2020

  • Demand of Mayors In San Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles, Santa Cruz, Fresno, Berkeley, and other California cities in fire-zones to Open Vacant Hotel Rooms so Houseless People Can Breathe...

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    Press Contact: Leroy Moore, Muteado Silencio (510)-435-7500 - email: poormag@gmail.com
     
    Demand to Mayors In San Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles, Santa Cruz, Fresno, Berkeley, and other California cities in fire-zones to Open Vacant Hotel Rooms so Houseless People Can Breathe...
     
    Due to the ongoing Crisis of Fires all across the State houseless and formerly houseless peoples and their advocates are demanding that ALL vacant motel and hotel rooms be opened for people residing on the street, unable to shelter in place.
     
    "I have asthma and my inhaler doesnt even help in this bad air when im in a tent", said Roxanne, houseless reporter for POOR Magazine residing on the streets in San Francisco.
     
    "As the AQI index continues to register "Unhealthy" for all people, with warnings to "stay indoors" not do outdoor activities and close windows and doors,  it is another form of anti-poor, ableist abuse to look the other way from hundreds of thousands of  houseless, disabled residents of all California cities sleeping on the street with no windows or doors to shut," said Tiny Gray-Garcia, formerly houseless co-founder of POOR Magazine.
     
    The majority of houseless residents of ctites are medically fragile or living with disabilites, untreated or undiagnosed COPD, emphysema, heart disease, asthma and other by-products of their lives in poverty, scarce and hard to find 
     
    In addition to the increased risk of acquiring Covid19, direct and unprotected exposure to particulates and smoke is proven to cause life-long damage to our bodies.  
     
    The Bay Area and all of California is home to some of the largest homeless communities in the country, From Santa Cruz to San Francisco, mayors have already shown a reluctance to open motel and hotel rooms for houseless peoples to help them stay healthy and sheltered in the face of the Covid19, pandemic so this newest danger of fire smoke is another chance for mayors to move resources to the poorest people to ensure we are all safe in these times of crisis. This is intentional negligence by mayors, even when cities recieve millions in homeless services funding  
     
     
    "Many privileged people have never experienced this in their lifetimes however people with disabilities especially us who are houseless have experienced negligence like this over and over how government and even some in our communities have time and time again left us behind in times of emergencies from hurricane Katrina to the earthquake in Puerto Rico, said Leroy Moore, POOR Magazine and Krip Hop Nation 

     

    As a contrast to the government scarcity model politricks, acts of violent wealth-hoarding of land and resources POOR Magazine’s Homefulness Project, The United Front Against Displacement Self-Help Hunger Program, East Oakland Collective, The Disability Culture Club, HomiesEmpowerment, Community Ready Corps, Consider the Homeless and other very grassroots organizations all across the Bay Area have been doing daily Mutual aid redistribution efforts to unhoused and very low-income housed or marginally housed indigenous refugees, in Covid19 , the fire crisis and always in the crisis of poverty -providing supplies of gloves, masks, hand sanitizers and now specifically N95 Masks to fight the fire smoke.

    Co-sponsors of this statement include  POOR Magazine/ Prensa POBRE/Homefulness Project- the SFBayview Newspaper,/ Food Not Bombs, House the Bay, SolidarityForever Self-Help Hunger Program,  POOR Magazine's Solidarity Family,KRIP HOP NATION, Do No Harm/ Health Justice Commons.Indians Organizing for Change (IPOC), IdleNoMoreSF, Public HEalth Justice Collective, National Brown Berets Oakland Chapter, National Brown Berets Sacramento Chapter.  To add your organizational or individual name  email poormag@gmail.com 

     
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  • Calling out the Violence Across the Whole Board

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

     

    The recent shooting in San Francisco’s Tenderloin district on June 22nd that left several people wounded was a sad reminder that even with the pandemic of covid-19 running rampant amongst us there is always room for not only police brutality, but for community violence. It’s horrible enough that we hold on to our families with paralyzing fear of police terror, we also have been cornered by a few unconscious folks from our very own communities that traumatizes us as well. 

     

    In our hoods, there has been violence committed against elders at random, assaults on minors by adults and way too many unnecessary brawls where in some cases elders have egged on the youngsters, instigating fights that could have been avoided. Calling the police to deal with some of the issues had proven to be an epic fail as testimony from those in the community ranged from being treated fairly by very few authorities, to being made to feel inferior by officers who didn’t take the situation seriously and in one case, a cop smirked at a resident because he thought that the person was faking an injury. The question is what do you do when you have community conflict but no confidence in an institution that has taken an oath to protect and serve you? Who can broken people turn to when we cannot rely on a broken system that BROKE all of our spirits in the first place? How do you solve problems within the hood with only the input of just the hood?

     

    Indeed there was a time when strong, fierce but wise elders had taken on the duty of being the mediators and regulators in the neighborhood and the younger generation did not show disrespect to the solutions the elders set forth, nor did we disobey them. If there were serious offences then the fathers, brothers, uncles, cousins and grandfathers would stand up as enforcers to ensure everyone’s safety. Everyone came together to guide the children in the right direction and no crime a youngster had done, especially in the presence of an elder went unpunished. Young girls rarely went out after dark without being accompanied by a male relative and we were taught to be an upgrade from the previous generation by not following in the footsteps of the elders’ shortcomings. Unfortunately that way of life slid through the cracks of community responsibility and has gotten lost.

     

    Police departments from California to Georgia have been catching heat for the recent deaths of unarmed black citizens and others of universal majority and poverty status. Protests erupted across the nation and worldwide condemning a crime that has been committed against black folks since the kidnapping of our Ancestors from the motherland centuries ago. However, if

    we are to address the violence our neighborhoods endure, we have to go across the whole board and name every angle whether it be a cop or a miseducated knucklehead that affects our communities and our lives. To turn the other cheek to the crimes that are being committed against us out of fear only enables wrongdoers, no matter who they are, to stagnate progress and continue to violate us with impunity.

