Story Archives 2012

Living Pimp-Free...

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

Dedicated to all warriors for Decolonization from this web of lies... thx for NEVER giving up the fight!

 

Living pimp –free

is not eas-y

because to be really, truly pimp-free

is to be without

the security

 

Of systems in place,

To secure and displace,

to create fakely named safe space,

With simple answers to hard questions

Like violence and hate,

Poverty and race

 

U see –

to live Pimp free

Is to deconstruct ALL the capitalist realities

Of Po’lice, Politricks,NPIC, and white supremacy

 

To recognize how so few peoples got all that stolen money, trading on false borders, prisons and

indigenous peoples liberty

 

And to live pimp free-

To really be truly free-

Is to redesign systems based on eldership, ancestors, Pachamama

And We

 

To deconstruct all the simple answers of why

we kill each other,

starve our mothers,

shoot and kill our black and brown brothers

incarcerate so many others

 

To walk through lyfe pimp-free

is to stop, look, listen and see-

Move off- the grid of control, share resources, with each other –

Teach ourselves and our children

Build our own pimp-free housing –

create our own work and jobs

Barter with each other

Launch reparations of blood-stained amerikkkan dollaz

 

Reach out and touch

Connect with, repair and love

All of us-

 

Without a step and fetch it hustle –

But with the decolonized truth-

even if it hurts, confuses, takes time

and means more “trouble” 

 

U see

to live pimp-free- IS the revolution

In a 21st century corporate %1-led Aristocracy

 

So here I am in my dreams

riding pimp-free

Slanging elders knowledge instead of what they charge u for in eugenecist kkkollege

Scolding, holding and caring for mamaz, babies and elders,

Marching, protesting and acting against devil-opers, sacred site desecrators, bank-pimps, corporate pimps and po’lice killers

Bartering food, starting our children good,

Listening to our ancestors, caring for our mama

Taking the lessons even when they are filled with drama-

Trying, not dying, to live, to give, to dream, to see- a life for all of us- that is truly

Pimp –free

 

 We aint there yet – but Creator knows –

It will someday be…

a life-

that is truly pimp-free..

 

Save the Date: Living Pimp-Free: The Revolutionary Change Session- Juneteenth 2012 -(June 15-18): Decolonizing, Healing and Preparing For Liberation From ALL Plantations and Pimpologies

Living Pimp-Free will be a three day intensive seminar to heal, decolonize and prepare for life beyond plantations, pimping, po'licing and profiteering to realize, vision and conceptualize sharing, caring and true inter-dependence as peoples....details upcoming

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Say Al--Is that you?

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

Say Al--is that you?


Someone's sprinklin' water & rose petals
on the baby buddha's birthday
& another millennium has passed
Say Al--is that you?


Someone's sittin' in the sun today
letting slender bamboo leaves fall on his face & body
Say Al--is that you?


Someone's scooped up another bowl of rice
& stirred in some thick gravy from Mary's Cafe
Say Al--is that you?


Someone's boppin' along Post and Fillmore
Between the Korean grocer and the Muslim bakery
Say Al--is that you?


Someone's sweepin' the steps of the Catholic Church
below the statue of Sun Yat-sen at 6:00 AM
Say Al--is that you?


Someone's walklin' with Lou & Oscar
with Shirley & Jeff & Janice & Curtis & Russ
in a strawberry field in Watsonville
Say Al--is that you?


Someone's writin' another poem on ricepaper
& leavin' it on my doorstep--
Say Al--is that you?


Someone's just become a Buddha poet
of the past, present & the future
Say Al--is that you?


Say Al--it is definitely, irrefutably--you.
You are the One, the One and Only
You are the Boss man of the New Asian Nation of Poetry.


You are the tremulous, spiraling blue note
from Fliptown, J-town, Chinatown
from the Fillmore, Agbayani Village, from the Imperial to Yakima Valley
from cannin' salmon in Alaska to stirrin' green tea in Kyushu


You are the man who's found the path to Ifugao Mountain--
right here.


Say it again, say it again & say it again--Al.

 


Love and Peace, Man
from  your bro--Russell Leong


June 2009


--

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"Don't Shoot...!" Stories, Truth and the Murderous Oakland Po'Lice Department

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

THE STORIES (as reported in corporate media and "po"lice reports)

On January 29, 2011, at about 8:55AM, Oakland Police Officers responded to the 5500 block of Taft Street to a report of an individual armed with weapons harassing a resident on the block. Responding Officers saw a man later identified as Matthew Cicelski in front of the residence and Cicelski fled on foot. Officers surrounded the block to contain Cicelski. Cicelski forced entry into the home of the individual that called the police armed with what they thought was an Assault Rifle. The residents ran out of the house and advised Officers Cicelski was inside armed. Cicelski appeared on the front porch armed with a replica Assault Weapon pointing it at the Officers. The Officers opened fire on Cicelski and he was fatally wounded.[1]

 

A man who was shot and killed by Oakland police officers after he allegedly pointed a replica assault rifle at them in the Rockridge neighborhood was identified Sunday as 39-year-old Matthew Cicelski, an unemployed father of a young son.

