2016

  • Crossing False Borders- A Youth Skola Report (Decolonewz sElection Issue)

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    p dir="ltr"spanMy name is span class="il"Cassandra/span, from Poor Magazine. Today Irsquo;m talking about borders. I do not believe in borders due to the fact that I come from migrant family members that immigrated from Nayarit, Mexico to the United States twenty five years ago. I will also be talking about the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous People and itrsquo;s importance in the upcoming election. /span/p p dir="ltr"spanArticle 10 of the UN Declaration states that Indigenous peoples shall not be forcibly removed from their lands or territories. No relocation shall take place without the free, prior and informed consent of the indigenous peoples concerned and after agreement on just and fair compensation and, where possible, with the option of return./span/p p dir="ltr"spanPeople are constantly being deported from the U.S. especially with all the ICE raids happening in different states, including California and right here in my neighborhood./span/p p dir="ltr"spanPoliticians like Donald Trump and Marco Rubio believe that immigrants are the problem in the United States, and that making stricter immigration policies will help. Others like Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton donrsquo;t believe that immigration is a huge issue in the United States./span/p p dir="ltr"spanAs a result, when politicians like Marco Rubio and Donald Trump speak about the issue of immigration, they go on and on about how they want to stop ldquo;illegal immigration.rdquo; But is it really illegal? If the United States government were to follow the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, would there be such a things as a borders?/span/p
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  • Profiled to Death

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pRecently while Walking on Division St. in San Francisco with laundry and groceries by a tent city, I was approached by a young black female news reporter from one of the local mainstream news station affiliates. She was accompanied by another gentleman of African descent and a camera man of Asian descent./p pShe excitedly asked me as if she heard good news that I should also be excited about ldquo;Are you moving?/p pTo which I replied, am I moving?/p pI was of course offended not only that I had just been profiled by how I dressed and looked but that I should some how feel excited about this./p pShe of course referring to Ed Leersquo;s recent vow to shut down local tent cities ldquo;and provide the residents of them with needed social servicesrdquo; For those of you who donrsquo;t understand government double talk, what that really means is he intends to have DPW steal their belongings while the cops arrest, kill or beat them./p pI should consider myself one of the lucky ones. I was profiled by a naiuml;ve if not over zealous news reporter who, in spite of being affiliated with some of the monsters responsible for the suffering of poor folks, was still pretty much harmless./p pIronically, she is the same reporter who educated on one of Poor Magazines actions outside of 850 Bryant street some time last year in an effort to get the DA to either bring criminal charges against or stop the eviction of elders./p pAbout a quarter mile from where this occurred, a houseless man who was residing in a tent city on Shotwell street and who would otherwise be known as a community activist Luis Gongora was profiled to death. Shot by police, supposedly for waving a knife at police. Not only do residents of the tent city on Shotwell and 19supth/supnbsp;street dispute this, so do local building residents./p pSeveral nights later the cops returned slashed the tents of the remaining residents kicked over a makeshift memorial for Luis and assisted the DPW in stealing their belongings./p
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  • Concussion Review

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"I#39;m going to be doing a review on the movie Concussion, a movie about footballnbsp;and the dangers of it. /font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"You could hate or love this guy: his name was Doctor Omalu./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Doctor Omalu had worked on autopsies to find out how people died. He would do it in a different way, He would respect the body for who they werenbsp;andnbsp;how they lived because he would respect the dead, not open someone up./font/font/font/p h3 class="western" style="font-weight: normal; orphans: 1;" font color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Then he was doing an autopsy on a player who died in the movie, Mike Websternbsp;was anbsp;football player that played for the Steelersnbsp;andnbsp;made it to the hall of fame. But what he didn#39;t know-- if got tackled his head was taking severe damage. In this movie finding this out was very important because the players didn#39;t even know about this. During the movie they are trying to find this out what is affecting the people who are playing football./font/font/font/h3 pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"After finding the reason why Mike Webster had a diednbsp;andnbsp;saw that two more football players died, another autopsy was performed on both of them. They came up with the same results. It was not early Alzheimer#39;s or tumors. Iit was something else. Andnbsp;trying to find this was difficult. So was telling people who loved football that you will get severe head injuries./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"After telling people that you can head injuries he got so much hatenbsp;andnbsp;was even called out by the N.F. The N.F.L was worried about losing money, because football was America#39;s game where veryone comes together. The family yells with joy or sadness but there was always thrills./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"After three deaths this needed a name, the name was Chronic traumatic encephalopaty, After giving the biggest boogie man a name, they attacked back. They had took his job away, taking his life, taking everything he worked for away./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"But after one of their best people who diednbsp;andnbsp;was inside with the N.F.L had died of CTE the N.F.L knew that it was true./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"The reason that we had seen this movie because it was a very conscious movie on a very conscious day about Martin Luther Kingnbsp;andnbsp;last year we had seen Selma./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"The most important parts of the movie were when he was always for the best of people. He knew that peoples#39; lives would be in dangernbsp;andnbsp;knew that it was wrong how people like to hide the truth. If it ruins their profit they don#39;t win. And stillto this day people still get C.T.E.nbsp;/font/font/font/p
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  • The violence that hurts us all

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"ldquo;Itrsquo;s okay, Puddin, itrsquo;s okay, wersquo;re good.rdquo; I was more focused on calming my 10 year old daughter down than tending to my knee I hurt while hitting the floor as ldquo;Hood Terroristsrdquo; riddled our block (Eddy and Laguna Sts.) with bullets that missed my neighborrsquo;s head by an inch. A young man in his early 20rsquo;s was wounded in that shooting. On the scene of the evening shooting, a few of the Plaza East families had to patiently wait in the cold until the crime scene investigators were done with collecting the evidence and families were allowed to return to their homes. /span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"I went to the hospital with the rest of the community to check on the person who was shot. When I came home, they still had the neighborhood blocked off, and I couldnrsquo;t get into my house./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"emImage: Scharod Fleming was a great dancer and beloved son who was killed in 2004 at the age of 15 at a dance party. Scharod#39;s Law, which allows promoters to be liable for violence at their events, is named for him./em/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"I elected to follow my feline counterpart Tifah and take to the backyard. We both climbed the fence, resembling 2 members of Mama Naturersquo;s thick curvy club, a thick cat and a thick lady. (Outch!)/span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Earlier that Sunday, another man was killed while exiting the McDonaldrsquo;s drive-thru area across from the Northern Police station in the Fill-no-moe. ldquo;Shootings that happened directly across the street from Northern police station is normal these days.rdquo; Says an onlooker who did not want to be named due to lack of trust of the media. This is PNN, not CNN I reminded the humble resident who then let down all guards./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Traumatized children stayed home from school the next day because of anxiety that led to a sleepless night. Windows on the right side of the 1200 block of Eddy street were shot out and a few are still awaiting repair. As of yet there has been no word of any suspects in both Sunday cases./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Richmond has had its share serving as another killing field for our young men. 14- year old Xavier McLanahan, 15 year-old Malik Barnes and 21-year old Joshmahl Russell are the latest victims of the violence that continues to rob and devour our children in the Bay Area. These kind of child murders would be declared a state of emergency if the youngsters had the ldquo;complexion protectionrdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"In my opinion, this is like a horror movie where our children are being slaughtered by the porsquo;lice and this ldquo;unseen monsterrdquo; or ldquo;community terroristsrdquo;, like some weird version of ldquo;A nightmare on elm streetrdquo; except the nightmare is on my street and not on a picture screen. Its soul-boggling that no one in either category rarely is brought to justice. Itrsquo;s frustrating and disrespectful to us, all of us who lost loved ones (my brother Marcus) and because of this racist, porsquo;lice state will pretty much never have any closure other than waiting for a year for an autopsy report and a xeroxed copy of a ldquo;Thank Yourdquo; letter from survivors that have benefitted from ldquo;donated for profitrdquo; organs from the deceased./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"While watching mainstream media, I couldnrsquo;t help but notice that almost every Black, Brown and other children of color murdered in our communities are immediately labeled a gangsta so therefore therersquo;s this reserved attitude of ldquo;one less.rdquo; If a murder victim unfortunately had run-ins with the ldquo;lawless with badgesrdquo;, there really is a vibe of ldquo;good riddancerdquo;, and that makes a cop that much more comfortable with laughing at half-assed jokes as a poor Mama wail over their love onersquo;s body. I know, (judgemental ones) itrsquo;s not the porsquo;licersquo;s job to feel our torment, but I would rather see a blank faced cop than a laughing one. I donrsquo;t think itrsquo;s decent to be laughing a few feet away while someone is catching hell right in front of you, itrsquo;s a human thing, you know?/span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Changing the conversation to the side of the coin thatrsquo;s hardly voiced, a lot of our children are killed because they ARE NOT in a gang and REFUSE to engage in any wrongdoing, often being called ldquo;goody-two shoesrdquo; or ldquo;square.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Like in the case of Joquan, a young black man who was on his way to the store after receiving news that he was going to be a father, was approached by 2-3 gunmen who ldquo;emptied outrdquo; their guns, shooting him dead after he refused to partake in a crime. (His mother subsequently died from a broken heart over her loss)/span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"The youngsters who resisted the temptations to fuel the ldquo;Those people in low-income housingrdquo; stereotype are then targeted because of their choice to do the right thing. There is a need to support the children who are bullied, and ldquo;Not scold us and make us feel bad for doing the right thing or treat us like criminals, like officer ldquo;Jezzyrdquo; did!rdquo; Said one teen who feels like ldquo;Black teen life mattersrdquo; also in the Western Addition area./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"There have been some shine on the news lately praising the success of laws that were created in the name of child victims. Legislation like Meganrsquo;s law, Jessicarsquo;s law and the Amber alert, an alert system that lets us know whether wersquo;re at home or on the highway that a child is lost or has been abducted. These are powerful tools when it comes to the safety of our children, returning them home to their families, and implementing harsher sentences for those who are responsible for committing crimes against our youth./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"The sun will also shine on Scharodrsquo;s law, coined after 15-year old Scharod Fleming, a young, black talented ldquo;dancing machinerdquo; from the Western Addition who was killed outside the YMCA in the Tenderloin leaving a ldquo;Black Saturdayrsquo;srdquo; event by Eugene Cockerham, Jr. a promoter that had of reputation of throwing events that ended in fatalities, who also failed to provide adequate security for the young partygoers after fights had broken out later that evening./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Scharodrsquo;s law was introduced to provide stricter regulations to hold promoters (more) accountable for violating licensing rules and the required security staffed at dances, but Scharodrsquo;s Law, along with ldquo;Let the Children Dancerdquo; foundation created by one of his relatives is not taken seriously, not supported and swept under the rug, like many of our childrenrsquo;s lives./span/span/p pnbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-1c727c87-a004-42a7-2ed3-e3db0668c200"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Queennandi X, PNN/span/span/p
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  • Stolen Land / Hoarded Resources Redistribution, Decolonization Community Reparations Tour Comes To LA with Black, Brown, Broke Disabled Hip-Hop/Spoken Word Show

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    div dir="ltr" div class="gmail_quote" div dir="ltr" div class="gmail_quote" div dir="ltr" div font size="6"spanStolen Land / Hoarded Resources Redistribution, Decolonization Community Reparations Tour Comes To LA with Black, Brown, Broke Disabled Hip-Hop/Spoken Word Show/span/font/div div nbsp;/div div div div class="gmail_quote" div dir="ltr" div class="gmail_quote" div dir="ltr" div strongWhat: National Stolen Land/Hoarded resources Tour Hits LA - (Occupied Tongva Lands)/strong/div div strongWhen: June 10 11 /strong/div div strong1st Tour Stop - Venice Beach 1pm -June 10th /strong/div div strong2nd Tour Stop: Beverly Hills 1pm June 11th /strong/div div strong(Po Pets, Krip Hop welfareQUEENS poetry/Hip Hop Gigs Listed below) /strong/div div br / bStolen Land Hoarded Resources Redistribution, Decolonization Community Reparations Tour.nbsp;/bbr / The Nation-wide tour of wealthy neighborhoods across the US which launched in San Francisco on Earth Day is co-led by Poverty Skola Lisa Tiny Gray-Garcia and fellow Race, Disability, Indigenous Skolaz from POOR Magazine/Prensa POBRE, Leroy Moore from Krip Hop Nation and folks from LA Community Action Network and on Day 1 of the LA tour will go tonbsp; Venice Beach area where hundreds of elders and families face Ellis act evictions and displacement,nbsp; and Pacific Palisades where others live in multi-million dollar designer homes and on Day 2 go into Beverly Hills to offer an innovative healing solution to the disease of wealth and resource hoardingspan. /span div br / spanWe Black, Brown, homeless, disabled and 1st Nations people are peacefully crossing the visible and invisible lines that separate us poor folks from the very rich to ask them to begin the healing, change-making, process of decolonizing, redistributing and reparating their stolen and/or hoarded, inherited wealth and/or land , Concluded Lisa Tiny Gray-Garcia./spanbr / nbsp;/div div spanThe Stolen Land/ Hoarded Resources tour is loosely based on the Bhoodan Movement of India launched by Vinoba Bhave who walked through India asking wealthy land-owners to gift their land to landless peoples. With a similar vision, this small group of landless and indigenous peoples being hit the hardest by displacement and gentrification will be Intentionally crossing the invisible and visible lines between the land and resource hoarders aka the very rich and the victims of generations of white supremacy, theft, colonization, criminalization, racism, eugenics and silencing, aka the very poor. /spanbr / nbsp;/div div spanspanLos Angeles is where me and my mama became homeless when i was 11years old, after she became disabled. We were arrested and harassed multiple times for the sole act of sleeping in our car, concluded Lisa Tiny Gray-Garcia, who is the author of Criminal of Poverty , Growing Up Homeless in America, which chronicles the life of a homeless, disabled, mixed race mother and daughter struggling to survive in LA and their work to launch a data-saferedirecturl="https://www.google.com/url?hl=enq=http://www.poormagazine.orgsource=gmailust=1463522470157000usg=AFQjCNHqLxeRYeopy3lJ4A_sYtI_s2FUJQ" href="http://www.poormagazine.org" target="_blank"POOR Magazine/a the organization and the landless peoples movement called a data-saferedirecturl="https://www.google.com/url?hl=enq=http://www.poormagazine.org/homefulnesssource=gmailust=1463522470157000usg=AFQjCNHWtRnLE2Ru-DTJKRXUSvSfpc75lQ" href="http://www.poormagazine.org/homefulness" target="_blank"Homefulness/a-one of the models being highlighted as a powerful move of redistribution and reparations in this tour./span p One of the other ways we can talk about people giving reparations is to give to the Sogore Te land trust one of the only Native- women -run land trust, said Corrina Gould./p/spanbr / nbsp;/div div spanbBlack, Brown, Broke Disabled Hip Hop Spoken Word Tour/bbr / The Tour will be in LA on June 10-11/16 ending with a performance collaborating with Drip-Hop Nation member and LA based Hip-Hop artist, DJ Quad of 5th Battalion.nbsp; Saturday afternoon and night will be a Hip-Hop/Spoken Word performance with Po#39; Poets of POOR Magazine/welfareQUEENs ( Muteado SIlencio, Vivi T, Laure McElroy, Tiny Lisa Gray-Garcia, Queenandi XSheba, Aunti Frances) Leroy Moore DJ Quad of Krip-Hop Nation at BNB... Inner-City Arts#39; The Rosenthal Theater./span/div div nbsp;/div div spanTour Dates: Hip Hop Dates: TBA/span/div /div /div /div /div /div /div /div /div /div /div /div /div pFundraising a data-saferedirecturl="https://www.google.com/url?hl=enq=https://www.youcaring.com/the-we-empowerment-center-krip-hop-cafe-intifada-563789?fb_action_ids%3D10207679299995470%26fb_action_types%3Dog.commentssource=gmailust=1463522470174000usg=AFQjCNE3-brnUmAGlrVc2ah_-CoUyx2smQ" href="https://www.youcaring.com/the-we-empowerment-center-krip-hop-cafe-intifada-563789?fb_action_ids=10207679299995470fb_action_types=og.comments" target="_blank"Link for the Tour on YouCaring /abr / a href="https://www.facebook.com/events/1607154592842850/"Event Page on Facebook/a/p
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  • Upcoming Film, A Small Temporary Inconvenience, Black Disabled Civcil Rights Activist, George Eames, In Louisiana 1950’’s- the 90’s

