Story Archives 2009

Po'Lice Terror!

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
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The Racist Murder of Oscar Grant

by Phil Adams/PNN

I’m a 25 year old mixed Latino/black male USMC veteran who lives in the East Bay. Racial profiling and police abuse of power is very real to me and in fact plays a part in my life every time I’m in a public place. I have been arrested for jay-walking and put in handcuffs without explanation and repeatedly pulled over for no reason. Police abuse is very real but for once it has gained some attention.

On January 7, Several reporters and poverty scholars from POOR Magazine/PNN re-ported and sup-ported with several thousands other organizations and folks at the demonstration at Fruitvale BART the day before Oscar Grant III's funeral. There was a large shrine taped off for the memory of Oscar Grant III. There were many lit candles and personal statements from people who knew him such as “You will be missed”.

“This has to Stop, as a black mother I can’t stand by and see our children murdered,” Queennandi, member of the welfareQUEENs of POOR Magazine and fellow staff writer spoke an impassioned scream into the mike for all young men of color.

“Let’s call them the Po’Lice,” Tiny, co-editor, and formerly incarcerated founder of POOR came up to speak ending by talking about the connection between the case of young black mother Nadra Foster’s own po-lice terror because of a call by other so-called media-justice makers at KPFA and the police terror of Oscar Grant.

The general theme for all the speakers was that we will no longer accept another missing generation of men and this injustice will not stand. Numerous chants filled the air:

"Organize or die"

"No justice, No Peace"

One thing I think all the demonstrators knew is that it’s time for change and that we as a community working in solidarity will be the only way that change can occur.

New Year’s eve 2009 a BART police officer Johannes Mehserle shot and killed Oscar Grant III in an attempt to restrain him on the Fruitvale BART platform in front of a crowded train car. BART will not release the security footage of the event and the officer has resigned so BART claims no action can be taken. Numerous videos of the slaying were taken by the cell phones and cameras of onlookers and released to various media outlets. Those are the facts.

The city of Oakland has been plagued with police brutality and mistrust of the police for decades. What do you expect from the city where the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was founded? Being a 25 year old male of mixed racial background I have to ask people, how much things can change in a little over 40 years. This country was built on hundreds of years of slavery with vast economic gain due to free labor making it one of the most powerful nations in the world you think an addiction to free labor and money like that can just change overnight? Economic gain from free labor is the whole reason we have the most incarcerated people of any nation and we have to deal with this Orwellian police state. And that is the reason why Oscar Grant III was shot in the back in front of a crowd by a BART police officer.

Oscar Grant III was hard-working young man holding down two jobs. Oscar Grant was a father. Oscar Grant was a son.. At the protest I had the chance to interview Sharon Raffety whose son had grown up with Oscar in Hayward, CA. She reminisced on when they were younger how they used to play little league and what he was like in the second grade. Oscar grew up in a religious household, his mother was a reverend and growing up his life was steeped in the church. Sharon told me like all young men he had his share of troubles but "kids make mistakes" and like most men do he matured and went on with his life. Before Oscar was killed he worked at Farmer John’s market and a Kentucky Fried Chicken to provide for his four year old daughter who is now missing a father.

As far as I am concerned if, you shoot an unarmed person in the back you should go to jail I don’t care if its a mistake or you were angry or drunk or its a warzone, you shoot an unarmed person who isn't resisting in the back you should go to jail. But that would be equal justice. Not Just-US!

Editors Note: DUE
TO THE TERRIFYING REALITY OF GLOBAL AND LOCAL Po'LIce TERROR FROM EAST
OAKLAND TO PALESTINE TO KPFA - ONE OF THE POOR MAGAZINE MURALS CREATED
AT SATURDAY's PAY TO PAINT OPENING PARTY WILL HONOR OSCAR GRANT, IDRISS
STELLY AND ALL THE SPIRITS OF MURDERED YOUTH, ELDER AND DISABLED
SCHOLARS VICTIMIZED BY Po'LICE TERROR IN AMERIKKKA AND ACROSS THE
GLOBE!- PLEASE COME AND HELP US CREATE THIS.. BRING YOUR IMAGES OF
ANCESTORS AND FOLKS- AS WELL, HELP US CREATE THE FIRST DRAFT OF
THE DECLARATION OF INTERDEPENDENCE WHICH CALLS FOR NO ENGAGEMENT WITH
THE -Po'LICE - EVER!!!

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The 2nd Annual Poetry (Luchadores!) Battle of ALL of the Sexes on Valentines Day

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body


Where: Sub-mission (formerly Balazo) 2183 Mission street @18th st/SF


When: 7:00 pm February 14th ( after party with DJ begins at 11:00)


To sign up as a contender call: 415-863-6306

(en espanol) 323-304-9084

Or email: deeandtiny@poormagazine.org

by Staff Writer

Valentines Day Poetry Luchadores/Wrestling Battle of ALL of the Sexes!

Your favorite revolutionary poets, media-makers, poverty scholars and cultural workers at POOR Magazine Mash-up Poetry, Gender and Wrestling for The 2nd Annual Poetry (Luchadores!) Battle of ALL of the Sexes.

The 2009 Poetry Luchadores Battle will feature famoso undefeated poet luchador/wrestlers, (also Former and Current San Francisco Poet Laureates) Devorah Major and Jack Hirschman and battles such as The Poverty Pimp vs. the welfareQUEEN, The Black Cripple vs The Govenator and The Poverty Skolah vs The Akademik!

Emcee/Referree: Javier Reyes from Colored Ink aka The Ref

Featuring undefeated champ and co-founder of POOR Magazine, Tiny Gray-Garcia aka The welfareQUEEN (author of Criminal of Poverty: Growing Up Homeless in America, one of the SF Chronicles picks for Top Memoirs of 2007), Tony Robles, aka the Revolutionary Worker Scholar, co-editor of POOR Magazine and author of Lakas and the Makibaka Hotel,(Childrens Book Press). Also Featuring 1st prize winner of 2009: Queennandi aka SuperbabyMama (author of Life, Struggle and Reflection on POOR Press) 2nd prize winner of 2008: Leroy Moore aka The BLack Kripple, founder of KRIP HOP and columnist of Illn n Chillin on POOR Magazine, James Tracy from Civil Defense Poetry, Poet, Mama Scholar and welfareQUEEN, Jewnbug, and other members of The Po'Poets Projekt and many more..

Judges: AL Robles, Genny LIm, Ananda Esteva and POOR Press author of Through the Eyes of a Child: Byron Gafford

On a day normally equated with cutesy hallmark cards, flowers and candy, challenge your partner (or future partner) to a Wrestling battle of spoken word, hip hop, poetry and/or flowetry in the ring! Singles welcome. If you dont have a partner, we will hook you up. Come with a Luchador/Wrestling Persona ( and mask) or we will create one for you!

The first, second, and third place poems will be published in The San Francisco Bay Guardian, THe SF Bayview and POOR/PNN Magazine online. Entrance fee to fight in the ring is$20; spectator fee is $10 (no one turned away for lack of funds).

All proceeds go to support POOR Magazine, a non-profit, grassroots, arts organization dedicated to providing revolutionary media access, arts education and advocacy to communities struggling with poverty and racism locally and globally.

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Who is to Blame for all the Dead Children?

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

A monster made of flesh, hungry for power and death.

A monster made of flesh, hungry for power and death.

 
 

 

 

 

 

by Carina Lomeli /PNN

It was December, 25 2008, Christmas day, two hours north of San Francisco. I sat, quietly on a red oak table with my hands on my lap, smiling to the newest members of my family. I got married on 6.6.6., his name is Ra'ad Hattar Khabbaz and he lived in Amman, Jordan, across the Dead Sea, facing the west; Israel and Palestine. In 1995 he left his large family behind, including his sister and parents to chase the American dream. Still, he keeps the first Dollar he ever earned, marking it with a heavy sharpie. I constantly run into the dollar and hold my self back from using it to pay for the MUNI. Instead I ride my bike whenever there is time and energy in the city of San Francisco. It is freezing, not compared to Russia, but I have lived in Arizona most of my life and I miss the sun.

However tonight, I am well taken care of, the house is warm and I had a glass of whisky. And with good purpose, I have absolutely no Idea what anyone is saying. I speak English and Spanish but not Arabic. All I can say is "thank you" and "that was delicious", stuff like that. No. La.

