Story Archives 2012

Post-Racial Pawn in RichWiteMan War Game?-Red Tails- A PNN ReVieWsforTheReVoLution

09/24/2021 - 09:05 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

"Watch the rest of the Movie and find out..." At one point in Red Tails, a new movie on the racist-silenced histories and herstories of the Tuskegee Airmen who fought fearlessly and artfully in World War II, one of the airmen questioned the point of "fighting for the Man" in a society where white supremacy refuses to accept a "Negro war hero". The character of his superior officer, played by Cuba Gooding Jr, retorts, that we do live in this racist reality and that fighting well in this war won't change any of that, ending with the fact that we should keep watching the movie.

Red Tails is a shiny, Hollywood movie with an all-star cast of beautiful and strong African descendent men like Terrence Howard who delicately navigates the cake-walk of hegemony with frightening white men in power in the military industrial complex of the 1940's. There is a "lite" and yet real story of alcohol abuse and finally, a mixed race story of love between one of the air-men and an Italian woman he encounters.  All of these story-lines are squeezed into the middle of compelling air-fighting scenes with old-school planes in the air and one comical "gerry" (German) character who does battle with the airmen.

Red Tails opens with the brutality of white supremacy with a 1925 "report" by the U.S. Army War College which outlined why blacks should not be soldiers; claiming that they were not just inferior, but also incapable of operating complex machinery.

The brutality of this racist dis-respect and hate is all the more insane as we watch the calculated skill of the airmen in different flight scenes throughout the movie and find out that they were in fact all trained in complex aeronautical engineering at the Tuskegee Institute founded by Booker T Washington. This juxtaposition should shock us and yet for all conscious folks living within the plantation called United Snakkkes of Amerikkka we are all too familiar with it and instead we wait with trepidation to see more hate un-fold. And then something funny happens. Because of the Tuskegee airmen's  brilliant skill in "protecting" the white men who pilot the "bomber"  planes, they are thanked and respected when before they were beaten up and called the N word with impunity.

I can't completely discount this movie. Even if i want to, racism is too complicated and stereotypes and Hollywood are too powerful and pervasive. Instead i have to dissect it, recognizing the urgent need of African descendent peoples in diaspora and all peoples everywhere, to see a Black male hero depicted in film that isn't some derivative of a gangster or a pimp. That these well-educated, conscious young men had skill and leadership, but because it wasn't prudent to have a Black hero on the cover of the Hearst Corporation owned papers of the day, they were never appreciated, heard or seen and finally ask the question, have we as African peoples, peoples of color "arrived" because we are hero's in a war movie. Remember folks, we are in a allegedly post-racial society, where everyone can become a pimp or a president, so why not a war hero?. And the covert military industrial complex isn't even covert anymore with training movies for the Navy Seals coming to a theatre near you soon. I just have to wonder what Muhammad Ali circa 1967 who said, No Viet Cong ever called me a "nigger" might say to this new black army hero.

Remember, to truly "arrive" in our Afro-centrism, Indigenity and power, while moving to plantation and pimp-free living, it can't be through "the Man's" false borders, fake wars and empire -fueled land theft and drone-filled fights or like my African/Boricua mama used to say, "We aint ever reaching liberation on their dime." It must be through the creation of our own self-determined futures, villages, economies, realities and heroes.

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Elders: Could you use some help with grocery shopping?

09/24/2021 - 09:05 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Shop Around is a convenient, low cost shuttle that makes it easier to go grocery shopping for seniors over 65 and people with disabilities.  The shuttle takes you and others directly to the store in San Francisco where you like to shop.  You'll have about an hour to shop, and the driver will help carry your groceries on and off the shuttle.  Each one-way trip costs $2.00.  There are certain eligibility requirements.  For more information, call 415-351-7052.

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Thinking about Olmstead

09/24/2021 - 09:05 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

(Editor's note--This article is reprinted from "Long Term Care News and Views", published by Planning for Elders in the Central City, Volume 17, Issue 2, February 2012)

 

On June 22, 1999, the US Supreme Court affirmed the right of individuals with disabilities to live in the community in the historic Olmstead decision.  The court found that "the unjustified isolation of individuals with disabilities is properly regarded as discrimination based on disability".  The court further ruled that the Americans with Disabilities Act may require states to provide community-based services rather than institutional placements for individuals with disabilities.