 

Cicelski was shot Saturday after 9:35 a.m. by three officers outside a home at 5552 Taft Ave. between College Avenue and Broadway, police officials said.

 

They said Cicelski, clad in camouflage clothing, had been acting erratically outside the home, where his ex-girlfriend lives. Two residents of the home called police to report that he was armed with a knife and gun while walking up and down Taft Avenue as if he were "patrolling" the street, said Assistant Police Chief Howard Jordan.[2]

 

Arriving officers reported that the suspect, later identified as Oakland resident Matthew Cicelski, appeared to be armed with an assault rifle when he ran from police and forced his way into a home, Joshi said.

 

Occupants of the home managed to get out and told police that Cicelski was carrying a gun, Joshi said.

 

Cicelski subsequently came out of the home and stood on the front porch with what was later determined to be a replica assault rifle aimed at officers outside.

 

Police opened fire and Cicelski was killed, Joshi said.[3]

 

Seems pretty basic right?  Crazy man allegedly armed and patrolling the streets gunned down by police.  Pretty good PR piece for a police department that is under fire for the shooting deaths of Raheim Brown Jr., and Martin “Marty” Flenaugh a week and three days earlier respectively.  The phrase ‘too good to be true’ comes to mind.  Further investigation (actual investigative journalism) paints a much more disturbing picture.

 

To begin with, according to witnesses, there was never any fleeing on foot.  Cicelski was killed after walking through the front door of 5552 Taft Ave.  Secondly no occupant ever reported that he was armed with a knife or that he was a threat to anyone other than himself.  Though it is possible that Mr. Cicelski was briefly wandering through the neighborhood prior to entering the residence at 5552 Taft Ave., once there he never left the residence until stepping through the front door which resulted in his death.  This is important because it shows a blatant police fabrication.  Police were notified originally by neighbors who were concerned about Mathew’s antics outside of the house but arrived after Mathew was already in the house.  By then his ex-girlfriend was already on the phone with a 9-11 dispatcher accurately describing the actual state of affairs.  No information that they were given corroborates the ‘patrolling’ the street account.  The only tie-in there was that part of said 9-11 call was to provide context for neighbors’ anxieties.  Likewise no-one ran out of the house.  Cicelski’s ex-girlfriend’s housemate walked out of a house that police had staked out, had a gun pulled on her by police, and was ‘escorted outside.  Later Cicelski’s ex-girlfriend emerged and upon seeing the tac team ran inside!

 

THE TRUTH (as told by the witness and victims):

 

Mathew Cicelski was formerly a successful businessman  and Gulf War veteran.  Returning from the marines he had exhibited signs of PTSD but by and large was able to effectively manage his mental health and social interactions.  All that changed  a few years before his assassination.  It began with the death of his best friend.  This had a severe emotional impact on Mathew.  A short while later the car accident occurred.

 

On July 20th of 2008 Mathew was the victim of an as yet unsolved felony hit-and-run accident.  He was admitted to Sutter Hospital but due to their inability to verify his medical insurance he was released without treatment to the same ex-girlfriend whose house he would be killed at just two and a half year later.  She was given a bottle of morphine, instructions, told he might die, and advised to call if he began vomiting up blood but otherwise to make an appointment at Highland for the following Monday (three days later).   Mathew did miraculously survive this abject violation of the Hippocratic oath and was eventually admitted into surgery.  The injuries were so severe that, among other procedures, a titanium plate was put over his eyebrow to keep his face from falling off his skull.  It was immediately obvious that due to the accident Mathew had sustained severe neurological damage.  Yet after successful facial reconstruction surgery, of the sort that movie stars receive, Mathew appeared better than ever.  Those who were intimate with him got a different picture.  Mathew began experiencing temporary spells of extreme mental crisis with sharp mood swings, disassociative thought, and wild behavior.  He began to feel profoundly lonely with his condition and relied heavily on his ex-girlfriend for support during these spells.  This support was rendered and for awhile Mathew was able to maintain relations and a job.  Eventually Mathew’s mental health condition began to deteriorate.  He was unable to keep his job which put him in conditions of severe financial strain and the public options for mental health treatment (in particular medication) were of the sort that seemed untenable.  They were either too expensive or required documentation that boded to make it very difficult for Mathew ever to resume his career.  Mathew did self-medicate a bit but was unable to achieve a regiment that kept him balanced.  The spells would occur with increasing severity to the point where his ex-girlfriend had to establish new boundaries.  She never, however, stopped helping Mathew or felt that he was an immediate threat to her.  Mathew continued to rely on her for comfort to the point of seeming to want to be around her while he was going through a spell for purposes of validation.  He was very insecure of his mental health condition and among other things had severe yet apparently prophetic anxiety that police would kill him during an episode.  The 29th of January, 2011 was no different.

