Story Archives 2004

Not Beholden to the Machine

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
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an interview with mayoral candidate Matt Gonzalez

by Janak Ramachandran/PNN

Walking into the Matt Gonzalez for Mayor campaign headquarters, I can feel the hairs on my neck tickling my shirt—I feel as though an enormous adrenaline rush is coursing through this campaign organization. With his second place upset in the November 4th mayoral race, the momentum behind Gonzalez on the streets of San Francisco seems palpable. His campaign headquarters, located at 13th and Mission where the old Fell Street off-ramp has been razed, seems to match the ‘down with old and in with the new’ energy of the place. Excited campaign volunteers, smelling the victory that would put Matt Gonzalez in the mayor’s chair, work feverishly to compensate for the business money machine that Gavin Newsom, Gonzalez’ opponent in the December 9th run-off election, has marshaled to his side.

As I prepared to meet Matt, the current President of the Board of Supervisors of San Francisco, I am afforded the opportunity to tour the location. Gonzalez’ meetings are behind schedule and so my interview with him has been delayed. If a campaign headquarters can say something about the person for whom it exists, this location wears itself on its sleeve. The buzz about the place is honest and hardworking and the atmosphere is neighborly and unpretentious. Interestingly, these are the very qualities that shine through in my conversation with Matt Gonzalez. Soft-spoken but confident, he speaks with a passion fueled by intelligent deliberation.

In response to an opening question on being a progressive candidate, Matt identifies one worldview from which he wants to govern. "I fundamentally look at the world as a place where there are wide economic disparities and…if we’re trying to make it a better society…we ought to be working to protect the most vulnerable people in that society. (S)ometimes progressive values intersect with neighborhood values (and) populist values—sometimes they’re conservative economic values. We (progressives) want good, clean, efficient government as well." Matt explains further that the money he saves from instituting clean and efficient practices would be earmarked for important societal priorities while a more conservative candidate might want simply to put the money into their pocketbook or the pocketbooks of their friends.

One of the priorities that Matt Gonzalez championed in the recent election, Proposition L, now enables the minimum wage in San Francisco to be raised to $8.50/hour. I ask Matt to expound upon living wage law and the notion of economic justice. "I’m supportive of efforts to try to pay people the value of their labor…a municipality, a state, or federal government has an obligation to make sure that wages don’t fall beneath a certain level…(people) just can’t make a living—can’t even eke out a living." And, though Matt explains that he is proud of fighting the business community and the wealthier elite to help fifty thousand workers, he wants to do more. "(A)t the end of the day, it’s like we captured a hill—we didn’t take the mountain."

Now that he’s mentioned the business community and the wealthier classes, I decide to challenge Matt regarding his ability to occupy the mayor’s office without towing the line of the elite and powerful. And so, I ask, "Do you acknowledge that you will be pressured by wealthier interests to put them first? How will you react to that pressure?" Though he acknowledges that the pressure will exist, he confidently asserts that he will not be swayed. "The business community is accustomed to being able to tell the mayor what to do—I fear that my opponent (Gavin Newsom) is not strong enough to stand up to that community. And so, that’s more than anything why I’m in the race and why I think it’s important that people vote for me—that they vote for somebody who has the intelligence and courage to say no to some of the people that are accustomed to driving policy in this city." In a later follow-up question, I inquire about Matt’s thoughts regarding a recent Bayview editorial’s assertion that a climate of corruption has existed for the last eight years under Mayor Willie Brown’s administration; where the ‘people accustomed to driving policy’ have been and are feeding at the hands of Willie Brown. I ask pointedly if, as mayor, he would investigate prior corruption and seek a legal remedy. "I think corruption in government is something that ought to be rooted out—I would certainly be a mayor that had that as a priority…I don’t think there should be an excuse for crimes, if they’ve been committed, simply because you’re not in office anymore."