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    PNNscholar1
    Original Body
    pb(Pic ofnbsp;/bspanGeorge Washington Eames, Jr. aka Mr. Civil Rightssitting in his wheelchair with a Black hat, Black jacket covering a white shirt and a colorful tie)/span/p pbLeroy Moore:/bspan So, give us your name./span/p pbCleveland Bailey Jr./bspan: OK, my official name is Cleveland Bailey Jr., but everybody calls me Cleve./span/p pbLeroy Moore: /bspanAll right, Cleve. Can I call you Cleve?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Certainly./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK, good, good. All right. So let#39;s get started, Cleve. You#39;re based in San Francisco now, right?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I am. I actually live in Hayward./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOh, OK. Great. So I have a couple of questions, of course, based on the upcoming movie. Tell us the title of the movie again./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Currently, our working title is A Small Temporary Inconvenience./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bAll right, great. Yeah, just like I said, I#39;m starting to read the book, and the book is excellent so far./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Great. I#39;m glad you#39;re enjoying it. My aunt Kathy really put her heart and soul into it, and I think it#39;s a great historical piece./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore/b: Yeah, definitely, definitely. Now, you#39;re originally from Louisiana, is that right?/span/p pspannbsp;bCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I am. I am from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the Red Stick. Yeah, it was a great place to grow up and a great time. You don#39;t realize the historical significance of the place that you#39;re born until you grow up. And then you realize that we have the best football players, we have the best basketball players, we have the best looking women, everything down there. We have some of the best stories. It#39;s kinda crazy, you know. The Civil Rights movement, Jim Crow, slavery./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b Yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: A lot of our history is African-American in the South, and when you#39;re from the South, people have a tendency to think that it#39;s all doom and gloom. But I enjoy it very much, and there was a whole lotta love and support in my community, and I#39;m proud of that./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah. I know for me, being a music lover and being a Blues lover, the South has so much history with the Blues./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Right, right./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So it#39;s a very creative environment, from the African-American minister and the way that he puts on his show to all of the things that go on. It#39;s just a very interesting and exciting place to kinda come from./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bSo, you know as a Black, disabled researcher, journalist, and activist. So when I found the story of George Washington Emmett Jr., I had to get the book. The story is definitely important for the Black community and disabled community. Tell us about your movies all the way up until now. I saw a couple of YouTube clips about your other movies too./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Let me try to get that question. How does the book impact people who are disabled?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, and how to is the movie gonna impact? You know, this is the history of people with disabilities and Black people./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, you know, that#39;s a very good question. I think what the movie will imply is that you can get power from pain. It just depends on how you look at it and how you decide to process what#39;s going on to you and what you choose to do with it. I think that my uncle George was mad about what happened to him. He was so mad that he was willing to risk his life to make sure that it never happened to anybody. And so he went after the law and the institutionalized systems that perpetrated these attitudes, and he rose from a paraplegic to a Civil Rights and American hero. So I think the biggest thing that people can learn from this is as long as you have your mind and your voice, and you choose to put it out there and use it in a constructive way, that you can get rewards, you can get respect, and you can get things done if it#39;s all for the right motives and purposes./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm, yeah. You know, there#39;s a lot of ups and downs in the book like inter-racial marriage back in the #39;50s, George got shot in a white neighborhood, prison and disability. Give us some background on these times and how would the film bring some of these issues to the big screen./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK. Obviously, my uncle George represents any Black male in America who happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time or happens to be stereotyped, but not something that he did, was something that someone else did, and they couldn#39;t get a good description of him. So it#39;s the Black male. So he was shot because supposedly, there had been some activities going on at the house, not at the house. Someone had flashed themselves in front of the guy#39;s wife a week or so ago before George walked down the alley. And the guy shot Uncle George, thinking that he was peeping Tom or intruder or whatever the case might be. So it was just a situation of shoot first and ask questions later. He was left for dead in an alley. But by the grace of God, he lived and was able to use his disability to his advantage and to find strength and power in his healing. It helped improve the community for everybody. That#39;s the getting shot part and what he did with his life. In terms of the inter-racial marriage, you know, everybody I talk to says they couldn#39;t understand how this pretty, educated white girl whose father was in thenbsp;/spanSOUTHERN GENTLEMEN, more like a white citizen#39;s council could fall for a paraplegic Black man./p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: But in talking to my aunt Kathy, she said he was the most charismatic person that she had ever met in her life, and it was almost an instant attraction. And so I think what we can learn from that is that we, as human beings, have to try to be more focused on what a person#39;s character is as opposed to what the color of their skin is. And then, it goes even deeper as to how strong our family ties are, are they the ties that should go in our lives, and when do we, as young adults, make decisions that will make us happy for the rest of our lives, as opposed to our parents#39; happiness?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: That#39;s a very tough situation because Kathy lost her family per se, but we are now related. And I think that she really enjoys being a part of George#39;s extended family. And so I think that God works in mysterious ways and that he gives us what we need. If something is taken from us, he will replace it with something better. So we don#39;t need to be afraid in this life about social barriers and social change and all that kinda thing. I think that God#39;s ultimate plan is to have human beings work through all of that and see people for who they are, not separate them based on some physical attribute such as color or whatever the case may be./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMm, thank you. You know, now that this is a book, so why do you think that this book needs to be on the big screen?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, several reasons. First and foremost, I think that the Black voices of America are getting a chance. There are so many stories about bravery and courage under fire, about people who show great character and moral strength, that have not had a chance to be seen on the big screen because there were not enough Black people who were in the production business. And so, now that the reign of mass media and film and television are loosening up, I think that Black people are more interested in seeing stories about Black people that are written and presented from an objective point of view. Heretofore, when many white writers and directors portrayed us, they portrayed us as step n fetch it, an Aunt Jemima, the oldnbsp; buffoon. We were always the first to die in their films, and we seldom got a chance to be strong Black people in the center of their own narrative, driving their story, making the decisions, and pushing the envelope. And so I think in today#39;s society, people are tired of seeing those old images of Black people, and they want to see people who are more like people that they know or love:nbsp; the great football stars with their story, the great preachers with their story, the Civil Rights movement, and how did we go from slavery to having a Black President in this country?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK? Those are the types of stories that people want to see. Gone with the Wind and all of that old stuff has had its day, and now it#39;s time for new leading men and new leading ladies. There are enough outlets now. So when you look to television, you can watch films. They#39;re on television, they#39;re on demand. You can watch films on your phone. You can watch them everywhere and anywhere, almost. So we need more and more content in order to keep the audiences engaged. So with that being said, it opens the door for stories like these that are important but have never been told because African-Americans didn#39;t have access to getting their stories out and getting their stories finances. So I think that the golden age of African-American cinema is about to begin, or it has begun. And we#39;re gonna see more and more compelling and interesting stories about African-American people and their lives./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, thank you for doing it. I know for me, growing up as a Black, disabled boy in the #39;70s, I didn#39;t see myself on the screen until Porgy and Bess, you know?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Mmhmm./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bSo yeah, it definitely needs to happen, especially for Black, disabled youth growing up now./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Right. And I think additionally, when you grow up, and you realize what your race what have gone through and how they were not allowed to learn how to read and write, how they were not allowed to own property and to have their families ripped apart explains some of the chaos that we see in our communities. And so, I think these positive images of us overcoming obstacles and pushing successfully in areas where inclusion is an important message for our young and old people to see./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMm, yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So that#39;s why I think this story#39;s important./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bThis movie will take place in Louisiana. How did you capture the Louisiana back in the #39;50s and #39;60s compared to today, Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So let me try to restate the question. I think you said how would I compare--/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bNo, how does the film capture Louisiana back in the day and now?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK. So our film is what we call in the film industry a period piece. And so, what we#39;re going to do is to, a lot of the buildings that were up at that point in time are still up, but they may not be in the very best section of town or to do a film. So we#39;re gonna do our very best to use art direction and an Art Director as well as a wardrobe person and a hairstylist to dress the characters. We#39;re gonna use the colors of the #39;50s, #39;60s, and of the #39;70s, and we#39;re gonna make it look like it was happening at that point in time. Is that the question?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, that#39;s the question, yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So it#39;s considered a period piece, where it looks like that period./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b:: And my job as the Director is to create the wardrobe, to scout the locations, the houses, the NAACP. All of those places are gonna be made to look like it#39;s the #39;60s and #39;70s./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK, gotcha./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So let#39;s say like basketball uniforms./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b: Yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: We would go back to LSU photos, and then we would use and recreate those type of uniforms for the basketball. And then, we would put that older photo from the #39;70s, and we would get a seamstress to make clothes for the actors and actresses./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK, gotcha. Wow./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: It#39;s quite a process./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, that iix a big process! How many characters are in the film, and how did you pick them, especially the one that plays the early days before he became physically disabled, and after?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK, so let me try to repeat that. You said there are a lot of characters in the movie. How did I choose them, and what was the last part?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bAnd how did you pick the one that plays your uncle George before he became disabled and after?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK, so as far as the characters are concerned, all of the lead characters are true in our film. So we have Uncle George, we have Aunt Kathy, we have Dale Brown, and we have Jim nbsp;Engster, we have Gloria. So most of the lead characters are picked from people who really existed and were really living and involved with him at that time. So a lot of it came from the book. But in the spirit of filmmaking, sometimes you have to insecure characters. So if 50 people were involved in doing something, in a film you might not be able, well you can#39;t focus on all 50 of them./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b:: You have to infuse some of the attributes or contributions of people into a specific character that you can follow and track. So instead of having 50 characters, you might only have five or six. But our main people are real, were real living, breathing people during those times. Now, in terms of who we#39;re going to choose to play Uncle George, we have not made that determination yet. We have to go through the casting call process. We have identified a number of young Black actors who would potentially play that role, and so we haven#39;t gotten there yet. That#39;s sort of where we are right now. We#39;re going after the actors and the money, and we#39;re getting Lynn Whitfield, who#39;s a famous Black actress, to help us with that process. Lynn is from Baton Rouge. She grew up--her parents and my Uncle George grew up together. So we have a connection to Hollywood through her./span/p pspanstrongLeroy Moore:/strong OK. Great. I was just wondering, if your uncle was alive today, would he be involved with the movie and with police brutality and the recent presidential race? Would he be involved in those aspects, if he was alive today?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Mm, I wanna say yes, and I wanna say no. He was 82 when he died, and he was kinda in bad shape. He died from cancer./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So it#39;s hard to say if he would be in the mental capacity and shape to actually be involved./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: But I think that he left us a strong and lasting legacy to pull from and to share with the world, which is why I thought that the film was worthy of being made in the first place. He has a website called Mr. Civil Rights, and it just lists all the things that he did in his lifetime to help other people and to help African-American people and other minorities gain a foothold in this country. He helped to bang on the doors so that they were open, so that he could go into any building that there was that one. So I think his spirit is guiding us in this process and that he would be very proud of the screenplay and how the film will look. In order to do this, we have to have Kathy#39;s approval, and she was very pleased with what we did with Uncle George. So when I say yes and no, if he were alive today, it would be like well, how old would he be [laughs]?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, yeah, that#39;s true./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: How old would he be? You know, would he be 85 and not in such good shape? Would he be 25? So that#39;s a yes and no question, and I think I answered it as best I could./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah. With this movie, after it#39;s out and after you do the film festivals, would you go into universities and have it there? I know Black history and disability history would definitely enjoy this film./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, our goal is not to do film festivals./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOh, OK./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Our goal is to have it released in theaters all over the country as a feature film. And so we want to have people to go to the theater and pay their $10 and watch the movie, and then we hope that it will go to on-demand and be available for both to rent and purchase. So this is a film that#39;s gonna be of the same quality as Selma and the same quality as The Butler, as the same quality as 12 Years a Slave. It#39;s gonna have those types of stars and that kind of distribution./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bWow. It#39;s so great because like what I said in the beginning, as a Black, disabled man, there#39;s like zero in Hollywood that represents me and my community./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Right. You know, I think that times are changing for everybody. And so we#39;re gonna see--I don#39;t know if you watch Empire, you watch Power. I mean, we#39;re seeing Black man projected or presented in an entirely different way than they have been in the past./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: And so I think that, like I said, the golden age of African-American cinema is just starting because only now are we able to have the money, the acting talent, the technical talent, the distribution. All the things that make film and television special are now working for us as well. And so I think you#39;re gonna see more and more characters of people who we haven#39;t seen before./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I think it#39;s gonna be exciting. That#39;s what people are gonna want to watch and see what these different worlds are all about. So that#39;s the beauty of film is that it allows us to go into places that we never would go in our normal lives, and we can see how the people live, what their struggles are, and how they respond to those struggles. And so film is one of the most powerful mediums on earth because we can empathize and put ourselves in other people#39;s situations or in other people#39;s shoes, and that can change the way we think about those people and those situations. And so it can help us to overcome racial stereotypes in the comfort of our own home, and I think that#39;s good for America./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah. True. Who is your main audience for this film, and how would you promote it?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, I mentioned Selma, I mentioned The Butler, and I mentioned 12 Years a Slave. So those were American films. They had Black lead characters, but they had strong white characters and alike. So we think it#39;s a film for everybody. It has Civil Rights in it, it has inter-racial relationships in it, it has a handicapped lead person in it, it has the integration of LSU sports--which makes it a sports film--it deals with social justice, it deals with the prison system. So it#39;s a very, very wide net that we#39;re casting, and we want potentially everyone in America to go see it. Young people can learn that we can work together if we put aside our past issues. And so those are some of the things that I think will make it attractive to a very, very wide segment and audience in the United States and maybe even, on an international basis, some as well./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bSo how can we keep up with your work and this film? When is it gonna be out in theaters?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, that#39;s hard to say exactly right now. Basically, what we#39;re doing is going after the actors and the money at this point. We have the screenplay finished. So once we do that, it could be as early as next summer or next Christmas, but it#39;s hard to say. As we move closer to production and things of that sort, we will do the circuit of the late night shows, things like Good Morning America, and let everybody know, do billboards, talk shows, things of that sort, like people do when they promote a film./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm. Tell me again how is the book really captured in the film? Is Kathleen really tied to the film?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: You know, a lot of times when you hear people, and they say, I read the book, and the movie was nothing like the book./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, our situation is a lot like that too because we focus on basically just Uncle George and Aunt Kathy#39;s relationship, how their families reacted to it, and some of Uncle George#39;s Civil Rights work, but more specifically LSU basketball, and then his prison stint. So we had to do what#39;s called condensed time. So when you go into the theater, it#39;s like you#39;re there, this is the story. Whereas the book was more of a autobiography of Aunt Kathy and Uncle George. So she#39;s writing this story in her voice, from Kathy#39;s point of view. Whereas in our story, the characters themselves are talking. And so it#39;s just a different medium, and you have to deal with it differently. Sometimes people think that the movie#39;s gonna be exactly like the book. But a book is not a movie, and a movie is not a book./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bExactly!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So the novelist is the person who writes a novel. The screenplay writer is the person who writes the screenplay. So they#39;re really two different mediums./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: But what we communicate in the film, and what the book communicates, is the spirit of truth of a segment of the book. So was Uncle George shot in the back? Yes. Did he stay in the hospital for a long time, and they thought he was gonna die? Yes. Did he meet Aunt Kathy? Yes. Did they get married? So a lot of it#39;s true, but a lot of times, in order to make it the most exciting it can be, it has to spruce it up a little bit. That#39;s what we do with the film./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, yeah. Now, one more question. I know Kathy told me that Uncle George was a poet. Is that gonna be captured in the film some way? And also, she told me that he was a good public speaker./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK, so I think Kathy is the poet./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Kathy is the poet, and she is--I don#39;t know if it#39;s a licensed poet or professional poet, but she has some type of designation as a poet. So that#39;s Kathy./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Now, Kathy also was a English teacher, and she helped Uncle George with a lot of his speeches./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOh, OK./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So they kinda worked together as a team. Uncle George was not educated per se. He only went to about the 10th grade, and so she helped him with a lot of his public speaking and his speeches and helped kind of formulate that for him or with him./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK, great, great. Now, is there a website for the film yet?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: No, there#39;s not. We#39;re waiting until we get the actors and the money./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: And then we start kinda getting it. We have to go through the process of going through Louisiana Film Office, and they take us through this process of qualifying for certain tax breaks and things of that sort. So once we get the money, the actors, and we have our principle photography dates set, then we#39;ll start a Facebook page and things of that sort so people can know what#39;s going on./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK. So how can people get in contact with you now?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I have a Facebook page, Cleve Bailey on Facebook. That#39;s the way. And then, my email address: a href="mailto:clevebailey.jr@gmail.com"clevebailey.jr@gmail.com/a. And if someone wants to touch bases with me through email or Facebook, that#39;s great./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK. I know there#39;s a Facebook page about the book too. Can you give that too?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: T/spanhe book title: nbsp;WARRIOR FOR JUSTICE: nbsp;The George Eames Story, it is available at Amazon.com and can be ordered by Barnes Noble. nbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bAll right, great. Thank you. Anything that you wanna add?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, this is my first feature film./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b Wow!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I went to the Academy of Art University to learn this, and I spent three and a half years learning film, learning directing, learning writing. It#39;s a tremendously energizing process. When I was younger, I never really understood--I knew it was important to read and write, but I never imagined that I would be a film director. And so I#39;d just like to say to everybody who#39;s out there struggling with school that it#39;s important because once you learn how to learn, you can basically do anything./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b Yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So I went back to school at like 40 years old to learn this, and it was easy. But I#39;d been learning all of my life, and then with the right opportunity, I would also want the right opportunity or the big opportunity. But I think life was preparing me for this, but I had to put in some time to learn how to read and write. And then, when I found something that I was sufficient in, I had to be willing to spend the time and burn the midnight oil to make it a strength./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b Mmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So keep up the grades, put in the work. You#39;re never too old. It#39;s never too late. It doesn#39;t matter if you have a disability. It#39;s just a made up mind: this is something that I want to do, and I#39;m gonna see it through. That#39;s what I#39;d like to leave with everybody./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b OK, thank you so much!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: All right. Thank you for your time. I really appreciate it. It#39;s very interesting, and I look forward to talking to you at some point in time in the future./span/p pspannbsp;bLeroy Moore: /bOK, great. Take care./span/p
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  • American Crime Control As Industry and Street Crime vs Corporate Crime and The Truth

