Story Archives 2013

When I First Saw the Brown Berets-

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Phillip Standing Bear
Original Body

Statement from Monique Duenez on joining the National BrownBerets:

When my Tio Ernest Duenez Jr.was murdered by John Moody of the Manteca Police Department on June 8 2011, a big chunk of happiness and heart was taken from my family as well as myself.  We have been fighting every Sunday since then at the Manteca Police Department. As a Part of my Tio's fight for justice I have met a lot of families along the way who I have gained so much love and respect for, I see what these families are going through and I know why they fight so hard and never give up. I do it because of the love and respect and pain in my heart I have to go through to see my family in pain and relive that event over and over each time we go to protest or a march, so I stand on that street in front of MPD with my sign raised high reading JAIL FOR MOODY to support my family in this FIGHT, this is my passion,where my heart is at and I want to do the same for each and every other families going through the same, because I see my grandmother and grandfather in pain, with anger and a fire within them and having to remember why they are out there fighting each Sunday.  That is the same pain, anger fire and love driven emotion I see these families going through, I am driven with the same emotions to help and fight along-side each family including my own, to show them all "I am Here.. I feel your pain,and I am with you all the way!" when my family has events and marches and we have supporters coming from far and wide, the feeling in our hearts of support and solidarity is also what helps us keep pushing and fighting, support is everything in the fight for justice to all families because we all need each other and we are all feeling the same way. My Tio Jr ALWAYS had my back, he NEVER left me hanging , he was one of my best friends and he always gave me his best advice, I don’t speak much about my pain I usually just put it into the fight but the reason I go so hard for my uncle, the reason I am the warrior I’ve become is because I know for a fact, if roles were reversed he would have me ina minute, he would have never given up on me so I am never giving up on him! When I’m out fighting for justice even if it's at another family march or protest, I feel him with me more than any other day, giving me the motivation to fight with my fist up in the air yelling no justice no peace and my heart feels at ease for the moment.  His son Dominic is my godson, and I made a promise to my tio jr that I will always have his baby boys back, just like he had mine.  I see my godson and know he will never get the chance to know who his father is and that puts drive into me even more and makes me want to fight for John Moody to be behind bars like he is supposed to be, so I also fight for the children of these victims of police brutality.  My Tio Jr is putting this drive in me, I feel him every day and each time I’m fighting I can feel him standing with us all, so proud to know his family isn’t giving upon him. That’s what makes me fight.

When I first saw the Brown Berets was in June 9 2013 at our march for my Tio's2 year anniversary, they made an impact on me and everyone else, so powerful,united, and marching along-side us all making us feel at ease, the Brown Beretscame from Santa Paula. Having an inspirational group supporting us was an awesome feeling, I Saw the Brown Berets again on July 21, 2013 at the Year after Anaheim Statewide March.  I was standing with Theresa Smith, all the families where gathered and I heard marching and a voice over a microphone yelling "no justice no peace"turning the corner , it was the Brown Berets I said to myself "that’s awesome",  I can hear families saying how powerful there entrance was and how happy they were for the Brown Berets to be there, it made me happy to know that such a strong powerful group of chican@s has these families backs and was there to protect them.

I spoke with some of the Brown Berets that day including Chimalli and Capone, and asked them if they have a chapter near where I lived they said they were working on it, Chimalli was telling me the expectations and who they are,Me not yet knowing I was soon to become a Brown Beret, was so excited about meeting them, I shook hands with them and went on. After that day I found myself looking up who they were, educating myself more on the Brown Berets, andI would tell my mom they are awesome! I want to join! The way they help our people, our communities and how they march side by side, and support each family and when you speak to them they have so much love for what they do, it’s an inspiration. I Met Jesse Ornelas I call him Mr. Miyagi , he came down to protest with us and I asked him If they were starting a chapter out here because we need it, he said yes they were planning and all it takes is one person, and I told him “well I am that one person”, he said okay and we went about protesting, he messaged me to let me know the commander of NBB wanted him to train me to be in the NBB and we started that process, one thing that made me so happy and so excited was Jesse told me he wanted me to be the voice of my family and these other families, and I knew this is what I’m supposed  to do…this is what my Tio Jr wants me to do and this is where my heart is, I cannot explain how much this means to me and to be involved with the La Causa , my heart is in this, for the people , for my family , for all the other families as well and to know I get to march along-side some awesome Berets is exciting!And what other way to Observe, Serve, and Protect then with my new Familia LaCausa, National Brown Berets.