     

    As far as the hood goes, I overstand that there is an indescribable amount of pain, trauma, anger, tragedy, ptsd (post traumatic stress disorder AND post traumatic slave disorder), poverty, death, addiction and homelessness but the fact is that we must come together collectively and heal from these community ailments. We must re-learn to unpack the generational layers of inhumane treatment that have some folks possessing the mindstate of beastiality similar to the oppressors. Educate the children with wisdom and teach them right from wrong, skool them on why it is important that we show up in large masses whenever there is an issue of unjust instead of showing up by the dozens to spectate a boxing match. It is a difficult task but with a deep breath and logical thinking it can be accomplished.

     

    Queennandi

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  • Murder Incorporated

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    Growing up, as my Mama's Sun and a formerly houseless student of a revolutionary school called Deecolonize Academy, I have read many books about the true history of the United States, one that until recently, wasn't eagerly taught by our country's public education system. I have heard stories time and time again of the man who discovered the place I live in today, and the many ways he tortured innocent indigenous people from all over the world. I learned about what came after, the brutal colonization of this land, and the slaves from another land that were brought here to build this civilization. However, hearing it in this fashion, with the words soaking into my brain as easily as water does into a paper towel, made it all the more easier to understand, and the different information being displayed far easier to understand than before. Mumia Abu-Jamal didn’t only tell the now widely known story of colonization and genocide, no, he went in depth in the philosophies behind the men and women who committed these atrocities. He examined these philosophies and used them to connect with the conflicts against poor people and people of color in modern day United States.

     

    I have a wealth of political consciousness, and a lot in this book I was already aware of. However, with everything, there were some amazing teachings that I soaked up from this book, like the history of the Aryan race. The myth was that the Aryans, originating in what is now known as Iran, (Iran deriving from the word Aryan) were a blond haired, blue eyed, unusually intelligent and strongly built race of people who was a natural “civilizer” a conqueror. As time continued, the aryans made the mistake of mixing with non-whites, and creating a crossbreed that was shunned and looked upon with disgust. This is what has dominated the collective consciousness of white colonizers for millenia, one of its most famous representatives and believers being the german politician Adolf Hitler, who sought out the return of the pure race, the aryans of old.

     

    The bastard childs of the pure aryan race were born, as the story is told, and through the ashes rose a new civilization, one advanced, conquering nation called the Teutons, or as I like to think of them, Aryan 2.0. Theodore Roosevelt, the 27th president of the USA, in a speech in 1906, stated that “ the world would have halted had it not been for the Teutonic conquests on alien lands”. The idea of the white conqueror, coming to civilize new and foreign lands with their presence is the idea that America is founded upon. The story about the Aryan race sets the foundation for the reasoning that 16th to 19th to 21st century colonizers had to rape indigenous land and people, steal their culture, and never stop. Mumia weaves these intricate and in-depth facts about history that give an interesting insight on how colonized thinking went on in the beginning, and how it continues to show its face in the modern day.     

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  • Detained Firefighters

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

     

    In 1865, slavery was offically abolished in the United States. Abraham Lincoln single-handedly destroyed one of its biggest money making industries. Most of the people who led that industry ran the country, and influenced the passing of the bill that outlawed slavery, the 13th amendment, by adding things to it. They added that slavery wouldn’t take place “except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.” This in turn created a whole new money making system for this country, the prison industrial system. People who are imprisoned work in slave-like conditions for the country, and in doing so create substantial revenue for it. Production of clothing, food development, recycling, and furniture production are a few modern factories that are run in prisons, but in California, a state known for its wildfires, the main prison occupation is firefighting.

     

    California has been very good at its firefighting business, due to the fact that 60% of its firefighters are paid at most 1.15 USD an hour, and are bound by the prison system. Given the same training and stricter supervision than official firefighters, detained firefighters work for years for slave-like profits to get time off their sentences. After they are released, because of the criminal charge on their record, fire stations don't take them in and they are left with years of experience going to waste. In a time when forest fires are stronger than ever, California needed to make a change.

     

    “CA’s inmate firefighter program is decades-old and has long needed reform. Inmates who have stood on the frontlines, battling historic fires should not be denied the right to later become a professional firefighter. Today, I signed #AB2147 that will fix that.” Those were the words of California's Governor Gavin Newsom, on the new bill he signed. Many people believe this is a step in the right direction, however, many more know that he has the power to completely dismantle the prison slave labor system in California, and is only putting this law into place because of necessity. 

     

    The COVID-19 pandemic has affected many different people in different ways. In the case of the prisons, hundreds of inmates are dying because of improper management of these incarceration systems. Because of this, most prison inmates cannot fight fire on the front lines, and fires have raged in California further and less controlled than in recent years. One of the things that bother me about this, among the many civil and human rights violations, is the handling of COVID-19 in prison systems. I’m no genius, but I feel that with this whole outbreak, the prison systems could have improved drastically the way they handled COVID-19 in their penitentiaries.

     

    In the constitution, declared by the 13th amendment, slavery was never officially abolished in the United States. For the past 100+ years the loophole of slavery being allowed in our prison system has served companies and the country in general very well. However, once a virus that doesn't allow them to use these slaves to the utmost breaks out, they need to pass a law giving those slaves and former slaves rights. The government of California is clearing the records of many reformed and most often not even guilty individuals who have put in years of work, but not paying them for the work they did. They are treating this small gift as an unbelievable act of kindness and not something that should have never needed to be done in the first place.    

     

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  • Apply for People Skool August 2020- Decolonization/Degentrifukation Seminar for People with Race, Class and/or Formal Education Privilege

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    This summer's People Skool for people with race, class and/or formal education privilege is coming up on August 29 and 30th! This workshop is aimed at service providers, media creators, educators, organizers, researchers, artists, legislators, policy-makers, donors/philanthropists, students, community members- anyone who wants to learn about following Black, Indigenous POC and poor leadership and aligning your work with poor people-led self determination movements. 