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pThere are several reasons why the prison industrial complex (PIC) continues to grow in America, and I will focus on two of the most important. The first is that in punishing people we as a society attempt to appease the fearful side of our own human nature. The second is that vested interests keep this very unsuccessful system going. Just as steel companies need iron and timber companies need trees, so prisons use people as their raw material./p pnbsp;/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; When it comes to vested interests, there are many groups who have an interest in the maintenance of the status quo of prisons. In no particular order I will nominate nine such groups. Let me say clearly and emphatically that within each group there is a minority who hold opposing views and are much more open and positive in their approach./p pnbsp;/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The vast majority of prison guards, police, judges, forensic psychologists, prison vendors of every description, prosecutors and even some criminal defense lawyers do not want to know about alternatives. The culture within each of these groupings often seems to preclude much genuine dialogye and discussion about the outcomes of the very work they are employed in doing. As I say, thankfully there are exceptions./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The media have a vested interest. Despite millions of words of rhetoric to the contrary, the media generally and the tabloid in particular keep alive all the old racist stereotypes by the way they report crime, court cases and criminal offending, often out of all proportion to other news. Where would the tabloids be without a regular front-page crime story? Or the talkshow hosts? Or television (e.g., ldquo;Americarsquo;s Most Wanted,rdquo; ldquo;COPS,rdquo; ldquo;Criminal Minds,rdquo; etc.)? One evening recently on Fox News, nine of the first 10 stories related to crime, here and overseas./p pnbsp;/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The construction and subsidiary industries have a vested interest in an expanding prison network and are, by implication, happy to see a high crime rate continue. Warehousing the poor is now a worldwide trend in many industrialized countries, with the United States (especially California), Britain, Russia, and China leading the way. With huge profits being made through constructing, expanding, and providing for new prisons and old, the corporate culture has readily taken up the challenge that crime offers to make a profit out of human misery. A directory called ldquo;The Corrections Yellow Pagesrdquo; lists more than a thousand vendors. While private prisons are the most lucrative, state-controlled ones are also high on the corporate agenda, providing guaranteed payment and regular income [google California Correctional Peace Officers Association]./p pnbsp;/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Many academics in the fields of law, social work, criminology, psychology, sociology, and psychiatry have a vested interest. Too many sit in ivory towers teaching outmoded theories, denying students opportunities to develop creative responses to the social problems that are largely responsible for crime./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Strange as it may seem, many politicians also have a vested interest in not seeing creative options to crime and prisons researched, trialled and reviewed. Generally they believe it is perceived to be soft to be advocating alternatives. The reality is the exact opposite. Most alternative programs are a lot tougher in that they demand accountability (e.g., restorative justice), with offenders having to take responsibility for what they have done. But few politicians are prepared to promote or fund such programs./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The new corporate elite running prison policy were brought in to try to change the harsh macho prison culture that had been built up over generations. While to a degree some dimensions of that have been tackled, they have also brought in the culture of measured success, which in corporate terms often means wage cutting, program deletion and prison expansion. Prison numbers have been going through the roof for the past twenty-five years. All this is conducted with the glossy PR expertise so characteristic of the corporate hard sell. Prisons are now presented to the public as desirable industries to have in local communities because of the job creation and new economic spending power available. Little attention is given to the thought of what a prison is, who is locked up, or why. This is a deliberate attempt to shift the public perception of imprisonment from being a scandal and a sign of failure to one that makes prisons desirable acquisition for a local community like a sports stadium, medical center, or public university./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Prison slave labor is now a complement to the international movement of jobs. For decades, U.S. based corporations have been moving abroad to avoid high domestic rates as well as labor and environmental regulations. Now such factors as the increasing costs of overseas slave labor, the expense of relocation, and the shipping expense involved have caused many manufacturers to recognize that American prisons, with their abundant supply of slave labor (2.4 million prisoners), are an attractive alternative to foreign-based production./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; If one had systematically and diabolically tried to create mental illness, one could probably have constructed no better system than the American prison system./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The prison industrial complex basically has a life of its own. It has become an industry, and a very lucrative one for some. Like its cousin, the military industrial complex, its pernicious spirit, its all-pervasive and needs plenty of crime and long sentences to maintain its financial viability. So whose truly the criminal? Is America a lsquo;Democracyrsquo; or a corporate Oligarchic police state?/p pnbsp;/p pnbsp;/p p style="margin-left:1.0in;"uStreet Crime Vs. Corporate Crime and The Truth/u/p pnbsp;/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; As a society we need to reassess our understanding of crime and ask why is it that corporate crime advances virtually unhindered, and while localized lsquo;street crimersquo; has become such an obsession for so many. The answer lies somewhere in the mixed realm of our own hidden fears and our sense of powerlessness in the face of crime, and the immense power of vested interests who gain so much from the current situation./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Corporate crime is endemic the world over. Very few are ever held responsible for its devastating effects. It reaches into virtually every aspect of our lives, yet so widespread is its influence, we are often unaware of its presence. It hits us in so many ways: from the added-on costs in our supermarkets to the pollutants in the air we breathe, from the hidden costs of our banking and financial systems to the costs of medicines we take for our illnesses. The tentacles of corporate crime touch all these areas and many more./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Yet we rarely speak of it, read of it, or hear of it for any sustained period. We have become totally preoccupied with individual lsquo;street crime,rsquo; although corporate violence and crime inflict far more damage on society than all the street crime combined. Just one major tobacco company, for example, arguably kills and injures more people than all the lsquo;street criminalsrsquo; put together. Public corruption, pollution, procurement fraud, financial fraud, and occupational homicide inflict incredibly serious damage on workers, consumers, citizens, and the environment. Why on earth is a criminal justice system geared to sifting the poor and minor offenders, pretending it is dealing with crime and social harm, when all of the major harm is being done by the hidden rulers of our world, the multinational corporations?/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; A major reason for this is the consistent presentation by the media of crime as being primarily personal. Through newspaper, radio, and especially tabloid talk shows, and in the news and entertainment on television, crime is deliberately portrayed in manageable portions of murder, muggings, burglaries and theft, allowing an age-old notion of scapegoat full reign./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The public perception of crime is largely shaped by corporate media and tabloid television, which focus overwhelmingly on street crime, illegal drugs use, robberies and theft. If these media devoted proportionate time to the corporate muggings and homicides that are carried out through fraud, unsafe products, usurious lending policies, pollution, occupational accidents and starvation wages, public perceptions would shift to reflect reality more accurately. This will never happen. The same big business people who perpetrate corporate crime control the media through colossal advertising budgets, cross dictatorships, and ownership./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The actual functions of the criminal justice system are unstated, unacknowledged, and even illicit. Any criminal justice system reflects the values (or lack thereof) of those who hold power in society. Thus, criminal law in America has become a political instrument, formulated and enforced by those with status and power against those who predominately are status poor and powerless./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; By and large, our prisons are reserved for those with dark skin, little money, or unconventional lifestyles.nbsp; The powerful manage, most of the time, to escape the sanctions of the criminal justice system. Either they have the means to hire good defense lawyers or they are able to make a better impression on juries and judges. At another level it has been demonstrated time and time again that violations of environmental, workplace safety, and other laws by corporations and hospitals are seldom prosecuted as crimes are punished by incarceration, though they kill and maim far more persons and rob and damage far more property than street crime committed by poor people./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; We are left with the question: what is real crime and who are the biggest criminals? Until we start to focus on crime in its global corporate context and not restrict ourselves merely to the localized street version, we will never learn to identify and grapple with some of the biggest criminals in our society. And we will never create a society where the common good is achieved, where people are truly respected for who they are, where true justice prevails./p pnbsp;/p pCorrespondence: Troy T. Thomas, H-01001, CSP-LAC/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; nbsp;nbsp; P.O. Box 4430, Lancaster, CA 93539/p
    Tags
  • Black, Brown, 1st Nations Poor Mothers Cry Out for Justice for Today's Murder in the Bayview, the un-arming of the police and the Resignation of Mayor Lee

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pspanfont size="4"bfont size="6"Black, Brown, 1st Nations Poor Mothers Cry Out for Justice for Today#39;s Murder in the Bayview, the un-arming of the police and the Resignation of Mayor Lee /font/b/font/span/p pnbsp;/p div font size="4"bPress Advisory: /b/font/div div br / font size="4"font size="2"On the eve of the 2nd stop in the a href="http://www.poormagazine.org/node/5524"National Stolen Land/Hoarded Resources Reparations, Redstribution and Decolonization Tour (l/aaunched to stop the ongoing forced poverty and racial and economic inequity in the US) the San Francisco Police Department has murdered yet another un-armed, low-income person of color. The 27 year old African-American woman was allegedly pregnant and under extreme stress when the police shot her./font/fontfont size="4"font size="2"font size="4"font size="2"Despite a hunger strike and a nation-wide call for the firing of the San Francisco Chief of Police it took this murder to force his firing, which is why poor, houseless and mothers of color are publicly demanding the un-arming of this paid military force called the police and refuse to accept the murder of another child, mother or father./font/font p /p/font/fontspanspanI am saddened that the life blood of a young woman and her baby had to be the deciding factor to make this change. I pray for her family and all of us as we move forward in mourning to make a better way, said Corrina Gould, Ohlone warrior woman and co-founder of the Sogorea Te Land Trust/span/span/div div div nbsp;/div div font size="2"We as low-income, 1st Nations and mothers of color call out for justice for another mamas child, another young person of color and another woman, killed by an armed and dangerous government agency, sanctiioned to kill. We demand the un-arming of these paid killers (police), reparations to the families that lost their children, sisters, brothers, fathers and mothers and the recalling of Mayor Ed Lee who allowed this to happen over and over again, said Lisa tiny Gray-Garcia, co-founder of POOR Magazine and Homefulness, a poor people-led solution to homelessness./font/div p spanspanIt#39;s unconscionable that someone#39;s life had to be lost I#39;m order for Chief Suhr to be fired. All and any law enforcement who use a #39;shoot first#39; ideology needs to be held fully accountable, said Vivian Thorp, low-income, formerly houseless xicana mama of three children, staff writer and poet at POOR Magazine and co-leader at Homefulness, a poor people-led solution to homelessness./span/spanbr / nbsp;/p/div div spanspanThe Police are the ancient and modern day slave-catchers, this is one of the many reasons we are demanding reparations for our people, our children and our elders in the stolen land tour across Amerikkka, aid Queenandi XSheba, mother, poet and writer with POOR Magazine./span/span/div div nbsp;/div div As mothers who birth, raise and care for our future, we refuse to accept the ongoing staus quo of killing , mourning and begging the people in power to make change happen, we demand the paid government agents and occupying armies known as police, hired to protect the wealth-hoarders and land-stealers, are hereby un-armed, so they can no longer continue to murder our children, concluded Lisa Tiny Gray-Garcia/div pspanspanAll the mothers quoted here represent a small slice of thousands of mothers refusing to accept the murder of our children by police, These mothers are all available for comment and will be taking part in tomorrow#39;s Stolen Land Tour in Oakland, which starts at Trestle Glen and Lakeshore Avenues at 1pm/span/span/p
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  • Keewantinawin: The Wind That Goes North