Food was being passed around and I had to take everything or else it would be rude, it's hard not to eat anyway. Brown rice, pine nuts with chicken to top it off, "You must use the bread and take from the big plate," His mother tells me. She cooks so well, all I can think of is the fact that I have a lot to learn about being a good wife and one day, a good mother. Nothing makes me more nervous than thinking I am doing things the wrong way. The day I got married my parents stopped helping me pay rent, and tuition. Ray, as I call him has been there ever since, trying to give me everything I need.

The fact that we were all together only accelerated the impact of the news that would develop through that night. There are always different sides, opinions, interests, positions, excuses, lies, apologies but the one thing we all agree on is that, "I will do whatever I can to survive". Death, something we know so much about, but cannot describe it through words, is felt strongly by action. Action from things we cannot control nature, sicknesses and the number one reason in our lifetime, military action.

At the end of World War I, discussions erupted on the future of the Middle East, including the disposition of Palestine. And so, on April 19, 1920, the Allies, Britain, France, Italy and Greece, Japan and Belgium, gathered in Italy to discuss a peace treaty with Turkey. The Allies decided to assign Great Britain the mandate over Palestine on both sides of the Jordan River, and the responsibility for putting the Balfour Declaration into effect. The Balfour Declaration was made by the British government deciding to endorse the establishment of Jewish homes in Palestine. After discussions within the cabinet and consultations with Jewish leaders(Zionists), the decision was made public in a letter from British Foreign Secretary Lord Arthur James Balfour to Lord Rothschild. The contents of this letter became known as the Balfour Declaration. Arab nationalists, politicians and communities were unsure how best to react to this British authority. Notice how The disposition of Palestine took place without the concent of the native Arabs already living there. Jews were present in Gaza until 1929, when they were forced to leave the area due to violent riots by the Arabs, who killed a total of six Jews.

Today International Journalists are not allowed in Israel or Palestine. Israel is not letting journalists or doctors into Gaza or Israel. Announcements are made to pass medical humane supplies clearly copies are made, they know. Tons of medical supply ships are being mistakenly shot at, on purpose. Occupation powers are paranoid and talk of Hamas terrorists are completely ludicrous. Nobody is there to witness the inhumanities caused by the US-Israel, As ambulances, schools and mosques are being bombed, Palestinian war chief are not notified of this, they are not told. The Red Cross stepped in to reveal war crimes. They are harassed constantly by Israeli Forces "they shoot if you stop" says a volunteer. "No time to tell stories" -Border crossing Egypt. Both sides were told to respect medical assistance as it is against the Geneva Convention.

The UN simply discusses transportation matters and rocket launches, like the measly 9 mile hand made rockets the Israelis are so terrorized by. But Arabs just want to stop the deaths of so many Innocent lives; these terrorists are my husbands uncles, nieces, history and culture. Not terrorist by what they do, but what they represent, a life that cannot be controlled by those that use military force, hidden agendas, and lies to control the world their mothers provided them with. During The past eight years 4,209 Palestinians have been killed, 1/3 of that women and children. 1,556 Israelis have died including Soldiers. An 8 year resident of Israel simply said. "There is a fight against terror!!" Only 10 Israelis have died since the beginning of attacks. His mind has been brainwashed to think that a thousand Palestinians are not worth one Jew, who is spreading these Delusions of ownership and superiority? Palestinians are being burned out of there homes and refugees inside UN school thought to be safe are being attacked. Snifter rifles hit children "for election?" Palestinians ask.

During the last four days, a seize fire is in effect for only three hours a day. Food difficult to find, civilians are suffering too much. Lines of people form to get bread, waiting from 8:00am to 1:00pm. Candles running low, No electricity, no Clean running water, no cloth to protect the injured. Why? US Candidate set sail on the Dignity(medical Relief ship) then hit three times. One of the Drs. said "prepared to die". Israelis said turn around! go back! they were well aware of medical supplies being carried. They claimed to be fired at first, saved by Lebanese Ship with warm welcoming. Israelis are using illegal force against civilians.

On February 26th on a speech to the American Enterprise Institute President George W. Bush predicted, "Success in Iraq could also begin a new stage in Middle Eastern Peace and set emotion progress toward a truly democratic Palestinian state". This would also involve Russia, European Union and United Nations for the imposed settlements of the Israeli - Palestinian conflict. And with a shake of hands and smiles and accomplishment they decided the fate of 1.0 million UN-registered refugees. The majority of the Palestinians are descendants of refugees who fled from their homes during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. The Strip's population has continued to increase since that time. Palestinians Don't Deserve a state, and giving them one would be a grave Mistake for Israel this was the title by Don Feder, he is Coordinator of the Interfaith Zionist Leadership Summit. Phase one-air war, Phase two-land and finally phase three exhaust situations to the maximum.

Capitol Hill says: “Disproportionate war does not make since. Who to blame for the dead children says is, hamas…hamas broke seize fire.(By the way Israel broke seize fire)Palestine cannot use terror as a method of action". Mean while, Obama our future Revolutionary President will not get involved in foreign politics and does not want to come off as a divided nation. On Jan 7th throughout the night 20 air strikes were shot at Gaza. US reopen of transportation and Arabs Veto America because they will not agree to size fire. "No Comment" By Obama, will lead to a global division and then everyone will once more remember the pain of extermination.

These new corporate business suited monsters are gracefully, with military tactics destroying land that is not theirs. No one who loves their land bombs its children and schools, and deprives people from achieving life and respect. This is a great massacre on Indigenous people such as Arabs and some Jews who have been living side by side peacefully...for thousands of years. We all have a god given right to defend those we love, and they just played their song of war in my direction. I have visited Jordan and I hope to have my children see the land of their father. I too expect to freely go back to my own house in Mexico without the terror of money hungry beasts looking for their next pray. As history puts it conquering/occupation leads to immoral / inhumane. The least I can do is write an article that will open the eyes of those who do not know weather or not to care.

The Good news People in the US are in rage in response to the outcry coming from Gaza. Is this all we can do??? British Member of Parliament says "medial political Israeli news is more untrue and is allowed because of lack of opposition, nobody does anything about it. They are the forth most powerful country in the world, because of US support. Palestine along with Gaza have been and are now trying to adhere to the rules but everyone is ignoring their obedience, they want the land without the people, a cleansing of the land." Terrorism together, against the Superworlds that thirst for the blood of those beneath. The stronger eat the vulnerable and weak. World must stand together for a better future we must discuss a new visionary chapter. Where we live in piece under no fear from those In charge. In a strip of land four by thirteen miles with 1.5 million Palestinians squeezed and pushed to the side in a land that is the mostly populated in the world is being bombed without regard to human lives. This is us!! The USA gives direct support to these fascists.

As I decide which scarf to wear on a cold night, my eye catches the white and black pattern that helps me remind everyone that I am not going to risk my children's freedom simply for being born Arabic/Mexican in a world dominated by those who have and use military force when they see fit against my people-- Venanzuelan, Chinese, African or Arabic or anyone that is not part of capitalism or its designs.

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Legal Lynchings- The Blatant, boastful murder of Oscar Grant

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

by Queenandi X Sheba/PNN

The execution of Oscar Grant was a painful reminder of the "Legal Lynchings" That has been taking place for centuries. It also was a reminder of the superiority complex that lies deep within the western slavemassa that leads him to believe that it is OK to shoot a unarmed black man lying face down, detained, and in the back. It was a awakening reminder that even though we have President Barak Obama, There is always goin' to be a racist-cowboy pigg who will remind us of "our place" and even though history was made with our first african president, The pigg that murdered Oscar Grant (s) Message was loud and clear: "ya'll niggahz betta not be gittin' uppidy, either" (I'm not knockin' tha people, but realistically speaking, that's exactly what that pigg and his kind thinks of us)

When I first heard of Brotha Grant's murder, it just added on to the pain and resistance that I was born with. Me being a third (and more) generation survior of police brutality, it was just another slap in the face, and a failed attempt (again) to break the peoples' spirit. My mother, Carolyn X was beaten, and eventually neutralized for her role in the struggle, and her love for tha people. My godbrother, "Tuggie" was released from jail late at night, told to run, and was shot in the back, I was slammed viciously on my 7-months pregnant belly by 2 officers, and was robbed of some of my firstborn's shopping money. Reason: I had on a FUBU jacket, so I must've "been a drug dealer". My daughter, whom was in my womb at the time of my beating endured her fair share of the "Criminal injustus system", in which she was detained, called "niggah" repeatedly, taunted, robbed and threatened with a false case for rebelling against their abuse, and protesting her rights. My daughter's cousin was detained with her, but broke down and cried as he too was taunted, and was afraid to say anything resistant.
I say that to say this: This is not a coincidence. The secret army (po'lice) have been trained to murder the african since and before we were stolen from the motherland. They have been trained to murder africans in particular, poor people in general, thus becoming an in-part but common racially/economically motivated structure of population control and global domination.