Transitioning from the possible crimes of the mayor to the crimes of the SFPD, I mention that it has been recently suggested by an SF Weekly article that Proposition H, the police oversight measure, will do little to stop police brutality. He responds, "the biggest problem with most commissions is that they’re all mayoral appointments…the mayor appoints the department head and you have no checks and balances. All the power is in the mayor’s lap…Placing different kinds of people on a commission from different appointing authorities (Proposition H strips the mayor’s office of some of its appointing authority and grants appointments to the SF Board of Supervisors) will insure that there are different points of view…" Gonzalez believes Proposition H will provide the balance required to give the OCC (Office of Citizen Complaints) the teeth needed to effectively pursue police crimes.

I wonder to myself if this balance will also help prevent the criminalization of poor people—where police brutality and Propositions like Prop N and Prop M have become the norm (Prop N is the ‘Care Not Cash’ initiative sponsored by Gavin Newsom that drew increasing criticism for stripping cash subsidies from homeless and under-housed citizens of San Francisco while failing to deliver on the promised services and housing; Prop M is the recently passed anti-panhandling measure—again sponsored by Gavin Newsom—to criminalize asking for help). Knowing that Matt Gonzalez opposed both Proposition M and N, I invite his comments on the initiatives sponsored by his mayoral opponent. "I think it’s just a waste of time to run a campaign…to speak in favor of an anti-panhandling measure when there’s already one on the books that the voters approved in 1992. I never heard the sponsor, my opponent in the mayor’s race, explain why we needed yet another panhandling law and, I suppose, if I were a better politician, I would just draft my own and take it to the ballot next year…(its passage) proves a certain degree of frustration with our society (and) the inability to right some of the inequities. So I…take a vote like that—a 60-40 vote—and look at it that way…it’s people voicing their frustration with government rather than wanting to attack the poor." If Gonzalez is right, then another backlash (like the one that stymied Proposition N) from San Francisco citizens, some of who may have approved Propositions M and N, can be expected. And Newsom may be forced to backpedal on Proposition M much the way he did on Proposition N.

Another ‘criminalization of the poor’ issue receiving greater scrutiny involves the long standing practice of CPS (Child Protective Services), in conjunction with DSS (Department of Social Services), to remove children from their parents for frivolous reasons (e.g. based solely on income considerations, temporary personal crisis, or hearsay evidence) and to deny the reinstatement of parental rights when the requirements dictated by CPS have been met. When I inform Matt Gonzalez that POOR Magazine, through the investigative journalism of its subsidiaries Courtwatch and Poor News Network, has determined that an incentive system—where funding for CPS is directly tied to the number of children the agency finds reasons to remove—motivates and encourages CPS workers to separate children from their families, he concurs that such a system strikes him as problematic. "I think, as a general matter, you want kids with their parents or with their families and so, I think that kind of removal action is a very serious matter and should not be taken…lightly."

When I mention to Gonzalez the concerns of POOR Magazine writers and other economic justice advocates regarding not only the criminalization of poor people that Newsom seems to be pursuing (by sponsoring measures like M and N) but the direct police harassment and brutality toward people living in cars and on the streets, he nods his head in understanding. "We’ve had a number of people come to city hall and testify about the manner of harassment that the police have engaged in…if you’ve got a crisis in your city where you don’t have a sufficient number of shelter beds or places to put people, you cannot attack somebody’s effort at taking care of themselves…(I’ve) met a number of people who went through periods where they lived in a car and eventually…are able to get back on their feet. It (living in a car) might be the last step before you’re right on the street. And so, I think it’s a very serious matter—I think it’s counterproductive…to allow law enforcement to engage in something that is, in effect, mandating homelessness." 

Matt Gonzalez believes that providing real services that prevent desperate measures like panhandling is the fiscally healthy and truly caring solution. "(Panhandling) is fundamentally a societal problem about the inability to care for people who have problems or (to whom we’re) not giving decent wages…" Gonzales claims that, as long as money for services is spent responsibly, more fortunate San Franciscans have a desire to see some of their taxes used to address issues of poverty and homelessness. "(W)e’re trying to get people back on their feet—and, in cases where that’s not possible, put them in good living arrangements with supportive services so that their lives are meaningful…"