 

THE MURDEROUS OPD

 

While it is true that Mathew Cicelski entered the house at 5552 Taft Ave. without permission from the residents there was no malice in his approach.  He did not break in to hurt any of the residents.  There was no intended robbery or assault and none in fact ever occurred.  This is not to say that Mathew was OK at the time.  Mathew was in severe mental crisis when he arrived that morning at the house.  He went to his ex-girlfriend who was alarmed at his presence and extremely erratic behavior.  He was speaking irrationally but was clearly suicidal.  The clarity of this presented itself in the bottles of pills that Mathew had lined up on the front porch and begun consuming.  This was what instigated her 9-11 call which joined in the chorus of neighborhood emergency calls that would eventually result in Mathew’s death.  Her call was intended as a 51-50.  Mathew’s ex-girlfriend clearly perceived his suicidal plans and did not feel capable of addressing his situation without assistance.  This was no 2 minute 9-11 call.  Cicelski’s ex-girlfriend was on the telephone with the 9-11 dispatcher for roughly 45 minutes.  During this call a few very important messages were relayed.   For one it was made incredibly clear to the dispatcher that Mathew needed mental health assistance.  It was also clearly established that the gun he was carrying was a toy and not to shoot.  This was reiterated multiple times!  It was established that he was present at the house despite a statement relayed to the caller approximately half an hour into the conversation that police were in the neighborhood looking for Mathew!
 
Eventually the police took position with roughly a dozen officers, guns drawn, outside the front of the residence.  Mathew was at the time in the backyard playing with the dog.  Around 9:30 in the morning one of the residents of the house (Cicelski’s ex-girlfriend’s housemate) went outside and was immediately and violently detained by the police.  Cicelski’s ex was the next to attempt to go through the front door.  Mathew was behind her.  She opened the door saw the police and immediately ran inside screaming “Don’t Shoot!”  She tried to keep Mathew from going outside but fell while she was running from police.  Mathew went outside with his toy gun and was immediately shot by two or three officers.  Cicelski’s ex-girlfriend was also in the line of fire.  Despite the fact that the police claim Mathew was approaching in a threatening manner there is as yet no explanation of the bullets in his back.  Upon discerning that they had just shot and killed an unarmed man, police proceeded into the home, injuring Cicelski’s ex-girlfriend in the process, and searched the place top to bottom.  Obviously they were looking for anything that could provide them an excuse for their murderous behavior.  Apparently their search was fruitless.  That day when confronted with the fact that they had previously been informed that the gun was a toy they claimed they did not believe this account.  Later their story changed to say that dispatch had not informed them about the toy gun.  Only cut and altered versions of the 9-11 tapes have been made available for review thus complicating the process of exposing this police cover-up.
 
 
The struggle continues.  Though Cicelski’s family is pursuing litigation, they have yet to receive any justice for his death.  Beyond this, Cicelski’s ex-girlfriend has had her life completely transformed by his assassination.  Her childhood home was riddled with bullets and left covered with Mathew’s blood and brains which the police and the city of Oakland neglected to clean up.   She has endured retaliatory abuse and threats.  Hurled by circumstance into the nightmare world of having to maintain her own mental and physical health while at the same time dealing with Oakland politricks, she has spent the last year trying to piece together her life with very little support. 
 
As the one year anniversary of this police assassination approaches we must resist the heavily media fortified urge to write Mathew Cicelski’s death off as just another Officer-Involved-Shooting.  We must call this what it is…a crime against humanity perpetrated by a state sanctioned murderous group known as the OPD.  Above all we must demand  justice for the victims deceased and living.  Justice for Mathew Cicelski!  End Po’Lice Terror Now!
 

[1] Fugitive Watch (http://www.fugitive.com/2011/01/30/matthew-cicelski-shot-by-oakland-police-after-pointing-replica-assault-rifle/)
[2] SFGATE (http://articles.sfgate.com/2011-01-31/bay-area/27092221_1_officer-shot-police-id-man-man-with-fake-gun)
[3] NBC (http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Fatally-Shot-Man-Had-Fake-Gun-114903794.html)
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(H)afrocentric: The Comic

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

If The Boondocks was feminist, it may look like this…



Follow the self proclaimed radical Black feminist, Naima Pepper (who has a White mama), as she deals with the contradictions of her own life in various ways—lashing out in Tourette Syndrome-like rants about gentrification, white supremacy, and apathy. Both she and her fraternal twin brother, Miles Pepper grew up in a mostly White and Asian neighborhood. Miles Pepper reflects a popular culture aesthetic and mindset. As they navigate through the world with their best friends, Renee Aanjay Brown and El Ramirez, their identities and neighborhood start to change in front of their eyes. 




