Story Archives 2010

Bruce's Ghost

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
cayley
Original Body

The night the first "Redstone Runaround" story was written this poverty skolar had a dream about a Japanese woman dressed in a flowing white gown, holding a lantern in each hand, floating above the street at 16th and Capp Streets (in San Francisco)--where the Redstone Building is located.  The lanterns were blue, as was the light coming from them.

I thought it was just a dream caused by being happy about getting an important story on poormagazine.  The dream came back the next night.  I thought it was a pizza dream that time.  When I had this dream for a third night in a row, I wanted to know what was going on.  I thought maybe it was the Japanese goddess Amaterasu, so I talked with some Japanese friends.

Because I described her as having no feet in the dreams, my friends said I was being visited by a ghost, not a goddess.  The spirit was trying to tell me she is okay and wants her loved ones to know it.  After the 1906 earthquake some bodies were buried with no identification, and some of them may have been labelled "Chinese" because, back then, all Asians were called "Chinese".

To send this spirit to her rightful heaven, if anyone reading this article of Japanese descent and has family history involving the 1906 earthquake and ancestors who mysteriously disappeared, please know that your ancestor is okay.  I would appreciate it if any Shinto priests or priestesses hearing about or reading this article would contact me to tell me what I can do to help this spirit move on.  You can contact me at bruce94103@gmail.com, or write a "comment" about this article with your advice.
 

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Deaf Hip-Hop Scene in London

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Although Krip-Hop Nation is back home, the work, news and music keeps on going.  DJ TBC of London, England tells us about the Deaf Hip-Hop scene in Lodon England.

 

Deaf Hip-Hop Scene in London

 

 

Being Deaf it is hard to experience music properly DJ TBC writes…

 

Deaf people want to be able to enjoy music but it has to be loud, so loud the vibrations of the bass line can be felt. Hip-hop does well with its bass lines as Deaf people can understand the rhythm and therefore can dance to it.

 

DJ TBC, I produce music and have a heavy emphasis on the bass so my Deaf peers can feel it literally! I love to see people dancing to the work I have devoted much time and energy into and knowing I’m doing something positive for the community makes me smile.”

 

Deaf people for years have been often left out of the music industry and it is only now with the likes of Signmark whom hails from Finland that the industry is starting to realize that there is hidden talent within the Deaf community. Signmark is a sign language based rapper who translates lyrics that are spoken which he has himself created in order to bring important messages/wordplay into the mainstream such as “It ain't no rocket science, don't need a microphone to rock it” which creates empowerment for Deaf people at large.

 

DJ TBC is involved with a Deaf/hearing group who are organizing a party in London called Sencity aimed at bring Deaf and hearing people together for a night of music but it focuses on all the senses rather than just sound for example there will be Aroma Jockey’s who mix smells to match the mood of the music, Video Jockey’s to mix video’s as If they were music tracks and one of the highlights of the night will be the vibrating dance floor where people can actually feel the beats and bass lines! Signmark will also be headlining the gig along with some other prominent names in the business. Sencity has been running for the last 7 years and started in Holland to make the impossible possible by putting on a music event for Deaf and hearing people to come together and since those days it has grown with events taking place in Australia, Mexico, Brazil, Finland and many other countries. See www.your-sencity.com for more information.

 

Hip-hop has its place within the mainstream but needs to reach out further to Deaf people who love to watch music videos such as Drake’s “Over”, Public Enemy’s “Fight the power” and Birdy Nam Nam’s “Abbesses. Hopefully one day we can see more artists like Signmark emerging and breaking through the ranks in to the mainstream.

 

DJ TBC “We all need a form of escape and we need for everyone to enjoy Hip-Hop whether they be Deaf or disabled after all we live in a society that is very much about inclusion. If you put your mind to it anything is possible!”

 

For a free download of TBC’s track “Facing the barrier” go to http://www.mediafire.com/?hajsxcgkb1dqg2f

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Somebody Else's Slave: Use of the "N" Word.

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Mad Man Marlon
Original Body

Picture credited from the book "Capitalist Nigger" by Chika Onyeani. It is featured online www.proverbmusic.net/.../

Note: The following story I’ve written is not aimed as a direct attack on ANY specific race, whatsoever. It is people’s (including my own) experience, reflection, and especially survival from a word/weapon. Historically, it has destroyed human beings.