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    p dir="ltr"By Lisa Ganser/p p dir="ltr"[image description: A beautiful black ink hand-drawn portrait of Jack Sun Keewatinawin, a tall, 21 year-old Cree man, drawn in a cross-hatch style. Jackson is smiling softly, wearing a t-shirt, and has long flowing black hair. In the background are bricks that are suggested with hand drawn dots. The drawing was commissioned by Tabitha Johnnie, Jacksun#39;s younger sister, for their mother, Samantha, who has since passed away.]/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanIt#39;s been three years since Montantilde;o Northwind#39;s brother, Jack Sun Keewatinawin, was killed by Seattle police, and he is still reeling from the violence and loss./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;Everything they said on the news about my brother was a complete lie,rdquo; says Montantilde;o. ldquo;I don#39;t trust the police, they are racist bullies. Have you seen the Seattle police? In full body armor with assault rifles. Being trained by Israeli military.rdquo; He pauses and continues, ldquo;One of my kids will be out, and I#39;ll hear a siren,rdquo; he sits straight up and abruptly looks out the window, ldquo;I sit up at attention. I don#39;t want the cops to kill my kids. I don#39;t want the cops to kill anyone,rdquo; says Montantilde;o./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanOn February 26, 2013, Montantilde;o and Hawk Firstrider each made phone calls to 911 because their brother, Jacksun, was in a mental health crisis at his home and needed help. The police had been called a number of times to help Jacksun get to a hospital to treat flare ups related to schizophrenia and PTSD, in fact Jacksun was even known to call 911 on himself when he was panicked and experiencing hallucinations. On this evening, Montantilde;o and Hawk feared for their brother#39;s safety, and the safety of their father, Henry Northwind, who Jacksun lived with in Seattle. In previous times of crisis, de-escalation and even hospitalization had proven very helpful in reducing harm. This time, however, when the militarized Seattle police department arrived, they had collectively turned off their dash cams and already committed to the irreversible use of Force. The police themselves admit that within 30 seconds of initial contact with Jacksun, he had been shot and was bleeding out on the ground./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanSeattle police officers created their own false narrative about Jacksun#39;s killing. They quickly demonized and spread their version of what happened in the media, they interrogated and intimidated his family, they intimidated and possibly paid off neighbors and witnesses. Montantilde;o#39;s home (with his three children) has been watched and photographed by officers in police cars, and both Jacksun#39;s parents are now dead with no pending Federal wrongful death case./span/span/p pnbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="451" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/2qypo-XBoIVGZFI32I7g4SVxMDrb5OlknFtnghEmOGvExdBO05268cux7dVVLcu6OSIeq0GsgbaaCDlHRiWwll2fBMV-JCAg_cFAEO3GJwUxJKJkJ6TP529buCXHjH7SWoYUAOO3" width="602" //span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span[image description: a colorfully chalked sidewalk in San Francisco that says ldquo;Loved Ones in a mental health crisis, instead of getting help, got killed by police or arrested died ldquo;in custody.rdquo; You are loved missed. We will not forget.rdquo; These names and words are drawn with hearts around them: Jack Sun Keewatinawin, Yanira Serrano-Garcia, Natasha McKenna, Herbert Benitez, Bipolar, Ezell Ford, Kayla Moore, Paul Castaway, PTSD, Idriss Stelley, Aura Rosser, Depressed, Norma ldquo;Angierdquo; Guzman, Errol Chang, Schizophrenic, Keith Vidal, John T. Williams, Tanisha Anderson, Sadru-Din ldquo;Sadirdquo; Muhammed, and Phil Quinn. The words ldquo;Loved Onerdquo; is written in a heart for those not named here.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHenry Northwind and many of his neighbors were the non-police witnesses to Jacksun#39;s death, and there is said to be no video surveillance. Police told Montantilde;o that was due to a ldquo;shift change.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;My dad was winning a fight with cancer at the time of Jacksun#39;s death,rdquo; Montantilde;o tells me as we sit in his Seattle apartment in February 2016. Aggressive treatment had successfully regenerated healthy liver tissue. The outlook for Henry was stable and hopeful. Then Jacksun was killed. Henry#39;s health declined and he died just four months later. Montantilde;o views his father#39;s swift decline in health, and his abrupt death in the hospital, as mysterious, questionable and suspect, and directly related to his brother#39;s police killing. Henry had been the family#39;s outspoken leader in the Justice struggle for Jacksun, all the while incredibly grief stricken. ldquo;If you ask me, I believe my dad died of a broken heart,rdquo; Montantilde;o says./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHenry#39;s account of what happened was published in the Native press Indian Country Today Media Network in April 2013:/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;Henry Northwind was an agonized witness to the horrifying events of that day, and he insists the killing of his son was unjustified. He is a former policeman, and says he is familiar with the proper police protocol for such situations. He says those procedures were not followed./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHe says that by the time police arrived in response to the 911 call, his son had calmed down, and that he and Jack were in their front yard. Northwind says he told the police that his son had a knife and a piece of iron. #39;Hersquo;s calmed down now, you donrsquo;t have to kill him,#39; he says he told them. #39;Donrsquo;t kill him, please!#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHe says the lead officer pushed him aside and said, #39;Hersquo;s heavily armed.#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;I said, lsquo;Hey donrsquo;t kill my son!rsquo; I was in front of them and Jack was [about five feet behind me]. At that time Jack turned around and ran straight back to the house and, in unison these guys moved hellip; and Irsquo;d say there were about 15 cops on the curb ... They all had shotguns and pistols drawn...[Jack] got to the porch and he turned around and two guys got him in the chest with the Tasers and he just ripped them out and took off againhellip;he had thin, thin, really thin jacket and a real thin, super thin t-shirt, I saw [the Tasers] stick to his [chest] and he went like thatrdquo;mdash;indicating grabbing both Tasers and pulling them outmdash;ldquo;and he just tore them away, and uh, you know thatrsquo;s at least 50 thousand [volts]! [One policeman] said, lsquo;He just shook it off like somebody just slapped him!rsquo;#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanAt this point, Northwindrsquo;s telling of what happened that night diverges radically from the police account. The police report says Keewatinawin ran and one of the officers pursuing him fell at his feet, and appeared to be vulnerable to an attack. Northwind says this is not true. #39;When Jack ran over here, he slippedmdash;there was no cop that slipped, I swear to God there was no cop, no! Jack was on the ground... and /spanspanhe /spanspangot up. He (Jack) was on one leg, he was getting up with his hands, and he went like thisrdquo;mdash;he throws his arms in the airmdash;rdquo;and when he did that, they opened fire on him!/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;They said he had something in his hand. There was nothing in his hand, nothing, not a damn thing. That last shot, my knees buckled on me and I said, #39;They killed my son!#39;#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanNorthwind says a police officer ran up to him and said, #39;What are you doing over here?#39; Northwind says he told the policeman, #39;Thatrsquo;s my son you just murdered.#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanNorthwind claims that officers then put two guns to his head to keep him from running to his son./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHe says that when he told one of the officers, #39;Thatrsquo;s my son you just murdered!#39; the officer replied, #39;Ugh,#39; and ran to the large group of officers. Moments later Northwind says he heard one policeman say, lsquo;Hey, found it!rsquo; and another officer respond, #39;What?#39; #39;An iron bar,#39; came the reply. Northwind says he then heard the first officer say, #39;Oh, damn, now at least we have a story.#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;Right in front of my fucking face they said that!#39; Northwind says. #39;One guy said, lsquo;Thatrsquo;s the father!rsquo; and the other guy says, #39;Oh, shit.#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;They were wrong, and they were in fear. I could see the fear in this guyrsquo;s eyes. I just gave him a tongue-lashing.I asked him, #39;Are you happy? How many more Indians you think you need to kill?#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;Finally, I just screamed, lsquo;They killed my baby boy!rsquo;rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanRead more at /spana href="http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/04/03/neighbors-dispute-police-account-shooting-native-man-seattle-148519"spanhttp://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/04/03/neighbors-dispute-police-account-shooting-native-man-seattle-148519/span/a/span/p pnbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="451" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/cUrbZr2seZKxv2OqU1ZwaNu_QpcYWail4ycOz5mNJlY1YSkgW_c5q7Z7hHiG63O0C7CSw5DFOHPffBl4TMlUg4zWyTvYNjYETEXKIgaT62srNnA72HJwXz96Y6JeBoLNoMtxROW5" width="602" //span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span[image description: it is Feb 2016 and Montantilde;o Northwind, a handsome First Nations single father, holds up a sign in his 3/spanspanrd/spanspan level apartment home in Seattle where he lives with his children and a bunny rabbit named Mr. Bunny and sometimes Thumper. The sign reads ldquo;Justice for Jacksun Keewatinawin,rdquo; and there is a sun drawn between the words Jack and sun. Montantilde;o just started the sign and says he will be coloring it in. Montantilde;o wears rectangular glasses and has a short beard and mustache.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanWhen Montantilde;o and Hawk arrived to their father#39;s home, Montantilde;o described the scene as swarming with police and like a ldquo;shark feeding frenzy.rdquo; There was confusion and yelling and in a moment of fear, Hawk turned to run away. A police officer pointed a gun at Hawk. Montantilde;o yelled, and another officer glared at him and stepped toward him with his hand on his holstered gun. ldquo;Don#39;t run! He#39;s gonna kill you!rdquo; Montantilde;o screamed. The police kept the two sons from speaking with their father. They were put into a police car, and told ldquo;Your dad#39;s okay. Your brother was shot, but he#39;s okay.rdquo; What they were not told was that the police had a gun to the head of their father, and their brother was dead./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanJacksun#39;s family were whisked from the scene of his death into separate mirror-lined interrogation rooms at the Seattle police department, where they were questioned for many hours. Montantilde;o says they weren#39;t allowed to speak to each other and were there until at least 2:30am. Montantilde;o kept asking if they were done. ldquo;I have kids to take care of,#39;rdquo; he said. He kept being told that an investigator was on the way, and that these questions were ldquo;standard protocol.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanWhen the ldquo;investigatorrdquo; finally arrived, he asked Montantilde;o all kinds of intrusive questions about Jacksun, about his sexuality, his sexual preference and drugs of choice. ldquo;Why are you asking me this?rdquo; Montantilde;o asked. ldquo;What does this have to do with you killing my brother?rdquo; These questions have nothing to do with what happened tonight.rdquo; Montantilde;o believes it was during this time that they were building their cover up story, grasping at anything they could to justify the murder of his unarmed brother./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="676" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/4bVWcTtU2koIiP8wJH5fkRBugP3Yy0aiQieyaD8sFZqMN7frOcmEUOlEKOxUM5jeGdqffZ8D6zxKaBKwhcAGPWm_pwKDXh5zxqFSuCNoiAon3hHIiRWfJIiblfatY8z6qZe-UIZx" width="602" //span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span[image description: Two Cree kids playing at the park together, a young Jacksun is lifting his younger sister Tabitha up off the ground to reach handles above their head at a play area. Jacksun#39;s arms are around Tabitha, he is smiling and wearing a black t-shirt, and Tabitha#39;s shirt has flowers on it and she is reaching very far toward her goal. This brother and sister love each other very much.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanMonths after Henry Northwind#39;s death, Montantilde;o made plans with Jacksun#39;s mother, Samantha, to go together to scatter Jacksun and Henry#39;s ashes at the Salmon La Sac area of the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. Salmon Le Sac is between the Cle Elum and Cooper Rivers, and a place that Jacksun used to happily dive into near-freezing ice melt. Montantilde;o smiles when he talks about his big and younger brother, a gentle giant he says, and how he would jump right into that near freezing water, all by himself, and was so happy doing it. ldquo;This was the place they were both happiest, in the mountains and the wilderness with Mother nature,rdquo; said Montantilde;o. At the time the plans were made to spread ashes of their Loved Ones, Samantha was in the fight for Justice for her son, and she was also making great strides in managing her struggle with drug addiction. Montantilde;o says she was doing well, and was living in a sober house. Montantilde;o was looking forward to this time with Samantha, but a month later, she mysteriously died and authorities ruled it ldquo;an overdose.rdquo; Montantilde;o questions this cause of death. ldquo;I believe she was murdered,rdquo; he says. ldquo;Before she passed she said she was attempting to get legal Justice for Jacksun.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="543" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/r4jWBA4qAlItgwL31etVpX3m51WnRmUKpATqIhwq_IxPcNPMhUnAFMc7NSSCncJhh1-8lObwIPYB9ZbynPFnWpfVqFJ93d5M38fESR3-nhXZb0cw-lbXWg75EX71M1NgGhRxBSWA" width="602" //span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span[image description: Montantilde;o shares the only photo he has of his brother Jacksun, taken in 2002 at the Freemont Street Fair in Seattle. Jacksun is looking at the camera and lovingly holding Montantilde;o#39;s infant son Nahiyaw, and a very young Montantilde;o Jr. is to the left of them. Missing from this photo is Montantilde;o#39;s not yet born daughter Stormy.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;Keewatinawin is Cree for #39;the wind that goes North,#39;rdquo; Montantilde;o says. He continues, smiling. ldquo;My dad told me that - but he also told me some other things that didn#39;t translate the way he said,rdquo; he says with a laugh./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;Crees are like trees in Canada, we are everywhere. The Cree Nation is one of the largest, but you don#39;t learn about Cree Nation in history. We were late comers to the plains,rdquo; says Montantilde;o. ldquo;We came down and settled in Montana. My dad told me that too.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanWhen asked what Justice looks like for his brother, Montantilde;o says, ldquo;Justice for our family would be to have the case reopened. Accountability for the officers involved, an apology for my brother#39;s wrongful death, and negligent use of force admitted. I want a safe environment for my family to live and grow without worry of killer cops. A wrongful death suit would be the best, but there are no lawyers willing to take the case.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="451" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/JLiw1u2ojLynYzHzJvcdMlt0DUJwhwqqwNR0qaZc-TztvF1jWbXiSCl4m82IDewtnVYG1i2a1hKpJa10mg1TrF0EmiHnNIT4Auw4FtnU8KDhptRdocncA1OVBGMfl00WD9ydcg_L" width="602" //spanspan[image description: outside a screening of #whereishope at the D Center at UW-Seattle the sidewalks are brightly chalked with Disabled Loved Ones names lost to police violence with hearts chalked around each name. Jacksun Keewantinawin is in the foreground, surrounded by Idriss Stelley, Kayden Clark, Paul Castaway, Kayla Moore, John T. Williams, Victoria Arellano, Jeremy McDole, James Boyd, Freddie Gray and Tansha Anderson.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanThe Seattle police officers that killed Jacksun Keewatinawin are Michael Spaulding, Stephen Perry and Tyler Speer. Michael Spaulding was the first officer to shoot, the police narrative says that he slipped and fell just before shooting, and that Jacksun raised a weapon (a weapon found by onlookers no where near Jacksun#39;s body). Montantilde;o says that it was his brother that was on the ground, on his knees, unarmed and with his hands in the air./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanOn February 26, 2016, the three year angelversary of Jacksun#39;s death, Seattle police officer Michael Spaulding is currently on paid ldquo;administrative leaverdquo; for yet another ldquo;officer involved shooting.rdquo; On February 21/spanspanst/spanspan 2016 officer Spaulding shot and killed Black Loved One Che Taylor. Montantilde;o#39;s family is in solidarity with the family of Che Taylor, and has already reached out to them./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanLisa Ganser is a white Disabled genderqueer artist displaced from San Francisco and now living in Olympia, WA. They are the daughter of a momma named Sam and this is their third story as a writer for POOR Magazine./span/span/p
    Tags
  • Uhuru Sasa Means Freedom Now/ Notes from the Inside

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pem style="padding: 0px; margin: 0px; color: rgb(51, 51, 51); font-family: 'Lucida Grande', 'Lucida Sans Unicode', helvetica, verdana, arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px; line-height: 18px;"span style="padding: 0px; margin: 0px;"Editors Note: Dr. Voodoo, author of The Boogey Mana political ,grass roots book about power to the peoples, is one of several power-FUL PNNPlantation prison correspondents. As currently and formerly incarcerated poor and indigenous peoples in struggle and resistance with all plantation systems in Amerikkka, POOR Magazine stands in solidarity with all folks on the other side of the razor wire plantation./span/em/p pAfter 14 years in hell and isolation of solitary confinement at P.B.S. P., CPR-SHU security housing unit, I paroled to the streets of Los Angeles and within 27 days I was falsely re-incarcerated on fabricated charges and faced the draconian, biased, racist 3 strike law of life in prison. California is hanging and persecuting black men as if we still being hung by trees like one hundred years ago. Because of my prison activism and grass roots writing that exposes the California Prison Industrial Complex, CDC which means lsquo;California Department of Corruptionrsquo;, I became a target to be neutralized and return back to hell of solitary confinement: uCould you even imagine spending 14 years in isolation then paroled to get a lil breath of fresh air than slammed back down? ldquo;This would drive anybody crazyrdquo;. Yes I went ape shit crazy./u 3 out of 4 of these fabricated charges was dismissed, because not only am I 100% innocent, I could prove my innocence. So I was threatened and terrorized to plead no-contest without no- kind of legal assistance, this is the dirty lil secret of how the racist court system persecute niggerrsquo;s and the poor. They use weak, bogus, false and in my case, fabricated charges to threaten and terrorize me to plea out or face life in prison under the biased racist 3 strike law. My folks u wouldnrsquo;t believe the evil biased terrorism and racist persecution thatrsquo;s going on in todayrsquo;s court rooms in this country and calif is the worst in the nation. Case No. VA119188 John Keller, if 3 out of 4 charges was dismissed this will tell anybody that the case is very weak at least. But the biased insidious court house donrsquo;t give a damn about your innocence and especially if you happen to be a grass roots activist. Your public pretender works for the D.A.rsquo;s office and mine did not file one legal motion to defend me. A Negrow slave Ms. Pamela Decatur so called defense council. So I was up against the whole damn racist court room without no legal counsel and please keep in mind how biased and racist the draconian 3 strike law is applied to the poor population./p pI paroled from solitary confinement and the boogey man court house return me to prison and solitary and I could prove my innocence. Please help a grass roots activist who was set up and framed when I paroled to L.A.. I have one non-violent fabricated charge and received a 15 year prison sentence because of illegal, old, prior enhancements they used to incarcerate me. Innocence project, NAACP and other bull crap so called organizations is full of bullshit and do not help nobody. Innocent grass roots activist need help./p pDr. Voodoo AKA Mr. Keller, John #H-52472/p pP.O. Box 290066, B-5-115/p pRepresa, CA. 95671/p pldquo;Uhuru Sasardquo;/p
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  • Youth Together Defunded- Support May 24!

