Story Archives 2004

Odd Hussein Capture. Hooray! Now, What's The Catch?

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

Hali-Burton $61 million OOPs.

Is Saddam Hussein's capture real or
a grand long range set up plan to make 'Prez
G. W's next bid to be elected legitimate?

I only ask this question...

because I don't know.

by Joe B.

It’s been a long Sunday night between a trusted friend’s visit and later I’m bundled up insulated from the cold up as my friend’s other friend left their car lights on too long draining the battery.

20 to 45 minutes later after a few cars and a knowledgeable truck mechanic and taxi driver with jumper cables stopped both good Samaritan’s made it possible to jumpstart the car again and happily to worried people left in a borrowed car to their next destination.

In the morning the radio automatically switched on with new about U.S. soldiers in Tirkit, actually Adwar,a village 10 miles from Tirkit, Iraq capturing a ruffled, ragged,dirty,scraggly bearded Mr. Saddam Hussein in a disguised hiding place 8:30 pm. Saturday, Nov. 13, 2003 local time.

Reports say "He gave up without a shot,with $750,000 American Dollars on hand, automatic weapons of made in American. [some information gleaned from The San Francisco Examiner, a free weekly newspaper].

I’ve heard he (Saddam Hussein) used,drove,or was driven in taxi caps in disguise avoiding capture and that Hussein has doubles running around but its curious how the capture coincides Hali-Burton’s over 61 or more billion over charge of rebuilding of Iraq.

Was the capture serendipity or planned to take pressure off or make people for get billions of dollars in over billing problem.

What about the Ben-O or O-Ben guy(you know) the family, set on a plane flying away a day or
a few hours before September 11th tragic acts.

I’m not saying Iraqi’s, American,and coalition forces aren’t doing their jobs capturing Saddam Hussein wasn’t a priority so is capturing Mr. Ben and other infamous leaders.

Its to damn neat to capture Hussein as Hali-Burton’s hemorrhage money in reverse.

I don’t trust any of this and only one person who I suspect is way older than he seems at least he sometimes lets things slip but he’s gone underground and will contact or visit me when time permits plus knows me to be a trusted friend,honest,with integrity,and incorruptible too boot.

He said he knew me in another life.

He says it will all be well and not to make such a ruckus about temporary set backs.

Time for me to write some relatives,buy presents,and hopefully have a lovely Christmas maybe New Years too.

May all of you on line and off be blessed in health,wealth,wisdom,and whimsy.


Donations C/0 Poor Magazine

1448 Pine Street #205

San Francisco, CA 94103


Email: askjoe@poormagazine.org

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Lingering Legacies. What To Say, Lust And Lasting Questions.

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

An old story.

Dark & Light Merge.

Time honored omissions.

Keep truth buried until guilt
or death reveals it.

by Joe B.

Lingering Legacies

On bottom right of San Jose News I read about the Late South Carolina’s Senator Strom Thurmond’s hidden Black daughter being acknowledged after decades of rumors.

U.S. Attorney for South Carolina’s Strom Thurmond Jr.
of course at first couldn’t believe this of his father and as dutiful son didn’t believe Mrs. Washington-Williams until she showed evidence by way of cashier’s checks that the elder Thurmond provided financial support and notes from him in writing that he knew he was her father.

Now folks can you understand why Black people have lingering doubts,fears,about white folks in general?

The curse of slaver stained both master, mistress,slave woman and male.

Remember it was the horny master sneaking into a slave’s shack for black berry juice not her going up to the big house.

Some advantages could be had by sleeping with the master as in less work in the fields for her man, child,or being sold but this didn’t work lover’s, son’s,daughters,were still sold to settle gambling or to pay for real estate incurred debts.

As for Black males whites projected their lusts onto them for their own misdeeds hence placing White Women on pedestals while shacking up with slaves.

I’m sure some white women took delicious revenge with one or more male slaves.

How could they not they can do nothing against boy friends or husbands.

What better way for both revenge and resolve than to satisfy themselves with slaves who would not believed on pain of castration, death or both.

Women who were successful in their dalliances of forbidden fruit kept their secrets to the grave maybe selling lover’s or had them killed ridding themselves of the problem,a problem her own heated loins created!

Is it any wonder why Black folks don’t completely trust the Caucasoid race?

How many families have relatives of darker hue not acknowledged?

At least the true humans hunting buffalo, dear,these men and women chose, welcomed and loved runaway slaves,Asiatic, Pacific Islanders too join in friendship and marriage even when laws against it are quickly penned.

When blacks,reds, browns mesh bodies and minds creating beautiful rainbow children.

Its Whites who’s set up arbitrary constructs of beauty and intelligence.

Being susceptible as any human to constant negative reinforcement it’s a wonder most blacks don’t commit suicide because as a people we’ve been literally led to slaughter,accused of being cursed by our very skin, called ugly not sensuously kissed or too well loved by the sun in its younger days and in middle age still loves us.

The Strom Thurmond story only illustrates lingering legacies still hidden either by shame, economic reasons,spite, envy,or family pride.

Anyone have secrets in their family tree? (one never knows until the question is asked)


Donations C/0 Poor Magazine

1448 Pine Street #205

San Francisco,CA 94103


Email: askjoe@poormagazine.org

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ACTION ACTION ACHTUNG!!!

