Story Archives 2007

HOMEFULNESS- A Real Solution to Houselessness

09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

A sweat equity, permanent co-housing, education, arts and social change project for houseless and formerly houseless families and individuals.

by Staff Writer

PROJECT PLAN

Populations served annually :

  • 350-500 Houseless/very low-income families
  • 400-600 Houseless/very low-income children 0-12 years old
  • 200-300 Houseless/fragile/very low-income youth 12-18 years old
  • EQUITY "CAPITAL" CAMPAIGN BUDGET: 2.5 MILLION

    I. The Site Proposal;

    Permanent housing units for houseless and formerly houseless families following a model of co-housing which includes the following;

  • A site for F.A.M.I.L.Y.(Family Access to Multi-cultural Intergenerational Learning with our Youth) which is a revolutionary on-site child care and education project for houseless children and families which incorporates a social justice and arts , multi-cultural and multi-lingual curriculum for families and children 2-102
  • A site for POOR Magazine, The Race, Poverty, and Media Justice Institute, Community Newsroom and all of POOR’s indigenous community arts programming
  • A site for Uncle Al & Mama Dee’s Cafe; a multi-generational community arts and social justice eating and performance space
  • II. The Building

    A Mixed Use/C3 Zoned, multiple units or Loft space that has space for all of the above

    III. Funding;

    Equity "Capital" Campaign budget: 2.5 million

    Fundraising will occur through an Equity campaign launched by POOR Magazine.
    As an act of resistance to the hierarchal and unjust distribution of wealth and resources locally and globally, POOR Magazine is formerly calling the fundraising effort for HOMEFULNESS, an Equity Campaign, instead of a Capital Campaign, as through equity sharing, not tied to financial resources, we will be creating permanent and lasting solutions to houselessness for families in poverty who have been displaced, evicted, gentrified and destabilized out of their indigenous lands and communities.

    For more information on how to become involved with this project please call 415.863.6306.

    To donate to the Homefulness Project, please send checks to POOR Magazine 1095 Market St. #307 San Francisco, CA 94103

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    US Economy Leaving Record Numbers in Severe Poverty

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    The percentage of poor Americans who are living in severe poverty has reached a 32-year high, millions of working Americans are falling closer to the poverty line and the gulf between the nation's "haves" and "have-nots" continues to widen.

    by Tony Pugh

    A McClatchy Newspapers analysis of 2005 census figures, the latest available, found that nearly 16 million Americans are living in deep or severe poverty. A family of four with two children and an annual income of less than $9,903 - half the federal poverty line - was considered severely poor in 2005. So were individuals who made less than $5,080 a year.

    The McClatchy analysis found that the number of severely poor Americans grew by 26 percent from 2000 to 2005. That's 56 percent faster than the overall poverty population grew in the same period. McClatchy's review also found statistically significant increases in the percentage of the population in severe poverty in 65 of 215 large U.S. counties, and similar increases in 28 states. The review also suggested that the rise in severely poor residents isn't confined to large urban counties but extends to suburban and rural areas.

    The plight of the severely poor is a distressing sidebar to an unusual economic expansion. Worker productivity has increased dramatically since the brief recession of 2001, but wages and job growth have lagged behind. At the same time, the share of national income going to corporate profits has dwarfed the amount going to wages and salaries. That helps explain why the median household income of working-age families, adjusted for inflation, has fallen for five straight years.

    These and other factors have helped push 43 percent of the nation's 37 million poor people into deep poverty - the highest rate since at least 1975.

    The share of poor Americans in deep poverty has climbed slowly but steadily over the last three decades. But since 2000, the number of severely poor has grown "more than any other segment of the population," according to a recent study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

    "That was the exact opposite of what we anticipated when we began," said Dr. Steven Woolf of Virginia Commonwealth University, who co-authored the study. "We're not seeing as much moderate poverty as a proportion of the population. What we're seeing is a dramatic growth of severe poverty."

    The growth spurt, which leveled off in 2005, in part reflects how hard it is for low-skilled workers to earn their way out of poverty in an unstable job market that favors skilled and educated workers. It also suggests that social programs aren't as effective as they once were at catching those who fall into economic despair.

    About one in three severely poor people are under age 17, and nearly two out of three are female. Female-headed families with children account for a large share of the severely poor.

    Nearly two out of three people (10.3 million) in severe poverty are white, but blacks (4.3 million) and Hispanics of any race (3.7 million) make up disproportionate shares. Blacks are nearly three times as likely as non-Hispanic whites to be in deep poverty, while Hispanics are roughly twice as likely.

    Washington, D.C., the nation's capital, has a higher concentration of severely poor people - 10.8 percent in 2005 - than any of the 50 states, topping even hurricane-ravaged Mississippi and Louisiana, with 9.3 percent and 8.3 percent, respectively. Nearly six of 10 poor District residents are in extreme poverty.

    'I DON'T ASK FOR NOTHING'

    A few miles from the Capitol Building, 60-year-old John Treece pondered his life in deep poverty as he left a local food pantry with two bags of free groceries.

    Plagued by arthritis, back problems and myriad ailments from years of manual labor, Treece has been unable to work full time for 15 years. He's tried unsuccessfully to get benefits from the Social Security Administration, which he said disputes his injuries and work history.

    In 2006, an extremely poor individual earned less than $5,244 a year, according to federal poverty guidelines. Treece said he earned about that much in 2006 doing odd jobs.

    Wearing shoes with holes, a tattered plaid jacket and a battered baseball cap, Treece lives hand-to-mouth in a $450-a-month room in a nondescript boarding house in a high-crime neighborhood. Thanks to food stamps, the food pantry and help from relatives, Treece said he never goes hungry. But toothpaste, soap, toilet paper and other items that require cash are tougher to come by.

    "Sometimes it makes you want to do the wrong thing, you know," Treece said, referring to crime. "But I ain't a kid no more. I can't do no time. At this point, I ain't got a lotta years left."

    Treece remains positive and humble despite his circumstances.

    "I don't ask for nothing," he said. "I just thank the Lord for this day and ask that tomorrow be just as blessed."

    Like Treece, many who did physical labor during their peak earning years have watched their job prospects dim as their bodies gave out.