Presently, it is still used as such in displacing human beings………….. from themselves. Bringing forth community consciousness, locally and globally. “There was a discussion about how people say that word. No matter how you say that word………....its like saying that you’re someone’s slave.”

An explanation of the use of the “N” word by my comrade and co-founder of POOR Magazine’s Family Project, Jewnbug.

We’ve all heard this word, this slur……………at least most people here in the U.S.A, and in other countries have. A slur spat from the mouths of European colonizers onto one race of people, while savagely stolen from their land: African Descendants into African-Americans.

A word/weapon leading to generations of enslavement, dehumanization, segregation, criminalization, incarceration, and death of communities by European KKKolonizers. Used for “mass destruction” in present day. A word so ugly, evil, and inhumane that its very usage would even one day become a partial transformation. A reclamation effort from its enslavement to the soul.

Metaphorically, a kiss to an ugly duckling to see it blossom into a beautiful swan. Immoral infection to their mind to re-invent, reclaim and reproduce it for themselves. A cultural form greeting of brotherhood, or despise. Soap into syrup, one or the other in the mouths of many. One race to displace their humility with one word.

Arguably and/or accurately, it is the mother of all racial slurs:

NIGGER

Ugly as it seen, ugly as it is heard. According to “His-story” (among others) the word “Nigger” began as a term used in a neutral context to refer to black people, as a variation of the Spanish/Portuguese noun, negro; a descendant of the Latin adjective “Niger” meaning the color "black."

Many conflicting stories stem from “His-story” about the origination of this word, and its original target, but who can doubt its destination? “

When I was growing up, I didn’t know too much about that word, until I went to an all white school in Upstate, New York.” Raaddrr Van, Race, Media, and Poverty Scholar said to me regarding his experience. Van recalls the moment he boarded the “cheese (yellow) bus” the other kids began to chant “KKK, KKK, KKK!” at him. (acronym for the notorious white supremacist terrorist group) “Today, as a black man in America, that word does hurt me, and my black people.” Van says. “But at the end of the day, I’m still black.”

I can only imagine the inner torment, and terror someone like Malcolm X endured from the sound of this word, in his childhood. In school, he was taught the reality of discouragement from his eight grade (white) teacher. Malcolm’s dream from ever becoming a lawyer were shattered from his teacher’s words, "No realistic goal for a nigger.” Hearing this hurt Malcolm’s humility enough to engage into a life of crime, until he was incarcerated.

From incarceration, to education however, Malcolm X later became one of the most influential speakers and leaders the world would ever see.

A word to the black man Do not point your nose too high Do not swell your chest too much Do not boast too loudly Do not be puffed up Let not your ambition be inordinate Or take a wrong direction Remember you have done nothing at all You are just the same member of society you were last week……….. Partial excerpt from an editorial from The Los Angeles Times titled “A Word to the Black Man” published on July 5th, 1910 following the July 4th historical victory of Jack Johnson over James Jeffries, in Reno, Nevada.

The headline was the “Fight of the Century.” Johnson’s victory over Jeffries enraged whites who rioted against blacks via his victory. “Nigg-er” became a widespread into a pandemic of psychological impairment. The result went into a reclaim. Re-formed and re-introduced as “Nigg-a.”

It became a self-proclamation, of self-expressiveness among many young black men and women, actors in certain films; such as 1970s “Blax-ploitation Era” rap artists in music, comedians in their standup performances, etc, etc. Nearly everywhere, it hits my ears fluently, in friendly or furious fashion.

A cultural collective attempt to empowerment: “Yo my nigga! How you doing?” “Hey, you punkass nigga!” “We should no longer accept this negative, anti-BLACK image of ourselves that was forced on us by the former slavemaster!” Sister Yeye Akilimali Funua Olade, April, 2007 My lifelong best friend from Cleveland, Ohio, Ryan Jones said to me, in a brief recent interview regarding his feelings and experience with it.

Jones briefly explained its purpose to me. “That word has been misused for the past 100 years. It was used to invoke racial hatred towards an ethnic group of people to intimidate, and make them feel inferior. Personally, I do not like the word, for I was called that word numerous times growing up, and it holds a personal disgust within me.” Growing up with Ryan Jones and his brother, Bryan Jones (both identical twins) I can not only concur his feelings of the word and experience, but from my own.