Meet the characters (left to right): Renee Aanjay Brown, Miles Pepper, Naima Pepper, and El Ramirez.
 
To purchase a copy of (H)afrocentric, click here.
 
Watch (H)afro-centric conceptualist speaking at POOR Magazine's Community Newsroom on PNN-TV:

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DV and Mirkarimi

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

January 31, 2012

Newly elect sheriff Ross Mirakirimi is under the gun for domestic violence and child endangerment, following a family dispute on December 31. Although Mirakirimi's position as sheriff is being threatened, he is not the first man of his status to have allegedly battered his wife.


Unfortunately, spousal abuse is nothing new in a society where false ideologies of male dominance are respected. Due to classism and status, domestic abuse often is a voiceless or tolerable issue if you are part of a high-ranking circle. And in some cases, DV may get a nod of approval because control on any level or category is connected and equals back to one word: OPPRESSION.


Speaking with the people, I found that many were disappointed because Mirakirimi had a lot of support for his proactivity and involvement in our communities, and that his recent charge made folks feel like supporting him was "all for nothing". Some believed that once Ross was sheriff, there would be somewhat of a "positive flow" when it came down to the sheriff's anticipated involvement on issues such as evictions and internal misconduct.


By no means is domestic violence supported on my end. We here at Poor Magazine have a few survivors of DV of our own on staff. It is not easy to recover from such traumas as DV, to reclaim self worth and heal from the wounds both physically and emotionally inflicted, but it is doable. For Mirakirimi backers, this goes back to the age-old lesson of how we the people put power into the hands of mortal men, who are not perfect but possess "God-like" titles.

Ross should not be treated no differently than the po' man, and protocols to protect his wife and child should be followed all the same. He has the right to seek help and not be judged by those who throw stones and hide their hands (a longshot he'll seek help, but he has that right). To redeem himself and become a better man for himself and his family, to take his shortcomings and turn it into virtues by ways of educating other men who share similar experiences.


Leadership requires ownership to one's imperfections. To be true to self and not lead those who support you astray. And if one is unwilling to heal and just sweep situations like Mirakirimi's "under the rug", this vicious cycle of abuse and oppression will go on and the nation will continue to suffer.

"It's too bad to have had to open up a paper to see Mirakirimi in trouble for assaulting someone other than a krooked ass kop!" -Queennandi

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Resisting Gender Violence and the Prison Industrial Complex --An interview with Victoria Law

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

 

Victoria Law is a longtime prison activist and the author of the 2009 book, Resistance Behind Bars: The Struggles of Incarcerated Women (PM Press). Law’s essay “Sick of the Abuse: Feminist Responses to Sexual Assault, Battering, and Self Defense,” is featured in the new book, entitled The Hidden 1970s: Histories of Radicalism, edited by Dan Berger.

In this interview, Law discusses her new article, which provides a history of radical feminist resistance to the criminalization of women who have defended themselves from gender violence. Furthermore, Law presents a prison abolitionist critique of how the mainstream women’s movement has embraced the US criminal justice system as a solution for combating violence against women.

Previously interviewed by Angola 3 News about the torture of women in US prisons, Law is now on the road with the Community and Resistance Tour.

Angola 3 News: In your essay “Sick of the Abuse,” you write that “a woman’s right to defend herself (and her children) from assault became a feminist rallying point throughout the 1970s.” You focus on the four separate stories of Yvonne Wanrow, Inez Garcia, Joan Little, and Dessie Woods. All four women were arrested for self-defense and their cases received national attention with the support of the radical women’s movement. Can you briefly explain their cases and why they were so important for the women’s liberation movement of the 1970s?

Victoria Law: Yvonne Wanrow was an American Indian mother of two living in Washington State in the 1970s. In 1972, her 11-year-old son was grabbed from his bike by William Wesler, a known child molester. He escaped and fled to the house of a family friend named Shirley Hooper, whose 7-year-old daughter had been raped by Wesler earlier that year. When Hooper called the police, they refused to arrest Wesler.

Understandably shaken, Hooper called Yvonne Wanrow and asked her to spend the night. Wanrow, who was 5 foot, 4 inches, and had recently broken her leg, brought her gun. At five in the morning, Wesler came to their house. When he refused to leave, Wanrow went to the front door to yell for help. She turned around to find Wesler, who, at 6 foot 2, was towering over her. She shot and killed him.