Gonzalez is also interested in "empowering tenants of public housing." When I ask if he would support tenant ownership of public housing, he responds enthusiastically, "I think it’s great—I’ve always been a supporter of land trust type models and limited equity models." When I indicate the recent efforts of developers to create more higher rent facilities, Matt continues with quiet passion regarding the trend toward gentrification in San Francisco. "(W)hen you allow a bunch of developers to come in and ignore housing needs and just build office space that’s going to attract more people to compete for existing housing…you’re going to end up with such fierce competition for the housing (that) people making money on the lower end of the spectrum just can’t…survive. To build low-income housing really requires a commitment by the city." Gonzalez’ plan would make property available to non-profit developers or other developers that want to build low-income housing. "You can do it at thirty, forty, fifty percent of the median area income. That’s a lot better than Newsom’s promise of a work force housing initiative (at) eighty, one hundred, one hundred and twenty percent of median income. That doesn’t (reach)…the lower ends of the median income spectrum."

Given Mayor Willie Brown’s current attempts to create a sweet developer deal for his corporate allies with the Bayview/Hunter’s Point Naval Shipyard (see ‘Land Grabs’ Bayview editorial dated November 5, 2003), I ask Gonzalez’ opinion of this specific development issue. "I think that the primary problem with the whole navy shipyard turns on the fact that there’s…uncertainty about whether or not that property is in a sufficiently clean state to start developing. (T)hese developers don’t have the best interests in mind of the future occupants of that property." Regarding the efforts of the Redevelopment Agency and the Housing Authority to control the Bayview area, Matt comments that "there was a proposal…that the Bayview be its own kind of redevelopment site in and of itself with (its) own commissioners—and not be subject to the powers of the redevelopment agency—that it be a different Bayview/Hunters Point redevelopment agency." Gonzalez believes that, if such a plan was configured to create direct neighborhood empowerment, it may be useful.

Since empowering lower income neighborhoods is a priority for Matt Gonzalez, I ask his views concerning the light rail project and whether he would fight to keep those jobs within the Bayview/Hunter’s Point community. "Despite the promises of (community based hiring practices), we so often (end up) with just commuter jobs that we’re creating. I’ve always thought that…it (the light rail project) was an opportunity to hire people in the community to do those jobs. So I’m very supportive of the first source hiring program."

As we conclude the interview, I turn to a national issue that affects San Franciscans and ask Matt how far he would be willing to go to protect San Francisco residents from the intrusions of the federal government and the increased powers it has appropriated to itself via laws like the PATRIOT act. Gonzalez says he will support the measure on the March ballot that fellow Supervisor Jake McGoldrick has sponsored that would give the Board of Supervisors the power to oppose possible invasions of privacy and the like by federal authorities. "(W)e would take the political and legal onus on ourselves…I’m very opposed to an act that purports to be about patriotism (but) has so little to do about it—it’s sort of like ‘Care Not Cash’ (Gavin Newsom’s Proposition N) having so little to do with really addressing the true problems of homelessness. (T)he PATRIOT act is an assault on civil liberties that I think future generations will look upon to say, ‘how was it possible that these people…didn’t see what a terrible travesty and undermining of their values that it was.’"

Finally, I invite Matt Gonzalez to tell San Francisco voters (and particularly San Francisco democrats) why they should vote for him over Gavin Newsom. He notes that he already has the support of many democrats (Gonzalez is a member of the Green Party) including members of the Democratic County Central Committee "because, as one of them said, ‘I’m the best democrat in the race.’" Noting some differences between him and a more traditional democratic candidate, he asserts, "I’ve certainly worked with many progressive democrats but…the democrats (as a party) have never fielded a presidential candidate that was opposed to the death penalty or supportive of gay marriage (as is Matt Gonzalez). For me, it’s really about charting a different course—perhaps (a) more independent one locally—(that’s) not beholden to the machine."

When I hear the word ‘machine’, I am reminded of a conversation during which a San Francisco resident explained to me why he had shifted his allegiance from Gavin Newsom to Matt Gonzalez. "The more I listen to Gavin Newsom," he said, "the more I realize he’s just part of the political and corporate machine." And Matt Gonzalez, especially after hearing him in debate with Newsom, strikes him as a far more sincere and competent man. People say there is a clear choice in the December 9th election—perhaps the choice is as clear as man versus machine.