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

The Fascist budget cuts courtesy of Herr Arnold

by Tiny/PNN

2000 arms outstretched upwards, angled right..reaching|.reaching their eyes tilt slowly toward the sky, and then He appears, "Ar-nold, Ar-nold Ar-nold!" their collective voices climb to a solid chant "AR-NOLD AR-NOLD ARRRRRNOLD!!!!" The thin asbestos walls of the strip mall parking lot in Tracy , California tremble under their weight

It has been thirty days since governor Arnold Schwarzenegger took office and as one of his claims as a candidate stated; ACTION ACTION, ACTION!!!, he aims to fulfill his odd promise. Although this sounded like the bubble comment of a cartoon action figure rather than a gubernatorial candidate, since he has taken office he has launched a series of fascist attacks on the weakest members of our society. First he made quick work of the immigrant drivers license legislation (killed it), proposed severe cuts to the in-home support services provided to disabled Californians as well as several other drastic cuts which would affect disabled folks, and most recently proposes to suspend spending to California's school funding guarantee.

Ever since he began his run for governor I have been nervous of Schwarzenegger's vague Nazi background and fascist tendencies. He asserted from the beginning of his run, buried under all his terminator-like sound bites, that he wanted to cut services out of medi-cal all the while providing increased advocacy for the ever endangered Hummer (a war-like vehicle that he purports to own several of). When he perceived opposition to his fascist budget cuts he decided to take his budget "on tour" receiving a HAIL(Heil) ARNOLD chant from every clueless California enclave he visited. The San Jose Mercury News described Arnold as a populist. Wasn't there another Austrian power hungry politician described as a populist that illicited blind faith from his "people" no matter how fascist his policies became

Well, yes I said it Hitler lurks in the populist murk that is Arnold, and Hitler's first choice for the death camps were disabled people, the mentally ill and other assorted "misfits" If you think I'm bitter, you're wrong. As the sole caregiver for two disabled family members who fall directly into his proposed cuts categories, I am scared.

ACTIONARNOLD is proposing to cut all benefits for people who use in-home service providers who are family members and as well, all service provision to any disabled people who are ambulatory, i.e. if the only in-home services you receive are for cooking, driving to medical appointments, cleaning, laundry, help with bathing, etc

Now the frightening thing about his choice of what to cut is how these cuts directly impact and increase the poverty of poor people and families of color, i.e., those of us who refuse to ever consider putting our elder family members in "homes" but wouldn't have the money to take care of them without the meager stipends granted from In-home support services and/or folks with disabilities that don't render them in a chair but whose lives depend on the driving, cooking and/or errand running of their in-home aids because without that help they wouldn't eat, get medicine, have a bath, or see their doctors/caregivers.

As well, many daughters like me who transitioned off of welfare to non-existent "work" in the big welfare (de) reform dayz of the 90's were able to earn a living wage helping their family members with basic needs, as well as bring their entire families (elders, children, adults) up and out of poverty together. But of course, these family-based solutions which help the "whole" family rather than just the individual wouldn't be attractive to ACTIONARNOLD champion of Capitalist/Fascist values.

Finally, as disabled folks and their advocates fight to preserve these basic services and defy the cuts, I hope that all Californians will speak to their Tracy-dwelling relatives and friends, eager to line up with outstretched arms and let them know that AR-NOLD is no longer a harmless pretend action figure but in fact, is a fascist leaning government official and we all need to worry what AR-NOLD's next form of ACTION ACTION ACHTUNG will be

POSTSCRIPT; As of press time the Democrats in the House negotiated a slight compromise - which is to hold off on the budget cuts to health and welfare services until the next session which begins on January 8th. It is VERY Important to call your local legislator and let them know how you feel about these dangerous cuts as well as to call Arnolds office at 888-780-9275 press #8 and leave a message.As well there will be two press conferences/protests sponsored by a several economic justice coalitions in the Bay Area; Thursday @ 10:00 am 845 Jackson Street ( bet Powell and Stockton )
and 11:00 am Mission Neighborhood Health Center 240 Shotwell Street (bet 16th and 17th)

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White Boy Wins!

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

PNN deconstructs the Willie/Gavin Connection

by Clive Whistle/PoorNewsNetwork Community Journalist

So my question is how did a white middle class man well-known for his extremely wealthy friends win this race - No, it wasn't because of Al Gore, Nancy Pelosi or even Mr. Bill ( Clinton, that is) . these roll-over democans only had a mild impact, mostly just insulting the intelligence of politically savy San Franciscans with their slavery to the Democratic party political machine over all other ethical considerations

No the secret weapon of this wealthy white boy was the Brown machine, and i do mean Brown, literally and figuratively, brown and black folk - several of them very low-income - living in neighborhoods predominantly filled with people of color, galvanized by Willie Brown's "machine" i.e., The A. Philip Randolph Institute, ( aka A.P.R.I.) and the fake race card- Gonzalez is a racist! and other claims by Willie and his right-hand man, the Rev Amos Brown.

I know all of this first-hand because as a previously homeless, very low-income Black man who has lived in the projects ( Sunnydale), in shelters, and works with mostly homeless San Franciscans of color, I have been courted by APRI in the projects and in the shelters. And the hilarious part of this "organizing effort" is not only that Newsom's power base is born from pillars of institutionalized racism and classism, but as well, the laws and legislations backed by Newsom, i.e, PRop N which is intentionally racist, as most of the people it targets are on welfare and/or homeless and also happen to be people of color, as well as the completely useless and superfluous Prop M - a legislation that had already been in place but just allowed people to hate on panhandlers a little more and then of course, Newsoms votes against public power, endless votes against renters and for property owners and on and on...