     

    Fill out the application here or go to racepovertymediajustice.org to download a paper application and learn more. Please fill out the application by Tuesday August 25!

    (please note- the application is long- it is the first step in the learning of this workshop, and includes reflecting on your life and circumstances).

     

    Contact deeandtiny@poormagazine.org if you have questions, or if you want to find out about People Skool for poverty skolaz)

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  • In my Neighborhood Gun Violence is Normal

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    I'm Ziair and in my neighborhood West Oakland, hearing gun fire is normal. My brother got shot in the same hood where I live, so I really know how it is to have a family member shot. In West Oakland little kids as young as 11 have and play with guns. Kids that I hoop with carry weapons.

     

    Me and my family have been impacted by gun violence when I lost a loved one.

     

    Natalia Wallace, age 7 from Chicago. Natalia was “sweet, shy, loving, and good at math” said her family. In Chicago an innocent kind kid's life was taken, first degree murder. The getaway driver was found and denied bail. She was killed after being struck by a stray bullet at a family 4th of July party in the 100-block of North Latrobe Avenue.

     

    Natalia was playing on a sidewalk when police said three armed men got out of a white car and fired more than 20 times in the direction of the people holding the party that police said included many children  Natalia was killed while playing with her cousins In a yard In the Austin neighborhood.

     

    Losing my brother Torian was horrible. I didn't think it was real. I thought no, not my brother.

     

    Everybody knew him and he knew everybody but some envied. Torian was killed by a black on black crime. He died in a park. Iit was traumatizing for me because my brother smiled at me while he was in the emergency car at the same time slowly dying. It really hurt me. I never knew somebody that close would die ,little did I know that would be the last time I would see him.

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  • Incarcerated Fire Fights

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    In the year 2020, we have been experiencing the terror of these recent forest fires. The United states has so many firefighters engaging the heat but they now have become stretched thin. With these new fires our government has introduced new incarcerated fire fighters, and have now gotten backlash for their compensation of these new firefighters, some saying it is a new form of slavery.

     

    Another problem is how most of these incarcerated fire fighters when they are released, most because of their rap-sheet cannot get a job as a firefighter. Brandon Smith, a formerly incarcerated firefighter, says he was making $57 a month, while the average firefighter was making $37,000 a year.

     

    On January 31, 1865 the thirteenth amendment was made in order to abolish slavery, under this act slavery could only be used as a form of punishment to a person if they did a crime. Though you can see this amendment does not age well especially for these inmates who are trying to survive the fires themselves, same as regular fire fighters, with very little payoff.

     

    Recently Gavin Newsom Governor of California has approved of a new law that will help incarcerated firefighters get a job in the world. This law is called AB 2147, and it is meant to help incarcerated firefighters by expunging them of their criminal records. Meaning they will wipe the slate clean from these people’s plates so they could get another meal for themselves and their families.

     

    For me these people are my heroes. People that did something now trying to do something good. But while most of these inmates have the intentions of doing their job in good will, the corporations like the penitentiary institutions systems are trying to make as much money as possible off of people's heads. If giving a payout of only 57 cents an hour is a strategy, they’ll take it.

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  • The Tearing Down Of Black Disabled Movements, Constantly Starting Over

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    Hello people it is July 2020 & the disability community is tied up with the 30 anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act in the middle of COVID and police brutality.
     
    I understand yes we need to celebrate and yes Krip—Hop Nation is part of one or two celebrations but as a Black disabled poor man I’m dragging my booty to the celebrations. Here on Krip-Hop radio and our other media channels today I want to concentrate on three to four Black Disabled Movements in London, UK, Toronto, Canada and San Francisco, CA Bay Area and a little bit in South Africa in the late 1980’s and 1990’s. All of these movements except in South Africa I had the opportunity to witness and the question that has screaming in my brain is, "What happened to them, why nobody that I know hasn't written about these movements?  This is only my experiences and my knowledge. We also interviewed Julie Jaye Charles of London, UK who spoke about what is going on today in London, England for Black disabled people more in the service side of things.
     
    Back in the 1980's I found out that London England had a Black Disabled Movement and that changed my focus and I wanted to be there. The book, Reflections by Millidrette Hill who was a student barrister, freelance writer and an advocate on race and disability. She co-founded Black Disabled People Association and actively spoke out about the experience of Black Disabled People. She co-wrote the book with Nasa Begum and Andy Stevens (Begum, N, Hill, M and Stevens, A, 1994). I carried that book everywhere and I still have it.  It wasn’t until after college graduation in 1995 that I decided to go to London to track down this movement and apply for graduate school at Leeds University who at that time had done one of the first graduate studies in disability that included Milie’s work on Black disabled movement. Long story short I got into Leeds but because I owned my school $$$$$$ they didn’t release my transcripts and on top of that I didn’t have a chance to meet Milliedrett Hill but I met many Black disabled poets and other Black disabled activists. So I came back home and lived my life and in 2001 I was invited to Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada and that’s when I saw another Black disabled activist on the panel I was on. Since that panel I heard the founders of that movement were not supported so the movement disappeared until recently. I heard that the founders back in 2001 in Toronto was radical and brought up racism like in London in the disability community. I don’t know what is going on in Toronto for Black disabled people.
     
     
    Here in the San Francisco Bay Area back in the late 90’s and early 2000’s my organization Disability Advocates of Minorities Organization, DAMO lasted from 1998-2002 and the reason why we decided to close DAMO is the founders got tired of writing grants over and over. During that time I met Dunhamn who was organizing around Black disabled issues in New Jersey and she was doing Minorities Disability Coalition 1985 which became National Black Disability Coalition in January of 2000 that is still operating today.  You also had Disabled in Action that Calvivn  Peterson ran since the mid 1980’s and recently you have an all Black disabled women organization in Detroit called Warriors On Wheels who have started a food delivery service during COVIN 19.
     