The three of us were subjected to it, and attacked because of it. As a child born and raised in Cleveland, myself and my family were often savagely subjected to “Nigger” many times. Our white neighbors were quite friendly towards us for awhile, until slight disagreements led to cursing and hissing. The cursing became a chorus of inner terror and fear for me.

Like a bomb detonation, it damaged my dignity. (repeatedly and daily even) “Nigger!” “Nigger!” “Nigger!” The Use of “Nigger” spans much deeper. Verbally, every single African Descent person here in United States of AmeriKKKa, (and abroad) can see and hear all categories of one ugly word within a sentence from a set of lips. The awful energy, hatred, anger, fury, and the deepest downcast. Like a barrage of bullets and/or daggers striking into one’s mind, heart, and soul.

Physical, like a po-lice officer’s “Use of Force.” Southern trees bear strange fruit Blood on the leaves and blood at the root Black body swinging in the Southern breeze Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees Pastoral scene of the gallant South, The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth, Scent of magnolia sweet and fresh, Then the sudden smell of burning flesh! Here is fruit for the crows to pluck, For the rain to gather, for the wind to suck, For the sun to rot, for the trees to drop, Here is a strange and bitter crop. Poem by Abel Meeropol, performed by Billie Holiday.

A pregnant woman is hung upside down by her ankles. Her unborn baby slashed from her belly by a white hate-filled mob. They set her on fire. As her life is taken before her eyes, she lives long enough to see them crush the life she produced. Burning upside down, she cries out for her child as a hail of bullets tear through her burning body. Mary Turner, May of 1918 in Valdosta, Georgia.

A fourteen years old boy’s eyes are gouged out, shot in his head, his body weighed down with a 70 lb cotton gin fan, then barb wire tied is around his neck. Emmet Till, August 28th, 1955. Abducted at night, taken to an undisclosed location, castrated, then dumped on a roadside left to bleed to death. Edward Aaron, September 2nd, 1957.

Chained to a pickup truck in the darkest of night, then dragged along the road until his body was severed apart as he begged for his life. James Byrd Jr, June 7th, 1998.

Shot in the back, spread eagled on the ground, even in compliance to a po-lice officer’s orders. His dying words of shock as he looks up at his killer: “You shot me?!! Oscar Grant, January 1st, 2009. Spread eagled, imprisoned on my bed, looking at the barrel of a gun, and a dozen other guns from po-lice officers. Innocence and detailed description of their “suspect” irrelevant to a crime I did not commit.

Skin was all they saw.

October 7th, 2005, a day that my life saw death through their eyes. Being a “Nigger” in their eyes, ready to open fire with it on their mind. “Who’s skin care you? Who’s voice care you?” (In reference to my poem) http://www.poormagazine.org/node/2728 I feel that for every reclaim of “Nigg-a” is a reminder of pain behind “Nigg-er.” Tran substantive error in terms of “Black on Black” violence in poor communities perpetrated by corporate mainstream media, and its proponents. Blind consciousness of capitalism in journalism, “If it bleeds it leads.” “

They (young men of color) are murdered twice, by the cops and……....... by the media!” Explosive words from D’andre, who was lead speaker to everyone in attendance and support (including POOR) of October 22nd National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality, Repression, and Criminalization of a Generation. Another tran substantive error is a very sensitive subject and heated debate.

The false empowerment and notion of “skin privilege” imposed upon the minds of African Descendants (and other non-white ethnicities) that the lighter their skin, the better their chances to survival and success. “Passing for White” was the term used in the old days.

My mentor, POOR co-founder “Tiny” Lisa Gray-Garcia soundly resents, and resists this psychological pandemic of Eurocentric form of “self.” “Additionally, I as a mixed race daughter of a "half-breed" mixed race, unwanted orphan of color, my mama. My phrase is I'm Black, I’m just melanin challenged.” I am the success story of the pure race scientists, and the tears of my KKKolinized ancestors.”