 

In an official statement from National Brown Berets:

The National Brown Berets are very pleased to have Monique Duenez join the NBB family. The reason why is because she has felt the grip the dirty hateful oppressors have on her community. She and her family have paid the ultimate sacrifice when that hateful murderous poor excuse for a cop killed Ernest Duenez Jr in cold blood some time ago. Monique and her family have made it their life mission that the dirty dogs that hide behind badges be brought to justice. The National Brown Berets are dedicated to protecting and serving the families that have taken up the fight for justice and we will do what it takes by any means necessary. CHICANO POWER!!!!! ALL POWER TO THE PEOPLE!!!!!!!!PRISON FOR MURDEROUS COPS!!!!!!! JUSTICE FOR THE PEOPLE !!!!!!

Respect & Power

Minster of Defense for the National Brown Berets - Jesse Ornelas

You can learn more about the National Brown Berets at www.nationalbrownberets.com

****************

You can watch the video of the murder of Ernest Duenez Jr.on Youtube:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhnY17F_eiQ

You can join our fight for accountability from law enforcement on October 22nd in Sacramento at the California StateCapital on International Day Against Police Brutality – this will be a statewide call to action.

Our last Statewide Call to Action July 21st 2013- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v358Nj_-Qxw

 

See other action we are taking in California – if you would like to join a forum like this please contact us directly – the murder of Ernest Duenez Jr. and countless others are highlighted in the documentary C.O.P. Crimes of Police: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJZi7nogu84

 

WATCH THE TRAILER HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWdb4N3U8q0&feature=youtube_gdata_player

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From South Carolina to Santa Clara - the Homeless to Jail Pipeline Continues

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

(image of Poverty Skolaz from POOR Magazine and LA CAN/WRAP fighting the criminalization of poverty through our voices, our solutions, our self-determined actions)

Whack, Tap, Crack, the sound of the steel Po'Lice flashlight on a car window is like no other, and always had the same effect on homeless me and mama, blood-curdling fear. I thought about our constant po'lice harassment, abuse and eventual arrest for the sole act of being houseless in Amerikkka when i heard about South Carolina's "new" law that officially made it illegal to be homeless in downtown Columbia, SC

For over 10 years of my young life starting when i was 11, me and my mama were housed and un-housed, and that meant our lives were constantly at risk of po'lice harassment, abuse and eventual incarceration.

POOR Magazine/Prensa POBRE, STREET SHEET, Krip Hop Nation, poverty skolaz at Western Regional Advocacy Project (WRAP) and many others have been writing, speaking, teaching and making people aware and one of the reasons i wrote the book Criminal of Poverty - Growing Homeless in America is that it has been illegal to be houseless in the US since the original theft of these indigenous lands of Turtle Island by the English law-based, only-good-for-rich-wite- Settler-Colonizers.

From the pauper laws to the Ugly laws, there are many other things that this colonizer created law has made illegal such as being an indigenous person from the other side of the Amerikkkan imperalist false borders, a poor person selling or working on land they don't "own" or rent like me and my mama did for years to survive, and/or a young person of color just convening, living or surviving like Kenny Harding Jr, Mario Romero, Ernesto Duenez Jr or Derrik Gaines.. And as Susan Schweik's powerful book reported, its also been illegal for centuries and still is to be living with a disability and poor thanks to the archaic "Ugly laws" of the 19th century, which stated that anyone "unsligtly" could not be seen on the street- aka "begging" being poor being houseless in Amerikkka.

"You have no choice, you either go to jail or go to jail," said Marcuz, 62, an African Descendent poverty skola from South Carolina. "I have been living in shelters trying to get housing, but there is no housing here, so now our housing will be jail or a jail that's basically another jail called a shetler way out of town", Marcuz concluded,

On Aug. 13, the Columbia City Council approved a plan that effectively makes homelessness illegal in parts of the city. The proposal forces those who sleep outdoors to be sent to a shelter on the outskirts of town. Those who don’t comply are literally banned from the city or sent to jail.

Once you are sent to the shelter, you can’t come and go. If you want to go back downtown, you have to get approval from social worker/wardens to shuttle you back to downtown.

Even the Po'Lice in Columbia aren't feeling the hater-law, “Homelessness is not a crime,” Interim Police Chief Ruben Santiago told The State. “I’ve got to have the legal right (to question or take anyone into custody). We can’t just take people to somewhere they don’t want to go. I can’t do that. I won’t do that.”

