Story Archives 2011

THE DAILY OUTRAGE: A REVIEW FOR THE REVOLUTION

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

The San Francisco Examiner recently printed a story, from the African country of Zambia, about charges being dropped against two Chinese men, supervisors at a coal mine, who shot 13 miners during a 2010 protest over wages.  The managers fired shotguns into a crowd.  Nobody was killed.

The Zambian government paid off the workers so no charges would be pressed by them.  China spends over $1 billion annually to get what it wants from Zambia.  This is, as the headline said, "the daily outrage"--but the real crime is Amerikkkan newspapers and journalists failing to connect the dots:  Amerikkka does whatever it takes to get what it wants, just like China.

Amerikkkan corporations closed their domestic factories and used cheap Mexican labor to keep prices at home as low as possible until Chinese labor became a "better" cheaper means to greater profits.  When the Sub-Prime Mortgage scheme popped like the Dot-Com Bubble, Chinese workers felt the pain too. 

Chinese peasant-workers, moving by the millions from the country to cities where the jobs were, either became homeless on the spot or went back to their home provinces and villages.  Americans caught in the Sub-Prime Crosshairs lost houses and the Amerikkkan Illusion, and they still are as more houses are foreclosed and taken by banks.

Democrats and Republicans play Chicken with the Federal budget just like they did when Bill Clinton was President.  I know, I know, I can't expect a conservative rag to analyze anything the way I do, but willful blindness to reality and the part one plays in it is, indeed, a "Daily Outrage".

 

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Notes from the Inside: "Mother"

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

MOTHER

YOU are the First
beginnings Of the first love I've ever known...
 kindness, warmth, trust,
  All this you have shown...
YOU are
the perfect rainbow
across the sky of every human being,
 YOU are the flower view
 my soul keep seeing...

Your nourishment gave me the power
to continue on
with strong motion,  you are
  the raw essence
   of truth
  and devotion...
your wisdom is the treasure,
your giving has no measure,
much higher and precious than any other...
you are the one
you are my mother.

Bernard Patrick
2/23/99

BEING POOR AIN'T NO STATE OF MIND

When the winds be blowin'
so very hard
and the cold is assaulting
one's bones, when
the very bottom of one's belly
cries out to a world
the just don't hear,
to a world that just don't
really know the
 serious push
  of the
pains that
 hunger their
 way
 above and beyond
  the heart...
When one's only dream
is to be warm and realized...
just to be realized.
 When one has allowed
 the neat commodities
 of pride
  to become vaporized
  In the fluttering wings of hope...
When one has engaged
in the vast theater
  of other people's stare
  and disregard.
When one must become an
actor or actress for the small
 but wanting
  facet
  of a meal.
Being poor is the tragic song
  that has no
 particular music, it's
  a song and a journey
that has no apparent end...
...It is the cracked reflection
 in a cultural mirror
 that often breaks
 into little
  jagged
  elements called terrible...
Being Poor
 is like the shadow
 squeezing in
  between two tan
  buildings...
Being Poor is deplorable... it is
 the profane exterior
 of hurt
  encrusted
 and shackled
 along the narrow lines of reality.
 

Bernard Patrick, 1999
GSP EF307420
100 GA, HWY, 147
Reidsville, GA
30499

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Microeconomics: Scavenging to Survive in Pasadena

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

To support her family, an undocumented worker gathers recyclables from street-side containers. 'I do it out of necessity,' she says.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008;

para espanol, mira abajo

It's not yet 3 a.m. Juana Rivas grabs her shopping cart and steps off the curb into the dark.

She shields herself from the cold with a sweat shirt and jacket, along with a pink hat and gloves she bought at the 99-cent store. Only a barking dog interrupts the silence.

Rivas arrives at the first house, lifts the trash can lid and shines her flashlight inside. Nothing.

"No hay. No hay," she says in Spanish.

She peers into another trash can. Nothing. She zigzags back and forth across the street, stopping at each house to search for aluminum cans, glass bottles, plastic containers, anything she can exchange for money at the local recycling center. She reaches inside and shakes the contents, listening for the telltale clink of a beer bottle or the hollow tap of a milk carton. Nothing.

She starts to feel anxious. Her husband and four children are depending on her. The $2,300 rent check on their Pasadena home is due in one week. She already asked for an extension on the gas. The cable and the phone have been disconnected.