As of press time PNN has contacted Gavin Newsom several times for an interview and he has not responded to our requests. 

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POOR Press Book release party 2003!

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
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POOR Press Releases their books by very low and no income youth and adults for 2003-04

by PNN staff

The people came - the voices were heard. Histories and Herstories were spoken.

A. Faye Hicks, Carmi Johnson,
Oji Elliot, Byron Gafford, Marvin Crutchfield. Martrice Candler and many more upcoming youth and adults spoke on the POOR Press authors panel at the 2nd annual POOR Press Release Party to introduce their poverty scholarship on issues ranging from racial injustice at the workplace to the plight of the poor single mother.

The day was also informed by Poverty Scholars- The Po Poets Project of POOR Magazine, who spit rhymes from their tome; The houzin Project; Art and Resources on Gentrification, Eviction and houselessness.

So now friends, readers and potential conscious Gift Givers - it is Up To You...please support all these po folks - tryin to be heard.. buy our books... for all your holiday needs and wants... !!! ( see below for on-line POOR Press catalogue)

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2nd Thoughts On Jobs, Whatever You Do, Always Rethink Your Options.

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
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No time for funnies.

Gobble,Duck,Chicken,or
Geese Folks.

by Joe B.

2nd Thoughts On Perfect Jobs


Careers; tricky are the ways some define,take apart,and in a few cases can end ones life.

Most of my life I’ve had the dream of the perfect job where I didn’t have to do much,have time to be creative so I could read, write,while getting a paycheck every week or two.

It hasn’t worked out that way at all from Construction,Custodial, Lab/Librarian’s aid, Security Guard,Cooks Helper in the Oakland Unified School System, selling solar heat equipment,to Warehouseman, H.H.A./C.N.A Home Health Aide/Certified Nurses Aide,Dietary Aide
and House-sitter to name a few occupations over the years.

That was before becoming a houseless, jobless,non entity living in the streets or in shelters.

Thank fate for room and board from another guy named Joe and his kind wife their shelter was my sanctuary in L.A. and after then The Salvation Army or Sally’s.

At that same time some sick, twisted, individual or group were having their fun slashing homeless folk sleeping in near by ally ways I can still hear screams of help.

Anytime,anywhere,it could have been my turn as the next unsuspecting victim under a knife!

Everyone assumed it to be a man doing few thought of it as a woman and yet females equal in their anger,rage,and disgust easily could’ve done it too especially if they are pretty lure a poor guy away tempting him with more than food and when he’s sleeping sounding- quick,hard,stabs, slashing,and inaudible gurgling as the victim chokes and drowns in his own blood draining our of him.

I don’t know if this sicko was ever found?

‘Um, photography, painting,silk screening, writing stories,columns, and using computers and working with the internet followed yet house-sitting seem the perfect job,or writing columns a few times a week.

What really got me thinking was the lucky stiffs and I mean lucky for those guys working in the porn film industry.

I know about the late John Homes,Long Dong Silver,Savannah,Linda Lovelace and many more unknown to me.

After learning about dead porn stars dying by accidental drug overdoses, misadventures,murder,and suicides made me reevaluate the skin flick business.

Even though I have endurance along with RE [retarded ejaculation] my body and lazy eye would keep a few women from enjoying their scenes even though I’d be up for it knowing that made it less appealing.

I’ll learn the physical and therapeutic art of massage so if the housesit doesn’t work out I’ll have a real hands on job and though I have small hands and have been told they are pleasing and comfortable women’s skin.

My rear was another problem or so I thought until I realized it’s a genetic gift of genes hand down by ancestors,and forefathers to me – who am I to disparage something nature gave me I like ‘em on women they might like it on me besides that having a firm,round ass to be gripped,touched, fondled,poked,is find as long as nails are cut short;a reddened scratched bleeding back in one thing but bloody bottom cheeks I can do without.