    David Jones, the president of the Community Service Society of New York City, an advocacy group for the poor, testified before the House Ways and Means Committee last month that he was shocked to discover how pervasive the problem was.

    "You have this whole cohort of, particularly African-Americans of limited skills, men, who can't participate in the workforce because they don't have skills to do anything but heavy labor," he said.

    'A PERMANENT UNDERCLASS'

    Severe poverty is worst near the Mexican border and in some areas of the South, where 6.5 million severely poor residents are struggling to find work as manufacturing jobs in the textile, apparel and furniture-making industries disappear. The Midwestern Rust Belt and areas of the Northeast also have been hard hit as economic restructuring and foreign competition have forced numerous plant closings.

    At the same time, low-skilled immigrants with impoverished family members are increasingly drawn to the South and Midwest to work in the meatpacking, food processing and agricultural industries.

    These and other factors such as increased fluctuations in family incomes and illegal immigration have helped push 43 percent of the nation's 37 million poor people into deep poverty - the highest rate in at least 32 years.

    "What appears to be taking place is that, over the long term, you have a significant permanent underclass that is not being impacted by anti-poverty policies," said Michael Tanner, the director of Health and Welfare Studies at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.

    Arloc Sherman, a senior researcher at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal think tank, disagreed. "It doesn't look like a growing permanent underclass," said Sherman, whose organization has chronicled the growth of deep poverty. "What you see in the data are more and more single moms with children who lose their jobs and who aren't being caught by a safety net anymore."

    About 1.1 million such families account for roughly 2.1 million deeply poor children, Sherman said.

    After fleeing an abusive marriage in 2002, 42-year-old Marjorie Sant moved with her three children from Arkansas to a seedy boarding house in Raleigh, N.C., where the four shared one bedroom. For most of 2005, they lived off food stamps and the $300 a month in Social Security Disability Income for her son with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Teachers offered clothes to Sant's children. Saturdays meant lunch at the Salvation Army.

    "To depend on other people to feed and clothe your kids is horrible," Sant said. "I found myself in a hole and didn't know how to get out."

    In the summer of 2005, social workers warned that she'd lose her children if her home situation didn't change. Sant then brought her two youngest children to a temporary housing program at the Raleigh Rescue Mission while her oldest son moved to California to live with an adult daughter from a previous marriage.

    So for 10 months, Sant learned basic office skills. She now lives in a rented house, works two jobs and earns about $20,400 a year

    Sant is proud of where she is, but she knows that "if something went wrong, I could well be back to where I was."

    'I'M GETTING NOWHERE FAST'

    As more poor Americans sink into severe poverty, more individuals and families living within $8,000 above or below the poverty line also have seen their incomes decline. Steven Woolf of Virginia Commonwealth University attributes this to what he calls a "sinkhole effect" on income.

    "Just as a sinkhole causes everything above it to collapse downward, families and individuals in the middle and upper classes appear to be migrating to lower-income tiers that bring them closer to the poverty threshold," Woolf wrote in the study.

    Before Hurricane Katrina, Rene Winn of Biloxi, Miss., earned $28,000 a year as an administrator for the Boys and Girls Club. But for 11 months in 2006, she couldn't find steady work and wouldn't take a fast-food job. As her opportunities dwindled, Winn's frustration grew.

    "Some days I feel like the world is mine and I can create my own destiny," she said. "Other days I feel a desperate feeling. Like I gotta' hurry up. Like my career is at a stop. Like I'm getting nowhere fast. And that's not me because I've always been a positive person."

    After relocating to New Jersey for 10 months after the storm, Winn returned to Biloxi in September because of medical and emotional problems with her son. She and her two youngest children moved into her sister's home along with her mother, who has Alzheimer's. With her sister, brother-in-law and their two children, eight people now share a three-bedroom home.

    Winn said she recently took a job as a technician at the state health department. The hourly job pays $16,120 a year. That's enough to bring her out of severe poverty and just $122 shy of the $16,242 needed for a single mother with two children to escape poverty altogether under current federal guidelines.

    Winn eventually wants to transfer to a higher-paying job, but she's thankful for her current position.

    "I'm very independent and used to taking care of my own, so I don't like the fact that I have to depend on the state. I want to be able to do it myself."

    The Census Bureau's Survey of Income and Program Participation shows that, in a given month, only 10 percent of severely poor Americans received Temporary Assistance for Needy Families in 2003 - the latest year available - and that only 36 percent received food stamps.

    Many could have exhausted their eligibility for welfare or decided that the new program requirements were too onerous. But the low participation rates are troubling because the worst byproducts of poverty, such as higher crime and violence rates and poor health, nutrition and educational outcomes, are worse for those in deep poverty.

    Over the last two decades, America has had the highest or near-highest poverty rates for children, individual adults and families among 31 developed countries, according to the Luxembourg Income Study, a 23-year project that compares poverty and income data from 31 industrial nations.

    "It's shameful," said Timothy Smeeding, the former director of the study and the current head of the Center for Policy Research at Syracuse University. "We've been the worst performer every year since we've been doing this study."

    With the exception of Mexico and Russia, the U.S. devotes the smallest portion of its gross domestic product to federal anti-poverty programs, and those programs are among the least effective at reducing poverty, the study found. Again, only Russia and Mexico do worse jobs.

    One in three Americans will experience a full year of extreme poverty at some point in his or her adult life, according to long-term research by Mark Rank, a professor of social welfare at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

    An estimated 58 percent of Americans between the ages of 20 and 75 will spend at least a year in poverty, Rank said. Two of three will use a public assistance program between ages 20 and 65, and 40 percent will do so for five years or more.

    These estimates apply only to non-immigrants. If illegal immigrants were factored in, the numbers would be worse, Rank said.

    "It would appear that for most Americans the question is no longer if, but rather when, they will experience poverty. In short, poverty has become a routine and unfortunate part of the American life course," Rank wrote in a recent study. "Whether these patterns will continue throughout the first decade of 2000 and beyond is difficult to say ... but there is little reason to think that this trend will reverse itself any time soon."