If I was to have murdered someone on the job, intentially or not, cop or not, I would have been fired and arrested-on the spot, no bail of course. Godd forbid my victim's white-Hell I would've had two cops at my door, with a do-it-at-home lethal injection kit and before the victim's family could dry their tears, my ass would've been "strung up"
A double edged sword cuts us all. This system a lot of times is just like tha sword, sharp on one edge, to make sure it fillets blacks and other comerades in the struggle. The other edge is for the rich and so-called rulers and their skin doesn't even get broken! When tha pigg who killed Brotha Oscar Grant was put on paid leave, it only validated what I've been feeling and saying for a long time: "Amerikkka rewards her killaz, and eats her young."

I, and fellow PoorNewsNetwork/PNN staff Tiny, Phil Adams, Bruce Allison, and PNN-TV producer Tony Robles Re-ported and Sup-Ported at the January 7th Fruitvale BART and BART Board Hearings. And at the bart board meeting I couldn't help but to take a moment to tune into the pain of Oscar Grant's mother, Ms. Johnson. My heart started to hurt so bad for her that my hot tears began to blind me.

As a mama, it is terrifiying to know and see that our children are being shot down like homeless hamsters at any given time-without probable cause and extreme prejudice. The blood that's been POURED out all over any poor area or hood by killah kops bypassed the "alarming rate" a long time ago. I cannot help but to ask US this simple question: How did we allow for this kind of brutality to continue to claim the lives of our african & laraza brothers, sisters, children and other poor folks around the globe-through 2009!!??

If we stayed resistant & consistant on killa piggs when the first unjust (documented) murder of a brotha was known to us, would brothas like Z. Shakur, Fred Hampton, George Jackson, Johnathan Jackson, Cameron Boyd, Idriss Stelley, Oscar Grant still be alive? ...

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Made To Be Broken

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

by RWS/PNN

Revolutionary worker scholar I am--that's what POOR Magazine calls me--and I am out of work again. You might remember an article I wrote a few months back where I spoke of the non-profit organization in the city that gave me the boot after a year of altruistic service to my fellow man and woman. The organization is still there--in fact I saw the woman who fired me. She came through the front door of a donut shop on Market Street. I darted to the rear of the donut shop like a mouse. All the verbs and adjectives and expletives I'd saved for a chance meeting with this woman disappeared. I waited for her to leave. She took her time. Some revolutionary worker scholar I turned out to be.

Funny thing about being unemployed is that I keep running into the people I used to work with--people I helped get jobs. I see them on the streets. To be honest I try to avoid them but I can't escape 100% of the time. It's not that they are not pleasant, good, personable human beings--they are but they ask me inevitably if I have found a job yet. I tell them no and they start telling me of positions that might be available. They take out napkins and wrinkled business cards, scribbling on them with pens low on ink. One fellow gave me the phone number of a friend who runs a towing service in South City. "You'd be good at it" I was told. "Be good at what?" I asked. "Towing cars" he replied, incredulously. This was a guy I had helped get a job as a janitor in a church. He was cleaning the toilet in the house of the lord and giving me a tip for a job in hell. I took the number and tossed it.

Despite my ducking and dodging and meandering ways I ended up finding a job at another non-profit organization (a temporary assignment). My title was vocational rehabilitation counselor in a job-training program serving people with various mental and physical disabilities. On my first day I walked into the bathroom. Inside was a Chinese guy at the urinal with his pants down at his ankles letting it go. He stood with his hands on his hips staring at the ceiling whistling that US Marines tune:

From the halls of

Montezuma

To the shores

Of Tripoli

I turned around and walked out thinking, my God, what have I gotten myself into? My job was teaching job skills to the participants--about 25-30 of them--some of who were monolingual Chinese speakers. My co-teachers were young, in their 20's, and I wondered if they had ever been fired from a job. We covered various topics such as job interviewing techniques, skill assessment and how to make a good impression at a job interview. I would be at the front of the class, giving my bullshit lecture, drawing from my bullshit experience that really wasn't bullshit at all. I would watch the reactions of the participants. Some of them--no, most of them would doze off. I didn't take it personally though. I just figured that these folks were tapping into their subconscious minds; perhaps they were cultivating solutions to the world's problems such as houselessness, police brutality and world hunger. Rather than rudely and abruptly wake them, I watched as they dreamed.

The job-training program included hands-on work in the warehouse where participants sorted through boxes of mosaic tiles destined for hobbyists who use them to spice up bland picture frames or make coasters for frosty libations. I watched as the workers counted mini tiles that resembled cheez-it crackers into cellophane packages. Some folks weighed the tiles and others heat-sealed the cellophane packs while others stuck labels on cellophane packages. The division of labor was concise and everyone did their jobs. On occasion, a worker or two would break into a fit of laughter out of the blue. I would watch these folks from the corner of my eye, laughing inside. I caught the eye of a fellow in the midst of a laughing fit; I smiled at him in a display of laughter solidarity. He quickly lost his laughter and asked me, "what the hell are you laughing at?" I turned away and tried to walk with a supervisory gait (which generally means, without grace).

The workers were paid piece rate. Some had not worked in decades and some had been in the training program for a decade.

Initially I was told that I would be filling in at this program for a woman on maternity leave. My job was to end upon her return--which was scheduled for December 24th, Christmas eve. I began to enjoy the job and the people I was around. The guy I saw in the urinal on my first day whistling the US Marines anthem turned out to be a pretty revolutionary guy. He blurted out the following one day in class: Just because you were born in America or have a job in this country doesn't make you better or your work more valuable than anybody else's. I thought, here's a guy with some balls; how often do you ever hear that on a gig?

Another participant of the program going by the name of Big Mack approached me and asked me if I were a client. I told him that I was the new trainer. He then asked me if I liked old school music. I answered in the affirmative and he reached into his pocket and produced 3 cassette tapes. He told me of his side business making "mix tapes". "Yeah man" he said, "I got the stylistics, Blue Magic, Switch, Bobby Womack, all that shit". He offered me a deal--3 tapes for 5 dollars. He had that look in his eye that told me music was his life. I signed up for 6 tapes. He informed me that the other tapes might take a little time to produce because he is buying a new cassette player to replace his broken one. He told me what songs he was going to put on that tape and I could taste that music as he spoke. It didn't matter that I no longer listened to cassettes or I hadn't owned a cassette player in years--it was in his eyes, the music of life. He asked me to loan him a dollar for cup o' noodles. My tapes are pending.

I spent some of the classroom time reading poetry. I read Langston Hughes, Bukowski and a little bit of Raymond Carver. It was hit and miss. Sometimes the poetry went well and sometimes folks dozed off. Some of my coworkers probably wondered what poetry had to do with a job-training program. It had everything to do with it. Making a poem is the hardest work of all. All those cellophane bags stuffed with poems; all those heat sealed bags filled with poems; all those punch presses punching out poems--what a beautiful thing.

One funny thing I remember were the stickers that were used on the cellophane packages destined to hold those mosaic tiles. The stickers were small, like the kind you see on bananas. They read: Made to be broken. I got into the habit each day of putting that sticker on my chest above my heart. My co-workers laughed and I'm sure the clients thought I was crazy. I sat among the workers, some laughing to themselves, some swaying and rocking back and forth. I fit in like a puzzle. Never had I known such peace at a job.

Christmas Eve finally came. I was summoned to the boss' office and told how much they liked me and how they wished they could retain my services. The woman who I filled in for had resigned but due to the budget crisis at city hall, the organization had been forced to eliminate the position.