     
    I also read about disabled movement during and after apartheid was also talking about racism and ableism but at that time before computers I could only find very little on this topic but now with the internet these stories are coming out like   poet, activist, Looks Matoto in South African who is disabled poet and writer writing about the history of Black disabled people under apartheid abad now..
     
     
    My questions are who has this history especially in London?  Where are the books, art and music about these Black Disabled Movements?? and with Disability studies going international than what does Disability Studies look like in mostly Black /Brown countries and so much. Where is the funding? 
     
     
    I had the opportunity to interview Julie Jaye Charles, who is also a minister in the UK government who is advocating for more visibility, funding and more opportunities for Black disabled people in the UK. This is going to be a deep conversation because I remember the 1980’s Black Disability Movement in London. And recently I had a video chat with three Black disabled activists from the UK Michelle Daley, Lyi Olaf and Saadia Neilson and Saadia Neilson actually worked with Margett Hill back i n the 90’s.. They talked about how it is being Black and disabled in the UK & how once again the UK don’t support Black disabled people although the government and big White organizations continue to do studies after studies on race and disability but don't implement them. This interview will go up on Krip-Hop Natioon’s youtube page in the beginning of Aug 2020
     
     
    So what do we have back then and today?? I put this list on Facebook last month. It's a start.
    Disabled/Deaf people of Color Movements/Orgs that I knew of since the 80's (please add to. This is heavy CA)
     
     
    1) South Africa Black Disabled Movement to fight apartheid 1980's
    2) London UK Black Disabled Movement 1980's late 90's
    3) Toronto, Canada Disabled People of Color Movement early 90's
    4) Disability Advocates of Minorities Org 1997-2002,
    5) Harambee Educational Council 2000-2004
    6) La Familia Counseling Services 1979-
    7) Asians and Pacific Islanders with Disabilities of California (APIDC) 1999-
    8) National Coalition for Latinxs with Disabilities - CNLD 2016-
    9) National Black Disability Coalition  2000-today
    10) Harriet Tubman Collective (on the internet) 2016-today
    11) National Black Deaf Advocates, Inc. (NBDA) 1982-today
    12) Sins Invalid 2006-
    13) Harriet Tubman Collective 2015 -
    14) HEARD, Helping Educate to Advance the Rights of Deaf Communities - HEARD 2011
    15). DISABILITY JUSTICE NETWORK OF ONTARIO
    16) BEAM (Black Emotional and Mental Health Collective)
    17) Disabled In Action 1980’s-today
    18) Warriors On Wheels 2019-today
     
    By Leroy F. Moore Jr.
    7/14/20
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  • Screams of Terror- Gun Violence and My Story

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    Image: Secoriea Turner
     

    Over the course of my life, I have learned much about guns while laying in bed. I learned that there are guns that fire really quickly, but don't make a lot of noise. Those are light machine guns. I can usually only hear those when I concentrate. I also learned about the louder guns, the ones that usually follow up with screams of terror, and those are assault rifles. Finally, one of the least common that I hear are shotguns, which have a really loud boom and after four or five rounds created a silence that seems as if time itself stopped in that moment. 

     

    The sounds at night that I hear are sounds of gun violence. People being killed, families losing a loved one, and faces being put on t-shirts aren't a rarity in neighborhoods like the one I live in, and in the night I can hear all of it. These days, gun violence doesn't have rules. There is no “don't harm women or children” any more. Whoever stands in the way of the barrel is killed. 

     

    Over the July 4th weekend, as we all know, there are an abundance of fireworks being lit. This allows for far more gun violence and crimes using guns to be committed unchecked. That is how Secoriea Turner was killed in Atlanta on July 5th, only 4 days before this was written. Turner was killed while in the backseat of a car with her mother that was going towards her cousin's house. It was an act of senseless violence against a car amidst anger caused by the murder of Rayshard Brooks by police officers in front of a Wendy’s in that area. 

     

    “Nobody helped me, I prayed to God and He didn’t help me. My baby died in my arms.”

     

    Those were the words of Secoriea’s mother Charmaine, who fortunately was not severely injured by the gunshots. I have heard many cases like these in neighborhoods like mine, and they break my heart every single time. In all of the neighborhoods I have lived in there have been countless unnecessary deaths of people in the community, whether due to gang violence, stray bullets, domestic violence but most of all police brutality, and not in the ways that many might think. 

     

    There have been many cases I've seen or heard of where the government provided ammunition and/or drugs to gangs to keep them fighting. Police officers would cause wars between gangs by telling one that another said this, and so on. This is police brutality. Many of these cases where the police interfered to harm the community have caused many of these deaths. In this case, I am not aware of the specifics as to why they opened fire on the car Secoriae was in, but I am aware that it had some connection to the murder of Rayshard Brooks, who was killed by the police less than a month earlier.

     

    These neighborhoods that I grew up in aren't filled with so much violence and hate for no reason. When cities were first being mapped out, the rich white owners would use a process called redlining to section off specific areas of the city reserved for black and brown people. Those areas would purposefully have reduced funding for schools, city management, and if you are from there you would have a smaller chance at a job going forward. This is institutionalized racism that continues to this day, and has caused so much pain and hurt to powerful people, by encouraging and teaching them to hurt themselves and each other.  

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  • Oakland Implements Apartheid for Houseless Residents: Encampment Management Policy is Approved

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

     

    Oakland Implements Apartheid for Unhoused Residents 

     

    At yesterdays Oakland city council meeting the extremely dangerous Encampment Management Policy was unanimously approved, which will result in the forced removal, further criminalization, poLicing and even death of hundreds of unhoused residents from safe places to rest, sleep and live.

     

    "This is the implementation of apartheid for the poorest Oakland residents, the violent war ON our poor bodies continues, and has now become more deadly, "said Tiny Garcia, formelry houseless co-founder of Homefulness. "From Shannon Marie Bigley to Desireee Quintero when our unhoused bodies are removed from safe places to rest we face death," Tiny concluded.