So the porn biz as on camera stud star is out maybe behind it,writing scripts,or distribution is what works from me. People,situations,life, all of it changes and so do dreams of the moment when one cannot be realized others take their place.

May be some of my online buds in/out of that it know how it all works but I’d sure like to know if I had what it takes to be in a film or two immortalized on video or dvd formats.

"Joe, your lucky you weren’t killed way back when the Slasher was out and about cutting faces, throats, and bellies.

A wise woman said to me once.

Thinking back angels, friends,and strangers have watched over me.

Also all those women, guys,floating around in cyber space chat rooms, again thanks for all your support,friendship while in those myriad voiced-rooms.

Sometimes I went far trying to tare thru the thin online user/screen names membrane for a real date in real space with a fully fleshed out female and I apologize for putting everyone through that (onliners in chat rooms know of what I speak.

For those celebrating Thanks Giving,Christmas, Kwanza,and New Years may the coming month and after be blessed,safe,and rewarding for you all and for those whom this is but an ordinary day may your days to be long and full of good tidings and the best of great times.

I’ve got to go, get ready for KPFA’s Radio show PNN- P oorN ews Network, Dance or drop-in at Pier 23 but be in bed early dang it, see Alcatraz early on Thanks Giving for prayer celebration,then zip over on Bart to visit mama with at her new place for a Turkey and fixin’s dinner.

I still want to housesit now to see about being bonded.

Well,by folks save, wicked days,and nights to all.


Donations C/0 Poor Magazine

1448 Pine Street #205

San Francisco, CA 94103


Email: askjoe@poormagazine.org

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Wasted Waters

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
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Stationary Engineer Carmi L. Johnson's 2003 struggle for justice in the Bay Area.

by Staff Writer

An excerpt from the Introduction...

"This book is for all women who are in positions of power, who are not assertive but strong in order to handle any situation brought their way. To these women I say - Never give up. Thats's what "they" want you to do..."

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Spittin' Flames

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
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Spoken Word, Rap and Art

by Brandon Jones

featuring T. Rich

A POOR Press Production 2003

by Staff Writer

B-tro


I was born up in eighty-six after my dad was stabbed to death for some shady shit but I guess that’s life in the dirty south losing your pops over bull shit before you’re old enough to speak out your mouth what the hell are people about how the fuck you going to kill some body bringing home a pay check who ever did this I wish I could see them hung by theyre neck It seems like even from an earlier age I don’t get no respect then I went from Ft. Lauderdale to the Bay where I learned to spit some ill shit and have everybody listen to what you gotta say Ive come sort of a long way from losing friends to bullets to losing friends to heart attacks to hittin the ganja tree till my lungs damn near collapse shrubbing off pain to envious niggas tryin to stomp my ass in vain and my for the rest of my family that’s hard to explain so Ill save that for some other info matter of fact fuck a intro this a B-tro.

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Oji Volume 1

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
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Words, Art and Music

by Oji

A POOR Press Production 2003

by Staff Writer

"Now the God unites with his Goddess
Like relatives of negative and positive
It can be electric when you attract the opposite

Their conquest of melodic octaves is harmonic cosmology
Acknowledging positive honesty promising progress constantly

They relocate to an oasis and meditate
Within their special place
Engaged face to face
Faithfully embracing as their souls mate

Showing reflections of affections
With deep breaths connected in romantic tantric sex
Within their minds resides heaven
Blessed with longevity she’s pregnant
Now they shall achieve their dreams
Breathing, smiling, and singing safe and sound
While they’re royal flower child succeeds on soil that’s fertile"

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The Scholarship of Poverty

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
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Selected Narrative of Poverty Journalism

by Staff Writer

Editors Statement

“ I believe, and teach that all writing about poverty should be first person narrative. It should be exciting, cinematic, seductive,
grabbing the reader’s interest down to the last word.’’

-- Dee Gray,
Editor, The Scholarship of Poverty
Co-editor, POOR Magazine

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Arcata Stands Up To Orwellian Tactics

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
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by Alex Cuff, Newsbrief Editor

Last month, Arcata, CA joined increasing number of municipalities to pass a resolution urging local law enforcement officials and others contacted by federal officials to refuse requests under the Patriot Act that they believe violate an individual’s civil rights under the Constitution.