I bid everybody farewell. I never got my mix tapes and to be honest I never would have played them anyway. What I got was something better: laughter and poetry and true revolution on the job with folks who supposedly had mental/physical disabilities. Those people were among the most sane I've ever met and on a job that's rare to find. I left that place with my discharge letter and my final check. As I approached the door for the last time I peeled the "Made to be broken" sticker off my chest. I went outside.

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Recreation is Rife with Racism, Classism and lies in Amerikkka

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

by tiny aka Lisa Gray-Garcia/PNN

“When they faced a work shortage they brought in the Chinese- they proved to be great workers, highly productive and steadfast, and the only difference is they wanted to be paid with food!”

The deep green pine branches and soft white snow massaged my weary eyelids through the train window. I was on a little tiny vacation, a train ride to Reno, Nevada,. An unbelievable luxury for me who had struggled with poverty all my life and only started traveling last year with the release of my book The trip was on the Califonia zephyr line of the Amtrak and is a truly breathtaking route which travels through and between the snow-covered, river threaded mountains of California and Nevada where Asian, Irish and native American workers did back-breaking underpaid or unpaid labor and had to strike to be paid close to a subsistance wage. It is an amazingly beautiful trip that I would highly recommend to everyone, children and adults alike.

Just don’t listen too carefully to the volunteer historians from the California state Railroad Museum

As my eyes rested in the lush scenes, my ears were bombarded with a guided tour through the history of trains, labor and the depths of old school capitalism. The idea was great, an audio tour through the very trains we were on and the routes we were going through by people who actually worked the trains and archived the history. There was only one problem, these elder volunteers were washing the brutality, racism, classism and bloody labor struggles out of US history with each raspy paragraph they tentatively whispered into the PA system.

After the insanely egregious lies about the railroad workers struggle I challenged the elder historians on the train in a respectful way. Suffice it to say it didn’t go so well.

This wasn’t the first time this had happened. I was invited to be keynote speaker for the local to global justice conference at University at Arizona. After my talk was completed A friend set up a ride in the famous Sedona train excursion run by a private company that climbs through the native lands in Sedona, Arizona.

The first frightening part was the ride past migrant workers stuck in the rocky ravines of the mountains. Migrant raza day laborers, indigenous people who were reduced to seeking day labor in the cold, barren mountains. “They like to wave at people” the hyper- excited announcer proclaimed. Like they were some kind of cute animal who lived in the mountains

“See that land outside the window, that was homesteaded by a settler from Mexico when this was still mexican land. He settled the land and raised a whole family with no electricity or running water Then a couple of years ago, the land was taken from the family by a multi-national corporation. Now the family takes you on a tour of the land by horse. One of the descendents of the family is our porter”

By the time this horror story was completed I was in tears, how could this story be told as a part of a travel narrative. Why was the destruction of a family reduced to one part of a guided tour.

The two hour ride through stolen land, exploiting stolen people and using stolen resources logically culminated in a huge rendition of Star Spangled Banner with a huge video of George Bush and a gigantic waving flag

Local Museums and Archives

In museums across the US this same cleansing happens to the point where I am always ready to cringe when I walk in to anything called “museum” or archive. Im always surprised when truth is told and silenced voices of herstory and history are truly represented, such as the case of the African-American Library and Archive in Oakland and The Tenement Museum in New York ( where they go out of their way to hire native New Yorkers with a social justice lens on poverty and immigration.

But since the advent of the internet, more and more public archives are trying to compete for the tourism dollar by launching massive public relations campaigns on-line. These are at once very successful financially for the cash strapped public institution and clear example of the gentrificaiton of recreation. In San Francisco we have the Academy of Sciences, not so many years ago you could get a hot dog , a soda and a visit with an alligator.

A few years back, The Academy of Sciences in San Francisco underwent a huge remodeling and re-vamping job. Now this massive site boasts attractions such as the live garden and the zoetrope tour, repping large donors’ names like the donors were themselves scientists and scholars, rather than people with a lot of money in need of a tax write-off and an invitation to a phat donor party.

Ticket price$25.00 – who can afford $25.00? Certainly not poor folks. My family and I have been dying to go for months but couldn’t afford it. I was recently able to buy group tickets for my family because my job offered a discounted rate. When we arrived on an early Sunday morning after Christmas, we stood in line with literally thousands of people for several hours while we watched as the members of the museum were escorted in first, making one wonder if it really was a “member”s only institution. Once we actually got in all of the daily “tours” were filled. My partner also noted that there were two black folks in the line and he was one of the two.

The alligators were trying to leave

There was a big “swamp” in the middle of the museum which held alligators and turtles. One of our family members noted that it was the same alligator who was there before – the sad thing is all three of the alligators and all of the turtles looked very eager to leave, their heads buried in the retaining wall while their legs seemed to be reaching in a perpetual state of frozen departure. My partner noted that the albino (read: white) alligator seemed quite happy in his tank being the object of thousands of people gawking while the darker-skinned alligators seemed to want to get the hell outta there.

As we counted out our meager dollars to pay for food in the over-priced buffet of the Academy of Sciences which one had no choice but to eat in as you were starving from the over four hour wait in the entrance line, I pondered the situation. First they move us (working poor, people of color, folks) out, “clean us out” to be exact with redevelopment, gentrification, sneaky lawyers, speculating realtors, sleazy landlords and removal. Then they turn our neighborhoods, our land, our parks (and our tanks) into over-priced “attractions” that none, least of all us, can afford to be in and then once we are truly extracted, removed and/or destroyed they lie, re-define and/or revise our stories for their archives about when we were there and how we left.

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Single Room Occupancy (SRO) Hotels- SWEET and SOUR

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

One Poverty Scholars tour of poor people housing aka SRO's and what needs to be done!

by Thornton Kimes/PNN Poverty Scholar in residence

From 1995 to 1999 I lived in the Curtis Hotel, a Single Room Occupancy building on Valencia Street between 16th and 17th Streets in San Francisco’s Mission District. A friend, call him Joe the Bummed-Out Tenant (J.BOT? Joe-BOT? Just Joe? I dunno…), lived and worked there as a desk clerk for 14 years before quitting, experiencing houselessness for 9 months and moving into a Tenderloin Housing Clinic (THC) SRO, the Vincent—the same year I moved into the Elk Hotel, a few blocks away, in March of 2004.

We reconnected recently at the Wednesday weekly free food pantry at the Elk, and remembered those years. Anyone with SRO experience can tell Hollywood-worthy social injustice horror stories, among other tales, and the Curtis surely was one—though it isn’t the main focus here.

To illustrate, an absurdity: She Who Must Be Obeyed, also known as the manager of the Curtis, often tried to stop our Seinfeldian conversations about nothing (or books), even when Joe-bot didn’t have anything to do other than read. Since I was well past the then-current you-haven’t-been-here-more-than-30-days…GET OUT! SRO regime, I politely resisted her “isolate the employee” campaign.

The Curtis had toxic management, bad electrical wiring, self-destructing tenants—Joe-bot and I saw one set fire to his own sink one evening, through an office window sharing an air-well during a conversation about nothing—and The Loud Construction Noises Of The Restaurant Appearing Under Our Noses that eventually contributed to my vanishing act from the place.

Joe-bot and I have been relatively comfortable with the management of our SRO homes, but the only thing that lasts is change. The Elk, like the Curtis and other SRO’s, has been a place where a Patel family from India could get a foothold in the mythology of the American Dream of Success. She Who Must Be Obeyed enjoyed her power over tenants who had none—unless they had done a lot of time in their hotel room—a little too much.

Harry Patel, now the ex-manager of the Elk, is a good man who made as much lemonade as he could from what harvest was available. That phrase “ex-manager” is important.

One of Joe-bot’s friends told me, one Wednesday, he wanted to sue THC. Musing on sueing is apparently a long-standing hobby, but after talking with Joe-bot I understood and sympathized. Until January of 2008, the Vincent (the building isn’t named, the sign outside just says “Hotel”) was a somewhat stable place to hang your hat.

From January through October, Joe said many people, including THC Director of Property Management James Holland, played the roles of Manager, Assistant Manager, or Acting Manager (a modern update on Musical Chairs—Musical Managers…). He named 14 of them, including at least one desk clerk, and one who voluntarily reduced himself in status to same, from the Boyd and Jefferson Hotels—and the assistant manager of the Elk, who hopes to be named Manager Manager there.