Tiny poetically-presents, in detailed description of the horrors that her mom, “Mama” Dee Gray faced in foster homes as a little girl: “Welfare Queens.” A revolutionary play produced and co-directed by the “Super Baby Mamas” of POOR Magazine/PNN Hey little girl, are you the new orphan? Are you the new orphan?! Hey little girl?! Cat’s got your tongue?! Can’t you talk?! I think she’s deaf ! She sure is funny lookin like a little nigger! Nigger lips! Nigger lips! Can’t you talk? Can you fight?! Cmon, stand up! Poor little deaf and dumb orphan girl! Can’t talk, can’t move! “

Mama”Dee-Gray would later be tossed in a trash can by her tormenters. Trapped in darkness, paralyzed with too much fear to move a muscle, else someone might hear her.

“Tiny” Lisa Gray-Garcia’s consciousness of her own culture, and deterrent from another. “I live within this white skin as a Mestizo person in conflict, and therefore I don’t believe it is respectful to appropriate a word (Nigger) used to harm so many of my ancestors……….anymore than I would use the word Spic, or Mojado (two slurs) used for my raze gente.” Tiny’s meaning of reclaim: “

What I do claim is my indigenity, my blood line to colonized peoples across Pacha Mama - Boricua, Taino, Roma, African, and Irish; as a way to re-claim the stolen and destroyed cultures that live within my heart.” Behind every sound of “Nigger” into Nigg-a (or vice versa) is the sound of slavery, torture, rape, oppression, displacement incarceration, and death.

Past, Present, and God forbid, the Future. In another reality realm, every single race has a slur placed upon them, literally from A-Z. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ethnic_slurs For me as a young African Descent man with multiple ethnicities in my bloodline; my own skin should be irrelevant to society once and for all!

My family of POOR's ultimate goal for all of us poor communities, locally and globally: Moving off these grids of separations and control of our land from “The Man” and his linguistic domination. “Nigger” being one of them. Taking back our land, with our own lens, our own lives, with every single story of struggle at a time.

In the end, the real reclaim is ourselves starting with the “I” voice ending with “we” as a community. Not a displacement from our communities, and ourselves from "Nigg-er" or "Nigg-a." "

The black man is a kind of man that never holds his fists down so that is why I like the Black Man kind." Poem by 7 year old Tiburcio Garcia, son of tiny and Revolutionary Youth Scholar titled "Black Man Knows True."

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Afterwards, Life is Oh So Beautiful (Poem looking at Curtis Mayfield & Christopher Reeve through my eyes)

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

(Only one of many poems I want to write about the two)

Afterwards, Life is Oh So Beautiful

Fall from grace
But the same
No camera, lights or stage

One Black the other White
A singer, the other an actor
Different life styles different backgrounds

Poverty & Wealthy
Curtom & Hollywood
1991 & 1995 spinal cords snapped

On stage & on a horse
Out of the public’s eye
Two paths never intertwine

Therapy behind close doors
Trying to get back to studio’s floors
With cameras & microphones

No more Superfly Superman
Looking through the Rear Window
But not seeing each other

One saw inner cities
The other suburbs
Connected & separated by spinal fluid

One fought for a cure
The other spoke about New World Order
Singing “Life Is Oh So Beautiful..”

Cameras, doctors and politicians following him
While Spike Lee “ Get On The Bus” with him
Stem Cell research social justice lyrics

Life did changed afterwards
But not a lot still acting still singing
Both disabled but oh so dissimilar

Media followed one
And let the other fade away
But when it’s all done

Whatever politics you might like
My Beautiful Brother of Mine
Both gone from this earth
“Never forget the life we live is oh so beautiful..”

By Leroy Moore
12/5/10

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Living Up To Promises (Poem)

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Living Up To Promises

I am Blind Willie Johnson
Standing outside City Hall singing
"If I had my way
If I had-a, a wicked world
If I had-a, ah Lord, tear this building down..."

I am Varetta Dillard, Water Jackson & Robert Winters
Leaning on crutches on stage singing
“Take me as I am….”

I am Peg Lag Howell
Creating dances for the Black community
Doing Georgia Crawl, Peg Leg Stomp, Beaver Slide Rag

I am Brigardo Groves
Striking the keys
Grooving the youth while teaching

I am Malcolm Samuel
Sticking up a middle finger to the po po
And delivering Paper Bullets through poetry

I am Blind Mamie Forehand
Bringing the holy ghost in a man’s world
Opening eyes to "Honey In The Rock..."