This "new" law is really only a bold step into codifing the deep fascism that already exists in wite-supremacist, blud-stained dollaz above all else honoring Amerikkka. The same hate that put me, my mama and so many of us poverty skolaz in jail for sitting, lying or living while houseless. it is why WRAP (Western Regional Advocacy Project) poverty skolaz have been working diligently for the last year on the Homeless Persons' Bill of Rights in California which is now currently on hold in the California legislature.

It is also extremely important to always connect the dots between the rising criminalization of poverty, poor and working class folks of color and the insane rise in gentriFUKation, displacement and the devil-opment of our poor communities of color which is going on in cities across the US.

From Santa Clara to South Carolina thanks to the budget genocide known as "Sequester" one of the few programs to help poor folks pay their rent called Section 8 was cut by 10 % - which means that elders, babies, families and folks are becoming homeless and and/or at risk of eviction out of our neighborhoods, our public housing and our so-called affordable housing by the tousands. Our comrades at CHAM in Santa Clara just reported that over 17,000 disabled, elders and families joined the thousands already facing or currently in homelessness.

There is also big money in what i affectionately call Non-profiteer-pimping and case manglement aka advocates who are limited in what they can "advocate" for as it relates to their "funding streams" and grant guidelines and non-profit Housing Devil-opers like Lennar and John Stewart who have extremely limited, over-priced housing available which you have to sit on wait-lists for years to qualify for and don't even qualify for because they only accept tenants who have perfect credit and no evictions on their records, a reality most of us po' folks don't have.

Me and my mama were never cured, helped or "saved" from our houselessness and poverty by all that po'lice harassment and criminalization. What we were were traumatized. Our lives constantly unstable and our lives always lived in fear. Liberation, consciouness, and activation of revolution with fellow poor, indigenous and peoples of color who connect the dots always about our herstories and histories is what kept us alive ,

Poor and indigenous people-led, never pimped movements like Right to Survive in Oregon, the Zapatistas in Chiapas, the Landless Peoples Movement in Brazil , the Shackdwellers Union in South Africa WRAP, POOR magazine and our own Homefulness project is what comes from our own liberation. And as we see the hater-nation called Amerikkka close in on us, we must remember, change wont come from a savior, a pimp or and institution - change will only come from a poor people-led revolution

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Happy Birthday Lee Williams September 2nd/ 2013 (1990's audio interview)

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Lee Williams and I met in the 90's and he joined at that time Disability Advocates of Minorities Org's artistic arm, New Voices: Disabled Poets & Artists of Color. In this audio interview Lee talks about his music career, his album, Phase V, being Black disabled musician and you can listen to some of his songs. This interview was done at SF Main Library in 1998 or 1999. His birthday is September 2nd. HAPPY BIRTHDAY LEE WILLIAMS 2013. MUCH LOVE!

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Bill Shannon aka Crutch Master Talks About Hip-Hop, Disability, His Dancing & More

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Krip-Hop Nation finally interviewed Bill Shannon aka Crutch Master. I have known about Shannon since 1995. I've always wanted to interview him about his dancing, Hip-Hop culture, his disability as growing older, his time in NY in the 80's and his work now. He even turned down a big time mainstream contest show. He made it clear that he loves Hip-Hop but his dance/art is much more than just Hip-Hop more like interdisciplinary dance and now is more into House music but still listens to Hip-Hop. Shannon is a conceptual, interdisciplinary dance and media artist who creates both solo and group projects. He considers his work rooted in street culture and informed by the fine arts. He is widely recognized in the dance/performance world, the underground hip-hop and club dance scene, the urban arts movement, as well as the disabled artist community. Also in this interview he also talked about being White in NY in the 80's when Hip-Hop was on the streets where he danced with his crutches. This audio interview was so great and I hope you like it. Listen then go to his site at http://www.crutchdoc.com/

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Disabled and Riding in a Wheelbarrow: A Father’s Love ( Kampala, Uganda Africa)

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Note: Through Krip-Hop Nation Facebook page I met Ronald Galiwango who lives and report from Kalerwe a suburb of Kampala the capital of Uganda. I asked Ronald Gailwango to write a story about people with disabilities in his country. Below is the story entitled ''Disabled and Riding a wheelbarrow'' Ronald Galiwango is a journalist in Kampala, Uganda

Disabled and Riding a wheelbarrow: A Father’s Love

Eunice Atim and Sarah Ationo live with their father, Alex Ekolu, in Amolatar town in Uganda(East Africa). Ekolu’s wife gave birth to a girl, Atim, but she suffered a dislocation, one year after her birth.