At her first trial, the judge instructed the jury only to consider what had happened at or immediately before the killing. This omitted (1) Wesler’s record as a sex offender; (2) Wesler’s assault on Hooper’s 7 year old; (3) His attempted assault on Yvonne’s son

Wanrow was convicted of murder and sentenced to 25 years.

However, various groups and people involved in the women’s movement and the American Indian movement had taken up her cause. They recognized that a woman had the right to defend herself and her family from assault. They held events that raised awareness, educated people, and tied her case into issues of violence against women and the systemic violence against Native people in the US. They also raised funds for her legal defense, which enabled her to have a better defense than she might have been afforded otherwise.

As a result, in 1977, the Washington State Supreme Court granted her a new trial, partially on the basis that the jury should have considered ALL relevant facts when considering self-defense. At her new trial in 1979, Wanrow pled guilty to reduced charges & received a suspended sentence, 5 years’ probation and 1 year of community service. The court decision also established that that women’s lack of access to self-defense training and to the “skills necessary to effectively repel a male assailant without resorting to the use of deadly weapons” made their circumstances different from those of men.

Two years later, in 1974, Inez Garcia shot and killed the man who had blocked her escape from rape. She was arrested and charged with 1st degree (or premeditated) murder. Like Wanrow, her cause was taken up by the women’s movement, which organized teach-ins and fundraisers and galvanized popular support with the recognition that women had the right to defend themselves against rape.

During her first trial, the judge did not allow testimony about the rape as part of the evidence. After her conviction, the women’s movement continued to rally on her behalf and hired feminist attorney Susan Jordan to take over her defense.

Two years later, an appeals court reversed her conviction because the trial judge had instructed the jury not to consider the rape

During the re-trial, Susan Jordan challenged potential jurors about their preconceptions of rape, making the assault an integral part of the case from the beginning. Garcia was acquitted. The entire jury agreed that the rape and threat of further harm were adequate provocation for Garcia’s action.

That same year, Joan Little, a black woman and the only female prisoner in North Carolina’s Beaufort County Jail, killed Clarence Alligood, a sixty-two-year-old white male guard, after he had entered her cell, threatened her with an ice pick and forced her to perform oral sex. Little was charged with first-degree murder which, in North Carolina, carried a mandatory death sentence.

Again, there was a HUGE outpouring of support from various movements, including people and groups in the women’s liberation and Black Liberation movements as well as more mainstream groups. During her trial, Little’s defense exposed the chronic sexual abuse and harassment endured by women in the jail and prison system. Countering the prosecution’s argument that Little had enticed Alligood into her cell with promises of sex, the defense team called on women who had previously been held at the jail. They testified that Alligood had a history of sexually abusing women in his custody.

Little herself testified about Alligood’s assault.

After seventy-eight minutes of deliberation, a jury acquitted Little, establishing a precedent for killing as a justified self-defense against rape.

Dessie Woods was a Black woman in Georgia who shot and killed a man who tried to rape her and her friend while they were hitchhiking. She was sentenced to 22 years. Black nationalist women took up the case of Dessie Woods, framing it as a case of colonial violence. Radical (White) feminists also took up her cause and used it as a way to challenge white feminists to examine not only sexism and patriarchy but also racism and colonialism.

However, unlike the cases of Little, Wanrow and Garcia, the larger White feminist movement(s) did not rally to her cause.

Even though she did not have the massive outpouring of support as the other three women, the prolonged support that she did have eventually won Woods her freedom in July 1981. A lawyer from the People’s Law Center challenged the use of circumstantial evidence and the use of a special prosecutor (hired by the dead man’s family). The U.S. Court of Appeals determined that there had been insufficient evidence to convict and imprison her.

The first three cases were groundbreaking in that they established legal precedents stating that women had a right to defend themselves (and their children) from sexual assault. In the case of Inez Garcia, her lawyer Susan Jordan extended the legal interpretation of “imminent danger” beyond the immediate time period, thus laying the groundwork for battered women’s defense—that a woman who kills her abuser is acting in self-defense even if she is not under attack at that time.

A3N: What impact did activism have in these four cases?

VL: The activism and organizing around those four cases enabled the women to have better legal defenses than they would have otherwise been afforded. For example, $250,000 was raised for Joan Little’s defense. Almost $39,000 was spent on social scientists who devised an “attitude profile survey:” designed to detect patterns of (racial) prejudice. The defense used their findings to win a change of venue from conservative/racist Beaufort County to Raleigh, which was key in her acquittal. Without the money garnered by supporters, Joan Little, a poor Black woman, would never have been able to have that kind of legal support. Instead, she would have been convicted and executed.

A3N: How are things different today, in 2010?

VL: We don’t see the same outpouring of support for women arrested for self-defense today. We can look at the case of the New Jersey Four, who are four Black lesbians arrested and incarcerated for defending themselves against a homophobic attack on the street. Their case has garnered support from groups working around incarcerated women’s issues and queer issues, but it hasn’t been taken up as widely as, say, the case of Joan Little or even Dessie Woods. Women who are incarcerated for defending themselves against partner violence receive even less public attention and support.