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    p style="margin-bottom: 0in"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Youth Together has been supporting Oakland high schoolers with youth-led programs for 20 years. But this year, they were denied funding from the Oakland Fund for Children and Families, the city agency that has historically supported them. Youth Together could be in trouble, and they are asking for community support as they oppose the funding decision at the Oakland City Council meeting this Tuesday, May 24./font/font/p p style="margin-bottom: 0in; orphans: 1"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Youth Together is grassroots, we always have been. We are here for the youth, said Jose Alejandre, a Youth Together organizer at Castlemont High. On May 24th we are asking the community to stand with us./font/font/p p style="margin-bottom: 0in; orphans: 1"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Youth Together was founded by high schoolers in 1996 who wanted after school and extra-curricular education that spoke to their needs and cultures. Their vision has now been realized as One Land One People youth centers in three high schools. Youth Together also organizes in five high schools and conducts educational workshops around the Bay Area./font/font/p p style="margin-bottom: 0in; orphans: 1"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"The OFCY has stated that Youth Together does not fit into their funding guidelines, as ldquo; #39;youth organizing groups that empower Oakland youth to organize for social change and systemic transformation#39; was not an emphasis for the Career Awareness Academic Support for Older Youth funding strategy.rdquo;/font/font/p p style="margin-bottom: 0in; orphans: 1"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Support Youth Together and their fight to get their funding restored. Meet at 4pm outside Oakland City Hall on Tuesday, May 24./font/font/p p style="margin-bottom: 0in; orphans: 1;"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Learn more about Youth Together:nbsp;a href="https://www.facebook.com/youthtogether/?fref=ts"https://www.facebook.com/youthtogether/?fref=ts/a/font/fontbr / a href="http://www.youthtogether.net/"span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman', serif; font-size: medium;"http://www.youthtogether.net//span/a/p
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  • How You Subject Yourself to Danger

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    p style="margin-left:.75in;"nbsp;/p pWhen you gang bang you subject yourself to danger on a daily basis./p pWhen you gang bang you can get hurt and killed in many different ways./p pWhen you gang bang you can get hurt and killed by your own so called lsquo;homeboysrsquo; from your own gang./p pThere are so many rules that come with gang banging./p pRules are very important in every aspect of life, and gang members find rules to be just as important. When you gang bang you have to follow the rules that are established by gang members before your time. If you somehow break these rules it is a great possibility that you will be disciplined. Discipline comes in many shapes and forms and in the gang life discipline often times mean:/p p(1)nbsp;nbsp; A fight with your own lsquo;homeboyrsquo; from your gang./p p(2)nbsp;nbsp; A fight with more than one person from your gang. When I say lsquo;fight,rsquo; I mean you will get the worst of the deal. If it takes two people to beat you down, it will be two people. If it takes three people, than it will be three people fighting you at one time. All that matters is that you know that you broke a rule and you should never break that rule again, or the fights will happen time after time again./p p(3)nbsp;nbsp; When you gang bang and break a rule that is very important you can be stabbed or shot by your own lsquo;homeboysrsquo;./p pWhen you gang bang you better never break the most important rule. The rule is never to talk to the police. If you talk to the police and tell the police about anyone or anything, you are breaking the rules and you can be killed. In most cases when you gang bang and break the rule of talking to the police and lsquo;snitchingrsquo; on someone you will be killed because to snitch goes against everything true gang bangers believe in. To gang bangers the police are the enemy, and you are supposed to never tell the enemy anything./p p(4)nbsp;nbsp; If you leave your gang to join another gang, it is a great possibility that you will be killed because you will become one of the worst kind of enemies. Once you are a part of a gang you become friends with people and learn where they lay their heads at night. When you gang bang you learn where peoples families live. If you break the rule of switching gangs it is a great fear, and an even greater possibility that you may share your knowledge to the gang bangers in the new gang, and if you do this, than you are again giving the enemy information, and the opportunity to go and kill people or their family. If you switch gangs it is a great possibility that you will be a dead man walking./p p(5)nbsp;nbsp; When you gang bang you have other gang bangers from other neighborhoods who are your enemies so therefore you subject yourself to fights, knife fights, gun fights, and anything else that goes with war./p pWhen you choose to gang bang, you choose a life of war because that is what gang banging is stronguWAR!/u/strong War breeds danger and death, so if you would like to know lsquo;Why you shouldnrsquo;t gang bangrsquo;? To gang bang is to be at war for the rest of your life, that is why you shouldnrsquo;t gang bang./p pnbsp;/p pemldquo;She Ainrsquo;t Never Been Around a Real Man, Until She Been With a Revolutionaryrdquo;- Coming Soon By King William E. Brown, Jr. (AKA) Pye face/em/p p style="margin-left:.5in;"emMinister of Information Litigation for the United K.A.G.E. Brothers International Union i.e. nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;ldquo;Antihostility Grouprdquo;/em/p p style="margin-left:.5in;"emFor the following see: a href="mailto:editor@sfbayview.com"editor@sfbayview.com/a/em/p p style="margin-left:.75in;"- em5 Core Demands/em/p p style="margin-left:.75in;"- emI Contribute to Peace Pledge lsquo;from prison 2 the streetrsquo; /em/p p style="margin-left:.75in;"- emUnited K.A.G.E. Brothers Demands: nbsp;http://sfbayview.com/2013/06/july-8-2013-united-kage-brothers-demands//em/p p style="margin-left:1.0in;"emMin. King William E. Brown Jr. #T58106 nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp;nbsp; /ememP.O. Box 7500 PBSP ASUnbsp;nbsp; nbsp; nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Crescent City, CA 95532/em/p pemnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; a href="mailto:Freedom_UKB@yahoo.com/"Freedom_UKB@yahoo.com//a Facebook Kage Brothers/em/p pemP.S. Learn More aboutnbsp; us and how to get involved with a P.Y.E. STREET TEAM i.e. lsquo;Positive Youth Encouragers for 2supnd/sup Chance Self Reliancersquo;/em/p
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  • Mother/Activist, Kerima Çevik, Tells Why Police Crisis/Disability Training Is Not The Answer