In previous elections APRI has been more flagrant with their persuasions about who or what to vote for, ( Willie, Amos, etc) this time around they were very circumspect, publicly saying that we should just vote! and privately saying Newsom is the man. But their cover was blown on the last Sunday before the election when APRI hosted the get out the vote "rally" at City Hall , pulling the heavy weights like Cecil Williams and even Jessie Jackson ( by phone), actually bringing up the history of the fight of black folks to win the vote in the 60's over a loud speaker, the wealthy white boy nowhere to be seen. and then the clincher of all this "brown- imaging" was the strong showing on camera of people of color at the Clinton PArty in the Newsom headquarters.

Now I know that people are afraid of Bush and therefore afraid of the democratic machine losing any power, but that's not what would have happened - I, would never have voted for a republicrat like Newsom and yet I do plan to vote for a democrat, any democrat, in the presidential election, not a green, just to get rid of the Bush-Terror. All I am saying is - some people are accusing the green party and Gonzalez of not doing enough organizing in communities of color and i would argue that no, they did organize in communities of color - the Bayview , The mission, Chinatown, Ingleside - the problem is they are fighting a well-oiled, high financed, "machine" - financed I might add, not by the people of color it is galvanizing, but by the rich white people who are behind Gavin and Willie.

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The REAL Prop N Story

09/24/2021 - 11:12 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
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Jim Gabbert Recalls Care Not Cash Was a Ploy Contrived to Get Newsom Elected

by Carol Harvey

What can you say about Jim Gabbert? crows the Broadcast Legends website. He is not ONLY a legend, but a TRUE pioneer and innovator! Hes a King Midas whose every radio or television property turns to gold!

His properties included KOFY 1050AM and KDIA 1310AM. In July 1998, this diplomats son sold his last lucrative media acquisition, WB20 television. Currently, when he is not jetting around the world, Gabbert hosts a KGO radio talk show.

I contacted you, I explained at the outset of a recent interview, because a friend reported this summer you announced on air that one of Gavin Newsoms political consultants confessed that they were sitting around one day and cooked up Care Not Cash as a simple idea the public could quickly grasp and voters would buy. It was an easy sell without real sincerity or intention to help the homeless.

Thats kind of an oversimplification, he said. But, you are almost there.

Gabbert said he was approached in March 2003 by a fair amount of people in San Francisco wanting him to run for Mayor. He said, they put his name in some polls they ran, and I beat Gavin every time. The consensus was that Gavin was a nice guy, but he really is very weak. He does not have fire in his belly to be Mayor.

Gabbert devoted a two-hour segment to this issue, airing it on his KGO talk show in the summer of 2003, around the time that the Courts ruled that the Board of Supervisors had to handle it, meaning Care Not Cash.

The public gave Newsom a chance with a 30% vote for Care Not Cash, a proposition that would reduce the General Assistance check given to homeless San Franciscans to only $59 a month, converting the seized money to shelter vouchers. But there was no guarantee that there would be a shelter bed for these GA recipients because there arent nearly enough shelter beds or hotel rooms in existence now.

Gabbert said if Newsom had been an effective leader, successfully selling his idea to a very screwed up Board of Supervisors which does not work harmoniously, Care Not Cash would have easily gone through.

How should Newsom have shown leadership? I asked.

Its called Politics, Gabbert said. Okay, what is it THIS guy wants? What is it THAT guy wants? You kind of work a compromise to keep everybody happy. But, he chose to fight.

So, he created obstacles? I asked.

Yes. In other words, Its my way or the highway.

Gabbert continued, They approached me, and I thought and I thought. At first I was kind of hot for it because politics has always been my second passion.

As longtime President of the California Broadcasters, Gabbert did all the groups lobbying. Ive gotten so many bills through both the Assembly and the Senate. Politically, I know my way around really well, he said. I had lunch with Willie Brown. Ive known Willie for years.

Well, then came reality, he explained. Im having a wonderful time.

According to the Broadcast Legends website, when the 67-year-old Gabbert is not at home in Sausalito with his Alaskan malamute, Jake, he tours the world, sails his 50-meter Italian yacht, and pilots his own Boeing 727, Citation jet and DC3.

In fact, Im in Palm Springs right now, he told me.

ANTI-HOMELESS RHETORIC

Gabbert warned, Those people out on the street begging are hurting the American Dream." Youve got two problems in San Francisco. Youve got Homeless, and youve got Homeless.

He separated homeless people into two distinct groups. The first consists of immigrants starting on their way up the ladder, as busboys, waiters, or hotel maids. This group, a paycheck away, suddenly lose their jobs because the tourist industry in San Francisco is falling way off.

The second group, according to Gabbert, is the hardcore homeless. They have chosen this as a lifestyle --- be it mental illness, be it drug addiction, he asserted. They drive away tourists, causing loss of jobs and more homelessness for the first group.

Gabberts analysis does not show how a person physically or mentally disabled or a Viet Nam Veteran, drug-addicted and traumatized during battle, unable to function in a job, have a choice in the matter. Also, Gabbert omitted many other homeless subgroups: The low-income elderly, the physically disabled, families, and children. Additionally, It is highly questionable logic to claim that one group of poor and homeless people is creating another group of poor and homeless people.