I hope the Elk Hotel does not go through the same chaotic game of Musical Managers the Vincent has enjoyed.

Joe-bot also said the Vincent, which acts as host to THC administrative staff in its basement, has become a noiser, more chaotic, less safe living environment with almost daily fights between tenants happening. October 2008 was an interesting month.

The television room in the lobby was stripped—no tv, chairs, or tables, and the common-use microwave was relocated under a fire alarm closer to tenant rooms. The inevitable result of microwaving bags of popcorn: the Fire Department visited the hotel 3 days in a row for microwave popcorn false alarms (my acquaintance at the SRO Collaborative knew about those incidents), plus an unrelated visit the next day for a bonus.

“The desk clerks don’t know how to deal with fire alarms, accidental or real,” Joe-bot told me, “they don’t know what to do or who to call when the alarm goes off.”

March 2009 will mark my fifth year living in the Elk Hotel, but THC only counts the years since they started managing the place. I’d really be upset if my tenure at the Elk was 10 years or more—was I living with imaginary friends?

When THC moved in, the Elk got spiffed up--new carpets, reinforced assault-proof (but not bullet proof) work hut for the desk clerks, and other improvements. They spent some money, but not nearly enough, and they didn’t focus on what I’d like to call my The Way Things Ought To Be List For SRO Hotels.

I briefly lived in the All-Star Hotel (16th and Folsom Streets), now a THC building (much to my surprise) several times. The All-Star has a community kitchen on each floor. The only other place like that I’ve ever seen is the very very clean SRO hotel The Arlington Residence, on Ellis and Leavenworth, run by The St. Vincent de Paul Society; the Arlington is for substance abusers in recovery; in 1995, my case manager at the shelter now called Next Door Shelter, thought I was a good fit since I don’t abuse substances (except food…).

SRO tenants can’t cook in their rooms. Too small a space, too easy to start a fire. Coffeemakers, Crock pots and microwaves are cool, but hot plates, toasters, rotisserie thinguses—nope, nah, nada, no way. I use my coffeemaker for coffee, tea, or me—that is, the hot water does the job for turning Top Ramen noodles and other things into a meal.

Top Ramen is, of course, a rite of passage many Americans most likely recall from their “salad days” (when salad was all they could afford living in their first home away from home—read William Shatner’s autobiography, before he became Captain Kirk he was a starving actor in Canada. If any Trekkers want his autograph, don’t say the word “salad” to him), but it is a staple on my diet now.

Community kitchens are on the top of my The Way Things Ought To Be List. A Laundry Room is snuggled up close, the second item. I lived next door to the one washer, one dryer laundry room at the Curtis, and paid less rent because the manager thought it was a hardship for me. It wasn’t, and the rent wasn’t either.

A Curtis Special, one washer/one dryer, would be a step up for many SRO tenants, including those with disabilities that restrict their movements. One of the tenants at the Elk is often unable to leave her room due to chronic pain problems. I know her as “Star”. Community kitchens and laundry rooms would require a sacrifice—the willingness to give up rooms that would house tenants and make money for the SRO’s management.

The digital television conversion those of us who care about television are all going through, the low-income coupons-to-buy-the-digital-signal-converter-boxes program, are not the only limbo SRO tenants experience daily. Even before the digital television thing started looming larger on the horizon, SRO hotels have been in a grey area for television service, cable and satellite in particular.

Some THC building are very cable friendly, Elk residents went through a very confusing process leading to the establishment of a community satellite television in the lobby. Satellite tv is cool, as long as the bills are paid. Ahem, cough cough.

Of course, if you aren’t low-income (you probably don’t live in a SRO—unless even “affordable housing” hoses you), more personal money certainly talks pretty loudly. Still, a television in every room, a chicken in every pot…actually, I am serious about that. This is one of those “I’d rather Opt Out Than Be Made To Seek The Service I Should Automatically Have” situations.

Another one is telephones. Put the low-income Lifeline phones in every SRO room, put the phone bill on the monthly (or every 2 weeks, the way I paid until achieving downward mobility this past summer to welfare) rent payment so nobody has to think about it unless someone at the phone company does something “unfortunate”. Simple. The Way Things Ought To Be.

SRO tenants in San Francisco have traveled some ways since The Bad Old Days, but there’s some distance to go to be living in The Promised Land. Organizations like Tenderloin Neighborhood Development Corporation, CoHousing Partners, and THC provide significant steps up the Ladder of Liveability, but SRO hotel managers and owners still have to be pushed and prodded, often by tenants working for the SRO Collaborative, POWER and other groups.

Next on my The Way Things Ought To Be list: showers and bathrooms. The best showers I’ve ever taken were in the county jail in Great Falls, Montana after cutting the fence around a missile silo outside of town.

Many SRO tenants use shared bathrooms, showers, and bathtubs. The Elk’s showers are all different in size, equipment, and water pressure. I spent long minutes in the county jail shower. Global warming? Me was bad boy. As I said, THC spent a lot of money on improvements for the Elk, but not much on the showers except for the frequent repairs that are the inevitable consequence of 80+ people living in the building.

One problem, a leak, required a Sherlock Holmesian effort to trace the path the water took to the mom and pop store under us. It also shut down my floor’s shower for several weeks.

Another problem, which may have been solved (I’m crossing my fingers…) is the Elk Hotel’s heating system, which turned on full blast during the hottest days of the summer and, after much complaining, didn’t come on much, if at all, as the season turned especially during the recent Bay Area deep freeze. Verbal complaints didn’t get much more than responses like “That’s a maintenance thing”.

I’ve never experienced anything like this in an SRO hotel before. How many tenants are too used to this? It was nice to learn that the Rent Board would have reduced my rent if I filed a complaint—all I want is an environmental control system that hasn’t lost its mechanical little mind!

A written request from a number of tenants, organized by the tenant rep, appears to have gotten results. We’ll see. I do like cooler weather, despite growing up in Texas, but I’m not a member of the Polar Bear Club that swims in the cold waters of San Francisco Bay!

THC and other non-profit-entity-run SRO hotels (including the Arlington) have on-site case managers available for low-income tenants who need help gaining access to social services and other things. Joe The Bummed Out Tenant and others I’ve spoken to at the Wednesday food pantry almost universally say said case managers are rarely available and there isn’t much they can do for them anyway—the assistance available is (well-known to those of us who’ve been around the social services block a few times) a trickled-down limited supply sought by a heapin’ helpin’ of people in need. That limited supply of help is under harsh attack in the Filthy McNasty economic conditions we’re living in now.

One more thing for the Way Things Ought To Be List: honesty. Tell folks there isn’t anything new available if they already know the ropes, maybe do the same anyway for the new kids on the block.

How did I find out the All-Star Hotel, which I thought was run by the City of San Francisco, is a THC building? Nate Holmes, shop steward of the union representing THC workers, told me. Nate’s an interesting guy, seems to know everyone, from SRO Collaborative tenant reps to someone from the San Francisco Organizing Project to Tony Robles and Tiny from Poor Magazine to who knows whom else.

I met him at what used to be Wild Awakenings Café, but is now the…Celtic Coffee Company. I’d love to have the old name back, but never mind. Nate Holmes is the best kind of shop steward (I’ve known one other, a single father of three I used to know in Seattle who worked for the postal service), the kind that gets in trouble with management for doing what a good union dude is supposed to do.

He is a caring, and very practical, pragmatic man. He told me, among other things, to do whatever it takes to get out of the Elk and into better housing. “I’ve seen too many people die in SRO’s,” he said. He’s happy to see Barack Obama be the next President, but realistic about the fact that there still is and always will be a lot to do to before conditions improve to (in my words) The Way Things Ought To Be.

Holmes also said “THC can do more to help tenants on GA find work—or create that work; they were trying to do more but they stopped for no apparent reason.” A six-months-long desk clerk training program that kicks the trainee to the curb to find another job elsewhere isn’t enough in his opinion. THC could get more people off of welfare, but only if, Holmes counseled me—tenants combine forces with the SRO Collaborative tenant rep organizaers to fight for more simple, practical mass employment, to push THC and encourage the San Francisco Board of Supervisors to add their voices and influence to such an effort.