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    PNNscholar1
    Original Body
    pphoto description: nbsp;Kerima Cevik, Black woman with two braids eye glasses holds a Krip-Hop Nation/5th Battalion CD on police brutality against people with disabilities./p pnbsp;/p pbKerima Ccedil;evik/bspan is a topic blogger, a parent activist for autistic rights and social justice, has been active various roles from being an editor and contributing writer at Ollibean, to consultant and contributor to the Autism Women#39;s Network Committee on Autism and Ethnicity. An independent researcher and content contributor, she focuses on shining a light on disparities in supports and quality of life for marginalized intersected disabled populations through grassroots community building activities, resource generation, and pay it forward activism strategies. She is a married mother of two children currently homeschooling her tween son Mustafa, who is autistic and nonspeaking. Mrs. Ccedil;evik gave written testimony before the Maryland State Assembly in support of HB269/SB540 Child With A Disability - Individualized Education Program, which became law in May of 2010 and worked with legislators in support of autism training for first responders. HB 361, a bill modeled on similar legislation presented before the Massachusetts Legislature by autistic disability rights advocate Lydia Brown, was shelved after all stakeholders agreed to a regulatory mandate for autism training instead. After the Autism Training Bill (proposed to be modified to include all disabled people), was shelved, Robert Ethan Saylor died in a catastrophic encounter with off duty law enforcement officers./span/p pspanI talked to Ccedil;evik about the routine responses to police brutality/killing of autistic/other people with disabilities, aka police crisis training and what else we can do as parents, activists and community as a whole./span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; Thanks so much for agreeing to be interviewed on this topic of police training and what we can do to stop police brutality/killing of people with autism and people with other types of disability.nbsp; Irsquo;ve been following you work for years.nbsp; Please tell us about your son and you work now?/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik:/bnbsp; Thank you for acknowledging my voice; deep respect. My son is very much like a 13-year-old version of Mr. Tario Anderson, of Greenville, SC., the nonspeaking autistic man who was tasered, handcuffed, and arrested over the tears of his mother and protestations of the entire neighborhood on Christmas Day. Mr. Anderson, to be clear, had not committed any crime, nor did he resemble anyone who was being sought by police. Like Mr. Anderson, my son is autistic, non-speaking and nonwhite. Mustafa needs to be able to either move his hands to sign or reach for his iPad and be allowed to turn it on and access his language program to speak. So if he, like Mr. Anderson, were walking alone to visit family on a holiday and police assumed that because he was not white and because he could not give a verbal response to their commands he would suffer Tariorsquo;s fate at best.nbsp;/span/p pspanRacial profiling severely reduces the probability of police accepting my son, a Hispanic presenting male, larger than his peers, walking down the street with an unsteady gait, holding an iPad without challenging him. Which would inevitably lead to them trying to stop him, taking his iPad, and verbally demanding proof his speech device was his and their response to him not being able to respond would be to try and arrest him for stealing it. Situations like the scenario I just described, that I call lsquo;Mustafarsquo;s Dilemmarsquo; and what happened to Tario Anderson is what haunts me. That is where I am now. I am in this moment of polarization along racial lines seeking solutions to avert this and other nightmare scenarios Irsquo;ve witnessed occurring to countless disabled people, for the sake of my son and all his peers.. Training has been done. Trained officers used deadly force in encounters with clearly identified disabled teens and adults. Irsquo;ve changed my entire advocacy strategy based on this truth. The best way for a person in Mustafarsquo;s Dilemma to remain alive and safe is to avoid any circumstance in which police engagement is necessary as much as humanly possible./span/p pnbsp;/p pspannbsp;The painful lesson Irsquo;ve learned is that training initiatives fail. The fallout from the slew of deaths that spurred the Black Lives Matter movement is that the majority of those lives lost were disabled Black lives. I learned the police officers that shot both Paul Childs III and Stephon Watts were thoroughly trained and also knew the victims prior to the fatal encounters. This knowledge changed the focus of both my parenting and advocacy.nbsp;/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; When why did you get involved with activism around police brutality?/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik/b: I lived overseas for 30 years. There is a history of involvement prior to that (a sit in in the middle of the day at our high school as a freshman over the physical objections of my older sister), but specific to the disability rights community, it began with Mustafarsquo;s Dilemma.nbsp;/span/p pspanIf someone shouts at my son, hersquo;ll retreat. He wonrsquo;t speak because verbal speech is not the way he communicates. Hersquo;ll run because if you shout at him it is an assault to his hearing very much akin to you wearing headphones and listening to music and walking down the street and having someone suddenly turn the volume up to earsplitting levels. I tried to look at Mustafarsquo;s dilemma from the point of view of the average police officer. They would see his nervous giggling as insubordinate. They would presume that if he can laugh he can speak and that would be an incorrect assumption. They would want to try and handcuff him. He would resist. He has weak lungs and brittle bones despite his size. My son has a 70% chance of encountering law enforcement in his lifetime simply because he is disabled. It is a thought that chills me to the bone. That is how a woman who has little time from the care and homeschooling of a disabled son gets involved in this battle for the life of her child and other peoplersquo;s disabled children./span/p pspanOn the legislative end of things, as I was trying to think of solutions to this dilemma of helping my son survive potential encounters with police, I met the great Lydia Brown, an autistic activist of color who had been trying to get an autism-training bill theyrsquo;d written at age 16 passed in Massachusetts for several years. I had come away from the 2010 legislative session here in Maryland very ambivalent about the approach to passing legislation taken by some disability advocacy organizations here. The approach was to support small, nondescript disability related legislation that no one would object to. The purpose was to claim the victory when the bills passed and very slowly build to more critical bills. But the bills themselves were not doing much to change the quality of the lives of disabled people like my son. So I talked to Lydia and reached out to my State Delegate to run a bill based on a combination of the bill shersquo;d written and legislation that had become law in New Jersey and I presented an expanded bill template to my Delegate for first responder training. nbsp;/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; I know my mother back in the 70rsquo;s didnrsquo;t really get into the disability rights movement because of many reasons.nbsp; How do you think the disability rights movement is doing especially today dealing with race and our issues such as increase police brutality?/span/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik:/bnbsp; A great deal of bad things happened to me in the 70rsquo;s. People think of us as the children of the civil rights movement and the first generation to benefit from the Civil Rights Act. But we were also the children who bore the brunt of the retaliatory backlash from those who resented us sitting in their schools and moving into their neighborhoods. So I canrsquo;t say I blame your mother.nbsp;/span/p pspanIrsquo;ve been quite vocal about the fact that the disability rights movement has been historically recalcitrant in acknowledging the roles played by itsrsquo; intersected activist populations. This is especially true in autism organizations, where nonwhite representation in decision-making positions is either nonexistent or at the token representation stage. Irsquo;ve spent part of my time trying to shed light on the structural bigotry embedded in autism organizations. It has been particularly tough dealing with racism in other stakeholders who are supposed to be on our side in fighting against injustice. Until very recently one would only see autism nonprofits rush to put out position papers when someone white and disabled was the victim of injustice unless shamed into doing otherwise. When autism organizations donrsquo;t need to be reminded that Black disabled lives matter as much as white ones, the direction of autistic advocacy for black autistics can move beyond placing them in the awkward position of being the de facto race relations activists. How they are doing at fighting police use of excessive force and catastrophic encounters? It doesnrsquo;t seem to be very high on their agenda, if on it at all. Right now Irsquo;m still disappointed that I must speak out when each new project or book or conference or action for our autistic community is announced excluding nonwhite autistic voices. If the privileged voices of the autism community continually erase us from entire histories of autism, they arenrsquo;t going to be there when police reforms are needed unless those harmed are white. That is a reality that is extremely slow to change.nbsp;/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; In this time of the heightened attention of police brutality against the Black/Brown/LGBTQ communities and the activism toward it in your view what has come out of it and what we still need to work on?/span/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik:/b Michael Brownrsquo;s murder and the protests in Ferguson resulted in a serious look at the urgent need for demilitarization of our police force. Everyday Americans asked why this shift to a militarized police force happened when the National Guard exists to fill the role of guarding the homeland. The reality of redlining was made public for the first time in ages. Most white people today had no clue what policing for profit or redlining was before the protests in Ferguson began. Zimmermanrsquo;s trial for the murder of Trayvon Martin began a chain of events that has forced a national spotlight on injustice in our criminal justice system. The murders of Islan Nettles and two other black transgender women in quick succession taught the general public what activists already knew; that the most vulnerable population at the highest risk for harm are nonwhite, disabled, transgender community members. They know now that all this time, the deaths of these people were diminished and erased from public attention. The gaslighting done to us for years, that rhetoric that race was a card that is played, that by speaking out we were practicing reverse racism, that we voted for a Black President so that means that racism is over was blown aside by the raw hatred of the Mother Emmanuel church murders. And still the attempt at erasure by some media outlets, saying this mass shooting was actually not a racial hate crime but an attack on Christianity was so awful I recoiled in disgust. When the killer was treated like royalty and given a fast food meal on his way to jail, I was furious. That man confessed to deliberately attempting to start a race war and still there was an attempt to deny. But so much has happened now that they canrsquo;t gaslight it away./span/p pspanWhat we need to work on as activists is entirely dependent on who we are as individuals, and what our skillsets are. I shy away from trying to advise others on scale, scope and direction. You and other activists have tried top down change for years. Politicians promise everything until they are elected; then they forget those promises. We need to work on going from a fear based post Columbine mentally of policing on steroids in every aspect of our lives and return to the role and scope of the law enforcement officer as a peace officer, there to help the community by enforcing laws and protecting and serving the public. What are our reform points as black disability rights activists?nbsp; #CampaignZero as added them as an afterthought in their list of policy change demands. But what do we need to live our lives free of being targeted by criminals and being harmed in police encounters? We havenrsquo;t gotten together and discussed that as academics, activists, and disabled activists fighting for the same reforms. Yet we have people everywhere lecturing on police brutality. That needs change specific to the needs of disabled people. There are reform issues missing from everyonersquo;s agenda related to how police interact with disabled wheelchair users, and what accountability will occur when a person is dumped from their wheelchair or physical support equipment. It is just unacceptable. The lack of interpreter support for nonspeaking people is unacceptable. There is no plan in place for how interaction safeguards can be put in place so someone like my son can keep from being shot by police. This is an example of an issue that is not being addressed by other activists and campaigns. What is the protocol for someone trying to sign police that they are deaf if police choose to ignore this and treat the individual like a noncompliant suspect? There needs to be a communication paradigm that is inclusive of nonspeaking people so that police can interact with victims and persons of interest without harm or violation of human rights.nbsp; I have too much to say on my personal agenda for what needs to change.nbsp;/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore/b:nbsp; As a Black parent of an autistic son, what do you think about what some cities want to do like having a name bracelet and some want families to register to the police so they now about family members with autism?/span/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik/b: Many autistic adults choose to wear GPS and tracking devices. Not because they are what the autism nonprofit industrial complex has mislabeled ldquo;elopersrdquo; or ldquo;runnersrdquo; but because they need the assistive technology support to navigate safely.nbsp; Irsquo;ve listened to autistic adults who support tracking devices as a choice for themselves because they tend to get disoriented. The key words are individual understanding about what this device is, how it assists them, and obtaining the individualrsquo;s consent. If consent cannot be obtained the device should not be there. I am very concerned that tracking bracelets not become a new form of restraint, and pathologizing behavior we make no other attempt at analyzing or understanding may be an indication of discord in the autistic childrsquo;s home that is not being addressed. In any other child, elopement would be a red flag that requires investigation to rule out abuse. In autistic children, teens, and adults, where the only goal seems to be compliance for non-speakers and forcing verbal speakers to be indistinguishable from their peers, the rush to remove responsibility from everyone and blame autism for every event or habit in a childrsquo;s life that is not acceptable to general society, we insist on coming up with solutions that equate our offspring with dogs in need of training or wild horses needing breaking. I am very concerned about the tracking bracelets that failed in Colorado, and the mother who was charged because her frequently lsquo;elopingrsquo; sonrsquo;s braceletrsquo;s battery failed. She was cited for child endangerment for what the police say was failure to charge the braceletrsquo;s battery. We still donrsquo;t know if the bracelet, from the same company that manufactured the two, which failed, has a defective battery. I think if the person chooses to wear the bracelets it is okay. If not, it is very much like house arrest with an ankle bracelet. Shackling people with an electronic tracking device for the crime of being curious about the world at large while being disabled is a limited, and rather draconian response to autistic wandering. . I am against databases full of innocent autistic childrenrsquo;s DNA and fingerprints, another part of the tracking device initiatives, because we don#39;t know that the data in them will be limited to use for its original intent. It is too creepy.nbsp;/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore/b:nbsp; There is no surprise that you have written about the ineffectiveness of police crisis/training.nbsp; In your August 26th/ 2014 article, Why Autism Training for Law Enforcement Doesn#39;t Work you bring up many police shootings including those of two young Black teens with autism who were killed by police in Denver Chicago, where the officers involved have receive training and you said ldquo;You can#39;t train away racism or ableism.rdquo;nbsp; Please give us your views and experiences when it comes to police training of people with disabilities/span/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik/b: Right. Paul Childs, and Stephon Watts are examples that police, regardless of disability sensitivity training, will always fall back on their primary training and shoot anyone with an object in their hand first and worry about the consequences later. The murder of Ronald Madison, the 45-year-old Autistic man and his brother on the Danziger Bridge after Katrina is a clear indication that racism is not being factored into the concept of training for disability sensitivity in law enforcement. In fact to date, disability training in law enforcement has been presented as risk management rather than ableism sensitivity for the most part. Ableism sensitivity is only applied to evacuation scenarios. We expanded the responsibility of police beyond the scope of their intended purpose.nbsp; That is the root of this problem.nbsp; I think we need to understand the concept that training for invisible disability in particular may have its uses, but it is not the antidote to catastrophic encounters with law enforcement. So it is time to begin looking at the solution from the reality that racist ableism exists, police are equally subject to human biases and failings, and when we expand the definition of what a police officerrsquo;s job is, we put everyone at risk.nbsp;/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; If itrsquo;s not police training then what are your suggestions and it can be for our community (For me I think we only focus on what police need and not what the community need)?/span/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik:/bnbsp; Leroy I agree that we are focusing on what we think police need when we need to reduce police engagement and increase community supports that limit the need for police contact as much as possible.nbsp; I wonrsquo;t advise the community but I can tell you what I personally would like to see happen.nbsp;/span/p pspanIrsquo;d like to see efforts made to establish a 911-type number for mental health emergencies/psychiatric disability related crises and more community crisis response teams to answer them.nbsp; There is a myth that policy makers are exploiting based on a moment in history. This myth that after the Willow brook scandal, we just opened the doors of mental institutions and threw the patients out to wander the streets, and that to this day those same individuals are out there being a danger to themselves and others. The new fear factor story being added to that is we really need to bring back mental institutions. Victim blaming every deceased victim of a catastrophic police encounter with a person with psychiatric disability and sprinkling that disgrace with a healthy dose of posthumously declaring every white male mass shooter as a mental health patient achieves this fear driven train wreck. Uh nope! I think that funding being demanded for the return of the infamous mental institution model of mental health treatment, research, and lsquo;residential carersquo; should be given to desegregated, community supported mental health solutions that work in accord with the Olmstead Decision.nbsp; I think we need to build on peer mentoring and peer respite centers, an idea that has already been proven successful in other parts of the country.nbsp; I think we need to be seeking preventative solutions that solve the main series of events that ends in catastrophe for so many disabled victims, and that is the present situation where a mental health call is lumped in with a 911 call and therefore has police responding where they shouldnrsquo;t be. I think we should be increasing healthy inclusive school environments for neurodivergent students at school by paying school support staff wages that retain them and training them, not calling SROs to handcuff autistic children to squad cars.nbsp;/span/p pspanI could go further:nbsp;/span/p pspanI think that police transport vehicles need to be made safe and wheelchair accessible. I think that blind suspects should be given a copy of their rights in braille, and law enforcement should understand that removing a personrsquo;s wheelchair is removing they spinal support and their legs. They need to be made aware that removing a personrsquo;s service animal deprives them of the assistive technology they need to navigate. I think that deaf interpreters who are body language qualified should be on call or available in every precinct. I think we have to get to a place in neighborhood law enforcement where the people who police your neighborhood truly live in it, and therefore know their disabled neighbors and everyone in the neighborhood personally and live through what those living there live through.nbsp; Inclusion in all aspects of society must mean insuring universal design in the criminal justice too. Wheelchair access in courthouses shouldnrsquo;t be a thing anymore, yet we still lack this.nbsp; We still havenrsquo;t achieved proper therapeutic supports of prisoners found to be neurodivergent. People are dying in county jails because the police protocol for dealing with anyone they label a mental health risk is to place them in a restraint chair ndash; for hours. This is the strongest evidence out there that police should not be involved in calls about autistic meltdowns, potential suicides, and mental health crises. We have community members with prosopagnosia, but we expect them to look law enforcement in the eye. How is that going to happen, when they may not be able to distinguish your facial features? Police demand compliance to their orders. How does that happen when some autistic adults have diagnosed auditory processing disorders and may not understand the command although they heard it?nbsp; I always come back to the question of how someone like Neli Latson had his case go to trial? It is because everyone but the autistics themselves is informing the entire criminal justice system about autism. Autistics are the scenery in autism training for police. I donrsquo;t know of one police training program for autism that addresses invisible disabilities that could bar communication in a police interaction like synesthesia, auditory processing disorders, photosensitive seizure disorders, and face blindness. Hopefully things will change. But if organizations that claim to advocate for autistics try and exclude autistic disability rights activists from the complexities of how autistic victims or persons of interest might come to harm from simple interactions with law enforcement, you get a hot mess of experts thinking that training by generalizing both autistics and police will solve everything. Training based on managing risks and generalizations when the people involved are such a diverse and unique population cannot succeed. Invisible disability is not something a training seminar, even one 40 hours long, can prepare police for when other factors are ignored to do so.nbsp;/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; You followed the aftermath of the shooting of Robert Ethan Saylor and now Maryland has police training by people with disabilities.nbsp; Your thoughts and what did you experience covering that case and do you think if Saylor were Black would his family get the same amount of attention fro the disability and general community with media?/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik: /bEthan Saylorrsquo;s case was local, and I did follow it. It was determined that there were no grounds to prosecute the officers involved. This kind of thing is no surprise to people of color but to the Saylor family it was like a hard slap in the face. The ableism in the lack of accountability broke my heart. The grieving family did what many grieving families do. They directed all their efforts at training, presuming that the officers involved had no training in this area and that mandated training might have changed the outcome for Ethan. I would argue that it would not. I donrsquo;t know how many of Ethan#39;s peers were involved in decision making about training. This is the third statewide disability training effort attempted in Maryland. I am afraid it will fail as much as the attempts before it. The premise behind training police for this is fundamentally flawed as I stated earlier. I canrsquo;t emphasize this enough. It presumes police are not subject to human weaknesses like ableism. It ignores racism or presumes that racism can be trained away. It does not address instances of excessive use of force by individual officers. Right now in Baltimore, there is another case of excessive use of force, the victim of which has broken bones. The victim knew one of the officers involved. That officer was well aware that the individual involved was not disruptive at all. But that did not impact the outcome.nbsp; I have not even addressed police culture.nbsp; Most police training doesnrsquo;t either.nbsp;/span/p pIf the family and the victim were Black no, the Governor would not have gathered a task force, and in my opinion this would not have made national news. Verbiage would have been generated to criminalize Ethan Saylor and he would have been posthumously victim blamed. That is the reality of where we are in race relations today. It is a time of dangerous polarization and overt unpunished hate crimes.nbsp;/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; What is you advice to first anti-police brutality movement, the disability and Black community on the issue of police brutality against people with disability?/span/p pnbsp;/p pbKerima Ccedil;evik/b: My policy as a stakeholder in the anti-brutality/police reform movement is when the victim is found to be a black transgender woman, making my best effort to give the podium to a black transgender activist, either live or through amplifying their words, and allowing those voices to be heard. When the victim is black and disabled, the tendency of prominent white activists to speak for the black disabled community or simply say the important identity is the disabled one is wrong. Because when victims are limited to a single identity, key reasons why this is happening are erased. It is the combination of identities that makes the victims targets. But white dominated organizations do this. No one should speak for the black disabled community when there are activists out there who can speak for that intersected population. Understand your privilege, be the ally, and give the voices of disabled black activists the platform to be heard.nbsp;/p pspanTo our Black community: We have tried to reform from the top down. My personal conclusion is that it is right to continuing filming and speaking out when we see excessive force and anything in an exchange between police and people with disabilities we know is beyond the scope of the law.nbsp;/span/p pspanI think all advice needs a giant disclaimer: this is one personrsquo;s opinion. I think what is making modern human and civil rights movements work is that the decentralized, online/offline, ebb and flow of the activism has allowed a great deal of room for a preponderance of ideas that will bring an eventual series of innovative solutions to our causes.nbsp; I can only speak my truth, with the understanding that it this womanrsquo;s attempt to insure her son survives an encounter with a militarized police department in a time of extreme racial polarization. It is difficult to see my son growing up and not communicating well enough to tell everyone what he thinks. We are also working on that./span/p pspanI have felt the personal need to focus more on grassroots activism. I am trying to support pushes for the establishment of respite centers, community crisis teams. I continue the work of calling out nonprofits that present themselves as emergency crisis response centers but in fact only act as resource generators who hand out phone numbers, and leaflets and watch people who need urgent help die. If organizations donrsquo;t have real action plans and policies aimed at preventing these deaths and permanent injuries, they are part of the system perpetuating them. I ask myself, why then are we not speaking out against funding them? No organization calling itself a disability rights organization should be ignoring this issue. If they are, we should be ignoring them. So I guess the advice Irsquo;ve given myself is again a series of answers to the question how can I save my sonrsquo;s life? The answers I came up with are:/span/p pspanReduce potential for catastrophic incidences.nbsp;/span/p pspanReduce police presence in school behavioral management of disabled students./span/p pspanReduce police involvement in non-criminal disability related crises.nbsp;/span/p pspanReduce nonprofit distancing from involvement in catastrophic encounters with police.nbsp;/span/p pspanReduce symbolic feel good training being marketed to police departments by diverse stakeholders in the disability nonprofit industrial complex and fund things that find solutions to how our people can survive these encounters./span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; As a legislative advocate what do you see needs to be done on the legal level?nbsp; Recently we are citing more states including disability apart of their anti-profiling bills.nbsp; What else can we do especially when it comes to the increasing abuse of disabled youth/young adults in our schools by resource officers?/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik:/bnbsp; I think we need to legislate to phase out SROs (school resource officers) from schools and refocus on strong anti-bullying culture infusion in public schools instead. I donrsquo;t think police should be profiling disabled children in school. Police officers are not trained to evaluate students with psychiatric or invisible disability. This entire concept is just frightening. I think that the role of legislation is to create laws to provide community based respite, location and recovery services for lost people outside the police force for those disabled people who themselves feel they need monitoring and tracking, and I think funding needs to be created for mental health crisis response teams with non lethal means of engaging individuals in crisis. I think laws generating funding to go towards community supports, assistive technology should exist and be operative in every State. Isnrsquo;t it sad that if a bear is up a tree or a wild predator is wandering in an urban area, we tranquilize and relocate them, and wersquo;ll come to blows if anyone thinks of shooting them, but people are okay with police shooting a disabled adult in crisis? How is it that our society has failed to progress on how they view disabled people?nbsp;/span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; As a long time activist what do you think the activist world needs to know to make their work, protest and campaigns not only inclusive but to gain more realization that many times the disability component of a police brutality case is a key?/span/p pbKerima Ccedil;evik:/b I think those of us who write need to increase our body of work to educate other activists as well as the general public that a victim with an intersected disability label is in fact the key to defining the problem and solving it. I think activists need to understand that they may be marching against racism, but erasing the disabled identity of the victim makes them ableist. I actually think we need activist networking and strategizing events that are intersectional to impart on activists across causes that not erasing one marginalized group from activistsrsquo; efforts might make a major difference in how change happens. Keeping it real, I was disappointed to see Deray McKesson on Late Night With Stephan Colbert and he chose not to at least give a shout out to Heather De Mian, who was on the ground in Ferguson protesting as well and was dumped from her wheelchair hit with her own cell phone and arrested for being an ally against racism. Typical example of disabled activists being erased and made invisible when a platform existed where she might have been able to voice our perspective on this.nbsp;/p pspannbsp;I have been more vocal about racism and the racial polarization we are all witnessing because of where and how these events intersect with black disabled lives lost. I burnt out dealing with that type of ableism and disability bias.nbsp; My personal focus changed. Irsquo;ve spent the past two years fighting to make our voice heard to our disability rights activist colleagues who are speaking for us and arenrsquo;t allowing us to speak for ourselves or worse, are part of the machine that is erasing the voices of our victims from their own stories. Doing the right thing begins with our own stakeholders and community./span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; I really believe that cultural activism plays a very important role in not only protecting our rights but also educating our community, politicians, legislators and the media.nbsp; So in this area of police brutality how do you see cultural activism of people with disability fit in, how has it made a difference and if you had a magic wand how would you expand it??/span/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik/b: Wow, great question. Absolutely agree that cultural activism has been the definitive transformative change agent in recent history. I just saw Jon Connor and Keke Palmer performing ldquo;Fresh Water For Flintrdquo; on The Nightly Show and I thought about ldquo;Disabled Profiled,rdquo; ldquo;Where is the Hoperdquo; and how much cultural activism is part of the way those of us who are Black activists move though social justice space. A documentary or a spoken word poem or a musical performance has the potential to make a much more visceral connection to people and pairs well with social media to make that message a global one. As you know I wanted to make that connection with disabled activists and stakeholders with you, Keith Jones, and KripHop Nation but that failed. A dream would be witnessing KripHop on a platform like The Nightly Show. Disabled cultural activism needs a wider audience./span/p pnbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/bnbsp; In these days what are you working on for your son and his community within and beyond eliminating police brutality?/span/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik/b: I actually sat down with my daughter, who has a Masters in special education, and later with my son, and reprioritized what he needs as a nonspeaking disabled tween, and included his older sisterrsquo;s professional opinion of what services he was denied as a multiply disabled student of color while in the public education system. What we came up with are new perspectives on inclusion, public education, and our thoughts of what the future of educating disabled people throughout their lifespan might look like and Irsquo;ll be writing about later.nbsp;/span/p pspanMy sonrsquo;s expressions of what his educational needs and interests are compared to what the public entity, the school system, wishes to track him towards is very much akin tonbsp; the difference between what my racist high school freshman counselor decided I needed and what my aptitude tests said I needed in terms of a high school education. When I entered high school and found that a counselor had ignored my aptitude and high school placement scores and placed me in both a remedial math class and a home economics course I never registered for because I was a Black female I was furious.nbsp; My math teacher marched me into the freshman counselorrsquo;s office and asked why a student who scored in the 98/spanspansupth/sup/spanspan percentile in math reasoning was placed in his remedial math class; the counselor calmly answered that there was no room for students my color in the college track math classes and I was in home economics because colored girls needed to learn their place was to clean houses and cook for white people.nbsp; Mustafa experienced both the racial bias and the addition of the presumption of incompetence that is carried into the school system by the structural ableism of society in general. On the other hand, those who witnessed the injustices done to my son because he is a nonspeaking multiply disabled student were silenced because they have no whistle blower protection from reprisal if and when they step forward. Irsquo;m working on what needs to happen to go about changing that.nbsp;/span/p pnbsp;/p pThe other cause Irsquo;m involved in is the fight against the attempts to pass right to die legislation in Maryland. nbsp;On February 13, 2014, Belgium legalized euthanasia by lethal injection for children and Europersquo;s escalation of assisted suicide on anyone who they think shouldnrsquo;t live stinks of eugenic mentalities that are frightening../p pspannbsp;The revised assisted suicide push is a based on a rebranded, seductive, presentation of a very ugly idea complete with a young woman with brain cancer who promoted the myth of the beautiful and dignified death on social media by making herself the star of her own reality show as a heroine of assisted suicide, making her personal choice and insistence on mandating this for the rest of us. Now other cancer patients who want to continue life sustaining treatments are being denied the medical insurance to do so in states where such legislation has passed, while insurance companies boldly state in rejection letters that theyrsquo;ll pay for drugs to end patientsrsquo; lives but not hospice care or medical treatments to keep them alive. That is inexcusable.nbsp; I need to give a shout out to Not Dead Yet, Carrie Ann Lucas, esq., Corbett Orsquo;Toole who introduced me to Carrie Ann virtually, and ASANrsquo;s Sam Crane, esq., for fighting this fight longer than Irsquo;ve been in it.nbsp;/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore/b:nbsp; Any last word where can people read about your work?/span/p pspanbKerima Ccedil;evik/b :Irsquo;m actually doing a great deal of amplifying disabled activist voices so Irsquo;d recommend they follow my blogs on Facebook or follow me on twitter @kerima_cevik. I hope more people amplify and support the ldquo;Where is The Hoperdquo; documentary, it explains the topic of excessive use of force and delves into the lives of some victims of catastrophic encounters with law enforcement and their families attempts to find closure well. I am not an organization type human but I think a shout out to ASAN activistsrsquo; efforts to end violence against disabled people by continuing cross disability vigils is worth mentioning. I think that disabled victims of violent death in general should all be remembered but that is a topic for another time.nbsp;/span/p pspanI have become a rather itinerant blogger because of offline goings on. These days, when I blog, I write about:/span/p pspannbsp;autism related topics on The Autism Wars: a href="http://theautismwars.blogspot.com/"spanhttp://theautismwars.blogspot.com//span/a/span/p pspanIntersectionality and Disability on InterSected: a href="http://intersecteddisability.blogspot.com/"spanhttp://intersecteddisability.blogspot.com//span/a/span/p pspanRacism and Social Justice on Brave: a href="http://overcominghate.blogspot.com/"spanhttp://overcominghate.blogspot.com//span/a/span/p pnbsp;/p pnbsp;/p pspannbsp;nbsp;/span/p
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  • If Walls Could Talk??? vs. Our Walls Can Talk!!! - Notes from the Inside