A3N: Shifting our focus to the issue of domestic violence, you write that the early women’s shelters formed by the radical women’s movement in the 1970s “utilized the self-help methods, egalitarian philosophies, and collective structures that had developed within the women’s liberation movement, striving to be democratic alternatives in which women had the space to safely communicate, share experiences, examine the root causes of the violence against them, and begin to articulate a response. However, these efforts received nowhere near the amount of attention, publicity, and support that the women’s movement paid to Wanrow, Garcia, Little, and Woods.” 

Why do you think these projects, as well as court cases where women defended themselves from intimates, did not receive the attention they deserved?

VL: Then (and now), people saw battering as a “personal” issue and were reluctant to get involved. Some felt that marriage (or partnership) somehow condoned abuse. Others felt that this was not an issue that a movement could be built on. Perhaps it was also recognized that the issue could divide a movement. After all, when reading histories of revolutionary groups during the 1960s and 1970s, we see that abuse and misogyny often went unaddressed.

A3N: What did these radical activists identify as the “root causes” of violence against women were? What is your personal opinion regarding these root causes?

VL: Radical activists identified society’s misogyny and patriarchy as root causes of violence against women. They pointed out that women are most often the ones who are attacked and abused because they are often the ones with less power (both physically and in terms of resources).

I strongly agree with this analysis and feel that only when we radically transform societal attitudes around gender and power will we be able to have a world without gendered violence.

A3N: The number of battered women’s shelters grew (by 1982, there were an estimated 300-700 shelters nationally), but you write that “the increased interest in the issue by those who did not identify with the women’s liberation movement resulted in a watering down of the radical feminist analyses that led to the first refuges for battered women. These emerging institutions emphasized providing services without analyzing the political context in which abuse occurred. There was a shift from calling for broad social transformation to focusing on individual problems and demanding greater state intervention.” 

How do you think this watering down and shift towards greater state intervention has since played out in later decades, leading up to today?

VL: Today, abuse is treated as an individual pathology rather than a broader social issue rooted in centuries of patriarchy and misogyny. Viewing abuse as an individual problem has meant that the solution becomes intervening in and punishing individual abusers without looking at the overall conditions that allow abuse to go unchallenged and also allows the state to begin to co-opt concerns about gendered violence.

For example, 29 states have some form of mandatory arrest policy in a DV call. There is also the possibility of dual arrests (in which both parties are arrested). In addition, many states now have “no-drop prosecution” in which the District Attorney subpoenas the battered spouse to testify with threats of prosecution if she recants or refuses.

The shift towards greater state intervention has also resulted in resources such as battered women’s shelters mirroring some of these same abusive practices (such as isolating the survivor). It also ignores ways in which the state inflicts violence upon women. I would greatly recommend the INCITE! anthology, entitled The Color of Violence, which explores various aspects of violence against women.

A3N: If you were dialoguing with those sectors of today’s anti-violence movement that embrace the criminalization approach, what are the key points you would make in arguing that prisons are not the answer? What do you think is the best way to reduce and prevent violence against women both inside and outside prisons?

VL: The threat of imprisonment does not deter abuse; it simply drives it further underground. Remember that there are many forms of abuse and violence and not all are illegal. It also sets up a false dichotomy in which the survivor has to choose between personal safety and criminalizing/imprisoning a loved one.

Arrest/imprisonment does not reduce, let alone prevent, violence. Building structures and networks to address the lack of options and resources available to women is more effective. Challenging patriarchy and male supremacy is a much more effective solution (although not one that funders and the state want to see).

A3N: Can you please tell us about recent cases of women who are facing charges or have been wrongly convicted for defending themselves?

VL: There’s the case of the New Jersey Four, whom I mentioned above. 

There’s also Sara Kruzan, a 31-year-old woman incarcerated at the California Institution for Women. When Sara was 11, she met a 31-year-old man named G.G. who molested her and began grooming her to become a prostitute. By the age 13, she began working as a child prostitute for G.G. and was repeatedly molested by him. At age 16, Sara was convicted of killing him. She was sentenced to prison for the rest of her life despite her background and a finding by the California Youth Authority that she was amendable to treatment offered in the juvenile system.

There’s been a letter-writing campaign to the governor urging clemency. Sara is also up for resentencing and needs letters of support. The Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of Youth and the California Coalition for Women Prisoners (CCWP) are working on publicizing and garnering support for her case. However, we’re not seeing a fraction of the support from women’s or other non-prison groups that the cases of Wanrow, Garcia and Little received in the 1970s even though you would think that her story would provoke widespread outrage and calls for release. 