His analysis doesnt even deal with the fact that San Francisco has the highest housing costs in the nation and a severe shortage of affordable housing and shelter beds. Billions of dollars in tax breaks are given to middle-class and upper-middle-class people to buy homes, but there is virtually no commitment to build housing for homeless and extremely low-income people. And new national poverty statistics show larger numbers of the poor are driven to the streets while the rich get richer.

In Mayoral debates, other candidates did not scapegoat the hard-core homeless but analyzed why homelessness is really increasing. Angela Alioto identified 9/11 as a key cause of flagging tourism and a resultant economic downturn. Board of Supervisors President Matt Gonzalez pointed to the business tax lawsuit by San Franciscos wealthiest companies that cost the City $80 million --- money that could have paid for the social services to get poor people off the street.

Gabbert said he opened up a two-hour KGO program to a listener discussion about the fact that people no longer want to come to San Francisco for dinner or to shop because they are so hassled by this second category of homeless.

His proposed solution was simple. Youve got to clean up the streets. No matter how you do it, youve GOT to do it, he told me; Otherwise you wont have people coming to San Francisco anymore. The amount of tourism we are losing is pretty amazing. We are considered one of the trashiest cities, almost, in America now in terms of beggars.

Down at Powell and Market, they get belligerent if you dont give them something. I mean, they start chasing you, or they throw things at you.

I asked whether he had experienced this. Oh, Yeah! Oh, yeah! he answered.

However, instead of providing examples of this alleged homeless violence, he described people taking dumps right on the steps of Angelo Aliotos Building down at Columbus and Montgomery, when it used to be the K101 Building when I owned K101.

Yet, without homes or bathrooms, where do the unhoused perform activities of daily life that housed people take for granted? When hotels and gas stations wont let them use their facilities, what do they have left but the street?

Gabbert insisted you cant have that happen and provide jobs for people who are just starting. This exacerbates the real homeless problem.

THE GETTY GROUPS INFLUENCE

Gabbert reminded me that the Getty family has been grooming Newsom to run for Mayor since he was first appointed to the Board of Supervisors. And getting back to what you did say, he continued, a political consultant who was going to become my political consultant approached me about running for Mayor. As we were looking at Jim Gabberts Campaign, if you will, I was talking to this consultant, who shall remain unknown.

His consultant mentioned that the Getty group felt that for Newsom to become mayor, he needed an issue. The consultant related that a year before Care Not Cash first came out, Getty-paid consultants conducted polls. They did a focus study, Gabbert said, showing most people were disgusted with the Streets of San Francisco, and that they had to do something with (the people on the street) not just let them stay there.

Their surveys and polls indicated this was the biggest hot button issue, Gabbert said. Every political candidate needs an issue, something to champion for. That became Gavins issue. They concocted that. They felt that would ignite voters enthusiasm and show that hes trying to do something for the City.

As he concluded the call, Gabbert said with conviction: This sounds to me like it was true. In fact, I know it was.

Key questions remain: Are the Gettys trading on Newsoms youth, looks and his image as one of our own to get him elected? If Newsom becomes Mayor, do the super-rich plan to use a person Gabbert described as an ineffectual politician to be their figurehead yes-man to push through their moneyed agenda?

Whether the Getty types promote Newsom or Gabbert, how could two wealthy people, isolated in the heady stratosphere of the rich, ever write social programs for a group they cannot possibly understand --- the earthbound homeless poor?

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Corporate Media Lies

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

Houseless people speak back to the lies reported in The SF Chroncles' Homeless Series

by Tiny/Poverty Scholar and co-editor POOR Magazine/PNN

"So what he took their pictures- they were in the public domain", a tall glassy eyed chronicle photographer, towering above me was spitting out defenses of the stereotypical photographs used for a a recent SF chronicle series on homelessness. As he spoke a large black camera with a telephoto lens dangled at his side, "they don't own the sidewalk", through gritted teeth, posing as a grin he defended the photographers lack of ethics in the series. As he spoke my mind traveled back to the cover of Sunday's SF Chronicle. The color; grainy black and white ala 1930's dustbowl. In the frame- two women shot from above the photographers gaze looking down which caused their size to appear almost elfin. Their hair a mass of tousled brillo, their surroundings; complete disarray, cardboard signs revealing their past or present vocation of panhandler. The headline below; Homeless Island

For the first five days of December The SF chronicle ran what they call a comprehensive story on homelessness in San Francisco. As a formerly homeless SF resident, I cringed with sadness with the unfolding of each days segment. As a poverty journalist who works to shatter the myths associated with homelessness and poverty, I was furious.

The Chronicle and Newsom is sleeping together Clyde from Shelter Outreach Project(SHOUT) of The Coalition on Homelessness was speaking into a mike at a rally held outside the Chronicle building on Mission street on day four of the series, they report in the chronicle that noone gets stabbed in the shelter well that's a lie my personal experience is I had a friend that was stabbed in a shelter right next to me.."