“It started like a joke and by the time I realized just how serious it had become, it was too late,” Ekolu says.

“I took her to Lira Hospital, where I was told the baby had weak bones. They put her limbs in a cast, which instead caused permanent problems,” he laments.

He went from hospital to hospital, but the money was never enough, so he opted to look after the girl at home.

Ekolu adds that initially, he thought it was witchcraft until he saw another child with the same condition.

Like Atim, his second daughter, Ationo, was also born with weak bones. He again went to hospitals and traditional healers, but none could do much to help the condition.

“I learned to live with them the way they are, because it is God who gave me these children and he had a reason,” he says.

However, despite his commitment to raise his daughters, he could not afford wheelchairs for both of them.

Wheelbarrow to the rescue!

Ekolu thought he could get help from the office for the disabled in Amolatar district, but nothing was done. “They sent people who took my daughters’ details and promised to bring for them wheelchairs, but they never returned.

In Uganda, One studies from nursery(kindergarten) and this takes about 2-3years. This one is followed by primary(P) level and also takes 7yrs(P1-P7). Atim stopped at this level because she stopped in P6. After primary, one goes to senior(S) and this again takes 6yrs(S1-S6). Therefore S3 follows here. When senior is done, one joins university

"For the love of seeing my daughters go to school, I decided to buy wheelbarrows to transport them. I hired people to push them, but when they stopped I decided to do it myself,” Ekolu says.

Just when he was about to give up with the girls’ education, a Good Samaritan donated a wheelchair for Ationo and she was able to proceed with her education. She is now in S3.

Unfortunately, Atim has not had the same luck. At least not yet. She does not have a wheelchair and at some point, her father stopped pushing her to school in the wheelbarrow. This meant that her education would also come to a stop. She dropped out of school in P6.

Today, Atim stays at home. She spends most of her time knitting table cloths, a skill she learned from her late mother. When she needs to move, there is always the wheelbarrow and someone must be there to push her to her destination.

Atim seems to have got tired of visitors, especially those who she believes use her condition for their own survival. It took hours to convince her that the interview was with a newspaper journalist, not an NGO.

“Let me hope that what you are going to write will help me get a wheelchair because I am tired of lying in this wheelbarrow like luggage,” she made it clear.

“When I get a wheelchair I want to go back to school and maybe, one day, become a leader for the disabled people in Amolatar, because the ones in place do not serve the purpose,” she added.

“In class, Atim was a brilliant girl. She was always among the best and I had hope that she would go far with her education. But poverty is a disease that has made me fail to help her continue with her education. She knows that I would never just abandon her education,” Ekolu says.

Though Ekolu has another wife in his life now, he still avails himself to push his daughter wherever she wants to go. He says he can never let anything bad happen to them.

He also calls on the Government to strengthen the office of the disabled because Amolatar has a big number of children and people who are disabled, but do not receive any support.

He would like those who are benefiting on behalf of those suffering, people/youth with disabilities especially people who claim to be running NGOs, to be punished. He says NGO representatives have come to him, but none has ever helped.

By Ronald Galiwango Journalist in Kampala, Uganda
9/2013

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Disabled/Racially Profiling express through song (THE SONG/Lyrics is HERE Disabled Profiled by Leroy Moore & Keith Jones)

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Keith Jones and I have a lot in common. Both Black both have CP, both are activists and into Hip-Hop. We also both have been targets of racial/disabled profiling at hotels Keith in ATL & Leroy in Oakland. Now we went into studios and recorded a song, Disabled Profiled, about our experiences of being profiled as Black disabled men. Keith on the beats, raps and mixed it and Leroy spits his poetry. More to come. Another edited version of this song is on the Krip-Hop/5th Battalion Ent's cd, Broken Bodies PBP, Police Brutality Profiling Mixtape that came out 2012 Keith Jones was profiled in ATL at a hotel in which he was staying at for a Krip--Hop event. He was using the computer and the guard thought he was homeless that led to Keith who had to prove that he was staying there. And peeps know about my experiences in the Bay Area and in NY where I was approached by NYPD and a store manager that said "I was making them nervous!"