Arcata didn’t stop there…this little city passed an ordinance that outlaws voluntary compliance with the Patriot Act.

“I call this a nonviolent, preemptive attack,” said David Meserve, the City Council member who drafted the ordinance with the help of the Arcata city attorney, city manager and police chief.

The Arcata ordinance may be the first, but it may not be the last. Across the country, citizens have been forming Bill of Rights defense committees to fight what they consider the most abominable attack on liberties contained in the Patriot Act. In Arcata, where forums drew little debate, the new law is an unqualified hit. It passed by a vote of 4 to 1, but has what looks like near-unanimous approval from residents.

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Lawrence Chan Endorses Displacement and Homelessness

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
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50 Low-Income Renters Targeted For Eviction

by Alex Cuff, Newsbrief Editor

After a ten year contract comes to a close in July
2003, for a low-income housing project, 50
units of mainly Cantonese speaking immigrants are soon
to be dumped upon the streets of Oakland with no where
to go. Oakland’s Measure EE (Just Cause Evictions)
does not cover or protect units built after 1984 – these rental
units and the tenants are vulnerable to a “no cause” eviction.

Wealthy Hotel tycoon Lawrence Chan plans to expand
his profits by evicting poor local immigrants in
Oakland, at 989 Webster Street. Lawrence Chan is the CEO and founder of Park Lane Hotels International and C&L Financial Inc., which
develop and operate hotels and real estate projects
across United States and Asia. Projects in the Bay
Area - the 1009 rooms Renaissance Parc 55 Hotel in San
Francisco; the City Center Marriott Hotel and
Courtyard by Marriot in downtown Oakland; the San Jose
Marriott (opens in 2003); and the 1.2 million sq. ft.
mixed use retail/residential/commercial Pacific
Renaissance Plaza in the East Bay.

Mr. Chan has served as a member of the White House
Board of Advisors on Private Sector Initiatives under
President George Bush, the Presidential Round Table
under Senator Phil Gram. He was formerly the Co-Chair
of the San Francisco-Shanghai Sister City Committee,
and has received awards including numerous
proclamations by the California Secretary of State and
State Assembly, and the Key to the City presented by
the then Mayor of San Francisco, Senator Diane
Feinstein

Local activists are urging everyone and anyone to
reach out by phone, fax, or e-mails, to protest and
stop the evictions of the low-income immigrant renters
before it's too late. The property is being managed by International
Hotelier Management Corporation located at 388 9th
Street, Suite 228, Oakland CA. (Phone number
510/251-6448.)

Sources say that Lynette Lee of East Bay Asian Local
Develpoment Corporation helped to refine the original
deal with Lawrence Chan to set aside 50 units of
low-income housing now at risk. Contact Lynette Lee (510/ 287-5353 x596) to urge her to seek a long extension to the housing deal as a means to save the housing for the low-income renters.

Lawrwnce Chan resides in Hillsborough Ca.
(Population of 10,825 -- Rich S.F. Businessman Town)
His home phone number is not listed. Hillsborough City Council Meetings are scheduled for the second Monday of each month at 6p.m.
(Hillsborough Town Hall -- 1600 Floribunda Ave)

Lawrence Chan -- SFSU Foundation Board of Directors
Phone 415/ 338-2297 Fax 415/338-2670

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Past Rot Return. Get The Odd Feel Of Time Reversing Itself as if Some Folks Want The Bad Old Days Back?

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

It does look like
earth's in a backward spiral

Let's go fo'ward not back.

We have to be our own
heroine's and hero's.

by Joe B.

Rot Rises Ominous, Tidings Ahead

First off let me get this of my chest these MAILER DAEMON@ smtp1. webco... failure notices From The SmarterMail program.

As someone not up on the online expertise I’ve been sent these constantly.

I guess its time subscribe because when at first one gets a 207.134. 171.110 does not like recipient or a 553 domain thing I realized after sending her the "Sorry,you don’t like recipient.

You have a long life and all the best to you and it still comes back as
Sorry,you don’t like recipient.