She speeds up the pace. The plastic bags attached to the cart swoosh against one another. The wheels rattle as they roll over pebbles in the street.

A few minutes later, she finds an empty Sierra Mist can, a few plastic water bottles and several Foster's beer bottles. She dumps them into her empty cart.

"There are bad days and good days," says Rivas, 48.

As she walks toward the next house, she says, "It's going to be a bad day."

Rivas knows what people think, that she digs through her neighbors' trash to make money for drugs or alcohol. She knows what people call her -- scavenger, digger, thief.

"There are people who look at me like, 'You aren't worth anything. You aren't anybody,' " she said.

For 13 years, she says, she has collected cans and bottles "to pay my rent, my bills. I do it out of necessity."

She has looked for more stable jobs, including cleaning offices at night. But nowadays, more companies are asking for immigration papers, papers she doesn't have.

Besides, scavenging pays OK, she says. The more hours she puts in, the more she earns. Her proof is in her recycling center receipts: Oct. 22: $70.12. Dec. 12: $143.08. Jan. 4: $134.91. Overall, in a year she might earn between $20,000 and $25,000. Combined with what her husband earns and what her children contribute, they can meet the rent and put food on the table.

Rivas is part of the expanding underground economy -- the hundreds of thousands of immigrants in Southern California who clean houses, mow lawns and wash dishes, making money at the margins and paying few if any taxes. Her story mirrors the contradictions that make illegal immigration such a flash point. She broke the law getting here and drains a municipal resource staying here. Yet she works hard, very hard, so her children won't have to do the same.

Every weekday, she wakes at 2:30 a.m., knowing that even an hour more of sleep means less money. She walks miles and miles, even when it rains, even when she is battling the flu.

"If I miss one day, I'm short," she says.

Her only company is the Spanish-language DJ El Piolin, Eddie Sotelo on KSCA-FM (101.9), who entertains her through a hand-held radio one of her sons gave her two years ago.

Her shoulders and legs ache from pushing the heavy cart up and down hills. Her hands throb from arthritis. This morning, two of her fingers are bandaged with white tape. Two years ago, she had to go to the emergency room to get stitches when a broken bottle gouged open her forearm. She left with several stitches and a tetanus shot. Emergency Medi-Cal covered the treatment.

Criando una familia con la basura de Pasadena
* Para comprar comida y pagar la renta, una inmigrante ilegal recolecta y vende reciclables.
Por Anna Gorman, Redactora del Times
March 12, 2008

Aún no han dado las 3 a.m., Juana Rivas echa mano a su carrito de súpermercado y pasa de la acera a la oscuridad.

Se resguarda del frío con una sudadera y una chamarra, así como un sombrero rosado y unos guantes que compró en una tienda de 99 centavos. Sólo los ladridos de un perro interrumpen el silencio.

Rivas llega a la primera casa, levanta la tapa del basurero y alumbra hacia adentro con su linterna. Nada.

"No hay. No hay," dice ella.

Mira al interior de otro basurero. Nada. Camina en zigzags hacia delante y hacia atrás por la calle, parando en cada casa en pos de latas de aluminio, botellas de cristal, recipientes plásticos, cualquier cosa que ella pueda cambiar por dinero en el centro de reciclaje local. Mete las manos dentro, sacude el contenido por si oye el sonido clave de una botella de cerveza o el sonido hueco de un cartón de leche. Nada.

Le entra ansiedad. Su esposo y cuatro hijos dependen de ella. Al cheque por $2,300 por el alquiler de su casa en Pasadena le falta una semana. Ya tuvo que pedir una extensión para el pago del gasóleo. El cable y el teléfono ya fueron desconectados.

Ella acelera el paso. Las bolsas plásticas atadas al carrito suenan al pasar unas contra otras. Las ruedas chirrían al pasar sobre los guijarros de la calle.

Unos minutos después, halla una lata vacía de Sierra Mist, unas cuantas botellas plásticas de agua y varias botellas de cerveza Foster. Lo echa todo en su carrito vacío.

"Hay días malos y días buenos," dice Rivas, de 48 años.

A medida que camina hacia la próxima casa, dice, "Va a ser un día malo."