     

    In addition as reported and witnessed by houseless RoofLESS radio reporters in Oakland, " This ban was being implemented before it was voted on, we have already been swept from most streets in Oakland " said Joh Rogers Jr, a houseless, long-time Oakland resident.

     

    "The people voting on this evil law have never felt poverty, hunger, struggle, or they wouldnt be voting to approve this," said Aunti Frances Moore, co-founder of the Self-Help Hunger Program and Homefulness.

     

    All of the houseless and formerly houseless, Black, Brown, indigenous and disabled youth, families and elders that comprise the liberated villages of Homefulness, POOR Magazine and Deecolonize Academy  hereby demands the immediate release of hundreds of acres of hoarded and stolen land in the City of Oakland be granted to homeless Oakland residents, majority of whom are long-time Oakland residents who lost their homes through gentrification, poltrickster, colonial policies, eviction, speculation, police predation, harassment and ongoing attacks on poor Black, Brown, Disabled and Indigenous Oaklanders. We are demanding these immediate land grants so houseless peoples can build their own self-determined solutions to homelessness like Wood Street Collective, Homefulness and the Self-Help Hunger Program 

     

     

    "Ban capitalism!!! How the fuck they think encampments started. My people lived in “encampments “ before colonization, they were called villages! Homelessness was not a concept in our territories 200 yrs ago and they call this progress?! If they’re going to outlaw them then house everyone!", said Corrina Gould, Lisjan/Ohlone land liberator, co-founder of Sogorea Te Land Trust and co-founder of Homefulness

     

    "With Oaklands new Encampment Management Policy, we are going to see the same things happen as they have in the history of the Bay Area, continuing the forceful removal of people who have nowhere else to go and are just trying to survive..." said Tiburcio ,17 year old, formerly houseless youth resident of Homefulness and student at Deecolonize Academy

     

    "These encampments weren't here before because people had their homes, but now we have all been gentrified and the city is trying to get rid off all homeless people, that not the solution they should get homeless people homes so folks can get some rest also for the children and elders shoudn;t be on the streets. " sais Amir Cornish, 17 year old formerly houseless student at Deecolonzie Academy.

     

    This new policy is the redlining of homeless people and will put people in danger of more arrests and criminalization. These policies have always been around it’s just this time we have a name to call it and certainly nothing under the sun , said Kimo Umu, 17 year old formerly houseless student of Deecolonzie Academy

     

    "This new policy is another attack to people already in struggle. Policies and Laws clearly aren't made to help they just solidify the power that the colonizers already have. One has to create their own solutions like we have manifested at Homefulness," said Akil Carrillo, 17, youth poverty skola at Deecolonize Academy

     
    Story on this issue:
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  • Defund Police, Fund Humanity

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    “We pay your salaries and you have your assault rifles ready to shoot us unarmed protesters!?!? Stop paying them, people!” A poverty skolar shouted from the crowd where about 100 people had gathered in front of the Tenderloin police station in SF to speak up against police terror, murder and blantant brutality that is swiftly plauging many states in the nation once again.

     

     Worldwide unrest opposing the murders of George Floyd, Rayshard Brooks, Atatiana Jefferson

    and Ahmaud Arbery will not “quiet down” anytime soon, nor should it, because as long as the

    police perpetuate a form of domestic terrorism our voices shall be heard in unison demanding

    justice for our murdered loved ones.

     

    While president trump was at a rally in Arizona making up racist names to replace the name of

    “co-vid” Rayshard Brooks was being laid to rest in a private celebration of life service in Atlanta

    and people including young students took to the streets in Berkeley and San Francisco in

    opposition of police terror.

     

    Protesters that were at the Tenderloin police station had also called out the constant

    criminalization of the homeless in the city by police and other officials citing that power washing

    away poor people’s tents without having adequate resources available for those in need with

    housing, mental health and substance abuse problems is not the solution to the houseless

    epidemic but to support those in crisis during the covid pandemic and not leave people in the

    streets basically to die.

     

    The demand was to cease the abundance of funding to police departments and take some of

    the financial resources and redirect them into more programs that would serve the communities’

    needs such as education, healthcare, affordable housing, mental/drug treatment programs and

    most of all - equal opportunity.

     

    “Every time there is a crisis or a state of emergency due to a disaster, poor people’s lives are

    always looked over and swept under the rug” said one protester. “Our lives do not matter not

    only when it comes down to the police, but the system as a whole.”, Some folks argue that if the police departments were to be defunded, that the crime rate will hit the roof because there would be no police officers to serve and protect the citizens. Unfortunately not every cop on the job “protects and serves” unless they are protecting more affluent neighborhoods and serving impoverished folks with the butt of their billy clubs-or worse.

     

    The excuse of police brutality victims engaging in alleged criminal activities is played out and

    does not give authorities the right to hand out death sentences, with that said the criminal

    activity amongst police departments must be called out indefinitely because criminals in uniform do not deserve one red cent from the very people that they (police) oppress and kill on a daily

    basis.

    The severe discord between the police and the black community has its history of not only

    brutality, but fear itself because who in the community would dare call a cop when the chief

    himself was the grand dragon of the KKK? The deep-seeded racism that “kept colored folk in

    their places” is also a tactic that conditioned black communities and other communities of color

    to become complacent with being victimized and refusing to report crimes out of fear of being

    killed and nowadays, deported and with that layer added we have a long way to go.

     

    Queennandi

     
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  • Unpacked Skittles

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    On February 26, 2012, Trayvon Martin had just purchased a pack of skittles in his hometown of Sanford Florida. This normal act of buying a snack at the convenience store was the last luxury of his life. As Trayvon was walking through the gated community of Twin Lakes, he was spotted by George Zimmermen, which resulted in a physical and fatal confrontation. This event very deeply affected me as a younger child in the 5th grade and still does till this day.

    When Trayvon passed on the night of his murrder, he was only 17 years old. Earlier that night he was strolling through the neighborhood of Twin Lakes. He had just finished leaving the local 7-11 not too far from his father’s fiance's house. Trayvon had just bought a bag of skittles which he was holding in his hoodie while walking back to his home.