I recently received an e-mail from CCWP about Mary Shields, a domestic violence survivor incarcerated for nineteen years on a seven-to-life sentence for attempted murder. This past September, Mary was found suitable for release by the Board of Parole Hearings. In 2006, the Parole Board had also found Mary “suitable for release” but rescinded its decision after Governor Schwarzenegger recommended against release. This time around, the governor has until January (when his term will be up) to either let the Board's decision stand or recommend that it be reversed and so CCWP is calling for people to send letters supporting Mary’s release.

A3N: Anything else to add?

VL: I want to remind readers that if we’re not coming up with solutions to gender violence, then the fall-back becomes relying on prisons and policing to keep women (and other vulnerable people) safe. It is also imperative to support women incarcerated for killing their abusers as well as to support battered women on the outside and to remember that abuse isolates people.

We should be working to end violence against women without strengthening government control over women’s lives or promoting incarceration as a solution to social problems.

--Angola 3 News is a new project of the International Coalition to Free the Angola 3. Our website is www.angola3news.com where we provide the latest news about the Angola 3. We are also creating our own media projects, which spotlight the issues central to the story of the Angola 3, like racism, repression, prisons, human rights, solitary confinement as torture, and more.

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The Poor Aint Foolin: National Day of Action for the Right to Exist: April 1st

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

They want us out of our community!"
"We're always told to move on, but to where? There are no places for us to be." -- Survey Respondents

Western Regional Advocacy Project (WRAP) and USA-Canada Alliance of Inhabitants (USACAI) are calling on our members and allies throughout the United States and Canada to join us on April 1 for a bi-national day of action to protest the ongoing criminalization of poor and homeless people in our communities.

We are building a movement to reclaim our communities for all members: not just those who set the rents. In order to build this movement and assert our human rights, we must make clear the myriad of ways in which our community members are treated as though they are less than human. We must "connect the dots."

Over the past 30 years, neoliberal policymakers have substituted private gain for public good; they have abandoned economic and social policies that supported housing, education, healthcare, labor, and immigration programs. WRAP and USACAI are at work identifying and tracking such policy, legal, and funding trends in order to publicize their spread and their effects. This is not a matter of theoretical analysis: this is an investigation of the policies and tools by which more and more people have been made to suffer.

Connecting the dots

Three decades ago, the deregulation of financial industries came simultaneously with the withdrawal of government support for affordable housing. Just since 1995, the United States has lost over 290,588 existing units of public housing and 360,000 Section 8 units, with another 7,107 approved for demolition/disposition since March of 2011. At the same time, some 2.5 million foreclosures have taken place since 2007, an additional 6.9 million foreclosures have been initiated, and a projected 5.7 million borrowers are at risk.

In those same 15 years, over 830,000 new jail and prison cells have been built, draconian immigration laws and eligibility screening criteria have been implemented in housing, healthcare, education and jobs programs, and America's three largest residential mental health facilities are now all county jails (Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York).

A New Wave of Criminalization

1982 marked the beginning of homelessness as a "crime wave" that would consume the efforts of US police forces over the next three decades. Crime statistics show that across the country, millions were sitting, lying down, hanging out, and -- perhaps worst of all -- sleeping. To take one city as an example, by the end of 2011, these new crimes comprised roughly one third of all prosecuted offenses in San Francisco.

We all suffer from governments that waste resources and refuse to develop real solutions to social problems, but the people whose survival is criminalized suffer the most.

Over the past year, WRAP has led a survey effort with its West Coast grassroots members and allies in Portland, Berkeley, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, Houston and Worcester, MA documenting homeless people's experiences with the criminal justice system for survival-related "crimes." USACAI has helped WRAP to take this effort broader by reaching out to their members and surveying homeless people in cities throughout the United States on these issues. Survey forms are available in English and Spanish if your organization wants to help build on this initial effort. WRAP is now releasing preliminary results from discussions with over 668 people:

Download the fact sheet here!

78% of survey respondents reported being harassed, cited or arrested by police officers for sleeping outside. 75% reported the same for sitting or lying down, and 76% for loitering or simply "hanging out." These were far and away the top crimes for which homeless people were charged. A sad corresponding fact is that only 25% of respondents believed that they knew of safe, legal places to sleep. In California, the public lodging law makes sleeping outside always illegal for homeless people. The law, by its nature, makes a large class of poor people inescapably criminal.

It can feel easy to scoff at these crimes: most of the relevant laws, nationwide, are summary offenses ("infractions" in California; "violations" in some other states), which means that they can't directly result in any jail or prison time. However, 57% of respondents reported bench warrants issued for their arrest as a result of these citations: that is, if they couldn't afford to pay the fines that these tickets carried, or if they were unable to make court dates, then they became subject to arrest.