Several currently houseless folks like Clyde spoke at the rally about the lies and myths about homelessness that were promoted by the series , "The chronicle reports that there were plenty of beds and no turnaways I have gone in there and I can't get the beds cause you have to go to a drop in center to register first which is several miles away-and then they have folks doing this finger imaging thing, that's what they do to people in a penitentiary"

"There were some good things in the series but most of it was based on lies," LS Wilson from the Coalition on homelessness was addressing the protest, "for instance, they kept talking about 169 homeless people who had died, there is no documentation to back up that figure, and whether these people were panhandlers or not, how they died, there was no actual homeless death report done since 1999 , and yet the chronicle keeps using that figure", as LS continued I was fuming, if it was a story about housed people the Chronicle would have had to do more extensive fact checking . LS went on to give the actual statistics associated with homelessness in San Francisco including the fact that the SF Chronicle said there was $200,000.000 spent on homeless services last year even though the County Controller reported that San Francisco only spent $97 million in direct services and $5,000.000 in administration. They also reported that there is no plan for homelessness ( i.e. except the racist, classist Care Not Cash) but there is a plan; its called Continuum of Care which was written by homeless folks and homeless advocates and includes real solutions, but this plan has been continually hijacked by opportunistic politicians looking for a clean way to get votes on the backs of homeless people.

"Disabled women are harassed in the shelter system," Michelle McMillan, a currently houseless woman addressed the crowd, "The chronicle series promoted the stereotypes of the lazy homeless person that is just not true, I have been working for 20 years in the same job, I do not drink, smoke or do drugs and if anything shelter staff are the abusive people in this system. I did not come to San Francisco to get a GA check my family has been in San Francisco for seven generations, I work and I am in school, Care Not Cash is a lie and will hurt people not help them"

After several more people spoke I became aware of the tall man standing near the entrance of the Chronicle focusing and re-focusing his large lens in our direction.
Eventually he tried to take pictures of homeless people who were on the fringes of the protest, they got angry and accused him of not asking first before he took their pictures, a basic expectation from any photographer

As was reported by Steve Chester from The Coalition on Homelessness at the protest, the people depicted in Homeless Island "bleeds it leads" shock pics splattered across the front cover of last Sundays paper, did not give their permission to have those pictures taken and this man's answer to that charge was "so what, it was on a public sidewalk, that's in the public domain." The frightening part of his assertion was he was right and that meant that inherently because houseless folks had no roof or inside space ie protection and because by design their home was in the public domain they were in fact, unprotected from the "gaze" from the stereotypes, from the corporate media lies.

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This is Not Hollywood, People will Die!

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

Illin' and Chillin' looks at the ARNOLD Cuts!

by Leroy Moore/Illin' and Chillin'/Executive Director of Disability Advocates of Minorities Org.

Arnold Schwarzenegger is used to having a stuntman
when he gives and takes hits and bullets in his
movies. Well Sacramento is not Hollywood and Governor
Schwarzeneggers ink bullets of his Mid-Year budget
proposals will cause real casualties for the poor, the
elderly and people with disabilities in California. In
his recent bomb shell called the Mid-Year Budget Plan,
Arnold will kick out 74,200 elderly, blind and
disabled from their homes by eliminating Residual
In-Home Supportive Services, IHSS, and Program among
other reduction in social services & entitlements.
The Residual Program provides personal assistance that
includes domestic and laundry services, grocery
running certain errands, meal preparation, and travel
to medical appointments etc... by a homecare worker
i.e. family member or someone you hire to keep
individuals with disabilities and the elderly in the
community and with their family and friends not locked
away in institutions and nursing homes. This trend
toward institutionalization would violate the Olmstead
mandate to provide services in the lest restrictive
setting and leave the State open to litigation.
According to Protection & Advocacy Inc (a law firm of
people with disabilities) approximately 23.4% of IHSS
recipients receive services through the residual
program; however, the residual program comprises only
13% of the total IHSS program costs. His Mid-Term
Budget plan has taught me how out of balance state and
city government are to one another. While Governor
Schwarzenegger is slashing IHSS causing
institutionalization or homelessness, San Franciscos
Mayoral race number one issue is homelessness and
number two is housing. You can see why we have grid
lock in the political arena. Schwarzenegger is taking
our food out of our mouth, stripping us naked and
kicking us out in the Christmas air.

This and many other Mid-Term budget proposals were
fired from Governor Schwarzeneggers pen recently that
will affect people with disabilities, our families and
the elderly. For example, his plan to suspend the
Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act of
1977, Eliminating Non-Core Regional Center Services
i.e. respite services. By eliminating respite care,
Schwarzenegger will be once again breaking up families
who have children with disabilities. Respite care
allows families to care for a family member with
disabilities in their home. For more than ten years,
I have provided respite care for a family who has an
autistic son. They needed that service and I grew as
part of the family because of the respite services I
provided through the Regional Center. This is coming
from a man who advocates for youth and their programs.
How can you tell the whole state to stop growing in
the midst of a booming autism epidemic and the
continuing of disability later in life? Well, the
Enrollment caps for programs for disabled immigrants &
spending caps are doing just that. All of this from a
man whose wife says she is an advocate for people
with disability. Her family is touch by disability
and our issues. So why governor Schwarz egger has
stepped on people with disabilities after the largest
demonstration in Sacramentos history of disabled
people, our families and allies in April of this year,
educating both the Senate & the Houses hearings about
the deadly Daviss propose cuts (that looks like
Governor Schwarz eggers Mid-term budget plan) and his
campaign promises? Who knows but Ive a piece of
advice to our new Governor, like Ronald Regan, Arnold
Schwarz egger will learn quick that Hollywood is not
Sacramento and the people will be knocking on his door
after being wounded from his ink bullets. The season
of sharing is not in Sacramento.

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GOD BLESS YOU, MR. KRAVINSKY

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

by TJ Johnston/PNN Community Journalist

Kurt Vonnegut would probably love to hear about Zell Kravinsky, an academic turned philanthropist from Pennsylvania. Kravinsky has heaped plaudits and scorn for donating his kidney to a total stranger. Earlier this year, Kravinsky, who has already given away millions derived from real estate, sneaked out of his house to a Philadelphia hospital to transplant his kidney to Donnell Reid, a poor African-American woman way down on the donor list.