    The majority of news outlets and case reports say that at 7:09 George Zimmmermen was running some errands and decided to drive through the Twin Lake neighborhood. According to his testimony George Zimmermen saw a dark silhouette he did not recognize in the neighborhood. Frightened, George decided to rely on his neighborhood watch training and called the police.

    When he called he gave the description of a black male with a grey hoodie on. George, while on the phone call, says ‘’these a$$holes are always getting away.’’ At this moment George lost sight of Trayvon. George, still being on the call, tries to pursue the last location of Trayvon, which was in between the buildings of Twin Lake.

    George Zimmermen, still on the phone, was told by police to wait at some mail boxes nearby. Instead of complying with the Police Department, he then proceeded to go towards Trayvon Martin. This is when Trayvon was shot once by George Zimmerman by the concealed weapon he carried.

    When reading the story of Trayvon Martin, I think about the fact that i am 17 years old. I’m a part of a majority that is affected by this. How police department’s usually target youth around this age and even younger, with cases like Tamir Rice, where 2 years later he would be shot and killed in Cleveland, Ohio for carrying a toy gun.

    These systems of jail are set up from the beginning. Our schools are known to have a system targeting troubled youth. The amount of money for just 1 inmate even for a juvenile is 50,000$. I know this from past experience being that I was once a troubled youth as well, but fortunately I had the grace of coming home with intentions of becoming better from the experience.

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  • Wood Street Report

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    In these days of crisis and chaos I ask could we find peace or at least come to an agreement on one thing. This one thing I'm specifically talking about is homlessness. Can we figure out the solution without having to use extreme physical force against homeless people in Oakland? I think the first step is to uplift stigmatization of homeless people in oakland.
     
    On October 13th, my organization, a poor magazine known for political ties and activism for the rights of houseless folks, made its way through west oakland to a paved road called wood street. This place is the home to many different homeless encampments.
     
    We were there because my organization, being experienced with this line of work, knew these people would be the first impacted by the encampment management company. So we wanted to ask some questions and were actually first greeted by a tall man claiming he advocated and has supported the homeless encampment.
     
    His name was Dale, and he was a member of the united front against displacement. His organization primarily focused on the homeless encampment located on wood street. His organization focuses on building solidarity against the unfair displacement and criminalization of homeless folks.
     
    When Dale mentioned this I thought in my mind at the moment he’s fighting against the city and it’s policies trying to sweep homeless people off the street. After saying his piece he informed us that the city tried to take out the multiple homeless encampments of wood street last 2019 in the month November.                                          
     
    Our interview stopped with Dale and we found our chance to interview with some of the resident’s of Wood Street. Many were content to give an interview except one woman. Meagan Carter Griffin who has been homeless for 8 years, gave her thoughts on the policies- ‘’It's a red lining of homeless folks.”
     
    Meagan has a point and so did everyone involved. This new policy is the red lining of homeless people and will put people in danger of criminalization. These policies have always been around it’s just this time we have a name to call it and certainly nothing new under the sun.
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  • Houseless, indigenous peoples UnSell More of Mama Earth and Launch Homefulness #2

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body
    Houseless, indigenous peoples UnSell More of Mama Earth and Launch Homefulness #2 - With ComeUnity Reparations

    "Alot of people talk about what they are going to do, we actually make this urgent change happen, said Aunti Frances Moore, POOR Magazine/Homefulness poverty skola/builder and founder of the Self-Help Hunger Program 

    On July 21, 2020, after years of marching, walking, protesting, teaching, praying, working really hard and writing, the poor peoples at POOR Magazine launched their second "land liberation" move. After launching co-launching the Bank of ComeUnity Reparations  with conscious wealth-hoarders in 2019, poverty skolaz at POOR Magazine set about the project of what they call "UnSelling Mama Earth"

    "Homefulness is about creating hope and following the guidance of our ancestors, to live in community to remember our responsibilities to one another so our children and the next seven generations can live on the land in reciprocity, free of the chains of capitalism. The #2 homefulness land is a reminder of the promise from our ancestors.", said Corrina Gould, Ohlone/Lisjan land liberator, co-founder of Sogorea Te Land Trust, Indian People Organizing for Change and Spritual Guide/co-founder of Homefulness.

    "We made herStory today, we launched the long journey to unSell another piece of Mama Earth" said the circle of houseless, indigenous, immigrant, displaced, formerly incarcerated youth and elder founders of POOR Magazine and Homefulness as they stood inside a small stretch of land in deep east Oakland

    "Our actions are making our words become real, said Minister King William , POOR Magazine family member and formerly incarcerated co-founder of KAGE brothers.

    "We have been "writing" the poem called liberation since we launched Homefulness #1. said Lisa Tiny Gray-Garcia,  formelry houseless mama, co-founder of POOR Magazine and author of Criminal of Poverty: Growing Up Homeless in America. "UnSelling Mama Earth means spiritually and legally taking land off the commodities market and giving it back to the people, so we can grow healthy food and build homes not tied to the lie of rent, speculation and profit.

    "This wasn't made possible because of a grant or a loan, this was us teaching folks with race and class privilege about the idea of ComeUnity Reparations and then working together with them to liberate Mama Earth, said Leroy Moore, founding member of POOR Magazine and Krip Hop Nation.

    This new site is 8 blocks away from the site of Homefulness #1 - the first "occupied land" this revolutionary group of landless peoples liberated in 2011.which with guidance from 1st Nations Ohlone/Lisjan elders have diligently worked to liberate that land and have launched a school for children in poverty, a radio station, a truly community garden supplying fresh fruit and vegetables to the whole neighborhood and provided rent-free housing 5  very low-income, formerly houseless families, youth and elders with the goal of housing 11 houseless families, when they have completed the project in 2021.