“THC says there’s no money for it,” Holmes continued, “but they had it to start with” and just stopped spending it on that task.

Okay. Practical solutions versus semi-hemi-demi-pie-in-the-sky something-from-somewhere impractical (maybe) stuff. I have a very hard time disagreeing with Nate Holmes, but for one humongous obstacle in the way: “affordable housing” and its cousins, “low-income” and “very low-income” housing—there ain’t enough and there will be much less of it if San Francisco’s schizoid city planning process, married to the even worse “10 Year Plan To End Homelessness” (a.k.a. Care Not Cash), is allowed to continue making what amounts to fetal alcohol syndrome/crack baby-style urban policy.

Practical solutions working to end under and unemployment and houselessness will get nowhere if City Hall not only doesn’t know what its right and left hands are doing—it doesn’t act like it wants to know!

Wendall Davis is the assistant manager of the Elk Hotel, a known product to his employers and still has to go through a multiple interview interview process to get hired as the Manager Manager. Wendall is pretty popular, a nice guy too—you’d think THC would notice how the San Francisco 49ers got a clue and hired Mike Singletary to be Head Coach after proving he’s Da Man and a good leader too.

During a December 29th tenant meeting at the Elk, in response to conversation about kitchens, laundry rooms, etc., Wendall commented: “THC put in new carpets and other stuff before taking over officially, but washers, dryers and kitchens are major improvements that would increase the value of the building and if THC did that where would we be at the end of the 10 year contract with Mr. Patel, the owner? Ass out!”

The Catch-22-ish rock and hard place here is absotutely amazing, fascinating, frustrating, insert-your-own word for it (but don’t say it in front of the kids unless they’re used to it…). The economy is part of this madness too, I totally understand, though everyone hopes things improve.

THC’s contract with SRO owners is slightly long-viewish, but where’s the beef? Wendall was answering a comment/question from me about THC being a non-profit in good standing (I hope) with other non-profits like St. Anthony Foundation, Catholic Charities, St. Vincent de Paul and others that help tenants move from shelters to SRO’s or apartments, securing appliances and furniture.

I would have thought that the non-profit attitude would be more it’s-the-right-thing-to-do, so-why-not-do-it-no-matter-what-happens-at-the-end-of-the-contract. THC and other non-profits are a buffer zone between low-income citizens and the streets, near-total destitution and worse. Should I be impressed?

Another addition to The Way Things Ought To Be List: An “SRO Project”. Is there anyone out there who could or would accept the challenge of doing what ATHC and others apparently won’t do? Find and/or spend money, organize volunteers and tenant sweat equity—á la Habitat For Humanity—turning them into improvements to SRO hotels just becuz this Do The Right Thing is the rightest thing to do? (This is one of the main goals of POOR Magazine’s HOMEFULNESS project –still un-funded)

Every few years I do on-line searches of Habitat, Americorps and Vista. What stops me from seriously going after positions in those organizations—and others that they support—is a combinatikon of feeling personally inadequate to the tasks at hand and being unwilling to be philosophically crammed between some very hard rocks ‘n hard places of built-in hostile Care Not Cash attitudes of some of those efforts.

One position I examined on December 30th, 2008, is located in Sacramento. It’s a “10 Year Plan To End Homelessness” schtick, like the thing Gavin Newsome allowed to follow him home one day and has been trying to sell San Franciscans on its cuteness ever since.

HELP WANTED! I’ll beat down my self-doubts if there’s a Fairy Godmother/father out there. I need a job. I also want to do something that makes sense, that means something, even if a little head-banging on stone walls is the order of the day. I’ve always wanted to find out how good San Francisco Renaissance (the non-profit that teaches folks small business basics and incubates many that have become, or will become, players in the small business universe in this city) is, or whatever training regimen makes sense to actually be capable of doing what I’d like to do.

Practical versus impractical, that is the question. When it comes to SRO hotels, I think the answer should be—make those places as good as they can be for folks who need them. They, and others like them, will need them for a good long while to come.

It is personally rather frightening how easy it would be for me to become one of those people Nate Holmes spoke of (the dead ones)—an SRO hotel hermit. Despite what I said about in-house SRO case managers, I’ve watched at least one good one in action: Beth Sadler, the Elk Hotel’s c.m., spent some serious time talking through a crack in the door of one hotel hermit one day (I was in the bathroom across the hall—fly on the, uh, wall…).

Practical versus impractical, that is the question. Is there an answer?

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Heaven and Earth-

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

Growing Roots and Farmers

by Joanna Letz/ PNN

Heaven and Earth Farm

dive into soil, look around and admire.

I dive into the clouds. Take a look.

I press the sun into my forehead and rain collects in my palms.

Smoke is my tail, and wind is my eyes.

I am the moon, I gather up my shinning dress

And slowly walk out again to greet myself.

And I continue.

Frogs jump out of my throat

And call to the directions.

Open arms- dance- twisting and pulling.

And winding back out again.

Stretching out our arms and running head first

As the earth turns

Chasing the sun

The earth swallowing me up and spitting me back out.

Questions fly as I re-write the sky on my arms

In freckle constellations

Staring down the throat of okra flowers- hearing their whispers

Sweet mulberry juice sticking to my face

Re-learning what it means to be alive

My first experience in a garden was in my grandpa's yard. Zucchini and cucumber vines going wild, yellow flowers everywhere. Honey bees and tree houses. This mysterious, magical garden my grandpa kept. Big compost pile I heard once caught fire. My grandpa kept growing tomatoes on his porch until he passed away at 94. It was to my grandpa I thought of as I journeyed to working on an organic vegetable farm in the Sierra foothills.

As a grand daughter of Eastern-European Jews, and a grand daughter of holocaust survivors, my connection to a cultural identity has mostly been based on a history of victim-hood. Many of the healing traditions of my grandmothers and great-grandmothers have been lost. I feel now is the time for me to reconnect with these lost traditions as well as other rich cultural knowledge and herstories about agriculture, wild foods and herbs, and how to take care of myself and those around me. The time I got to spend with my grandpa in his garden was transformative; peaceful and magical. The time I spent seeing my grandma knead her dough for cookies and cakes, and chop onions for soups, I was at ease. Now, with my grandpa passed and my grandma no longer able to make her sweets and barley soups, I must turn, look back and try to re-member what has been lost, but not totally forgotten.

Food has always been about bringing people together. Food is our health, nutrition, connection, and love. The kitchen, the farm, and the plants and trees around us, our environment, and our bodies, need to come back into the forefront of our movement building, and our lives. A world we can sustain- with our hands in the soil and fresh greens and carrots on our tongues and in our bellies. With the continuing growth in cities, and growth in agri-business and massive mono-cropped farms people are more and more disconnected from nourishing traditions and foods. The constant assault and harassment by police and corporate culture of poor communities and communities of color who are struggling to keep traditional healing and ways of being alive is a crime against humanity. Now is a time to create another vision and look to those struggling to keep other ways of knowing alive and be the alternative to a culture of commodification, of grocery stores, shopping malls, and highways. We have strayed far from our intuitive selves and we need to come back home to our bodies and traditions.

Every person, child, mother, father, sister should have the opportunity to experience life on a farm. The daily routine; getting up with the sun, feeding the chickens, watering the plants, playing in the dirt, weeding, and weeding, the repetition, and meditation. Shoveling compost, preparing beds, transplanting and fertilizing. Watching as seeds germinate and take root. Contemplating food, nourishment, seasons, and our health and well-being. Sitting between beds of beets and carrots, beet greens courageously reaching for the sun, and carrot roots just below the surface. Winters nearness in fall greens- blanket of cabbage, broccoli, fennel, collards, and kale.

Working outside in the soil something magical is happening all the time. Watching bees and flowers, hearing birds cry, listening to our heart-beats, and seeing seeds sprout. In the first few months I was at Heaven and Earth farm I felt like the little kid again in my grandpa's garden. I never imagined that what I planted in the ground would actually grow. Taking a moment to stare at a corn stalk, the silk pollinated and dry, the cob, the female ovary beginning to take shape. Nature is abundant. Watching the life-cycles of plants.