I moved out of a skilled nursing facility on October 2, 1982, so am coming up on my 30th anniversary of moving to Berkeley and living independently.  In this same year, my 18 year old niece is moving here to attend college and learn to live independently.

Jade and I share the same congenital disability and virtually the same threats to our independence.  We are dependent on lean government programs that require that we be poor in order to access them.  Any exceptions to these poverty requirements are few and convoluted.  I know this as a longtime disability benefits advocate.  Jade has seen more ready access to an equal and integrated education than I did, and she has more capable, aware, and attentive parents than my own who have advocated for her needs.  These factors have seated her well with an optimistic academic, social, and even vocational future despite ongoing disability-specific health concerns.

Still, Jade and I, members of two generations, plus Jade's grandparents are all currently in precarious situations facing the threat of institutionalization at the hands of state and local governments on which we depend for housing subsidies, healthcare and personal assistance services, accessible transportation, accommodations in school, and training to meet vocational goals.  It's a delicate network of services that are more often than not done to us and not by us.  We are the cash cows to multiple industries that rely on our dependency.  Our reward for compliance is our survival, but not necessarily independence.  We keep fighting for laws, asking for permission to live and possibly pursue happiness.  It feels more like a hamster wheel than a movement.  I am as worried about Jade now, after 30 years of work by people with disabilities, as i was and am for myself.  A lot and very little has changed.

These are the things on my mind when thinking about Olmstead.

 

If you're a senior or a person with a disability having trouble navigating the complex web of home and community-based support services you need to keep living at home, Consumer Rights for Community Living (CRCL) is her to help!  If you're not sure how to get the services you need, if you aren't sure what your rights are, or if you need help to resolve a grievance, call us at 415-703-0286

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Meeting Johnny Otis

09/24/2021 - 09:05 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Co-Editors Note: Mama Dee and me met Johnny Otis and Carlos Zialcita in the beautiful History of Black Music class they taught through Laney College in Oakland. Each week Johnny and Carlos would "bring" the sounds, rythem and rockin love of Little Richard, Etta James, Smoky and the Miracles and so many more throughout herstory. My mama, jazz singer and R&B dancer who never sang in public, traumatized by racist hate in foster homes and orphanages she lived in Amerikkka, felt like she was finally home each week in the presence of cool-guy hair-having Carlos and beat-smooth-talking Johnny.

 

I first met Johnny Otis in the mid 1990’s when he was still doing a live broadcast of his weekly radio show on KPFA-FM at his cabaret/café in Sebastopol, California where he lived.  Johnny was performing live on the air in his downtown café, a featured segment of his show.  He invited me to sit in on a number.  I remember it well.  It was one of my favorites – “My Babe”, a tune that was a big hit for famed blues harmonica player and singer Little Walter.  I guess Johnny figured I must have known it.  He was right – and I immediately felt comfortable sitting in with this “larger than life” rhythm and blues legend.  We hit it off immediately, and he also got along great with my wife Myrna – immediately recognizing her African roots and engaged both of us in lively conversation and the trademark Johnny Otis humor and banter.  I was thrilled that my initial meeting with Johnny went so well.  He invited us to come back.  Myrna and I would return as often as we could, usually bringing some of Myrna’s cooking.  If fact, Johnny would often say “Don’t you come back without some of that adobo….”

 

One day, Myrna and I returned to the café and brought Afro-Filipina blues and soul diva Sugar Pie DeSanto and her brother Domingo Balinton.  It was quite a reunion for Johnny and Sugar Pie, who had not seen each other in years.  I was immediately struck by the fact that he called her “Palaya” – a nickname that Sugar sometimes called herself along with close friends and family members.  Sugar Pie’s real name is Umpeylia Balinton.  I was aware of the history between these two giants of rhythm and blues and was in awe as I watched them interact.  Johnny discovered Sugar Pie at a talent show in San Francisco in the early 1950s.  Sugar Pie recently shared with me that it was in 1954 that Johnny gave her the nickname “Sugar Pie”.