    "This land was slated for development into 12 "luxury" condominiums. That is the violence of gentrification and removal that has been attacking poor communities for generations, and causing us to be homeless and landless, now that will NEVER happen in one more part of Mama Earth"., concluded Tiny Gray-Garcia. 

    "We are demanding as poor and very low-income people that violent speculation end in our neighborhood and that these developers and wealth hoarders give this  Land Back to the people.". states the report. This address was one of the addresses the youth and families uncovered in their extensive Wesearch. East Oakland is already the site of intense and ongoing removal and gentrification. As formerly homeless youth and elders at POOR Magazine uncovered in 2019 in the "Hoarded Mama Earth Report" due to real estate speculation and redlining Black and Brown Working class communities have already suffered the violence of removal from their long-time communities.

    Homefulness and POOR Magazine community is focusing on cleaning, praying with ancestors and remediating this sacred land and then beginning the process of pulling up the asphalt and poison that covers this land as it has been used for a gas station, car repair and then left for years while the land-stealers watched the "property values rise". Their next steps will be to write the "MamaFesto" for the land's life-long liberation from the speculative real estate industry, so that the land can be UnSold  ask the community at 76th and Blackarthur what they want to see and need in that block as well as begin growing healthy food for the neighborhood. "It is a long process to move the right way with stolen land when you are poor folks like us , but we will not give up,  "MamaFesto"    

    Stay tuned for the release of the "Mamafesto" by all the founding members of Homefulness #1 & 2 as well as a "commitment to comeUnity Reparations" by conscious wealth-hoarders to continue to make UnSelling Mama Earth Possible. These are both radical, actual statements of commitment to protect more of Mama Earth from speculation and the violence of gentrification and continue to activate the emergency need for  ComeUnity Reparations in these times of increasing poverty, landlord abuse and poLice terror.

    See below some of the POOR Magazine houseless and formerly houseless youth and elder poverty skola family members speaking about this herstoric day. Pictures, stories and testimonies of the Multi-nationed prayer ceremony that launched this land liberation work are attached. 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4E0KcNzxwZY

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuTCwFlS-o8

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIaNY3K7X7E

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BTQJEzsZ6X0

    The Theory and medicine that launched this work- Poverty Scholarship- Poor People-led Theory, Art, Words and Tears Across Mama Earth- 

    Stories by Formerly Houseless Youth Poverty Skolaz on this herstoric day here:

    Homefulness #2 - A Formerly Houseless child helps to build the future

    CLeaning up the Land So More Houseless Families Like Us Can Be Safe 

    More information on the Background of Homefulness-a homeless peoples solution to homelessness- click here

    Media inquiries please contact poormag@gmail.com or call 510-435-7500

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  • Eric Garner

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    Image: Eric Garner

     

    On July 17th, 2014 Eric Garner died in New York City. He was selling single cigarettes from packs. Suddenly a NYPD officer put him in a chokehold while he was being arrested.

     

    He said "I can't breathe" relating to George Floyd which relates to me because I have asthma and sometimes I can’t even get a breath, I know how it feels.

     

    It was made illegal in New York for police to do a chokehold in 1993.

     

    This story takes me to when my mom was picking me and my brother up from school and  she was harassed by the police. This has happened before, she was assaulted by the police. Every time my innocent mom sees the cops she has anxiety. When cops are outside my mom couldn’t even walk out or my mom would have flashbacks. 

     

    As a black child I was scared because “they don't see you as a child they see you as a man” said by moma Tiny. Corrupt cops are really an issue. Last week a guy from my neighborhood almost died, but thankfully the whole community was there and were screaming “don't shoot’. He had his hands up and was doing everything they were telling him to. But then again the cops just wanted to shoot for fun and this isn't nothing new for the cops, this is a routine.

     

    Eric was a peaceful man with a different hustle and way of “gettin it.” He was married and his friends would call him the neighborhood peace maker. He was the father of six children, had three grandchildren, and at the time of his death had a 3-month-old child. 

    In conclusion the only way a black man will not get killed is by fitting in and being a gentrifier and we still get killed to this day. Peace and love to Garner's family. If you were raised in the hood and black you would feel this pain. Good bye.

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  • Sweeping Signatures

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

     

    I dream of the days where I will be writing about all the good news that is yet to come. When the headlines are “Poverty has ended!” “Racism is no More!” But here I am writing about another policy passed to oppress the poor even more. This new policy is called “Encampment Management Policy.” The policy bans tents from being within 150 feet of schools and 50 feet from homes, businesses, playgrounds, parks and other recreation areas. 

     

    City Councilman Noel Gallo said that he is frustrated by the camps, tents and trash. His solution to it is to move it all out of sight. This doesn't really solve anything; it just allows more sweeps and restrictions to homelessness  Dale from the United Front Against Displacement said this about the new policy “It doesn't actually do anything to address the needs people have Because that's not what it's intended to do.”

     

    Deecolonize Academy went to visit an encampment at Wood Street in Oakland. This lot has been receiving lots of harassment, officially and unofficially. They've gotten eviction notices and also secret police raids. The lot is owned by wealth hoarder Fred B. Craves who got lotsa of his money by finding new ways to produce fish oil. He had said that he wants to turn the lot into a safe rv lot but after watching the construction workers mark the floor and some research, it turns out he wants to turn it into a research facility. The marks the construction workers had done were marks that implied a whole building was gonna be built instead of just providing resources for a rv lot.

     

    RV lots aren't a solution anyway, there is a RV lot close to this encampment at 34th and wood st and it's not any better. People there get served spoiled food, porta potties are not maintained, they have restrictions in what they can bring and they have a curfew. The gate is locked between 4pm-10am making the rv lot a cage.

     

    This new policy is another attack on people in struggle. Laws won't be on our side as long as colonizers, wealth hoarders, politricksters and Klan members rule this system. We aren't represented in this system and it's something that has to change. Policies and Laws clearly aren't made to help they just solidify the power that the colonizers already have. One has to create their own solutions, not wait for others to give them to you.