    'SOMETHING REAL AND TROUBLING'

    Most researchers and economists say federal poverty estimates are a poor tool to gauge the complexity of poverty. The numbers don't factor in assistance from government anti-poverty programs, such as food stamps, housing subsidies and the Earned Income Tax Credit, all of which increase incomes and help pull people out of poverty.

    But federal poverty measures also exclude work-related expenses and necessities such as day care, transportation, housing and health care costs, which eat up large portions of disposable income, particularly for low-income families.

    Alternative poverty measures that account for these shortcomings typically inflate or deflate official poverty statistics. But many of those alternative measures show the same kind of long-term trends as the official poverty data.

    Robert Rector, a senior researcher with the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, questioned the growth of severe poverty, saying that census data become less accurate farther down the income ladder. He said many poor people, particularly single mothers with boyfriends, underreport their income by not including cash gifts and loans. Rector said he's seen no data that suggest increasing deprivation among the very poor.

    Arloc Sherman of the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities argues that the growing number of severely poor is an indisputable fact.

    "When we check against more complete government survey data and administrative records from the benefit programs themselves, they confirm that this trend is real," Sherman said. He added that even among the poor, severely poor people have a much tougher time paying their bills. "That's another sign to me that we're seeing something real and troubling," Sherman said.

    McClatchy correspondent Barbara Barrett contributed to this report.

    BY THE NUMBERS

    States with the most people in severe poverty:

    California - 1.9 million

    Texas - 1.6 million

    New York - 1.2 million

    Florida - 943,670

    Illinois - 681,786

    Ohio - 657,415

    Pennsylvania - 618,229

    Michigan - 576,428

    Georgia - 562,014

    North Carolina - 523,511

    Source: U.S. Census Bureau

    © 2007 McClatchy Washington Bureau and wire service sources

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    G.A. Blues, Life Extension for all.

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Gen. Assistance hassles

    From small to large life X lives.
    Selfish Altrusim no oxymoron/contradiction
    in terms.

    by Josph Bolden

    G.A. Blues.

    The above words to many in my predicament is what we’ve go or have gone through while on General Assistance better known as G.A.

    From the jobs or careers that fall,or women,men that kicked up out of shared living spaces,and all sorts of unforeseen errors in judgement many of us end up there.

    The rules are more fluid now but there are people who will always view us as lazy, booze, drug, or sex addicted wrecks who are a waste of skin.

    These same folks are "Falling Down"
    it is only then they notice like everything else it’s a mixed bag of people on the dole more and more of them are sober, non drug users as I struggling to get back into regular work.

    Recently, a few weeks past persons who are Workfare/Alternative Workfare participant’s work in non profit organizations, food pantries, places other than automatic street cleaning or D.P.W.[Dept. Of Public Works].

    Just remembered, signed a contract not revealing hours of sick leave. Oh, well someone who hasn’t signed said contract can say what I cannot but what I can do is this.
    Reveal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). So look below folks.

    Just remembered, signed a contract not revealing hours of sick leave. Oh, well someone who hasn’t signed said contract can say what I cannot but what I can do is this.
    Reveal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). So look below folks.

    I want to thank the folks

    www.dol.gov/dol/topic/workhours/sickleave.htm

    Work Hours

    Sick Leave

    Currently, there are no federal legal requirements for paid sick leave. For companies subject to the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), the Act does require unpaid sick leave.

    FMLA provides provides for up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for certain medical situations for either the employee or a member of the employee's immediate family. In many instances paid leave may be substituted for unpaid FMLA leave.

    Employees are eligible to take FMLA leave if they have worked for their employer for at least 12 months, and have worked for at least 1,250 hours over the previous 12 months, and work at a location where at least 50 employees are employed by the employer within 75 miles.

    Well, that helps. Now, I’ve been thinking of T shirts all colors, sizes, and shapes. I don’t know about it as a business but have done some silk screening.

    The one thing I do know there is a lot more to do with this business than has been done. So I’ll keep it under my hat.

    That’s for me, everyone take care and as Last Week’s Asian Week
    what can I say, the thought came before the deed and its like an X Files show’s

    "Apology as Policy" which means do the error, mistake, or misspeak, misspoke, apologize for quick gloss over and make like it never happens until… it happens yet again.

    That’s all I’m sayin’ no wasting time on it I want life extension and I want it NOW! This war drains the best of our people in mind, body, and spirit. Instead of spending on death – life should be our highest priority.

    Again, it doesn’t matter what I think, don’t ever give me a chance to make a few billion, it would go to an ultimate question:

    Can we alive now no matter our age in relatively good health;
    Systematically improve our lives by changing microorganisms in our gut to mostly symbiotic and less parasitic from their bacteria, virus’s, to other living organisms theoretically improving ourselves from interior to exterior?

    That what I would do if I had billions to work with but its selfish altruism: Help yourself and others along the way.

    Example: you find what helps or makes the human body/brain more
    efficient and when little or now side effects only then is F.D.A.
    Federal Drug Administrationin formed and if they take longer than six months to a year other quasi avenues are explored to get vital medical info into public forum for access along with science and technologists ethic panels.

    In the long run it will be up to us individually to decide our own fates.

    But that’s just me, I have yet to earn a few hundred thousand let along cool million dollars.

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    US Cherokees vote to expel Descendants of Slaves

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    by Published on Yahoo News

    Native American Cherokees voted to expel descendants of black slaves from their tribe nation in a special election that has prompted charges of racism, according to returns made public early Sunday.
    But a vote of 77 percent to 23 percent, the Cherokee Nation in Oklahoma adopted Saturday an amendment to their constitution
    that strips membership from so-called "Freedmen," those descended from slaves once owned by Cherokees, blacks who were
    married to Cherokees and children of mixed-race families.

    "The Cherokee people exercised the most basic democratic right, the right to vote," Chad Smith, Principal Chief of the
    Cherokee Nation, said in a statement. "Their voice is clear as to who should be citizens of the Cherokee Nation. No one else
    has the right to make that determination."
    However, opponents of the amendment say it was a racist project designed to deny the distribution of US government funds
    and tribal revenue to those with African-American heritage, US media reported.