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pThe Poor Magazine Family Visual Artist Mutual Support Networks, and the Art of Resistance Movement Presents:/p pIn the Spirit of Proverbs 29:18/p pThe Visual Secret Powers of Grassroots Activism./p puOur Mission: /uFrom 1975-1989, in general. And from 1989-2016, particular. There were- and still are- thousands of still captive Blacks, Browns, whites, and other poor people of color, whom have been maliciously reduced to the mental bondage/and economic neo-slavery of Ralph Waldo Ellisonrsquo;s ldquo;The Invisible Manrdquo;. But thankfully, a chosen few of our captive men folks began to realize ldquo;If we are willing to make a good faith efforts to further self-develop our personal and collective skills as still captive artists, writers, and critical tinkers, we can begin to utilize the below working titlehellip;/p pldquo;If walls could talk???/p pVs./p pOur walls Can Talk!!!/p pAs a whole new framework of grassroots activism, that is greatly needed to better educate our activist communities on both sides of the genocidal prison walls. As such, we hereby invite the multi-million numbers of our most freedom loving men, women, youths, and other Indy Media activists to please visit the poor magazine family, either you can seek to contribute to our Grassroots Mutual Support Network of (a). new educational self-help training programs, (b). economic self-employment training programs, and (c) a self-regenerating system of economic self-empowerment goals on both sides of these prions walls./p pnbsp;/p pThe Poor Magazine Family/p pnbsp;/p pContact: Yafeu Iyapo-I/p pS/N L. Alexander, B-72288/p pCell: A2-118, Po Box 7500/p pCrescent City, CA 95532/p
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  • Prison Plantation Psychosis/ Notes From the Inside

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pustrongPrison Plantation Psychosis/strong/u/p pemspanEditors Note: Dr. Voodoo is one of several power-FUL PNNPlantation prison correspondents. As currently and formerly incarcerated poor and indigenous peoples in struggle and resistance with all plantation systems in Amerikkka, POOR Magazine stands in solidarity with all folks on the other side of the razor wire plantation. /span/em/p pem(See attached file for full size image of letter concerning Dr. Voodoo#39;s gang involvement as determined by the razor wire plantation.)/em/p pSolitary confinement health issues are very serious. I did 14 years at Pelican Bay state Prison Isolation. Irsquo;m now writing about Prison Plantation Psychosis and the effect of being isolated. Released from isolation ldquo;hellrdquo; in May 2015, any questions?/p pContact Dr. Voodoo/p pKeller John #H-52472/p pPO Box 290066, B-5-115/p pRepresa, CA, 95671/p pInnocent Grass Roots Activist who could prove my innocence: ldquo;Soul Brother nbsp;J Voodoordquo;/p
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  • Da Klan Trumps us and Assata Shakur is in trouble

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-db6df1e4-c44b-8176-0b2c-ea6b9de451e1"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"ldquo;Republiklan Presidential Klandidaterdquo; Donald Trumprsquo;s views on such deeds as building great walls, kicking out all ldquo;immigrantsrdquo;, muslims and other elements that donrsquo;t fit into the UWO (Upgraded World Order) of wite (non) supremacy has invoked the true spirit of this colonized, racist, stolen country. nbsp;Repeated nightmares of necks snapping like #2 pencils under the hateful noose of wites haunt me as I uneasily watch Trumpsrsquo;s tirade to sway his supporters to bring ldquo;picnicsrdquo; back to whomever he sees fit (in particular, people of color and muslims). Blacks and wites, possible ldquo;John Brownrdquo; endorsers are being attacked at Kla- oops,Trump rallies with no consequences to the parties involved but instead, legal support./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-db6df1e4-c44b-8176-0b2c-ea6b9de451e1"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"The false-superior feelings of racist wites towards ldquo;We, who are darker than bluerdquo; has always been the same. Wersquo;re looked upon as so-called slaves who were stolen and brought here not out of love, but for profit and destruction. We WERE NOT suppose to rise no higher than being 3rd class citizens and servants to be used for chattel breeding and horrendous medical experimentations. Now, in 2016 we still have to plead to the world (and in some cases, each other!) that ldquo;Black Lives Matterrdquo; to a racist US system who has been historically known to lynch any person darker than blue who dared to speak out against the mistreatment of his/her people./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-db6df1e4-c44b-8176-0b2c-ea6b9de451e1"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"The fact that Donald Trump is allowed to push his agenda on the world with impunity terrorizes me as a ldquo;slitizenrdquo; (so-called slave/stolen citizen) and as a Black Woman. I see Jim Crow again along with Jerry Crack. I see my brown comrades continue to be stamped with the term ldquo;Illegal Immigrantsrdquo; by Illegal Immigrants who has the same fate for us all in mind. Trumprsquo;s attitude and arrogance further fueled my hunch that the Ku Klux Klan has never ldquo;died offrdquo;. They (the klan) either traded in their uniforms for ldquo;politically correctrdquo; ones, like Trump, or hid low in a fake slumber waiting for someone like Don to lead the way and get the ldquo;good orsquo;l boysrdquo; platform back on track./span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-db6df1e4-c44b-8176-0b2c-ea6b9de451e1"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Coincidentally, this comes at the same time Amerika is pushing propaganda to convince us here how important it is to mend ldquo;ourrdquo; relationship with Cubahellip;.ORhellip;.. Is it to get their hands on Assata Shakur???/span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-db6df1e4-c44b-8176-0b2c-ea6b9de451e1"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"Assata Shakur, a Sistuh Souljah and a courageous soul who stood up against the prejudices and crimes committed on her people here has been in exile in Cuba for decades. Assata survived an assassination attempt when she, along with other oppressor-fighting comrades were ambushed on the New Jersey turnpike.She survived incarceration by the US for the death of a New York state trooper during that ambush (who, according to ballistics, was killed by a bullet from his fellow officerrsquo;s service revolver). /span/span/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr" style="line-height:1.38;margin-top:0pt;margin-bottom:0pt;"span id="docs-internal-guid-db6df1e4-c44b-8176-0b2c-ea6b9de451e1"span style="font-size: 14.6667px; font-family: Arial; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); vertical-align: baseline; white-space: pre-wrap; background-color: transparent;"As the ldquo;US moves to restore diplomatic relations with Cuba and loosen the five-decade trade embargo, which has ldquo;the potential to end a legacy of mistrust in our hemisphererdquo; and has ldquo;added uprdquo; to new hope for the future in Cuba,rdquo; as President Barack Obama was quoted saying on tuesday nightrsquo;s address, and it makes me wonder if our prez is the posterboy for the ldquo;catch 22rdquo; hidden agenda of the 1 million-dollar bounty on our dear Sister Shakurrsquo;s head? Does this ldquo;New Hope for Cubardquo; refer to if Cuba cooperates with the US when the subject of Assata comes up? According to ldquo;Dummy Darardquo; Sarah Palin, resistance against racism is considered ldquo;punk ass thuggery.rdquo; nbsp;I say resist on- and stay in Peopleskool because there is a no-good hidden agenda brewing up and the so-called black supporters of Donald Trump do absolutely nothing to put my mind at ease. Instead they reminded me that ldquo;slavemastersrdquo; had ldquo;employeesrdquo; too./span/span/p
    Tags
  • Visual Artist Support Network and the Art of Resistance Movement - Notes from the Inside

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pThe Poor Magazine Family Visual Artist Mutual Support Networks and the Art of Resistance Movement presents:/p pIn the Spirit of Proverbs 29:18/p pThe Visual Secret Powers of Grassroots Activism./p pOur Mission:/p pDuring the years of 1619 thru 1865; and again from 1865 thru 1965, a large number of Afrikan (Black),Brown, white, and other poor yet morally courageous women of color have repeatedly played key roles in helping to covertly and overtly educate, organize, raise funds, and train new youths and young adult leadership bodys- whom were morally committed to help achieve all areas of our racial, social, economic justice, and many other grassroots human rights movement goals./p pAs such, some of the current goals of (a.) the poor magazine familys brands of grassroots community outreach work/and economic self-help organizing strategies, and (b) the New Afrikan (Black) Collective Think Tanks, the Pelican Bay Human Rights Movement (ie the original PBHRM), the Priosners Human Rights Movemnet (ie the statewide bodies of still captive PHRM activists), and the Art of Resistance Movement (i.e. the ARMrsquo;S) Brands of both captive and non-captive activist movements, is to help rebuild 1,2,3 or more DIY or do-it-yourself models, to correctly teach and show a whole new generation of our Black, Brown, white, and other poor women, girls, and our Harriet Tubman style models of adopted self-help sister circles, to have a stable place to relearn why/and how ldquo;to get our mojorsquo;s backrdquo; as well as to play a more leading role in behalf of all of our collective economic, self-empowerment goals./p pIf we pause to critically analyze and compare both (a) the new collections of visual artwork by one of our still captive Black activists, named minister Baba Yafeu Iyapo-I, and (b) the below key verse of sacred scripture, Proverbs Chapter 29 at key verse 18: ldquo;hellip;Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is hehellip;rdquo;-Amen (True)- we wil find, that together we can ALL re-learn how to achieve far more by working unity- compared to what any grassroots group is often unable to achieve. When working all alone. As such, come and join the Poor Magazine Familyrsquo;s new campaign- to help rebuild a far more effective Indy multi-media movement in our own behalf ASAP./p pThe Poor Magazine Family/p pContact: Yafeu Iyapo-I/p pS/N L. Alexander, B-72288/p pCell: A2-118, Po Box 7500/p pCrescent City, CA 95532/p pnbsp;/p pThe above still captive prisoner is the original source of this seven part series of combined visual artwork, educational self-help fliers, plus a related flier of personal, collective, and grassroots problem solving strategies. For more info contact either Poor Magazine or Yafeu-Iyapo-I at the above address./p
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  • Writing by T. Yeargin: While Men and Women Weep Father Who are You? Who Am I and Human Development