 

My friendship with Johnny grew quickly as we found many things in common that we enjoyed, in addition to music.  I had always been a fan of Johnny, his music and his politics.  I used to perform “Willie and the Hand Jive” with a band I had a in the mid-eighties called the California Cadillacs.  I had also performed with Big Mama Thornton several times, along with Charles Brown, Lowell Fulson, Percy Mayfield, and several other artists Johnny had worked with.  Johnny would often invite me to his house after the show for lunch.  There he would share with me his record and book collections and sometimes take me into the studio where he painted and showed me his artwork.  It was Johnny who introduced me to Dr. Fred Cordova’s book, “Forgotten Asian Americans” about the history of Filipino Americans in the United States.  He told me “this is a story that has to be told….”  He showed me his menagerie of different birds as well as the Koi fish he had in a pond.  I was very intrigued by the life-size sculptures on his property of three voluptuous naked women. There were paintings in the house also, against the wall in the living room, where he also had a grand piano.  Phyllis, Johnny’s lovely wife, who is Afro-Filipina, also became a very good friend to Myrna and me.

 

My visits to the café and to the Otis residence nurtured my friendships with different members of his band, which included his son Nicky Otis, a drummer, and grandson, Lucky Otis, who played bass.  Johnny’s band would eventually accompany me on my CD “Train Through Oakland”, with Johnny playing piano, vibes and even drums (on one cut).  That came about when I asked Johnny simply – would he produce a CD of me.  He graciously offered his band, his recording studio, an engineer, and his own musical contributions of several songs.  In addition, I became a house guest during the many weekends we spent recording, mixing and mastering the CD.  It was definitely more than I could have ever imagined.  Even now, after all these years and Johnny’s recent passing, I am still in awe of this enormous gift from someone who had already “done it all” and certainly didn’t need to produce one more album or one more artist.  I am indeed humbled by his generosity and gift as a friend.  Although I never felt that my playing and singing was anywhere near the level of artistry that Johnny had long been associated with, I nevertheless felt honored that he would work with me to record my first CD as a leader.  “Train Through Oakland” and the experiences surrounding the making of it, will always remain one of the most memorable milestones of my life.  It will stay with me forever.

 

It was also around this time that Johnny decided to teach a class on the history of Black Music in America.  He joined forced with Larry Douglas, one of the trumpet players in his band and a college professor to create a concept for the class and propose it to the Peralta Community College system.  The class was Music 15-B: Jazz, Blues, and Popular Music in American Culture, a 3-unit college class transferable to the UC system.  It also fulfilled lower division requirements for Ethnic Studies, Humanities, History and other Liberal Arts departments.  The class was an instant hit.  I remember Johnny calling me one day to ask if I would like to work with him in the class as its coordinator.  He knew I worked with computers and multimedia. He wanted me to help him with curriculum development, preparation of handouts, the showing of films, and the scheduling of speakers and live bands.  His concept for the class was revolutionary and drew large enrollments.  It holds the record for the most popular class ever in the history of the Peralta Community College system.  This intense collaboration between Johnny and me brought us closer together, as I would often consult with him on all the different aspects of his class.  He lent me his books, gave me numbers of different speakers and entertainers to contact.  I essentially became his “right hand man” as he would often refer to me.  I even did the payroll – telling his wife Phyllis who to make checks out to and disbursing those checks every Monday night.  The class was incredibly popular, with the help of Johnny’s radio show, and word of mouth amongst the students and the community SF Bay Area music and Johnny Otis fans.

 

At the end of every semester, Johnny would host a “Red Beans and Rice Night” with my wife Myrna preparing the meal that would feed approximately 150 people.  This became a ritual twice a year for over 10 years.  To no one’s surprise, Johnny loved Myrna’s cooking, and even put her recipe for Chicken Adobo in his “Rock and Roll Cookbook.”

 

Gradually, Johnny’s health deteriorated.  This inevitably meant the end of the class as we knew it.  I tried running the class without Johnny’s presence, bringing in Lucky Otis, his grandson.  Peralta Community College District decided to “franchise” the class and offer it at each campus.  At one point I was assisting the professors at both Berkeley City College and College of Alameda, going from one campus to the other on Monday nights.  The funding for the class also was also reduced dramatically, making it impossible to book the live entertainment and speakers like we previously had done.  This became for me – the “end of an era.”  It was like the end of Rock and Roll and early Rhythm and Blues itself – its time had come and gone.