Rivas sabe lo que la gente piensa, que ella registra los basureros de sus vecinos en busca de dinero para drogas o alcohol. Ella sabe lo que dicen de ella – rastrojera, buscona, ladrona.

"Hay gente que me mira con cara de, 'No vales nada. No eres nadie,' " dijo ella.

Durante 13 años, dice ella, has recolectado latas y botellas "para pagar la renta, mis cuentas. Lo hago por necesidad."

Ella ha buscado trabajos más estables, incluso limpiar oficinas de noche. Pero hoy en día, hay más compañías pidiendo papeles de inmigración, papeles que ella no tiene.

Además, recolectar rastros paga bien, dice ella. Cuántas más horas le dedica, más gana. Su prueba está en los recibos del centro de reciclaje: 22 de octubre: $70.12, 12 de diciembre: $143.08, 4 de enero: $134.91. En general, en un año ella puede ganar entre $20,000 y $25,000. Combinado con lo que gana su esposo y lo que contribuyen los hijos, pueden pagar la renta y poner comida en la mesa.

Rivas es parte de la incipiente economía clandestina – los cientos de miles de inmigrantes del sur de California que limpian casas, podan céspedes y friegan platos, que ganan un dinero marginal y pagan muy poco, o nada, en impuestos. Su historia refleja las contradicciones que hacen de la inmigración ilegal un punto álgido. Ella infringió la ley para llegar aquí y drena recursos municipales al quedarse aquí. Sin embargo, trabaja duro, muy duro, para que sus hijos no tengan que hacer lo mismo.

Todos los días se levanta a las 2:30 a.m., a sabiendas de que tan sólo una hora más de sueño significa menos dinero. Camina millas y millas, incluso cuando llueve, incluso cuando está batallando contra la gripe.

"Si falto un día, no me alcanza," dice ella.

Su única compañía es el locutor hispanohablante El Piolín, Eddie Sotelo de la KSCA-FM (101.9), que la entretiene mediante un radio portátil que uno de sus hijos le regaló hace dos años.

Los hombros y las piernas le duelen de empujar el carrito cuesta arriba y cuesta abajo. La manos le tiemblan de la artritis. Esta mañana tiene dos dedos vendados con esparadrapo blanco. Hace dos años tuvo que ir a una sala de urgencia para que le suturaran una laceración que le hizo un pico de botella en un antebrazo. Salió con varios puntos y una vacuna antitetánica. El servicio de emergencia Medi-Cal cubrió el tratamiento.

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Un Corazon separado por una frontera/ A Heart Separated by a Border/Resistance Blog Series

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

 

Resistance Blog series created in 2011 PeopleSkool Winter Session

Reportera de Prensa Pobre/POOR Magazine Reporter

For English scroll down

El hielo se empesaba adesconjelar.
Por los fuertes rayos del sol una mañana.
Como a las 7:30 am mi hija me abrazo me dio un beso y se despidio. Mis baronsitos me veian como diciendo? Que pasa, porque mi mama se va y nos deja?
Abraze a mi primer baron con el alma pues el solo tenia 5 años. Le dije pase lo que pase no olvides que te amo.
El agacho la cabezita y me dijo esta bien.
No llore pero sentia que la respirasion se me aseleraba el triple de lo normal sentia que mi cuerpo se estaba quedando sin su corazon luego abraze ami bebe y sentia que nuevamente lo perdia.Lo abraze mas fuerte lo bese con los labios temblorosos porque queria llorar,
Le dije ya me voy hijito no vallas a llorar, papa
No se cuando voy a regresar pero te amo.
El solo dijo bueno mami se sonrrio y me dijo
pero seapura mami me trae una paleta y un pan.
El tenia solo 3 años y pensaba que yo hiba regresar pronto
Y asi siguio gritando hasta que ya no me vio
En ese momento yo llore porque ellos ya no me veian .
En todo el viaje lloraba pero traia una meta y tenia que cumplirla y no queria regresar pues no me gusta ser cobarde.

Son 7 años que no los veo de amargura de llanto por no tenerlos conmigo no verlos creser.