    "This is a sad chapter in Cherokee history," Taylor Keen, a Cherokee tribal council member who opposes the amendment, told
    the New York Times.
    "But this is not my Cherokee Nation. My Cherokee Nation is one that honors all parts of her past."
    Advocates of changing the 141-year-old treaty rules defining who is a Cherokee say the tribal nation has a sovereign right to
    decide citizenship and that other tribes base membership on blood lines.

    The Cherokee Nation, which ranks as the second-largest tribe behind the Navajo, has some 250,000 to 270,000 members and
    is growing rapidly. Members are entitled to benefits from the US federal government and tribal services, including medical and
    housing aid and scholarships.
    Cherokees, along with several other tribes, held black slaves and allied themselves with the Confederacy during the US civil
    war. After the war, the federal government in an 1866 treaty ordered the slaves freed.

    In 1983, the Cherokee Nation expelled many descendants of slaves as members but a Cherokee tribunal ruled last year that
    the Freedmen were fully-fledged citizens with voting rights. That court decision prompted Saturday's special vote.
    Native American tribes recognized by the United States government have the right to self-determination and authority similar to
    US states.

    Election results will remain unofficial until certified by the Cherokee Nation Election Commission, but officials said percentages
    were not expected to change significantly.

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    HELLthcare at Kaiser Permanente

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    A man is denied access to health care from Kaiser after being told he has "six months to live."

    by Olivia Colt/POOR Race, Poverty and Media Justice Intern

    'Kaiser killed me,' said William Fortson, a guest speaker at POOR magazines monthly Community Newsroom meeting.'Kaiser killed me.' Say what?? Is this the same Kaiser that has spent millions of dollars in a marketing campaign telling us how well they take care of us; the same Kaiser insurance my job supplies me with?

    William Fortson was diagnosed with terminal cancer of the liver in October of 2006 and was told stoically by his doctors that he had 'six months to live and that he [the specialist] thought it was better for me to enjoy the quality of my life' not the quantity. It is now March of 2007 and William is miraculously standing before us relaying his incredible tale, with his wife Mary, about the injustices of the HMO health care system for which he spent 34 years paying for as part of his employee benefit package. William has an eight cm tumor on his liver, a tumor too big to cut out or to transplant organs, too much trouble to do radiation or kemo, too much trouble for his healthcare provider to care for the well fare of him and his family.

    This saga does not begin in late 2006, but rather 6 years earlier when William was diagnosed with Hepatitis C. Like any good patient Bill Fortson went to all his appointments, followed doctors' orders and regiments, and monitored his health to the best of his ability. He played the game and followed all the rules, yet as his pain began to increase in his abdomen, his doctor at Kaiser disappeared into thin air; this resulted in his misplaced medical record and improper diagnoses for his pain for a little over a year.

    Americans pay on average $5, 267 annually for health care insurance, this is roughly 42% more than any other industrialized western nation pays in medical insurance. Americans spend more per capita in health insurance then any other nation in the world. The United States is one of the most developed countries on earth yet 32 million Americans receive inadequate coverage, doctors are not equipped with the most up to date technologies, and as a result must perform more expensive and invasive surgeries. Americans are paying a third of every dollar they earn for health insurance; but what are we really getting for all these co-pays, like in William Forston's case, an HMO that refuses to pay for treatment that is covered in his employee benefit package.

    William Fortson has a family of three; a beautiful wife Mary and a daughter Sakara whom will be graduating from college this May. And yet, despite all of his nest eggs, William and his family are facing the most challenging experiences of their life. Kaiser refused to provide William with the proper treatment or diagnose that would help extend his life. Furthermore, upon changing HMOs to Pacific Care, William is being withheld from receiving treatment from M.D. Andersen cancer treatment facility in Houston, Texas the number two treatment facility in the nation. Pacific Care, the Fortsons current HMO, covers treatment at this facility yet they refuse to shell out the money to help pay for William's treatment.

    A Harvard study recently showed that half of all Americans go bankrupt from medical bills. The Fortsons do not care about the cost of treatment as long as it means that William will continue to live and not be resigned to a death sentence. 'They may feel that my father's life is not worth their trouble but we are not asking for any free-hand outs,' said Sakara. The irony is astounding, we pay so much for the 'best' money can buy and still can callously throw someone's life away because they [the insurance companies] need to 'penny-pinch', to put it bluntly, because they are cheap. 'If I have too, I will stand on a BART platform with flyers denouncing Kaiser and telling my husband's story,' Mary told us as she relayed her side of the story in dealing with the harassment and brush off of the Kaiser Permante and Pacific Care personnel and medical staff.

    A few days ago a 12 year old homeless boy Deamonte Driver died from an infection from an abscessed tooth in Maryland. In response Congress has decided that they will allocate a reported 40 million more dollars to health care centers and departments throughout the country to prevent this from happening again. Instead of creating policies to affect change Congress is continuing to feed a broken and corrupt system. Coupled with a proposed bill by Vice President Dick Cheney, whom walked in and out of a hospital in one day recently for a blood clot, to place a malpractice cap for class-action lawsuits at $250k; this ensures that the insurance companies remain well protected from having to pay for the majority damages they incur on their patients. This bill will allegedly 'free' the HMOs from the litigation that is preventing them from offering and providing their constituents with the best possible health care they can afford; the same health care that put William Fortson on death row.

    William Fortson to this day is being given the run around by physicians and HMOs while his hour glass of time is quickly running out. The Fortsons have reached out to their community, thinking that support would be overwhelming, but none would listen, no one cares. Finally, after being offered pro-bono services from Felicia Curran, the Fortsons attorney, William has an emergency appoint with the UCSF Medical Center in San Francisco. William is not a guinea pig, he is not some careless object, he is a human being, with a wife and a family. He was living the American dream, or so he thought. William's daughter put it best in a letter she addressed to Anderson Copper 360, 'My father qualifies but no one cares. If a person has health care and can not get help, where else can we turn?'

    *KAISER KILLS*!!! Please join the Fortsons and other families and
    individuals who have been denied care and/or been subjected to
    HELLTHCARE at Kaiser at a rally and press conference on Tuesday April
    10th @ 9:00 am in front of Kaiser Permanente Medical offices at 2238
    Geary street ( near Divisadero) in San Francisco. Rally sponsored by
    POOR Magazine/PoorNewsNEtwork.For more information or to sign on as a
    co-sponsor or speaker please call POOR at (415) 863-6306

    Tags

    After Bush/Obama Times Pt. 1

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Too Many Lives,Loves Lost.