I saw that it wasn’t Ms. Angela,Linda,Lauren, Tracy,or Hanna but the flookin’ program guidelines.

Although these ladies may indeed not like me I have not heard from them but the insidious program.

Guess its time to be a subscriber to really converse one to one.

Guys,Gals,new to this online date,chat,cyber- link stuff don’t believe the program if it sounds like a form letter if you get an email from people instead of program then talk then at least is a living breathing life form after all isn’t that what we that art too busy doing trying to connect so we can touch flesh to flesh and form attachments, friends,lovers,and families?

From 1999 it rocked, blazed,a trail for artists,comics,singer, inventive musical improv.

Mr. Keith Savage was their from its inception along with Bob-O-matic as MC
[Minister of Ceremony’s]

I don’t know what I know is Hotel Utah’s last night was in its current location was Monday,Dec. 1,2003.

But already its spirit which always resided in the people inside the hotel slash bar/café/ music/comic improvisational space.

Charles Pitts,current ‘Po Poet,ex Poor Magazine Alumni introduced me to the Hot-U in mid 2002 because after being Poor M for a time I was feeling burnt out and had for my own sanity find more than media,media,media.

Being an A-political guy in politically savy in a fem organization began feeling a bit like Hades plus there were other outlets to explore that is to me private like trying out comedy,singing,and other than political polemic poems sometimes they all blend into drek.
[I know both employees didn’t think much about what I did after work as long as I returned the next day.]

Finding other ways of expression in the U helped me see way beyond my work at "PM" now its closing (Hotel U not PM)because of some deal but as I’ve said its not the building though it will be sorely missed as a gathering place it’s the soul force of the people residing it that made H-U a place to be Mondays or any day of the week.

I'm too depressed to tell where the new U is but that’s no secret its already spreading by word -of-mouth.

I’m glad the Utah will be reborn in a new space but its spirit never died.

And now,The Return Of Past Rot.

Governator A. Schwarzenegger’s freeze of the enrollment of California’s Healthy Families program will place more low income families already struggling in vicious vice.

His proposed cutting of $3.8 billion from both current and coming budgets shreds whatever help families were depending on.

Yes,there's a number to voice your complaint to the Governor about what he’s seems oblivious to –
THE HEALTH AND WELL BEING OF ALL CALIFORNIAN’S WHETHER THEY BE YOUNG, MIDDLE AGED OR ELDERLY.

‘Um,I don’t believe cutting state medical funds to those families who need it the most helps anyone only creates more devastating illnesses and houseless people who are in now worse medical need than before,for many it will be a life ending Death Sentence.

As for immigrant driver’s license’s being revoked is wrongly written,a bad mean,and will ultimately back fire
when many people who need their license’s to drive to/for work,their children to/from schools or work that involves driving to or from work or truckers, taxi cap drivers, chauffeur’s.

But as usual few pol’s think in long term but only in short term bumps adding to their next elections.

The word has already changed,ancestors of Aztecs are voting,they like other rainbow tribes know all the tricks now.

Keep pissing us rainbow folks off as we all join up,compare notes,hers/ histories,tragedies,and triumphs and begin a distinctly Old World Order,where everyone is included not like the false New World Order of globalized commercialized, consumer driven market place.

Everyone know this world multi-faceted, lingual,ideas,and peopled by the vary ones who were at one time or another poised on an extermination list.

Those days must never be forgotten.

Remember the first to die,be experimented on, are the lame,blind,death, or anyone not physically perfect then the rest until it didn’t matter if one was sound in body and brain just being different means death and beauty, brains either in female or male form scared those who felt inferior but had the power of life and death and abused that power for their own selfish whims….

Remember our collective past folks,if we don’t, well Bush 1&2 is a glimpse at that dying but struggling past to be alive a plunge our world in blood yet again.

Like I said I’m A-political,I just want outlive all this bull "S" don’t you out there want the same for you and your children’s children?


Donations C/0 Poor Magazine

1448 Pine Street #205

San Francisco, CA 94103


Email: askjoe@poormagazine.org

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