No saber cuales son sus gustos cuales son sus pensamientos cuales son sus alegrias, cuales son sus corajes Pero de algo estoy segura es que mi amor crece mas cada dia. Ellos lo saben, es que los amo y ellos a mi, talves la distansia nos a hecho valorar el amor verdadero que nada ni nadie lo hara romper. Mi corazon ya los quiere verlos abrazarlos besarlos sin parar, que no exista el reloj ni el tiempo para separarnos.aunque la sonrisa inocente de mis hijitos lo conservo en el fondo de mi corazon haora que mis hijos hablan conmigo,me siento emosionada ellos dicen mami la amamos y la queremos muchisisimo la extrañamos y queremos que se venga, queremos verla pronto y esas palabras me llenan de satifaccion.

Asi como mis hijos estan creciendo sin mi, hay muchos, mas esta situacion.

Y siguen quedandose sin sus padres por la pobreza
por que el gobierno en nuestras paises no hacen nada para cambiar la situasion y por eso esque mis hijos y a otros niños estan como dice María Helena Jiménez, procuradora 15 judicial de familia de Caldas, se refiere al fenómeno denominado 'huérfanos con padres vivos'.
Yo entiendo esto porque mi mama siempre dice lo mismo que mis hijos estan huerfanos porque a pesar que tienen a su padre cerca y mi con vida. Si yo no estuviera? que seria de estos niños dice ella.

Hay una estimacion, 2009 50 mil niños están creciendo sin sus padres, quienes migraron a otros países

 

Ingles sigue/English follows

The ice started to melt by the rays of sun in the early morning. It was 7 a.m. My daugther hugged and kissed me on the check and said farewell. My little boys looked at me as if asking themselves, What happened? Why is our mommy leaving us?

I hugged my first son with all my soul. He was only five years old. I told him, “No matter what happends remember that I love you.” He lowered his head and told me, “Ok.” I did not cry but I felt that I started to breathe three times faster then normally, I felt my body losing my heart, I hugged my baby, and I knew I was losing him again. I gave him a big hug and kiss, my lips shaking because I wanted to cry. I told him, “Now I must go. Please do not to cry. I don’t know when I’m coming back, but I love you.” He only said, “Ok mom,” and smiled and added, “Ok, but hurry up mommy and bring me a popsicle and a loaf of bread.” He kept saying this until I disappeared, and at that moment I began to cry because I knew I wouldn’t see them soon. I cried through my whole journey, but I had a goal and I needed to reach it and get to the North, and I wouldn’t come back because I don’t like to be a coward.

It has been 7 years that I have not seen them, and I feel bitterness and sadness for not having my kids and seeing them grow.

It has been 7 years of not knowing what their tastes are, what their thoughts are, what makes them happy, how they get angry. But there is one thing that I am sure of, and that is they know I love them and they love me. And maybe the distance has made us appreciate true love that nothing or nobody can brake.

My heart wants to see them and hug and kiss them in person. I want to see them now and hold them without stopping, kiss them without end. I wish that time did not exist and would separate us apart. I remember the smiles and keep the memories in my heart. Now and then when I speak with them by phone, I feel happy to hear their voice they say that they loved me, tat they miss me a lot. They say they want to see me soon, and hearing this fills me with satisfaction.

Just like my children are growing up without me, there are many more in the same situation.

Many children live without their parents cause of poverty, and the goverments of our countries don’t do anything to change the situation. This is why my children and other children are in this situation, according to Maria Helena Jimenez, juducial attorney for the family of Caldas. She refers to the phenomenon of “orphans with living parents.”

I understand because my mother said the same thing about me. She would say these kids have their fathers closeby to them, and me alive. If I was not here what would be the future of those children?

In 2009, 50 thousands children are growing up without parents, who have migrated to other countries.

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Save Dee and Tiny! Pt 7

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

The story of Dee and tiny, the previously homeless, currently at-risk mother daughter art duo, and co-editors of POOR Magazine/PoorNewsNetwork is a many layered, multi-colored panopoly of poverty, struggle and myth...

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Save Dee and Tiny! Pt 6

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

The story of Dee and tiny, the previously homeless, currently at-risk mother daughter art duo, and co-editors of POOR Magazine/PoorNewsNetwork is a many layered, multi-colored panopoly of poverty, struggle and myth...

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Save Dee and Tiny! Pt 5

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

The story of Dee and tiny, the previously homeless, currently at-risk mother daughter art duo, and co-editors of POOR Magazine/PoorNewsNetwork is a many layered, multi-colored panopoly of poverty, struggle and myth...

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