    This Will End Soon.

    Are you Ready For, The Next Phase
    Folks?

    by Josph Bolden

    After Bush/Obama Times PT. 1

    Between listening to a guy on 106.5 FM,reading the Emortality series[Look up Conquest of Death by Author Alvin Silvertein. No aging or disease though death by accident,dying is still possible.

    The Author Brian Stableford creator of the Emortaity series
    acknowledged his debt to Silverstien for coining the phrase and it meaning.

    Basically,Emortality differs from Immortality not only in its spelling but also that the latter is a state or process of being unable to die. Emortality is a state or process of life extension yet still being able to die.
    Damn!There's always a catch.

    Oh well better get use to emortality as emergency an stopgap before true immortality gets here.

    What has any of the above to do with Bush and Obama? Not much except that Born-Again-Bush,Vice Prez’ Dick,Tom Delay,and all his

    crony friends have caused death,destruction, slowed the pace not only alternate energy sciences but also medical advancement!

    Think back folks, between dead prez Ronald Reagon’s decade long ban on Biotechnology and Bush’s Born Again-War Prez-Fear- Stem Cell-Stolen Cash administration is over you know we will celebrate that great day!

    Unless Marshal Law is enacted to keep Bush in legally for illegal means.

    Most if not all the technologies will spring forth. Maybe veterans, and their families who’ve sacrificed time,risked, limb,lives,some lost forever will be the first besides a few citizens to partake of

    stem cell and or tissue repair technology for nerve repair,synaptic cloning giving back what was lost of motor or higher brain function though some memories are forever lost.

    This is what I wait for: The long way back from this gray tinged tunnel where we’ve been told the applied science to help people in need and save lives isn't possible on religous,ethical themes.

    Crapola on all that static folks,our lives,our collective or individual choices!

    I do believe the best way to win this socalled war is withdraw our troops

    Like that movie where a supercomputer on Nuclear War says:"Currious game,best way to win is not to play."

    After all this started because one man’s thirst to be a WAR PRESIDENT AND SCARE US WITH 911 OVER AND OVER WHILE TAKING AWAY OUR CIVIL RIGHTS – LEFT AND RIGHT TO COIN A PHAISE.

    Tags

    After Bush/Obama Times Pt. 1

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    The long Nightmare nearly done.

    Next Admin,much work yet more fun.

    Let loose Peace,Applied Science and...

    safely bring real wonders we dare dream,make real and true.

    by Joseph Bolden

    After Bush/Obama Times PT. 1

    Between listening to a guy on 106.5 FM,reading the Emortality series[Look up Conquest of Death by Alvin Silvertein. .

    The Author Brian Stableford creator of the Emortaity series
    acknowledged his debt to Silverstien.

    Emortality differs from Immortality not by how its spelled but also its meaining [this is mine as I understand it].

    Emortality is a state or process where one does not age or ages slower, cannot contract disease but still able to die.

    Well,better get use to emortality as an emergency stopgap to life extension
    or as one Mr. Stableford characters says"Riding The Elevator To Immortality."

    Life Extended science before true immortality.

    I learn anew,to crawl before I can walk.

    I'll go being an emortal ("False Immortal")

    Before being frozen down wait until all the best applide science is there.

    But if I get too old,I'll be coolin'it on ice too

    Life's a gamble,this is the biggest one I want to play right now!

    Oh,forgot, Immortality is the inability to die.
    I like that unless one gets horridly burned and that takes years for complete skin,nerve,cell regeneration to take place.

    Pain is the same unless blocked by improved nano-medical devices.

    Great,unless you go insane because of unblocked pain before being completely healed.

    What a dreadful side of immortality but I’ll risk it.

    If a poor,no cash slob like me can survive Bush's Administration I certainly can try to snag emortality for me and those who've lived through this "Bushit"

    What has any of the above to do with Bush and Obama?

    Not much except that Born-Again-Bush,Vice Prez’ Dick,Tom Delay,and all his

    croney friends have caused death,destruction, and have slowed the pace of not only alternate energy science but also medical advancement!

    Think back folks, between dead prez Ronald Reagon’s decade long ban on Biotechnology and Bush’s Born Again-War Prez-Fear- Stem Cell-Stolen Cash administration is over you know we will celebrate that day.

    Unless Marshal Law is enacted to keep Bush in legally for illegal means.

    Most if not all the technologies will spring forth.

    Maybe veterans, and their familes who’ve sacrificed time,risked, limb,lives,some lost forever will be the first besides a few citizens to partake of stem cell and or

    tissue repair technology for nerve repair,synaptic cloning giving back what was lost of motor or higher brain function though some memories are forever lost.

    This is what I wait for:

    The long way back from this gray tunnel where we’ve been told that the science and technologies that can save,rebuild countless lives

    cannot be done because of one man's stuborn religious myopia.

    I do believe the best way to win this socalled war is to withdraw our troops.

    After all,this insanity began because of one man’s thirst and help from a few friends to be a WAR PRESIDENT,SCARE US WITH 911 OVER AND OVER WHILE TAKING AWAY OUR CIVIL RIGHTS – LEFT AND RIGHT TO COIN A PHAISE.

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    My Brother: A New Image in Hollywood

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Bay Area movie theaters refuse to show a film that goes far beyond the common Hollywood stereotypes and accurately portrays the lives of two young African American men living with developmental disabilities.

    by Leroy Moore

    The entertainment industry has come a long way from Black paint on white faces, and a male dominated hip-hop industry. Today disabled hip-hop artists are making a name for themselves and more and more movies are actually breaking stereotypes instead of propagating them. One such film, My Brother , which has just been released by a new African American based film company in New York, Liberty Artists, tells the story of two young African American men living with developmental disabilities. The two men are portrayed by , Christopher Scott and Donovan Jennings, who are both new to the screen. The movie also stars and stars Vanessa Williams (Ugly Betty), Nashawn Kearse (Desperate Housewives), Tatum O’Neal (Dancing With The Stars, Rescue Me), Rodney Henry (The Lion King) and Fredro Starr (Save the Last Dance). Vanessa Williams comes to “My Brother” with life experiences as a mother and board member of the Special Olympics.