Using the Word "We"

Core to our success in this survey research was the active, engaged outreach of volunteers from nearly a dozen different organizations throughout the United States. Using an organizing method that WRAP members have developed and polished on the streets of cities on the West Coast, they were able to procure good information, and, far more importantly, begin important conversations within our communities about the real nature of criminalization and its impacts. By seeking out homeless people in the places where they really spend time and engaging our communities on their own terms, we were able to develop true, communal knowledge, founded in collective experience, and we are able to use the term "we" to talk about our communities in ways that isolated "experts" never can. We are organizing in a more honestly democratic way.

What We Need

This is not about caring for or even advocating for "those people." This is about all of us. As Aboriginal leader Lilla Watson said, "If you have come here to help me, you are wasting your time. But if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together."

The rise of repression in the United States and Canada is a war against all of us. We need all of us to act in this struggle for dignity, fairness and human rights. The people who pay for and profit from the criminalization of homeless people are the same people who benefit from our nations' refusal to meet basic human needs. They are using these laws to do what invading armies do: they attack us at our most vulnerable flanks -- the communities of poor and homeless people who have been subjected to shame and blame for decades.

The sit/lie law that Seattle passed in 1993 is nearly verbatim the same sit/lie law that San Francisco passed in 2010. The sit/lie law that San Francisco passed to use against homeless people is the same sit/lie law that the San Francisco Police Department now uses to harass Occupy protesters.

If you are not homeless, if you are not the target now, then understand that you are next. Isolated and fragmented, we lose this fight. But we are no longer isolated.

We can only win this struggle if we use our collective strengths, organizing, outreach, research, public education, artwork, and direct actions. We are continuing to expand our network of organizations and cities and we will ultimately bring down the whole oppressive system of policing poverty and treating poor people as "broken windows" to be discarded and replaced.

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A Worker's Worth

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

I'm not even 40 years old, so to think of slaving for pennies until I'm in my 60's or older in amerikkka makes me ponder on a destiny other than being a slave-like zombie for the Sssystem. It is an insane insult to the value of eldership in this country, To even require a person work up until 6 months before being admitted into a nursing home. A lot of  elders that work way beyond their "Golden Years" don't live to reap the "benefits" of "retirement." Either that, or be forced to spend every dime saved on their hellthcare bills obtained by working yourself to death for these corruptporations and npic's in the first place.

 
The "big drawers" on top rake in billions off us "common folks" for their "common wealth." We sacrifice sweat, limbs and tears as if we are the flies that fatten the frogs for the snakes, and if we are lucky, we bring home enough broken bread to survive. Unfortunately, this is a robotizied slave sssystem we are working for and I use the term loosely. I say slave because no matter how long you work on the plantation, the odds are slim that you'll ever own the "big house," that is unless we are blessed to have a strong interdependent frame of mind, not to mention a firm backbone of support and unity amongst the people. We have to battle a system that taxes the poor working "class" into a "below poverty level" class. A sssystem that steals land, creates sweatshops to enslave more people to work for wages that couldn't support a houseplant and give tax breaks to those who can afford to use our currency as toilet tissue. We have to battle a sophisticated ante of a slavery reform where it is ok to literally work people to death. The "common folk" such as myself have never been afraid or too lazy or uneducated enough to take on what is supposed to be rewarding- hard work. It is only when you combine hard work with interdependence for self and 'rades will it prove to be rewarding. How many people became wealthy and interdependent slaving for an underappreciative or racist boss, as opposed to how many have taken their own lives out of frustration or became irreversibly hopeless because of the loss of their jobs, housing or other life necessity? Homelessness, famine and other forms of poverty should be outlawed, but as mentioned before, this is a slave institution created by and for the survival of the slavemassa's people.
 
It is a slap in the face to beg a man for the tools of life so that you and your family won't starve, just to be told no when this man, who is no better than you is fully aware of your need and rights to survival. I have been assaulted many times by my former employer with ultimatum blows of "either your job or your family" or "your job or your health." I was even told one time to "get over the deaths of  my mother and brother and git back to work." These are unfair cheap shots that "bosses," "managers" or "supervisors" will throw to see how well "slaves" are controlled. If you are a rebellious "slave" and dare to challenge the wrongologies of the workplace, the "bosses" will get rid of you. 
 
I was eventually fired after taking a stand. One of the managers actually committed perjury and had my benefits denied when I injured myself on the job, and with impunity. All of the above, and I was also a niggah!
 
Self-Determination is mandatory whether or not you face the same hells as most of us. To be comfortable depending on those with a slavemassa mentality will strip you of your power over your destiny, and seal your fate. To sit there and eat out of the same plate as these "bosses" just because you git a lil' extra money will not last long, and when it is time to "clean house" the butt-kissers will be the first to go, tossed right back to us "common folks!"
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