I am Chick Webb
"Spinnin'" The Web with two sticks
Boom boom pop pop bang bang killing that drum

I am Al Hibbler mix with Curtis Mayfield
Writing messages for the community in lyrical form
"Night And Day" in "New World Order"

I am history
Coming back to carry out what should have been taught
Once upon a time there was a story

Listen to the invisible
Who was visible before pen & paper
I am the page you’re turning

Finally learning
What has been erase
Pace yourself

I am Ray Charles
Moaning "Hey Mister you better listen..."
None of us are free. None of us are free. None of us are free,
one of us are chained. None of us are free.

I am America
Bleeding and healing
Land of promises need to live up to them

By Leroy Moore
12/4/10

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Es tiempo de Vivienda Segura/ It's Time for Homefulness

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
cayley
Original Body

English follows...

Tierra Robada,

Nunca debuelta,

Boronas tiradas, ya no me cae,

Generaciones construyendo planes,

Intercambio por manos llenas de codicia.

 

Es todo de robar,

Gringos supremacistas siempre

Sin respetar,

 

Dejando nos sin,

Afuera y siembre sospechosos

Listos para las mentiras de los ricos,

Ojos encarceladores y

Retratos de odio

 

Casas siempre en peligro-

Suenos siempre diferidos,

Siempre una prueba

 

Es tiempo de Vivienda segura

 

Amor, compartimiento, equalidad, cuidado con todas lenguas,

colores, edades juntos es mejor y sobre todo

respeto

 

Es tiempo de Vivienda segura

 

Mi hijo junto con su hijo, tu abuela con su babaymama,

 ancianos enseñando a los niños, la práctica de cuidado y de la interdependencia

 

Es tiempo de Vivienda segura

 

No mas separasion, desplazamiento, aburgesamiento y nidos destruidos,

 

Es tiempo de Vivienda segura

 

No mas complejo industrial de prision, injusticia de el lenguaje dominante Ingles.

 

 Es tiempo de Vivienda segura

 

Es una familias de Vision

Juntos, sinmentiras chantajes filantrópicos,

alchauetes simpre aumentando

 

los carceleros

los supervisores

No se trata-la liberación de los presos mantenidos

 

Es tiempo de Vivienda segura

 

Depende de ti y yo y toda la humanidad

darse cuenta de que sin todos

no habra nosotros.

 

Ingles sigue...

 

Land stolen,

never given back,

crumbs throw-en, not feelin that,

generations of lying plans,

traded between greed covered hands.

 

Its all about theft,

constant white supremacist

dis-respect.

 

Leaving us without,

outside and always suspect ,

ready for rich people lies,

incarcerating eyes and

hater profiles.

 

Homes forever in danger –

dreams always deferred,

always a test.

 

Its time for Homefulness

 

Love, sharing , equity, caring with all languages,

colors, ages together is best and most of all

respect.

 

Its time for Homefulness

 

My son together with your son,

your grandma with your babaymama,

elders teaching children,

practicing caring and inter-dependence.

 

Its time for Homefulness

 

 

No more separation, displacement, gentrification and torn apart nests,

 

Its time for Homefulness

 

 

No more prison industrial complex, English language domination injustice,

 

Its time for Homefulness

 

This is a Vision Family

 

Of us together, without philanthro-pimped lies,

poverty pimps on the rise,

the jailers,

the overseers,

no this is–freeing the incarcerated kept.

 

This is the time for Homefulness

 

And its up to you and me and all humanity

to realize that without all of us

there would be no we.

 

Its time for Homefulness

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Krip-Hop Nation Presents: Black Disabled Artists, Authors, Activists & Friends for Black History Month 2011. San Francisco, CA