Flowers opening and closing. Learning the relationships between plants; Cucurbitaceae- winter squash and melons. The brassica family- the mustards, cabbage, kale, collard greens, broccoli. The Aster family- complex flowers. The mallow family, Malvaceae- cotton, tobacco, and okra. Learning about the soil, and compost. The evening sky at the farm filled with stars, planets, galaxies, questions, patterns, and imaginative creatures. Standing tall, the morning sun, stars and dreams in my eyes. Looking out over mountains, questioning and balancing time and space. Rising up like a wild fire, growing, sustained and cooled by the constant flow of blood, water, oxygen, nutrients, love. Goddess corn stalks. California grasses.

Back in the earth, the rhythms, the cycles, the sun and moon, stars and clouds. Back in my body, my home. The joy, and the hard work, the dance around the blueberry patch, the taste of just picked vegetables, smells of cooking oil and garlic and fresh greens. The sheer delight you just want to jump and kick and scream, and dance.

In a time of much instability what matters most? At the end of the day all we have is ourselves and those around us, our family, the trees, the living, breathing soil, and sky. The seasons change and we change.

In the Bay Area, with so much talk about local foods and green products we have to actually start living in a radically different way. As Frank Cook says, it's not about food miles, but food feet. We have to eat from our backyards. Let's celebrate the seasons, the harvests and moon cycles. Demand that all communities have farmer's markets- farm stands, and gardens. What's the point in elitist style clubs that only talk about organics for the people who can afford it. Every home needs a space to grow herbs and roots, tomatoes, and lettuce. The sidewalks could be turned into a farm. Manufactured lawns could be rows of greens and berries. Every home needs a compost pile. Every block a chicken coop and milking goats. Every block, a community farm and garden space. Kids and grandparents, mothers and fathers could be inspired by the bees, by the zucchini flowers. Who knew plant sex could be so exciting? Instead of putting money for more walls and bars, lets demand money for gardens and education. Dismantle the concrete separating us from the soil and the food we eat. We need to support more people to work on farms like Heaven and Earth and share in the knowledge and lifestyle of growing our own food.

Just as the saying goes, "it takes a village to raise a child," I believe it takes a village to raise a farm. Farmers work a lot and get paid a little. Many farms, especially the ones run by large corporations are employing "guest-workers" or undocumented workers who are working extremely hard jobs and getting paid nothing, and not even being recognized for the work they are doing. The "farm" - the food we eat, needs to come back into the hands of everyone. We can supplement what we eat from the farms with wild foods like acorns, mushrooms, fruits, and whatever is around us.

Lets demand more produce stands and grocery stores in neighborhoods cut off from the talk of green and local, like West Oakland. We need to bridge the gaps between Berkeley residents who daily have access to fresh, local produce, and residents of West Oakland for whom the world of organics is worlds away, caught somewhere between liquor stores, freeway's, elitist slow food movements, and a culture hooked on discussing the newest food fad without making it accessible. Let's not just talk about the best carrot of the year, or the newest heirloom bean, but about how to bring this goodness to everyone. Let's boycott the big grocery stores and challenge them to bring the produce and stores to low-income communities. Support organizations that are trying to bridge the gaps, like People's Grocery, City Slickers Farm, and the Free Farm Stand in the Mission.

As I journey back to the city, the rows of cabbage and broccoli, turn into rows of cars, and freeways, rows of lights, and telephone wires, billboards, and TV screens and screams. What are we growing here in the city? What are we growing inside ourselves and in the ground? The chatter drowning out our intuitive selves our knowledge we were handed down to us- from our mamaz, the mitochondria in our cells. Lets drown the chatter, the noise, with our heart-beats, our dances, our roots, as groups gather to re-member our traditions. As POOR magazine and others creates space for elders to tell their stories and teach their traditions.

Well-being. Taking care of each other and ourselves and realizing the abundance around us of all we need to live, love, nourishment, fruit, vegetables, music, song, building materials, water. Redefining the world we find ourselves in. Refusing to accept the culture of fear and of scarcity. Taking care of each other and ourselves, learning about the plants around us, about how to build, how to sing, how to heal, how to cook nourishing meals. This is culture. This is well-being, life, living.

Organizations like POOR magazine are creating new ways, and building upon old ways of being in the world. POOR through community newsroom and the vision of homefulness project is working to bring people together to share knowledge, stories, healing medicine, and food. POOR is speaking, and reporting on another way of living that is constantly under pressure from corporate media, gentrification, and the prison industrial complex. From the streets of Oakland to Gaza, we are demanding justice and demanding a right to live in peace- and in harmony with our intuitive selves and ancestral and cultural knowledge.

Take the time, and money if you have it, to support the farms and gardens in your area, make one in your backyard or on your sidewalk.

Please consider making a donation to POOR Magazine’s HOMEFULNESS project which is a sweat-equity co-housing project, multi-generational, multi-lingual school and small sustainable farm for houseless families . Checks can be sent to: 2940 16th Street, #301, San Francisco, 94103. Or call: (415) 863-6306

Check out Tiny's article- Is it true that a healthy body is a wealthy body?
http://www.poormagazine.org/index.cfm?L1=news&category=40&story=1955

Resources and Links:

East Bay:
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*West Oakland - People's grocery: www.peoplesgrocery.org
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*City Slicker Farms: www.cityslickerfarms.org
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Bay Area Farmer's Markets: www.sfgate.com/food/farmersmarkets
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Oakland green map info: http://www.greenmap.org/howto/isee.html
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Berkeley green map: http://www.greenmap.org/greenhouse/es/node/47
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www.alledibles.com: all edibles offers the collaborative design and installation of custom edible landscapes and gardens.
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Oakland based urban gardens: www.obugs.org
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www.ecologycenter.org
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www.greywaterguerrillas.com
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Edible Schoolyards: www.edibleschoolyard.org
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What can you harvest in your backyard/street/Neighborhood, check out: www.forageoakland.blogspot.com
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East Bay Food Not Bombs: www.ebfnb.org

San Francisco/u>
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Alemany Farms: http://www.alemanyfarm.org/
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www.freefarmstand.org: The Free Farm Stand: Sundays 1-3pm in Treat Commons Community Garden-Parque Niños Unidos-corner of 23rd St. and Treat Ave. For more information/to volunteer/ or know of a fruit tree that needs picking- call Tree (415) 824-5193
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Free eats chart: www.freeprintshop.org
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San Francisco Food Not Bombs: sffnb.org
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San Francisco green map: www.sfgreenmap.org
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Learn more about mushrooms: Mycological Society of San Francisco: www.mssf.org

Other Educational Farming/Outdoor programs for kids:
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Slide Ranch: www.slideranch.org
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Hidden Villa: www.hiddenvilla.org
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Pie Ranch: www.pieranch.org

Farming apprenticeship websites:
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attrainternships.ncat.org/
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www.organicvolunteers.com
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www.wwoof.org

Other Resources:
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www.localharvest.org
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www.eco-farm.org
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Community Alliance with Family Farmers: www.caff.org
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Community Food Security Coalition: www.foodsecurity.org
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Check out Common Vision's fruit tree tour in California: www.commonvision.org
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Organic Seed Alliance: www.seedalliance.org
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Equity Trust: www.equitytrust.org- helps communities to gain ownership interests in their food, land, and housing
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Regenerative Design: Wild Crafting Series: www.regenerativedesign.org/courses-events/wild-crafting-series

Books
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Healing With Whole Foods: Asian Traditions and Modern Nutrition, Paul Pitchford
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Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats, Sally Fallon
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Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods, Sandor Ellix Katz
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Botany in a Day, Thomas J Elpel
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Mycelium Running, Paul Stamets
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Mushrooms Demystified, David Arora

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Tribal Corruption Is Not Traditional

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body


Press Conference and Public Testimony

11:00-3:00pm, Thursday, February 5th

State Capitol Building North Side 10th st & Capitol Mall, Sacramento, California

by Adrienne Aguirre/PNN

American hands pry into other nations, wagging their fingers at all colonization that isn't their own. In this transparent pretense of a post-imperialist world, the United States insists on preaching against the evils of non-democratic states when back home, true democracy is myth. As American resources are funneled out of our country to aid the United States' reconstruction of countries abroad that have been continually raped by American greed, closer to home, the 500 year old colonization of the indigenous people of North America goes overlooked and unaddressed.