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  • Homefulness #2 - A Formerly Houseless child helps to build the future

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    I am Tiburcio Garcia, a formerly homeless youth who goes to school at Deecolonize Academy. I am someone who is able to gaze along the spectrum of class, walking a fine line between privilege and poverty. I have privilege in so many ways, a loving, kind, mother who constantly supports and educates me, a community to lift me up immediately when I fall, friends who have my back, and a healthy relationship which on my part is due to the mannerly way I was raised. However, in the eyes of this government and many others, I am seen as someone with hardly anything, struggling to survive. That’s why the project that was started by my mother, grandmother and everyone else at POOR Magazine is so important to me. That project is called Homefulness, and it's what's making sure me and my mother aren't homeless to this day.

    Homefulness is a poor peoples solution to homelessness, and we are starting another one. July 21, a day that is divisible by 3, was the day that we decided to start on the second version based off of the template of the original Homefulness, only two blocks down. I can still feel the grass snaking around my ankle and the weeds and vines getting stuck to my gloves. The air was saturated with pollen, and the sounds of weed whackers in the background were blending with the noise of cars passing by and multiple conversations. After a couple of minutes of hard work, pulling up grass and snipping particularly vicious fennel, I started to feel the sweat from my hair run down my back, and the hairs on my arm crisping. It was a “I need water right now even though I had a cup 5 minutes ago” day, and all of the students of the summer camp we were attending were working hard next to other residents of homefulness and members of POOR Magazine.

    This land that Homefulness resides on isn't an ordinary plot, and those weeds that we were cutting were going to disappear eventually because without our intervention that innocent half-pavement, half overgrown lot would have spelled doom for our community. We originally found out about this land while doing our Hoarded Mama Earth and Community Reparations research, and we later found out that land would have become 20 luxury condominiums, bringing in a hoard of gentrifiers that would have completely changed the ecosystem of this environment, just like it did in the city I was born and raised in, San Francisco, and eventually had to move out of due to eviction caused by that gentrification. 

    I am formerly houseless, and in the eyes of the system, I am not privileged in the slightest. I don't see that. I know I am one of the most privileged people on this -planet, because I actually get to shape history as it progresses. I am young, but I get to be a part of a project that will house thousands of families just like mine all over the world one day. On that day July 21, I got to lay the groundwork for Homefulness 2, the second homeless peoples solution to homelessness that will very well house and give privilege to kids just like it did for me. 

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  • Tamir Rice

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    Image: Tamir Rice

    Police terror is a nightmare for us young black males who have to live in fear and watch our back from the police because we don't want to die young. I know Tamir Rice was a good kid who did nothing to other people, but his life was taken too soon. 

    This could  have been me because I had guns pulled on me and the police considered kids as adults, not as kids. Tamir was only a 12 year old child, and the officer who killed him is Timothy Loehmann, a 26-year old white dude. 

    Tamir Rice was a 12-year old African American boy who was at a park Cudell recreation center. Tamir Rice was holding a replica toy gun, but the police didn’t know that. 

    Tamir Rice died November 22, 2014. When Tamir had the gun in his hand at the park the police just pulled up and saw Tamir with this toy gun but the police didn’t know the gun was a toy and is the reason why the police shouldn't have guns.  

    Tamir Rice was  only a child when this incident took place and he died at 3:30pm. Back then white officer’s considered kids as grown men just like now in 2020. When they see our colored faces they think we look like men and this is a sad story to hear because another black boy lost his life to a cop. 

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  • Houses not encampments

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    Decolonize Academy is a school led by the community and we do reports, and stories on the homeless people getting kicked out of their homes because nobody seems to care about these people on the streets. 

     

    Decolonize Academy is different from the man's school because this school cares about you and this school doesn't tell you lies about your culture and the american dream, which is gentrifiction taking homes.

     

    We went to a homeless encampment that was getting pushed out of their homes for a bio research lab. These people would say homeless people stuff is garbage to the society, but you know that a lie from the corporation. Our government and the research bio lab and the sheriff might pull up and move  them out of there,

     

    This one lady lived there for 4 years. They have their own garden to help each other. This encampment is under a bridge and a freeway, and it's really loud. When I went to this encampment I could hear cars going by and i could see RV’S around parked. This is their home, they have nowhere else to go.

     

    This encampment wasn’t here before. but it is now here and they are trying to get rid off the homeless people out of this encampment. That is not the solution. They should get the homeless people homes to get some rest. Also for the children and elerdly people who shoudn't be on the streets.

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  • Cleaning up the Land So more houseless Families like us can be Safe

    09/23/2021 - 14:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    Tiny
    Original Body

    My name is a ziair and As I walk on the campus and get ready  for Summer camp at Deecolonize Academy I sit down and eat then we did  martial arts with brother mink.

     

     Afterwards we all sat down and talked about how we're gonna go to homefulness 2 When we got  there we prayed. Everybody had goggles Shields and gloves  We brought trash bags, Rakes and  weed cutters We are paired Up into teams and got the garbage from off the site,we also cut the weeds.

     

    We were cleaning up the site there was a lot of shattered glass and old glass bottles and the land looked like a jungle,We chopped all the weeds Cut and rake the grass then took a break for the interview the show what we were doing,   everyone was hot and sweaty,what we were was a goal that we got it done because it was important.We got there at 11am and ended at 12pm

     

     Cleaning up  is fun and pretty good exercise.  Starting at homefulness #1, which we are still trying to build as poor and houseless peoples to then make Homefulness #2 happen is a big Journey but with all our family we made it happen and are liberating another small part of land.

     

     Us all being homeless we never had a home that was stable or place we could go to count on so that's why we're providing it for the homeless Now because we knew how it felt to not have one To lean on and have no support.

     

    in conclusion: as we closed out the land, it look better already.  We shared our thoughts about well we did and then prayed.It was very needed  that we did all that stuff so that we can take care of our and not junk It Up ,I'm glad I was able to help out.  

       

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