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Krip-Hop Nation celebrates Black Disabled Artists/Authors/Activists & Friends for a weekend (February 18-20) of readings, music, discussions and a panel all highlighting the artistic contributions of Black disabled artists/authors/activists and those who support them of yesterday and today focusing on music and literary. Author panel includes Toni Hickman of TX, , Adarro Minton of New York, Allen Jones of San Francisco and friends of Krip-Hop Nation, DC Curtis & Bones Kendall of LA. Performances will include poetry and songs by Bay Area Black disabled artists/activists, Lee Williams and Avotcja. Hip-Hop disabled artist, Roxx Da Foxx will sing from her new CD and more artists will shine up the Bay Area. Also Krip-Hop artist, activist, actor from Boston, MA, Keith Jones will talk about his new documentary and why his new Hip-Hop CD will be his last. Toni Hickman of Houston TX will perform from her Hip-Hop CD, Cripple Pretty and more. We will remember the lives and music of Bay Area Black disabled musicians/activists who passed away like Brigardo Groves, Malcolm Samuel and Joe Capers to name a few with their own music and PowerPoint program. Special surprise guests from South Africa & Uganda, DeeJay Kabia of South Africa who is disabled and has his own campaign to reach other disabled musicians and Ronnie Ronnie of Uganda who is a professional musician and is a key member of Krip-Hop Nation and more. We hope to have DeeJay Kabia in present or both will be on skype (we hope). All sponsor by Krip-Hop Nation, San Francisco Main Library, The San Francisco Bay View Newspaper, Poor Magazine & I.D.E.A.L Magazine. Events will take place at San Francisco Main Library, Modern Times Bookstore and First Christian Church, 259 29th St., Oakland and more look back for update info.

Black disabled artists, authors, and activists have always been apart of the Black community from blind blues musicians to the recent growth of Black disabled authors like Allen Jones, Adarro Minton, Gary Norris Gray, and Milan Mitchell etc.. The San Francisco Bay View newspaper is the most popular Black newspaper in the Bay Area and they’ve been committed to listening to and writing the news and stories of the Black community including the Black disabled community in the San Francisco Bay Area and elsewhere. Poor Magazine has been a strong supporter of the writings, art, music, activism of Black disabled people and the column Illin-N-Chillin was one of the first online column on race & disability. These are some of the reasons why, in conjunction with Krip-Hop Nation, we are sponsoring / organizing Black Disabled Artists, Authors & Activists for 2011 Black History Month at the San Francisco main library, Modern Times Bookstore and First Christian Church and more. Like back in the day, Black disabled musicians like Toni Hickman (with her Hip-Hop cd, Crippled Pretty), Bay Area musician and DJ, Avotcja and Modupue, (with their world music CD, Live @ Yoshi's') and Lee Williams (with his spoken word/soul CD, Phase V), to name a few, are creating their own styles.

Right here in the San Francisco Bay Area we have a rich history of Black disabled activists/musicians who have helped change the lives of local Black and disabled people. For example, men like the late Malcolm Samuel, a Black Panther poet, and the late Brigardo Groves who helped put KPOO radio station on the air and taught music to area youth. Black disabled artists, authors, and activists like the ones above and more will be coming from as far as Africa to US East Coast, Houston, TX. to here in the San Francisco Bay Area to participate in this event.

Where San Francisco Main Library, Modern Times Bookstore and First Christian Church, 259 29th St., Oakland and more.

When: Weekend of February 18th. Modern Times Bookstore on February 18t, SF Main Library February 19th
and First Christian Church, 259 29th St., Oakland on February 20th & more

Contact info: Leroy Moore (510) 649-8438 email kriphopproject@yahoo.com. Sponsors: Krip-Hop Nation San Francisco Bay Newspaper, Poor Magazine San Francisco Main Library and I.D.E.A.L. Magazine

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Krip-Hop Nation Will Be On Hard Knock Radio on KPFA 94.1FM Berkeley, CA 4PM

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Just got back from KPFA Studio with Anita Johnson of Hard Knock Radio.  Thank u Anita.  The show will air in a week or so.

Krip-Hop Nation will be on Hard Knock Radio on KPFA 94.1 FM Berkeley, CA in late December .. check out the site  http://www.kpfa.org/hard-knock-radio for the right date.

