comfortable couch and introduced ourselves . As a matter of fact, this was my first serious interview, and I think I appeared very nervous to her. People were walking by us, but it helped to create friendly atmosphere for me.

    First we talked about the role of the PUC, which is responsible for providing California utility customers with safe, reliable utility service at reasonable rates. I read this in the PUC mission statement.

    “It seems like what they are doing to us is the total opposite of what they are saying. It even sounds ironic and it is hypocritical. What do you think about this?” I asked as my first question.

    “They are violating their own mandate.” Medea Benjamin replied in a soft voice. “If they continue on this path, this won’t even be the end of the rate increases. Companies are responsible for the crisis, whether it is the utility companies or the wholesale energy suppliers. And somehow, between the two types of companies, they’ve got to figure it out and pay for it.” Frankly , I was glad that she answered me with a sincere attitude as I was a little anxious that she might not take me seriously. Firstly, she does not know anything about me and secondly, I am just a reporter who has never done this kind of thing before.

    Loretta Lynch, the president of the PUC, said that the light power users would face little rate increase compared to the heavy power users. But these power rate hikes will ultimately hit the residents of California. Those heavy power users, or the commercial power customers, will be forced to pass on their higher electricity costs by increasing the prices of their products or services.

    Medea Benjamin agreed on this point. She said, “Businesses are going to pass on [the cost] to the consumers. So, if you buy food, if you ever go to a restaurant, if you go to the laundromat, if you go to Walgreen’s, wherever you go to make purchases, you are going to feel the increase in prices.”

    The other thing that she pointed out is what is called the “baseline”. PUC and other utility companies determine who is going to get the rate increase depending on a certain baseline. That baseline is determined by region and by season but they do not set this baseline by how many people are in each house.

    “If you are a poor family, living six, seven, or eight people in a household because you cannot live on your own, have extended family of grand parents, kids, you will use more energy. So you will be in a category of the “energy hog”. So, it actually discriminates against larger family or larger households.” Medea said the way that they are deciding who will get the rate hike is unfair and the PUC and other utility companies should change this way of looking at and trying to solve the problem.

    There are many large families and large households, particularly in poor communities. Lorena, who works with us at POOR News Network, lives with 14 roommates in a two-bedroom apartment in the Mission District. She shares one bedroom with four other adults. Over the past three months, she saw the apartment’s energy bill increase by more than 60 percent. “My roommates do not have jobs. They are looking for a job. I do not know if we can afford to pay more for electricity.” Lorena said in English, which she does not use very often.

    Although the PUC states that anybody who is low income can get subsidies for their energy, the program is very limited and only helps low-income people for three months. With one quarter of children in California living in poverty, it is impossible to cover all of them. In addition, how are they going to subsidize the majority of seniors who live on a fixed income?

    “We should also remember the middle-class people.” Medea Benjamin said. “This can be very devastating for them because the middle class has really been hit hard by the cost of living. Many middle-class families are hanging on by a thread as well. They have high debts, high mortgage payments, high expenses related to child bearing, high cost of health care, so this does not just affect the poor. It also affects the middle class.” During the interview, somebody important called her and she had to take the call. She came back in less than one minute, but the telephone was ringing incessantly and I could hear many people in the conference room, where she had been.

    In 1996, then-Governor Pete Wilson, a Republican, signed the bill that deregulated and dismantled California's electric utilities in the name of lower consumer power bills. I learned in school that the whole notion of deregulation is to promote free competition, so that companies that have the most efficient operations, and management can offer their services and products at the lowest price, which should be beneficial to the consumers. Advocates of Social Darwinism say that the winners in competition will bring the most benefits to the consumers and hence to the society. However, what is actually happening is the opposite. Those two utility companies have not been able to pay the energy wholesalers who raised energy prices after the deregulation. Those utility companies are now passing on the higher energy costs to the consumers.

    “Do you think that the deregulation is the cause of the entire rate hike, or was this just a part of the scheme for them to get more money from the final consumers?” I asked.

    “I think both. I think the deregulation has been absolutely disastrous. This was sold to the people of California as a way to reduce rates by at least 20 percent. We were told that the deregulation would lower consumer prices because of increased competition and we see it went from regulated cartel to deregulated or unregulated cartel. I think it is also a part of the scheme that the companies themselves have pressured the politicians to implement the deregulation as a way for them to make very obscene levels of profit.” She answered.

    I kept thinking about things that I had learned in school, such as deregulation, lobbying, privatization, competition, etc. I was taught that those things bring prosperity to both business and the consumer. When we had discussions in class, I learned to use business jargon and got used to talking like a senior executive of a company. I remembered what I was studying and thought that my mindset was so one-dimensional.

    Because of this rate hike, two utility companies are getting a lot of revenue, but at the same time, the wholesale price increased more than 10 fold last year. Even with increased revenue from higher prices, the two utility companies are unable to pay 13 billion dollars in months of outstanding debt to the wholesaler.

    “What do you think is the best solution for all these rate hikes?” I asked, a basic question.

    “I think the only solution is public power.” She replied right away. “We put both the generators of electricity and transmission and distribution of electricity in the hands of public entities.” She argued that privately owned utility companies have, “no incentive for conservation.”

    Before the crisis, cities like Sacramento and Los Angeles had lower utility rates, better programs for conservation of energy, and better programs for uses of renewable sources of energy. Those cities that have their own public utilities have been sheltered from the crisis to a large extent. She insists that we should have municipal utility districts that are locally controlled and locally managed and they should be coordinated at the statewide level by a public power authority.

    “If we have public power locally controlled where the interest is not profit for the shareholders, but the interest is providing precisely what is the mission statement of the public utilities, which is reliable sources of energy at affordable prices. I would add into that, reliable sources of clean energy at affordable prices. Then we can really make tremendous progress in cutting down our use of energy and getting off of our treadmill of using more and more fossil fuels.

    She indicated that the company should, “divide themselves into the profit making and the non-profit making parts. There are certain things in modern day society that are too important to be left to the manipulation of the market place, things like water, energy, education and health care. These things need to be in the public sector.”

    As we finished the interview, I thanked Medea Benjamin for her time and sincere responses to my questions. My hands were sweating but my tense mind was relieved. I stepped outside the building and thought it would have been great if I smoked a cigarette, but I decided not to because I quit smoking last year. However, and more importantly, I was encouraged to know that there was another person fighting hard for the public’s interest.

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