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    p align="center"uWHILE MEN AND WOMEN WEEP/u/p p align="center"As they do now, Irsquo;ll fight for their rights/p p align="center"to be free,/p p align="center"While little children go hungry as they do now,/p p align="center"I will try to feed them with the truth so they will/p p align="center"never go hungry./p p align="center"nbsp;/p p align="center"While men go to prison,/p p align="center"In and out as they do now,/p p align="center"Irsquo;ll fight to be free and stand on/p p align="center"The word of god!/p p align="center"nbsp;/p p align="center"While there is a poor lost girl or boy/p p align="center"In the streets,/p p align="center"With nowhere to go,/p p align="center"I will try to lead them/p p align="center"To the right way./p p align="center"nbsp;/p p align="center"While there remains one lost dark soul/p p align="center"With no cause/p p align="center"And is confused about who they are/p p align="center"And donrsquo;t know the truth,/p p align="center"Then Irsquo;ll fight to the very end to let them know!/p p align="center"emBy Brother Shabazz AKA T. Yeargin/em/p p align="center"nbsp;/p pstronguFather, Who are you?/u/strong/p pI ask this because we serve life sentences and have left our children and teens to do for themselves./p pSome of us donrsquo;t like the way other people raise our teens now, but you and I are left out of the job that was ours. We are upset because our sons and daughters took on another person as their idol because we were not there./p pNow, I ask why you always do what he says. I am your father. Why donrsquo;t you listen to me?/p pOur young teens will say to us who left. Dad, who are you? Because you were never around, I talked to my uncle and my stepfather about life and what I wanted to be./p pThey were my idols growing up and also some of my friendsrsquo; fathers and mothers./p pNow you come into my life asking me who are they to teach me because thatrsquo;s your job! Dad, you let mom and us down./p pNow, my brothers want to know who you are and where you have been./p pI ask again, who are you? If you know who you are, take time to love and understand your children. Care for them and talk to them too./p pI come to you in concern for all prisoners that are locked up and trying to do something better with their lives, so that we can get back into society. We have a lot of inmates here in prison that have families out there trying to do their best./p pHere at Chuckawalla Valley State Prison we are trying to start a young menrsquo;s awareness group dealing with insight into criminal behavior, etc. Since we are a group of older fathers in prison we do need help from the public. We do need volunteers to serve as mentors for men who want to change their lives so they can be better fathers. This program needs to be here. Some fathers in here are really hurting and donrsquo;t know how to let it out. This is why when society hears about fathers behind bars many people on the outside can say this program is helping our young fathers to learn to avoid violence./p pOur young men need help and our children too, so will you please hear our cry so all of us can save our children. To help our young men, it takes all of us. It has to be something that we in here can use or feel that hits us hard at home, so we fathers can look at ourselves with more pride and dignity. As we lift up one another we lift up ourselves./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; -T. Yeargin/p pemHelp us to look out for our young children and young men out there!/em/p p align="center"nbsp;/p pstronguWho Am I/u/strong/p pOne of the greatest loves anyone can experience is having the ability to feel a deep clearness of concern for another person./p pNow I have the capacity to love myself and others and their feelings as well, in the sense of true concern./p pBecause now I do know, itrsquo;s not about me all the time. I have to think about others too. First, I must see and value myself as a good person worthy of being loved as others love themselves and their families./p pWho am I? Now Irsquo;m a person who has to think of others as well as myself.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Once Irsquo;ve made this change, then I know I was the cause of the problem dealing with other people not them./p pAs I learn these programs about violence and the magnitude of impact especially with life crimes, I know there is never just one victim. I share this with my ability to understand who and how my crime affected me and others./p pYes, there were many people I hurt that were around me like family and friends. Being a father, a son, and a teacher of men here in prison, I now can look honestly into myself and my past actions, so I can help others as well as myself./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; -T. Yeargin/p pemP.S. Do you men, and women, on the outside know who you are?/em/p pnbsp;/p pstronguHuman Development/u/strong/p pControlling Criminal Behavior: When men are in prison trying to stay at peace with themselves, some staff add to the bad behavior by turning men against each other. This makes us seem like we are the ones starting all the problems. A lot of us lifers and other men with lesser time are really trying to get out while it seems that some of these C/Orsquo;s and staff try to make it bad for us, so they can keep a job by saying we will never be rehabilitated. Why do we keep false hopes alive, when we as men know that our young men need help? I say this because drugs and street life donrsquo;t help any of us. Stop saying its drugs; itrsquo;s not. Most of us were poor and lived in low rent housing with our mothers and fathers. Some of us donrsquo;t even know our fathers. When you grow up poor in a low rent environment, with your mother just barely making a living for your little sisters and brothers, you take to the street life and try to be the man of the house. You stop going to school because you want to make it better for all of you. I say a lot of these words to let others know that some of us have been raised in unstable homes, and bad behavior brings us to prison. We donrsquo;t want anyone telling us what to do. It didnrsquo;t work then and it doesnrsquo;t work now, because of lies and false hopes. We can make a fast buck and live the good life. Drugs are not all the causes of criminal behavior. It sometimes goes back to childhood, poverty, your up-bringing and neighborhood. This is another reason why the powers that be say that we donrsquo;t want to be rehabilitated. Some of us get help out of coming to prison knowing that this isnrsquo;t it. The powers that be never talk about the ones that get out and try to give back our communities. Some young men are lost because of their upbringing. Right now I live here in prison and I hear all the time itrsquo;s the environment, so anything that doesnrsquo;t make sense is what we go for. The human being has to start his or her development at home. Then later he or she goes off to school and out in the streets. Then he or she starts picking up good or bad habits. Yes, drugs play a part sometimes. The problems that society is missing are that growing up poor, living in low rent housing, mother on welfare, just barely making ends meet, causes people to do anything to survive. Let me say before theirs any misunderstanding not allnbsp; of us were on welfare, but living in an environment of low rent housing causes some of us to be unstable and have behavioral problems. Yes, some of our young people make something of themselves, but some just choose the easy way, crime! Itrsquo;s not all in the home where the mother or father did the best he or she could. Now stop saying drugs are behind every crime because there are so many problems in society that play a big part on how our childrenrsquo;s minds develop. These problems also affect all of us. Donrsquo;t turn your back on the young men and women who are trying to grow into something better./p pBy,/p pT. Yeargin/p
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  • The Ugly Truth About Prisons and Our Society

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pImprisonment is usually justified by appeals to one of two philosophies: protecting the public or rehabilitating the prisoners. By either standard, however, the evidence is overwhelming that prisons do not work. In fact, if one had systematically and diabolically tried to create mental illness, one could probably have constructed no better system than the American prison system./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; In this context, the image of the lsquo;bleeding-heart liberalrsquo;- that universal object of scorn-is one that deservesnbsp; particular scrutiny. Implicit in this characterization is an assumption that public safety and social justice are somehow at odds- that policies which protect the civil rights of prisoners or challenge racism/white supremacy in the prison systems cannot really be effective in stopping crime./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; A far more compelling case can be made that social justice is a requirement for public safety. Racism and economic bias are structural features of the U.$. prison system. Understanding this relationship can yield important insights into why that system functions so poorly to protect the public./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; At present, the United States has the highest rate of incarceration in the industrialized world. Nonetheless, crime continues to plague our society to a degree unknown in other countries- which do not come close to Americarsquo;s rate of imprisonment./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Studies have shown that more than 90% of the adult population has committed offenses that are punishable by imprisonment. Few, however, actually go to prison./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Contrary to popular belief, the seriousness of a crime is not the most crucial element in predicting who goes to prison and who does not. Societyrsquo;s losses from lsquo;white-collar-crimersquo; far exceed the economic impact of all burglaries, larcenies, and auto-thefts combined. Nonetheless the former class of criminals is far less likely to go to jail or prison than the latter./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; What does determine who goes to prison? A large part of the answer is certainly race. Black men born in America and fortunate enough to live past the age of twenty are psychosocially conditioned to accept the inevitability of being sent to a so-called ldquo;correctional facilityrdquo;. For most of us, it simply looms as the next phase of profound humiliations. Nationwide, the rate of imprisonment for African-Americans is nine times that of European-Americans. In ten states, all in the north, the incarceration rate for African-Americans is more than fifteen times that for whites. Another striking indicator of institutional racism is the lengths of prison terms. When time served is compared for similar offenses- including first-time offenders- African-Americans serve far longer sentences than whites./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The discussion above is not intended to minimize the seriousness of crime, whether violent or not. The point is rather that swelling the prison population has failed to reduce crime. The racial and economic bias built into the prison system also works against crime victims. Poor people and people of color are also the most frequent victims of crime, and they stand to suffer the most from repressive policies that fail to stop, and in many cases fuel, criminal activities./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Prisons illustrate how racial and economic discrimination reinforce one another. As noted above, prison inmates are drawn from the ranks of the economically marginalized of all races. As an institution however, prisons have a far greater impact on communities of color, because of their disproportionate representation in prison populations./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; The social policies of the 1980s and 1990s up until now have caused an unprecedented increase in the numbers of people living in poverty in the United States, as well as a widening gap between the incomes and living standards of the rich and poor. Throughout this entire period, prison populations grew rapidly. With budgets slashed for every type of social service, prisons now stand out as the countryrsquo;s principal government program for the poor./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; If you go back in history and plot the population of all prisons and compare it to all the other variables you can think of, you will find a positive correlation only with unemployment; the higher the rate of joblessness, the higher the rate of prison commitments. It doesnrsquo;t take a PhD in economics or criminology to see the patterns./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Ironically, in many cases prisons have been touted as a solution to economic decline, especially in rural areas like Crescent City, California the location for super-max prison Pelican Bay. Prisons, filled with unemployed people of color, along with poor whites, from the inner cities, are being sold to economically depressed rural communities as a source of jobs for their growing numbers of unemployed who are usually poor whites. Again, with local and national lsquo;leadersrsquo; often see a potential state or federal prison as a recession-proof economic base. In fact, prisons are more than recession-proof economic base. In fact, prisons are more than ldquo;recession-proofrdquo;: they are the one industry next to war that greatly benefits from recession. Actually, in many cases the two industries overlap./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; From architects to academics who study prisoners and the prison system, from food service vendors to health care firms, from corrections bureaucrats to forensic psychologists and social workers, there is a lot of money to be made from the proliferation of prisons. The cost is estimated at 100 billion to run Americarsquo;s entire prison system!/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; It is a bitter irony that the high cost of prison cuts into the health, education, and social services needed by the very people who, lacking such supports, often end up in prison! The real roots of crime in America are associated with a constellation of suffering so hideous, like at Pelican Bay State Prison, that as a society, it cannot bear to look it in the face. So it hands its casualties to a system that will keep us from its sight./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; If one views the U.$. prison system as a reasonable response to lawbreaking, then crime, violence, and drugs seem like problems that can never be solved. To gain a deeper understanding of the purpose of prisons, it is far more helpful to analyze them as a response to major recent transformations of the U.$. economy: capital flight, the shift to a service-sector economy, the depopulation of the inner-cities, an increasingly segmented labor force, the economic marginalization of communities of color, the rise in youth unemployment, and the defunding of social services of every description./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Crime could be fought by increasing the participation of poor communities in educational, social and economic institutions. The money poured into maintaining the prison systems of America, which exceeds $200 billion a year, is money which could be used to create jobs, improve education and training, and stimulate economic activities. President Obama didnrsquo;t include this in his lsquo;stimulus packagersquo;./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Instead, the social policies of the last two decades have reflected a consistent choice to abandon poor communities, especially communities of color, to increasing dislocation and the inevitable growth of lsquo;criminalrsquo; activity, which is quite criminal in itself. As a result, lsquo;ourrsquo; society is polarized further and further-not only into the haves and the have-nots, but also into the incarcerators and in the incarcerated./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Meanwhile, African so-called lsquo;Americansrsquo; and other people of color are stigmatized as criminals and drug addicts, through media images that subtly (and not so subtly) mask the equal participation of whites in the culture of addiction, crime, and violence. The deepening polarization of society thus becomes a self-perpetuating cycle in which the image of the criminal lsquo;under-classrsquo; is used to garner support for the very policies that greatly contribute to the destruction of poor urban communities./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; It has been said that lsquo;the truth will set you freersquo;. But the truth does more. It indicts, it convicts, it rends and shreds excuses, denials and the simple ability to live at peace with the past. The truth is hard, which is why people often choose instead the soft comfort of lies./p pnbsp;/p pCorrespondence: Troy T. Thomas, H-01001, A1-130/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; nbsp;nbsp; CSP- LAC/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; nbsp;nbsp; P.O. Box #4430/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; nbsp; nbsp;Lancaster, CA 93539/p pnbsp;/p pP.S. A people already invisible can be easily made to disappear as this is the primary function of ghettos and prisons in America!/p
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  • Visual Artist Mutual Support Networks and the Art of Resistance Movement- Notes from the Inside

    09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    pThe Poor Magazine Family Visual Artist Mutual Support Networks and the Art of Resistance Movement presents:/p pIn the Spirit of Proverbs 29:18/p pThe Visual Secret Powers of Grassroots Activism./p pOur Mission: For over 40 plus years, a mass number of our Beloved Family Members, have repeatedly been taken captive, wrongfully convicted, shackled inside of all manner of state sponsored Human Torture Chambers- and then tormented by the openly anti-christian conditions of becoming almost completely:/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Name-Less/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Face-Less/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Voice-Less/p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Economically Power-Less./p pBut thankfully, several members of the Poor Magazine Family have recently agreed to help rebuild an on-going series of grassroots community outreach networking projects that are most vital to self-liberate the minds, bodies, and souls of all of our poor and oppressed communities on both sides of thesenbsp; captive and non-captive prison walls!/p pSo please come and join some of our alternative DIY (or do-it-yourself) models of new and/or improved:/p p1.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Educational Self-Help Training Programs/p p2.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Economic Self-Employment Training Programs/p p3.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Economic Freedom, Economic Justice, and Economic Self-Empowerment Movements./p pThat are specifically designed to not only legally self-remedy far more of our own most common family, social, and economic survival problems, ASAP!! But, in addition to ALL of our visual arts related self-help projects, are deeply rooted in the language of specific purpose of the below CCR, Title 15 authorities. See Sec 317. General Visiting. At (a.) These regulations are made in recognition and consideration of the value of inmate visitations as a means of/p p1.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Increasing safety in prisons/p p2.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Maintaining family and community connections/p p3.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Preparing inmates for successful release and rehabilitation./p pAnd Behold: Is it Not True??? That the most recent collection(s) of still captive Visual Artwork, one page Education self-help fliers and other grassroots community outreach networking projects that has been visualized and self-produced by one of our Adopted Kindred Spirtits named Minister Baba Yafeu Iyapo-I. Is a very Back to Basics/and hands-on examples of how we, working together, as a combined team-based effort, can begin to achieve an on-going list of greatly needed self-help victories on both sides of these extremely isolated prison walls./p pSincerely,/p pThe Poor Magazine Family/p pContact: Yafeu Iyapo-I/p pS/N L. Alexander, B-72288/p pCell: A2-118, Po Box 7500/p pCrescent City, CA 95532/p
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