Despite a lifetime of philanthropy, Kravinsky has been called a "selfish SOB" by a local journalist, deemed crazy by an AOL poll and his marriage is endangered as a result.

Kravinsky's history resembles that of Elliot Rosewater, Jr., the main character from Vonnegut's novel, God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater. Elliot is the head of a multimillionaire dollar foundation. His generosity is misconstrued as insanity, especially by his family. A shyster lawyer gets himself retained by a distant Rosewater relative in order to declare Elliot incompetent.

TK- More details about novel?

Because his wife, Emily is a psychiatrist, Kravinsky might have to fend a competency hearing. Yet for all the attention he has received, Kravinsky sees his in-kind donation as nothing unusual--and that's how it should be.

"America has grown so bizarre, it scorns self-sacrifice," Kravinsky tells me in a telephone interview. "In every other society in the Western world, it is expected where one would sacrifice himself so others would survive arduous conditions." He disregards the dichotomy of the AOL poll: he's neither generous nor mad, what he did was the least he could have done.

Giving a fully-functioning kidney is just a logical extension of a lifelong pattern. Kravinsky was raised in a socially-conscious household (he credits his father for instilling a strong sense of justice). At the age of 12, he picketed the city hall in Philly to build low-income housing. After grad school, Kravinsky taught emotionally disturbed children in the slums. Concurrently, he invested in properties. As his fortunes grew, he would live in the more run-down buildings and drive around in an old model Toyota. Eventually, he would upsize his living arrangements to a twin home and traded the Toyota to a minivan.

After losing his sister to cancer, Kravinsky devoted his resources to improving public health, locally and globally. He established an endowment in his sister's name to fund the Center of Disease Control and donated $30 million in real estate to Ohio State's public health school.

Still, Kravinsky felt he could give more. He saw the disparity of wealth manifesting itself in the health of the human body worldwide, citing Chagas disease, a parasitic infection prevalent in Latin America , as an example. Naturally, he's outraged. "I don't understand how others live well in the US and worldwide while others live poorly." He continues, "Rich people should be shamed to the point where decisions are made to let others die so that we may live in comfort. They are the repository of all human greed, the final effect of every decision we make."

Soon, the organ distribution system became the focus of Kravinsky's reform efforts. While the National Kidney Foundation has 59,255 Americans waiting for a new kidney (almost one third of whom are black), 3641 died in line. Then why should he enjoy two healthy kidneys while many struggle with one? He went to a hospital in North Philadelphia where most of their clients are poor African Americans. That population, according to Kravinsky, is "ill served by the dialysis companies. They allow them to persist in ignorance and rumors of the dangers of transplantation." The rejection rate of donated organs is merely five per cent and the mortality rate is just 1 in 4000. Also, one could register in not just one, but up to 20 transplant centers. That kind of info is withheld from would-be recipients while they languish near the bottom of the waiting list.

Little did Donnell Reid know that she was benefiting from Kravinsky's mission. She's obvious grateful that eight years of dialysis has come to an end. He considers Reid "a beautiful soul. She is my family."

Though it escapes his detractors why he went through all this, Kravinsky states, "I made an appropriate rational response to this remediable disparity. We could eliminate poverty globally if we chose to."

I asked Kravinsky if he ever read God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater. "No, maybe I'll read it."

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Bus 174 (Sandro's Story)

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

A PNN ReViEwSfoRtHeReVoLuTioN on the film; Bus 174

by Andrew DellaRocca

I live almost directly on the 21 line. The 24 Divisadero is also close to
my house; less than a block away. I went to see an art exhibit at the Yerba
Buena Center not too long ago. I don't remember who the artist was, but he
built a structure in an empty room striped with bright fluorescent colors.
I read about his exhibit, and apparently a component of it was a Muni bus,
which he had decorated in the same colors as the large structure he
constructed in Yerba Buena, and which is currently zipping around the
streets of San Francisco. Nothing could be "more proletariat" than the city
bus, the description of the exhibit stated. I took a picture of the 5
Fulton once. It was part of a series of what only turned out to be 6
photographs of the city of San Francisco, which I had taken to show my
girlfriend, my daughter's mother, what where I lived looked like. They live
in Brazil. I showed the picture I had taken, which could be viewed on a
viewscreen on the back of the camera, to her brother, Ti. The camera has a
neat component that allows you to zoom in, and so I zoomed in on the arms
that extended from the bus's top, and explained to him that some of the
buses, there, in San Francisco, are powered by electricity. He seemed
impressed, having never heard of such a thing.

On Monday, I took the 22 Fillmore to the Roxie cinema. A movie was playing
there called Bus 174, a Brazilian documentary which I was about to see for
the second time. I sat in the almost empty theater and watched the film
scroll over the skyline of Rio de Janeiro. I love Rio, spent a month there
once, and get an almost juvenile set of butterflies in my stomach whenever I
see images of it. But this time, like the first time I saw the film, the
aerial footage provoked in me a feeling not of excitement, but of anxiety.
I knew what the film was going to be about. As the camera cruised over the
city, the favelas (slums) came into view, dripping down the mountain slopes,
as they do, like the wax of a burning candle. And the scroll continued,
small, simply constructed houses, by the tens of thousands, covering most of
the land, with a few patches of green protruding every now and again, upon
which the grade of the slopes was too steep, even, for desperate squatters
to build. And then beyond that appears the Zona Sul, where the money is,
and its well-kempt apartment buildings, and the beaches, and the famous
Jesus Christ statue atop the Corcovado, and the famous "Sugar Loaf" rock
which emerges out of the ocean as if in a rage.