    “My Brother,” is an inner city story of two impoverished boys, Isaiah and James. James is developmentally disabled and played by Donovan who is an eighth-grader at Berkeley Middle School in Williamsburg, Virginia. Their mother, L'Tisha, finds herself in a tragic situation. Dying of tuberculosis, she desperately tries to get her two boys, eight and eleven at the time, adopted together. Finding that only Isaiah can be adopted L'Tisha makes the only choice she feels she can make; creating an unbreakable bond of love between the boys, and hoping that bond will get them through life. Her prayers are answered as the boys overcome impossible odds on their way to adulthood, staying as close as ever as young men dealing with life's obstacles. (www.mybrotherthemovie.com)
    As a Black disabled writer and critique of representation of Black disabled images in the media and in the artistic field, I can finally say in 2007 that the film, “My Brother,” holds up a mirror to the lives of Black young men with developmental disabilities in our society and in the Black family\community. I had a chance to talk to the writer and director of the film, Anthony Lover, as well as with Christopher Scott and Donovan Jennings’ parents, Lynette Jennings of Hampton, VA. and Brenda Scott of Houston, TX. through the internet.

    As all writers, producers and artists know creating a final product from a new, creative vision often takes years. For Mr. Lover this film was no exception. Mr. Lover worked on the concept of the film, “My Brother” , for well over four years and then spent another year of marketing and promoting. Finally the film premiered last June at the American Black Film Festival, where it won Best Picture, said Mr. Lover.

    Throughout the whole concept Mr. Lover always planned to work with actual actors who had Down Syndrome even though he was pressured to cast professional actors. We, people with disabilities, have seen big time stars play disabled roles like Cuba Gooding in Radio and Samuel Jackson in Unbreakable but we also have seen film directors who understand and make an effort in having people with disabilities in lead roles like the Farrell Brothers with The Ringer, The Wayan Brothers with Little Man and now Anthony Lover with My Brother.

    Mr. Lover went far beyond the common Hollywood stereotype of Black disabled young men, such as a gangster, like Snoop Dog in Training Days, or simply as someone that you crack jokes about. Unfortunately Mr. Lover really had to push this concept because the movie industry just didn’t understand his vision. Lover’s revolutionary thinking is so true and basic that he told me that audiences are tired of seeing the same thing over again, in a way that doesn’t speak to them about their lives, and which contains only stereotypes. After hearing his words, I realized that Lover is apart of a new crop of film directors that gets everything about the image of disability in the media, especially the image of Black males. I’m so tired of seeing the negative roles of Black disabled men as drug dealers, killers or bums or someone just to laugh at!

    Both parents of Christopher Scott and Donovan Jennings wrote that there are no role models for African Americans with disabilities on television and in the movies. Brenda Scott goes on to say, that very few TV programs or movies give a “real life” portrayal of today’s society. When they do show people with disabilities they are usual actors playing the part, or if it is a real person with disabilities it is a “token cameo” appearance. Very seldom are real people with disabilities given the opportunity to have a major role on TV or in the movies. Their TV and movie “role models” are not people that “look or act like them”. Although this interview was through the internet I could still sense the chemistry between the film maker, Lover and the family of the two lead actors through their answers to my questions.

    Like the 1971 hit song Family Affairr by Sly & the Family Stone, Lover told me that My Brother is about family, more than anything, how family is important, how women are the glue of family, and how family needs to stick together. He went on to say that the major themes are love and education, L'Tisha is teaching Young Isaiah constantly about his family, the bond with his brother, and about his need for education. I thought this film had just captured a rare and precious opportunity to make a movie with a theme of an empowered Black family with strong ties until I read the mission of the Liberty Artists.

    Liberty Artists, of which Lover is a part, is a film company on the verge of releasing a new and needed concept to the film industry: Heart-felt, family oriented films that use the African American experience as its central subject matter. Lover states that the films that Liberty Artists produce have two primary qualities in common. First, they will have storylines that document the complexity of the African American audience, rather than providing one-dimensional characters that can demean our audience. Second, our pictures will have ratings that range from G to PG-13. These rating might prohibit many of the freedoms taken with producing films geared toward the African American market such as extremely harsh language, violent behavior, and an overall destructive tone of a film, yet it compels the production to fill those voids with real substance, including multi-dimensional characters and variously layered storylines.

    In my opinion as a new film company it is impressive that the first film they produced deals with issues that is usually hush hush in the industry. Liberty Artists is a breath of fresh air for African Americans who are moviegoers. Lover’s next movie, The Promise, is about different themes, focusing on forgiveness and redemption, and about stopping the cycle of violence in African American families. Lover says, it’s about the a black father deserting his family, but surprisingly is told from the father's point of view. It’s very powerful, according to people who have read early drafts of the screenplay

    Education is not only one of the goals of Liberty Artists, but is also the career of Christopher Scott, who works in as a teacher’s assistant at the Rise School of Houston, a school for children with and without disabilities 9 months to 5 years old. According to Christopher’s parents, one of the teacher’s assistants is always a person with a disability and because of this it gives the children a role model in the classroom and gives the parents hope for the future of their children. They see what their children can do when the reach adulthood.

    Education also played a major role in Lover’s creation of My Brother. Although this was Lover’s first time working with actors with disabilities he did a lot of research before searching to find Donovan and Christopher and hopes to continue working with people with disabilities and that other film makers do the same. My Brother has build on Lover’s belief that people deserve the opportunity to share their abilities.

    Now that Chris has won the Founder’s Award at the HBO American Black Film Festival (the film won Best Picture honors there as well) and Donovan won the Youth Spirit Award at the International Family Film Festival. I asked their parents will their sons continue in the acting field. Christopher mother thinks Christopher is in a “niche” market. She knows that her son would like to continue with acting and wants to do commercials but will keep his day job. Lynette Jennings told me that her son is a “normal” teenager who likes gospel, R&B, pizza, sports and hanging out with friends. When Donovan saw himself on screen for the first time he jumped up and said, 'mommy mommy that’s me!' Donovan wants to be a fire fighter when he grows up.