Before Israel vs. Palestine, before the injustice in Gaza, the Indigenous peoples of North America were robbed of their homeland by white colonizers who decided that they had to commit mass, systematic murder instead of sharing the land peacefully with its rightful owners. Since then, the Indigenous people from North America have been forced to inhabit the 3rd world corners of the United States, perpetually constricted and relocated due to the ever-homeland-shrinking policies of the US government. The lands of their ancestors, the sacred sites where spirits once thrived, have fallen victim to libidinal greed. These sacred sites that once held the legacy of the culture and spirituality now lie in ruins as golf courses or made to bleed uranium for money hungry miners.

Today, new oppressors have joined forces with the old. These oppressors bear the same faces, have the same blood coursing through their bodies and face the same burdens as their victims but greed has infected their vision. Now, for the love of money, they have systematically been executing cultural genocide upon their own people. It is called disenrollment. With the Indian gaming industry raking in billions of dollars every year, it's disturbing that Indian universities lay in ruins. D-Q University, the only Indian university in California and the site of the Longest Walk”the historic event that basically paved the way for casino development in 1978, is direly underfunded while the Indian gaming industry in California alone generates billions in revenue each year. We've all seen the casino commercials, heard the claims that the money generated from these resorts goes towards helping the community ; what isn't stated is that the community mentioned doesn't seem to include indigenous people, doesn't care to invest in their education. On top of that, while the vast majority of Indian gaming occurs on either coast, all Indian universities, with the sole, extremely underfunded exception of D-Q University, lie between coasts. So where is all this supposed community funding going?

With rampant classism amongst the Indigenous people, resulting from the greed generated by the gaming industry, casino owners on tribal councils feel that it is necessary to strip the citizenship of certain tribal members, effectively deciding who is and who isn't Indian. One of the main reasons this is coming up now is because these leaders controlling our tribal nations today are sellouts, said Quanah Brightman, VP of United Native Americans. We have had illegal occupation over here [in the United States] for 500 years but no one cares because of these casinos. The people who control most of the money aren't even Native American!

As more and more tribe members are disenrolled and disenfranchised, the Indian movement to preserve what's left of Indian sacred sites is divided and ultimately weakened.

On February 5, 2009, United Native Americans will demonstrate in at the Capital in Sacramento, CA. We want to give platform to the Indian movement, for our demonstration to call to thousands of people nationwide who have been disenfranchised, disenrolled, and hurt by our leaders who have basically sold us out. We want to expose them for what they are and we want to put an end to disenrollment. We want to build our tribal colleges and invest in our healthcare education and our general well-being, Brightman said in closing.

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The Day White People Turned Into People of Color

09/24/2021 - 09:45 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body

by RWS

Uncle Anthony always said funny things. When he coughed he coughed up words, names, dates and visions, some of which were wrong but somehow always right. Uncle Ant is my father's younger brother. Dad named me after him. Uncle Anthony is fearless, never afraid to say what's on his mind aloud for anybody to hear. I wish I were fearless.

Uncle Ant, tell me that story

He had a thousand stories, some untold. He had a way of getting names wrong but in his unintentional wrongness made the names better, gave the mundane some spice, the murderer a shard of laughter. He once related to me a story about a man responsible for the deaths of millions of people in Southeast Asia. He was the top dog in the country's ruling party. What's his name? I asked my uncle.

"Pot Pie"

"Pot who?"

"Pot Pie. That cat slaughtered millions of folks, a real son of a bitch. They even did a movie about him. I think was called "A killing in the cane fields" or something like that".

I sit as my uncle described the torture, the suffering. His eyes dampened in the dark glow of his living room. He shook his head and poured a drink. I sat near his conga drum near the wall. He'd just gotten it out of the pawnshop. It ached for my uncle's touch. My uncle poured brandy into a glass, making the ice crackle and melt. As he spoke my internal voice started a monologue:

No Uncle Ant, the man's name wasn't Pot Pie, it was Pol Pot. And the movie was called, "The Killing Fields", there wasn't any reference to sugar cane in the title. You always get the names wrong--always. Oh no? Remember Saddam Hussein, when he got captured? You phoned me in the middle of the night, your voice wrought with urgency, as if a relative had just committed suicide. You said, "Man, they just caught Sadat! Found him in a rat hole under the ground. The Americans got his ass now". I thought to myself, there you go again, butchering the names; it's not Sadat, it's Saddam. Sadat was the president of Egypt who was assassinated, shot dead through 14 layers of security. He's been dead almost 30 years, remember?

Uncle Ant sits next to me. He still looks young, like he did in the 70's. The dim light falls upon his skin, the color of sweet coffee. His eyes are small and see the smallest things. He never ran from a fight, or a mirror. I look around the room. Pictures of black and brown people blanket the walls. Everywhere you look there is a face in a picture. There is a picture of Jesus on the wall. He's black too.

"Come on Uncle Ant tell me that story again"

He puts down his glass.
"Ok, this is what happened. I was about 25 or 26. It was 1968 or 69. Anyway, I was in my prime, solid. I had 16-inch arms, narrow waist. I was in shape, weighed 135. I could move too. When I was a kid I used to knock dudes out twice my size. Bing! I'd lay 'em out with either hand, lay 'em flat out. One time I got into a hassle with this motorcycle dude, some kind of Hells Angel. He cuts ahead of me in the line at the liquor store. I was polite. I said, excuse me but I was here before you. The guy just smiled and put his beer on the counter."

"What did you do?"

"I lit him up. It was a beautiful right hand to the jaw. He flew across the counter. That was the way I was back then. I grew up with black and brown warriors--blacks and Filipinos back in the 50's and 60's. Anyway, after I knocked that guy out I went out to the park by the lake. I was never into drugs, you know, not heavily anyway. My friend Dave gave me some LSD, some acid you know. He told me it would give me wisdom if I took it, that it would open up my mind, some kind of bullshit like that. So, I dropped that acid, put it on my tongue. I'm sitting there looking out at the lake and all of is peaceful when things start breathing."

"Breathing?"

"Yeah man, the leaves were breathing. I could see the cells of the leaves and the liquid pulsating like blood. I said, damn what's this all about? I looked at the ground and it was covered in diamonds and gold. It was beautiful like some kind of palace. I was just looking at it all, going with it. Didn't feel like knocking anybody out either. I just felt love, you know, the way you're supposed to feel. The air was nice and cool like I could drink it. I got up and started walking."

"What happened then?"

"I felt like a king walking on golden streets heading home. I walked for a few minutes when I saw a black man and an Asian lady. They looked normal, the way a black man and an Asian lady should look. Then I saw a white man and I almost shit my pants."

"What did the white man look like?"

"He looked like a clown! He had a face that was red, white, yellow, blue. He had a rainbow colored wig on his head. I started laughing. I kept walking and I kept seeing more white people. They all looked like clowns out of the circus, their heads looked like balloons, one of the heads even popped! I'd stop and look at them and laugh. They looked at me like I was crazy. I even saw a cop. His face looked like one of those droopy clowns of the 1950's. I looked at him and I couldn't stop laughing. The cop looked at me hard. It's not a crime to laugh. He wanted to beat me, I could tell. I've survived that in the streets, you know. I keep walking and stop by the liquor store. There's this white dude who works at the register, a chickenshit kind of racist, always looking at me funny but he gives me credit so he ain't all bad. That dude looked like a clown too! I never laughed so hard in my life. The man just looked at me and asked me if I was high on drugs. I was high on life but I didn't bother telling him that."

"What happened after that?"

"I went home. I got to the bathroom and looked in the mirror. I wasn't no clown, that's for damn sure. That was a long time ago, I can't believe how long it's been, thirty years? Clowns come in all colors. I've been around them all my life, the bosses especially. All clowns. I never touched LSD since. You don't need no LSD to see clowns all over. That was the last time I ever saw gold in the street."

Uncle Anthony and I sit in silence for a while looking at all the black and brown people on the wall. Finally he breaks his silence.

You know, I found God--I mean, he found me. He talks to me. It was never really about color, man. When you die do you think God's going to ask you what color you were down here on earth?

Uncle Anthony looks at the pictures on the wall then at me. The ice in my glass has melted. My uncle gets up and grabs his conga drum. He takes a sip of brandy. He tells another story. With his hands this time. And again I listen.

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