During my first month in Salvador, in 2000, I stayed at a small hotel in
Barra owned by a Chinese couple. I was given a musty corner room, in order
to save space for a large group of college students, who were there
attending a symposium. They were Cariocas, from the city of Rio, and
arrived on a bus. During that week, an incident occurred in Rio that was
broadcast live on the national news. A man had taken a bus and it's
passengers hostage. The ordeal lasted through the afternoon and into the
evening. I remember seeing the face of the hostage taker and wondering to
myself "how'd he get so angry?"

Bus 174, in Rio, passes the Botanical Gardens, in Zona Sul. This was the
bus that was taken hostage in 2000, the situation that I watched live on
Brazilian television, and twice again in the form of documentary cinema.
After the man had taken the bus and a half dozen of its passengers, all
female, hostage, the police arrived on the scene, disorganized and
unprepared. The media followed soon after. The perpetrator had, in the
mean time, already fired a round out of the bus's windshield, in the
direction of some of the officers. He ordered a hostage to write messages
on the windows with her lipstick. "Ele vai matar agente," one of them read.
The situation began during the day, but came to a conclusion several hours
into the evening, passing live on television for everyone in Brazil to see.

Bus 174, the documentary, explored the root causes of what happened that day
in the botanical gardens. Through interviews and filmed documents, I
learned about Sandro, the perpetrator. He had grown up on the streets after
his mother was murdered in front of him. At Candelaria, a square where many
street kids used to gather and sleep, Sandro found a place of refuge and
community. One evening, two men appeared with guns, and mowed down several
of the children that slept there. Sandro survived. The children claimed
that the two men were police officers. Sandro's life, mirrored in Brazil by
so many other lives, tells a dark tale.

Candelaria was not an isolated event. For decades, Brazil's city
governments had been accused of direct involvement in massacres and
disappearances of street kids. There had been talk of police death squads,
and not all of this talk had been condemnatory. Many, Padilha's documentary
demonstrates, applauded the massacre at Candelaria. Street kids were viewed
as thieves and criminals, deserving no better. Mainstream Brazilian culture
often did not acknowledge their status as victims.

Sandro, however, that day in the botanical gardens, had finally acquired the
pulpit. He brought attention to all of those details that nobody wanted to
hear about. He reminded people of the massacre at Candelaria, personified
the rage of years of invisibility as a homeless child. The footage of the
Bus 174 affair, vivid and abundant, and collected for the film, documented
that rage and the institutional response to it. The unprepared police force
had not been able to control the situation. Almost anybody had been able to
approach the bus, and many did, cameras in hand. The police, not having
radios, communicated using hand signals. The officer in charge had to
behave in a manner that contradicted all of his training, because city
officials, who were watching the drama unfold on television, worried about
how such action might be viewed on the television screen. They communicated
orders to him in an unenlightened effort to reduce the backlash that the
exposure might bring to the mayor's office. When Sandro finally walked off
of the bus holding a hostage at gunpoint, two bullets meant for Sandro from
one of the police officers entered the hostage's body instead, resulting in
her death. The crowd screamed for Sandro's execution. Their demands were
met immediately. The arresting officers strangled Sandro to death in their
car.

"The character of a society," said one of the officers interviewed by
Padilha, "is always revealed in a hostage situation."

The debacle in the botanical gardens brought attention to Brazil's inability
to care for the thousands of children that sleep on its streets. The
documentary charted the life of the normal street kid, as personified in
Sandro, his experiences not at all being unique. Sandro was often thrown
into the juvenile detention system and beaten. Sandro sniffed glue, as many
sniffed glue. When I walk the Brazilian streets, the vision of a young
shoeless adolescent, guarding a small bottle of glue underneath his shirt,
is a permanent backdrop. The glue supposedly diminishes the pangs that
accompany hunger. Sandro resorted to begging and thieving for a living,
like thousands of other children have done. Sandro slept on the street,
where many other kids have slept, and where passersby, on occasion, for
entertainment, drop boulders from a torn up sidewalk on the sleeping
children's heads, breaking their skulls. When Sandro was older, he was
thrown into a prison cell, where fifteen others had shared with him the
space designed to hold six. The cell reached temperatures of 120 degrees
Fahrenheit. There was so little space, that inmates had to hang hammocks
from the ceilings and remain suspended above their cellmates, who rested on
the floor below. And Sandro was subjected to the anonymity that falls upon
all of the street kids, until one day he decided to make himself known,
shatter his invisibility, and emerge from obscurity the way Sugar Loaf
bursts from the water.

Though the interviews with police officers, street kids, social workers, and
thieves, and the footage of the 174 affair were extensive, Padilha
effectively left out, despite my yearning for one, but to the advantage of
the film and its effectiveness as a whole, a villain. The documentary
angered and saddened me. My knees found their way to my chest. I sat there
in the theater hugging them, tense, wanting to point my finger, to allocate
blame, to know the villain. But, who was the villain that day? Was it the
police? But they were untrained, inexperienced, underpaid, and ill-equiped.
Was it Sandro? He had been a victim all of his life; witness to his
mother's brutal murder, subjected to the invisibility and brutality that
accompanies life on the streets and in poverty, survivor of a massacre. His
actions, though not justified, were a response to all of that. No, this day
could not be broken down so simply. There was no clear villain, this was
not a Brazilian novella. This was the real world: enormous in its
complexity, extensive in its conflicts, and absent of simple answers.
Despite it's profundity, the documentary was crushing.