Much love goes out to Anita Johnson of Hard Knock Radio for being a strong supporter of Krip-Hop Nation and another project I'm involved in Sins Invalid.  I'm very sad on what is happening at KPFA!  I used to be deeply involved in KPFA from the late 90's up to 2003 and have friends there who were laid off.  With all of that I & Krip-Hop Nation is excite to be asked to come on Hard Knock Radio.  Krip-Hop Nation will talk about some of the following:

 

    *What & Why Krip-Hop Nation
 
    *Its bigger than a label/contract
 
    *Krip-Hop  Nation events/projects
             1) Krip-Hop Homo-Hop
              2) Mcees With Disabilities
              3) Joe Capers Project
              4) Krip-Hop columns
              5) Black Disabled Artists/Authors/Activist in Black History Month
 
    *Why Krip-Hop Nation is international/Some of our members

    *DADA Festival in Liverpool UK 1ST time Krip-Hop/MWD perform together
    *Krip-Hop Book in the making
 

Hopefully the music during the show will be Krip-Hop Artists like:

Dark Shades is from Lady MJ  UK
Krip-Hop Across the World from friends of Brown Buffalo  Oakland CS
Stop Discrimination from PJ UK
MWD from Leroy Moroe Berkeley, CA.

These Days from Ronnie Ronnie Uganda, Africa

So Listen & support Hard Knock Radio  http://www.kpfa.org/hard-knock-radio

Leroy Moore

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Bird On A Wire: The Raven Speaks out on KRON 4's Stanley Roberts of "People Behaving Badly"

09/24/2021 - 09:21 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body

(Note: Stanley Roberts is the host of a TV segment called "People Behaving Badly" on San Francisco TV outlet KRON 4..."The News Station". The segment includes footage of people deemed to be behaving badly in real time. It includes the "Bad Behavior" of many, excluding the bad behavior of Stanley Roberts because it is assumed--by this writer anyway--that Mr. Stanley Roberts never behaves badly...ever. Enjoy)

Bird on a wire: The Raven speaks out on Stanley Roberts

By Revolutionary Worker Scholar

 

Q: What’s new in the life of the raven?

A: Same stuff as the last time

Q: Nothing new?

A: I’m still trying to avoid you, why do you keep following me?

Q: Because I think your voice is important…you got something to say.

A: I think you’re full of shit

Q: That’s ok.  But seriously, what's happening with you my brother?

A: I’m trying to survive, trying to get food—its rough out here—competition from owls, pigeons, seagulls, squirrels—not to mention those pain in the ass artists who pretend to be poor, stealing my bread scraps when I’m not looking.

Q: Which artists?

A: Never mind…we’ll save that for a future interview

Q: I understand you ran into Stanley Roberts the other day. What do you think of him?

A: You mean that big guy from KRON 4 News?

Q: Yes…where did you see him?

A: Downtown. I saw this orbicular figure coming out of the bushes with another guy holding a TV camera.

Q: What did he do?

A: I’m not sure but I landed on the windowsill of a bar the next day. They had one of those flat screen TV’s. I thought it was 3 dimensional because I could’ve swore I saw Stanley’s belly pop right out of the screen. Anyway, I was watching Stanley’s segment. It was called People Behaving Badly. What a crybaby that guy is.

Q: Crybaby?

A: Yeah, a whiner. Everything out of this mouth sounded like nanny nanny nah nah. He looks like a man…with that flannel shirt and all…kind of like the guy on the paper towel package but when he opens his mouth, man, what a crybaby.  Reminds me of when i used to hover around various schools.  I'd see those kids that were designated hall monitors.  Stanley must have been one of those kids.

Q: What was he crying about?

A: Everything. Complaining whining and crying about people recycling, crying about illegal left turns, right turns, cyclists, homeless people in the park, people walking their dogs, people tossing paper cups on the street, bus drivers. But I didn’t hear him crying and complaining about CEO's behaving badly or heavyset voyeurs with accompanying cameramen. I thought: How’d this guy ever get a job? Then I figured he must have cried for it.

Q: So, you think he’s a voyeur?

A: What else can you call him, hiding behind a camera spying on people, waiting for them to do wrong and broadcast it to the world with crybaby commentary. What kind of goofy Mickey Mouse brother is this, I thought--being black myself.

A: Do you have anything positive to say about Dear Stanley?

Q: He obviously eats well, much better than I do. I think I used the word orbicular to describe him (I like that word). Stanley ought to stick with what he does best—eating. He shouldn’t stray too far from the dinner plate. But it’s unlikely he ever does.

Q: Any last words?

A: Let’s hope brother Stanley doesn’t get caught behaving badly. I’m a raven up here on a wire and my comrades are up here too. We see it all. Yes…let’s hope Stanley doesn’t behave badly. If there’s one thing I can’t stand is a crybaby. Nanny Nanny Nah Nah.

 

 

 

 

 

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