    As a Black disabled advocate and historian of Black disabled arts, culture and media representation, My Brother is apart of a new image of Black disabled people as we continue to display our stories, lives and amplify our voices . My Brother shows the beautiful and harsh reality of Black families and people with developmental disabilities. It sheds light on issues of poverty, the view of youth with developmental disabilities in adopting industry and the strength of family and love.

    Although My Brother has won many awards, takes on race disability, poverty and unity of the Black family and is truly a one-of-a-kind film; it could be pulled from theaters nationwide if the people don’t come out in big numbers to see it! As of today March 20/2007 AMC Bay Street 16 theater in Emeryville has pulled My Brother! The film producer, Gregory Segal, and I have been going back and forth through email trying to come up with a solution so My Brother will be shown in the Bay Area. If My Brother is not shown here in the Bay Area, the Disability Mecca, the whole community will suffer a huge loss. What Mr. Segal is looking for now is an independent theater with a built in audience for a week or a couple days run. At this point I’m in the process of asking local independent theaters in the Bay Area. Please if you have connection to the Roxie, Parkway or any other independent theaters, please let me know ASAP! Bottom line our movie date of Thursday at 7pm March 23rd at the AMC Bay Street 16 theater in Emeryville, CA is postponed for now. For more information on My Brother go to their website at www.mybrotherthemovie.com, and to contact Leroy Moore call him at (510) 649-8438.

    My Brother was written and directed by Academy Award nominee Anthony Lover and produced by award-winning producer Gregory Segal. It was produced by Liberty Artists in association with Angel Baby Entertainment. The cinematographer was John Sawyer and it was edited by Christian Baker. The score was composed by John Califra. Production design by Evelyn Sakash. Art direction by Tavia Trepte. Re-recording mixer Lee Dichter

    By Leroy Moore Jr.
    www.leroymoore.com

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    Hating the Rich

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz

    "The rich are not like you and me." "The poor will always be with us." Get real and accept it we are told. Give alms and aid to the poor, tax the rich. Establish private foundations, be a responsible trust baby and give. You've heard it all, and maybe even believe it in your heart. But, it's toxic thinking. I have a suggestion for
    clarifying our consciousness: learn to hate the rich. Hate, yes. You
    can dress up the language and call it rage. But, hate is a concept
    underrated. Everyone does it, but no one wants to admit it, usually
    hating the wrong person. Hate is the opposite of love. Do you love
    the rich? Like the rich? If not, than maybe you can learn to hate the
    rich. I don't mean shame the rich in order to get money out of their
    guilt, as has been a long practice on the left and among non-profits.

    I mean NOT taking money from the rich, isolate the rich, make them
    build tall walls around their estates and corporate headquarters as
    the people force the rich to do in Latin America. How dare they have
    plate glass windows! We are held back and diminished by the claim
    that hating is bad for us, bad for everyone. You can hate the act but
    not hate the person. You can hate wealth or capitalism but not the
    rich. It's a ridiculous logic that keeps us hating and blaming
    ourselves for not being rich and powerful. Anyway, it's not
    consistent; it's all right to hate slavery and slaveowners, fascism
    and Hitler, etc. Why not hate the rich, the individual rich, not an
    abstract concept?

    Ah, but who are the rich? We have to be careful about that, living in
    a country that does not admit to class relations, and class is
    subject to little analysis even on the left. It's not a matter of
    income per se. And it's essential in hating to target the enemy and
    not some front for the enemy. High income can certainly make a person
    full of herself, and most US citizens who live on high fixed or
    hourly incomes due to circumstances of a good trade union or a
    professional degree have no idea that they aren't rich. In polls they
    say they are in the top fifth of the income ladder, and they aren't.

    A majority of US citizens don't want to tax the rich more, because
    they think they will be rich one day. They won't. The rich own not
    just a mortgaged house and a car, maybe a boat or a cabin in the
    woods or a beach house to boot; rather they own you. Even the cash
    and luxury soaked entertainment and sports stars are not the rich;
    they certainly deserve contempt and disgust, but not hatred. Don't go
    for scapegoats--Jews, Oprah, Martha Stewart. Hatred should be
    reserved for those who own us, that is, those who own the banks, the
    oil companies, the war industry, the land (for corporate
    agriculture), the private universities and prep schools, and who own
    the foundations that dole out worthy projects for the poor, for
    public institutions-their opera, their ballet, their symphony, that
    you are allowed to attend after opening night. My oldest brother, who
    like me grew up dirt poor in rural Oklahoma, landless farmers and
    farm workers, rebuts my arguments by saying that no poor man ever
    gave him a job. That says it all. The rich own you and me.

    In all the arguments about the crimes of the Judeo-Christian-Muslim
    religions, rarely is their greatest crime ever discussed--the
    leveling of class, rich and poor are the same in god's sight. What a
    handy ideology for the rich! The same with US democracy with its
    "equal opportunity" and "level playing fields," absurd claims under
    capitalism, but ones held dear but liberals. Hating the rich means
    also hating the state, the United States of America that is the
    ruling corporate body of the rich.

    Why are we so silent about this, grumping over the increase in the
    income gap, trying to figure out how to narrow it? What do we expect,
    that the rich will empower the people to overthrow them as they
    almost did in response to the labor movement in the 1930s or the
    Civil Rights Movement with the War on Poverty? Not again will they
    make that mistake. I'm not saying we shouldn't point to it as
    evidence of the crimes of the rich, but we should not delude
    ourselves that the rich will give up their ownership of us. So, we
    need to stop longing for the return of the New Deal or savior
    Roosevelt. Passionate, organized hatred is the element missing in all
    that we do to try to change the world. Now is the time to spread
    hate, hatred for the rich.

    Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz is a longtime activist, university professor, and writer. In addition to numerous scholarly books and articles she has published two historical memoirs, Red Dirt: Growing Up Okie
    (Verso, 1997), and Outlaw Woman: A Memoir of the War Years, 1960°©1975 (City Lights, 2002). "Red Christmas" is excerpted from her forthcoming book, Blood on the Border: A Memoir of the Contra War, South End Press, October 2005. She can be reached at: rdunbaro@pacbell.net

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    Another World (of Media Production) is Possible

    09/24/2021 - 10:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
    Original Author
    root
    Original Body

    Rarely heard voices struggling with poverty lead the extremely innovative Peoples Media Center/Peoples Press Room at The US Social Forum in Atlanta

    by Tiny

    From Jail to Journalism

    The morning I got out of jail, I walked through the ice-like streets of
    Oakland, California touching ivy and running my fingers along the sides
    of buildings, cars and the trunks of trees. It wasn't that I had
    forgotten how they felt. It was just to know that they, things, trees,
    buildings and cars, were still there, even when I wasn't, helped to
    ease the shudder, the ache and the tension that was now permanently
    lodged in my head

    Due to some extremely innovative lawyering by a local civil rights
    attorney I was given a chance to write as a way of working off my
    several thousand dollars of fines and jail time for crimes of poverty.
    In me and my poor mixed race mama's case, this was for the sole act of
    being homeless in the US- a citable offense. My writing/media
    production assignment was completed, albeit slowly, while living
    through the devastating experience of being a youth in a homeless
    family who had to drop out of school in the sixth grade to support and
    care for my family

    The resulting story, a first person narrative about my attempt to get
    our PG&E turned back on through county aid, was published. As a
    youth dealing with incarceration and grinding poverty, the sole act of
    being published, being heard, about me and my families' struggle to
    survive, was revolutionary and life-changing, in fact, it was so large,

    that it gave me the strength, the hope, to go on for another day. I
    began to consider myself a writer. My scholarship valued.

    From that first radical intervention, and subsequent acts of media
    resistance, along with mentors that included Angela Davis, Velia
    Garcia, and Erica Huggins, me and my mama launched POOR Magazine,
    an intentionally glossy , nationally distributed literary magazine
    written by poor folks on issues of poverty, racism, disability, police
    brutality and more, which put forth actionable solutions to every
    problem we discussed.

    The magazine led to the eventual founding of a grassroots, non-profit,
    arts organization of the same name (POOR Magazine) and several
    education, arts and culture based programs and media production
    projects such as PoorNewsNetwork(PNN) (an on-line news-service on
    poverty and racism), a Pacifica radio show, POOR Press, and The Race,
    Poverty and Media Justice Institute for youth, adults and elders, The
    Po Poets Project and the welfareQUEENs, and many more. The most
    important thing about all of these amazing projects is they are led by
    what we at POOR call race, poverty, youth, disability and elder
    scholars who are trying through media and art, to be heard, about their
    experiences, their solutions and their scholarship.

    Poverty, Race, Disability and Youth Scholars become Media Scholars at the USSF

    Poverty, Race, Youth and Disability scholarship will be leading all of
    the media production at The Peoples Media Center and Peoples Press Room
    at the US Social Forum in Atlanta. In a revolutionary collaboration
    between independent and corporate media producers, acts of media
    resistance will happen throughout the forum

    For example, a workshop on immigrant rights will be reported on by what
    POOR/PNN would call immigrant scholars or poverty scholars, i.e.,
    undocumented poor workers currently fighting racist, classist
    immigration laws and deportations. Similarly, a report on the current
    crisis of displacement in the aftermath of Katrina would be co-authored
    by a resident or former resident of New Orleans fighting displacement
    and/or a survivor of displacement in another city in Amerikkka. Both
    reports would be written and/or taped in English and Spanish and
    hopefully several more languages. The reports would be written, audio
    or video taped in the first person, debunking the myth of objectivity
    promoted by all corporate and even many independent media makers, and
    the reports would be led by the people experiencing, first-hand, what
    they are reporting on

    The independent and corporate media producers at the conference would
    work in collaboration with the poverty scholars to facilitate a media
    report across several media platforms; radio, on-line, print and/or
    video and in perhaps the most radical act of all for the corporate,
    alternative, ethnic and independent media present, the finished piece
    will be co-authored and both parties will share the precious by-line,
    co-production real estate.

    Whether it be radio, TV, on-line or print, it all often comes down to
    the by-line, shared or singular, which is always based on who does the
    actual writing, editing or scripting, rather than who is the subject of
    the story, who the actual story is about, whose story is being told,
    whose struggle or struggles are being reported on. It is this tension
    that informs the inherently voyeuristic industry of Journalism, and
    most media production. Contrary to this notion POOR/PNN believes that
    if you are reporting on any issue, struggle or action felt or
    experienced by poor folks, working folks, disabled folks, youth and on
    and on, it should be led by the folks who have experienced these issues
    personally.

    Writing, reading, thinking imagining speculating. These are luxury
    activities, so I am reminded, permitted to a privileged few whose idle
    hours of the day can be viewed otherwise than as a bowl of rice or a
    loaf bread less to share with the family, excerpt from Women, Native,
    Other by Trinh T Minh-ha

    Due to the many struggles inherent in a life lived in poverty, poverty
    scholars are often dealing with a deficit of resources, money,
    security, and time. literacy, formal education, a minute to spare away
    from the pursuit of a loaf of bread, whereas, most (not all) corporate
    and independent, ethnic and alternative media producers are coming from
    a place of some form of privilege, not necessarily just an
    over-simplified notion of race and or class privilege, but the far more
    subtle privilege of an organized life, a family that supported you,
    emotionally and/or financially through college, or perhaps the most
    precious of all, the privilege of time to think.

    Because of multiple forms of crisis and lack of privilege our voices,
    the voices of poor folks, disabled folks, poor youth of color, poor
    workers, single parents, elders children and homeless folks, are rarely
    if ever heard within the media, we aren't leading the stories about
    ourselves and our communities our families. or our solutions.

    Finally, to achieve the mighty and timely goal to make another world
    possible, the Peoples Media Center/Peoples Press Room will also be
    creating new inroads of access for unheard voices, unheard struggles,
    and urgently needed scholarship and community led solutions in a very
    exciting, non-hierarchical form of inclusionary, non-competitive media.
    We will be creating new national and international collaborations;
    media access channels, reporting opportunities, syndications, and
    co-authorship opportunities, which will live far beyond the one
    powerful week in Atlanta.

    Together we will make another world, another world of media production.

    Tags