 

Eventually, Johnny and Phyllis decided to sell their property in Sebastopol and move to Southern California where their two daughters and son Shuggie live.  This is where Johnny would spend his remaining years, close to his family and out of the public eye.  He had essentially “retired” and made the choice to no longer pursue all the different activities he was known for.

 

On December 28, 2012 Johnny reached the age on 90.  He died at 12:05AM on January 17, 2012.  He had lived a full life as head of his family, as a musician, producer, mentor, talent scout, owner of a record label, radio personality, politician, civil and human rights activist, poet, writer, painter, sculptor, cartoonist, chef, church minister, educator, and organic farmer.  It was a life of the inspirational and consummate “Renaissance Man” – a life for the ages.  There will never be another one like him.  Mabuhay ka Johnny Otis!        ©2012 Carlos Zialcita

  

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Ross Mirkarimi - STOP Evictions and Foreclosures in SF NOW!

09/24/2021 - 09:05 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
mari
Original Body

“I am being evicted.” This is a phrase I have heard too often by some of the closest people to me in my life. When I was 21, I was heavily involved with stopping evictions and displacement that I changed my email address to begin with no evictions as the email address. I remember organizing a working class home on Shotwell street to stop the eviction of their home and I remember the beginnings of the Mission Anti-Displacement Coalition. I did all this while living in a youth transitional facility, and I thought to myself at 21 that if I could have any superpower it would be to stop evictions and keep people and families housed.

Then I heard about Cheri Honkala becoming sheriff in Philadelphia, PA and how she ran on a platform to stop all evictions in her city. When she got elected to office she kept that promise of no evictions in her city. She stopped evictions for a period of time until the courts got involved. I literally shed tears of happiness thinking of all the elders, poor folks, and families who were saved from the streets because of one decision Honkala made. Honkala herself came from a position of poverty just like my family. To me, she is my superhero.

I thought how amazing would it be to get all evictions to stop in San Francisco, so I voted like many others for Ross Mirkarimi, who was a progressive backed candidate. My vote was for the possibility of progressive change for poor and working class folks in San Francisco. I remember even working on his campaign when he first ran for SF Supervisor because I wanted a city for everyone of all income levels, not just the upper middle class and wealthy. So I called his office and spoke with Susan Fahey, Sheriff’s Department Spokeswoman, as Ross wasn’t available for comment. When I asked her the question, “As sheriff will u refuse to evict or move on foreclosure evictions?” She said, "Legally he cannot refuse to evict. We have to follow court orders."

There went my white fluffy clouds of hope for a San Francisco that would finally step up to development and unjust evictions. I was saddened to come back to a reality of how another politician just plays by the system instead of radically changing it. I am tired of seeing poor and working class families and elders get pushed out of San Francisco everyday simply because the rent is too high. I want all the families that got pushed out to come back from across the bridge or the South Bay and rebuild their roots here. I want my city to reflect the diversity it had when I was a child riding the 14 Mission MUNI bus with my Kuya Nemesio.

Why is another San Francisco not possible? Why are we as organizers, progressives, r activists backing and voting for a sheriff that does not run on a platform of no evictions? Aren’t we tired of seeing our friends and family move out of the city that they were born and raised in? We the people of this city get to demand no foreclosures or evictions from our sheriff and our future sheriffs as a way to ensure that San Francisco loses not one more person. I still remember what Karen Zapata, an SFUSD teacher I knew said about politics, “We know how change is made, it is made by the people pushing the politicians.”

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Property Monopoly

09/24/2021 - 09:05 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Property Monopoly- A poem for all Displaced peoples across Pachamama-( and the people that displace them)

 

Property Monopoly

buys one house

then the other

Evicts all the families

even their mothers

 

Moves People Out

Moves people in

Buys another house

but never sees within

 

"Clean up the Neighborhood",

that's what he sez..

while he displaces all the peoples

until they are dead

 

Property Monopoly

Evictions, Foreclosures and Paper Trails..

but in this game-

the poor Always go straight to jail

 

By Tiburcio and Tiny

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