This does not mean that the film was devoid of valuable lessons, however.

By establishing Sandro's life as a tragic series of cause and effect
relationships that led to the 174 affair, Padilha indicted many specific
components of Brazilian institutions and society. He did not paint a vague
picture of economic disparity and class struggle, but instead vividly
portrayed pieces of the larger pie that might be tweaked to lessen the
brutal reality of an impoverished subculture. By exposing the conditions
under which street kids are incarcerated and then released (often the result
of an uprising and subsequent mass escape), I was left without a doubt that
the juvenile detention system contributes to the violence of Brazilian
society instead of helping to alleviate it. The same can be said of the
overcrowding of the prison system and the composition of the police force.
Bus 174 portrayed Brazil as a country submersed in a snowballing series of
small conflicts, despite its official status as a nation at peace.

I took the 22 Fillmore home that night. I had to walk down 16th a little
until I reached the bus stop. The bars on the street were lively. People
bounced between them, laughing with friends and chatting on cell phones.
One girl I passed leaned against a parking meter, adjusting her stilettos.
I couldn't stand to look at her. I didn't want to talk to anyone, Padilha's
film still brewed inside of me. I only wanted to go home and sit down,
silent.

The Cariocas, a few nights after the incident, came back from a party and
saw their bus driver sleeping with a prostitute in the bus. They snapped a
photograph, which set off a flash. The bus driver, in a fury, pulled out a
pistol and waved it at the group of voyeurs. After that, most of them
decided against taking the bus home. They took a plane instead.

I take the 24 Divisadero to my job on the weekends. Many of us in the
neighborhood refer to the bus as the "phantom 24". You never know when it
is going to arrive. Each weekend, I worry that the 24 will not appear. I
can never be sure if I will get to work on time.

Buses can have such a profound affect on our lives sometimes. Bus 174, in
Rio, affected an entire nation.

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Feel good Movie or Radical Media Resistance?

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

Illin and chillin looks at Radio and other movies on people of color with disabilities

by Leroy Moore Jr. ED Disability Advocates of Minorities Org.

Although many movie critic reviews of the recent
movie, Radio, starring Cuba Gooding Jr. as James
Robert Kennedy, a developmentally disabled African
American in a small town of South Carolina, has been
lukewarm and thrown into the feel good trash can, I'm here to say the commercial alone blew me away!

As an African American
disabled activist, writer and researcher, I felt
overjoyed to see a true story about a real Black
disabled individual on the big screen.
Newspapers, from the New York Times, San Francisco
Chronicle to the Bay Guardian & East Bay Express all
had almost the same review on the movie; Radio, a feel
good movie. That might be true but I ask have these
movie critics followed the slow evolution of Black
characters in leading disabled roles? Radio might be
a feel good\inspirational movie but how many Hollywood
movies do you see a Black actor or actress in a leading
disabled role?

In the last ten years, disabled
leading characters are beginning to look like me but the
majority have been cast in a negative light or in
harsh reality that many times shapes the lives of many
Black disabled people. For example, the 1992 movie
Water Dance starring Wesley Snipes as a new
quadriplegic who was a drunk or the 2001 movie
Cavemans Valentine starring Samuel L. Jackson as a
mentally ill homeless ex artist who lives in a cave in
Grand Central Park of New York or the 2002 movie
Unbreakable based on a comic book. Guess who plays
the physically and mentally disabled villain? Yes,
Samuel L Jackson plays Elijah; a disabled comic book
collector who was born with a condition that makes his
bones easy to break and because of this he was
isolated, living in a cosmic magazine world. He goes
around killing people in his wheelchair or cane trying
to find the person, Bruce Willis, who is opposite of
him, unbreakable.

Only recently have Black disabled roles in Hollywood
changed to positive. For example, in 1999 the
Bone Collector starring Denzel Washington as a
detective. He becomes disabled and remarkably keeps
his job and gets the girl at the end. And in 2000 the
documentary of a Black blind blues singer, Paul Pena
in Genghis Blues. In 2002 we saw the life of Frida
Kohl. You can also point out that the majority of
Hollywood movies with leading Black disabled roles are
all men.

Black Disabled uplifting movies or what some mainstream
media critics call feel good movies are playing catch
up to movies like Rain man, Almighty, A Beautiful
Mind, The Shine and the recent movie, Station Agent.
The list is endless of leading disabled roles with
White actors and actress. From invisibility to a
drunk, to a homeless mentally ill man to a psycho
physically disabled killer to a top notch investigator
to a successful blue singer to finally a feel good &
true story about a Black developmentally disabled man
who loves football. The slow, very slow ongoing
evolving disabled roles for Black actors and actresses
is forming in front of our eyes it might be slow but
it is expanding.

So go ahead and tug my heart and pull down my tears
because I dont care. I feel proud to see my Black
brothers and sisters on the big screen in disabled
roles especially in a positive uplifting light like
Radio.

Stay tune for a look back on movies with disabled
roles in the year 2003 surprising there were a lot and
more people of color in roles.

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