Lyrics here:

Disabled Profiled (Song Keith & Leroy)

Leroy:           

Yeah I’m a Black man

Known about racially profiled

Two Black hotel workers

Same race but in my face

Disabled profiled

Making assumptions upon appearances

Blocking the entrance

Can’t be race because we are both Black

 

Black Disabled Man

Must be a drunk

Slur speech drugging feet

Must be begging for money

 

Disabled profiled

Making assumptions upon appearances

Blocking the entrance

Can’t be race because we are both Black

 

Must protect others from this bum

Got to do my job

I summed him up from across the street

Poor cripple homeless beggar

 

Confused, disabled and black

The fear builds

As he approaches

Looking at him like he’s a roach

Firing out questions upon questions

No not racially but disabled profiled

Here in the home of ED Roberts

 

Disabled profiled

Making assumptions upon appearances

Blocking the entrance

Can’t be race because we are both Black

Mocking my walk

Didn’t read my tense body talk

Friends saw my anger,

“Mr. We’re together!”

 

Disabled Profiled

And I’m tired

Twice in one week

Its not race it happened from Black & White

 

Disabled Profiled

And I’m tired

Twice in one week

Its not race it happened from Black & White

 

Disabled Profiled

And I’m tired

 

Disabled Profiled

And I’m tired

 

I’m so tired

 

Keith:

The wheelchair got no diamond in da back and no sun roof top but I still run da scene wit a disability lean nah what I mean and every day dat im speakin and try to reach ‘em cause they be lookin at me tryin to profile the black man talking bout what happen to you damn see there was not no gun shot matter of fact I have my own kind of plot I have to run da block shut down because ya tryin to hold me down laughin at the way that I talk the way that I walk the way that I speak but ya girl likes da way that I freak ya betta get it right man understand cp is only part of da man I got something for the rest of yall listen something for the best of yall ya betta sit back and try to contemplate can you really demonstrate what it takes to create somehin kinda great in the face of hate ….    

 

Leroy:

Hey Keith just like you

I was triggered last week

Memories floating back

Makes this grown man weep

 

Paul Dunbar’s mask didn’t hold up

Felt like I was shot no bulletproof vest

Two days ago & I still can’t rest

 

Memories coming back

Woowooowoo “up against the wall

Hahaha are you drunk can’t walk?”

 

“No officer I’m disabled

Just coming home from work!”

“What what can’t understand?”

 

I was triggered last week

Memories floating back

Makes this grown man weep

 

Beep beep

“Mr. You is out late

Can I see your I’d?”

 

Why me

Don’t feel like being a teacher

Please just let me be

 

Black man in a uniform

Sees me as a threat

Or a charity case

 

Can’t look at me in my face

His mind is made up

Looking for my tin cup

 

I was triggered last week

Memories floating back

Makes this grown man weep

 

By Leroy Moore  & Keith Jones

Yes this is a true story!

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How to (Maybe) Survive and Encouter With Law Enforcement Even If You're Black Brown or Disabled!

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

October 2014

Since September 11, 2001, there have been numerous incidents involving law enforcement severely injuring or killing civilians. The vast majority of these victims have been black, brown or disabled.

The majority of the officers have been white.

Most recently the incident that has made national headlines regarding this sort of incident involved unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.

According to eye witnesses Brown had his hands up in an attempt to surrender to police when he was shot to death. Rather than rehashing that story here these are a few simple guidelines that if adhered to could save some lives and some families some heartache.

We all can agree that police have too much power and often literally get away with murder.

That is the first thing to keep in mind.

The first thing you should do when stopped by the police is ask if you are being arrested or detained if the answer is no don't say another word and leave immediately.

Second you should come to terms with the fact that you may go to jail whether or not you broke a law eventually they will have to let you out unless you cant bail out bail is always based on flight risk so if you attempt to run when first encountered that makes you a high flight risk don't do it!

Don't get angry or at least don't show signs of it.

Don't accuse them of being racist or picking on you for any reason there is a good chance that that is true but there is no point in antagonizing somebody who is picking on you and has the ability to beat you, take away your freedom or kill you.
Be as co-operative as possible by giving them your real name and social security. You are not required to tell them anything else and don't. The only other thing you should tell them is “I choose to exercise my right to remain silent at this time.” If you start talking again, even if they offer you something like a chair, or about the ballgame last night, you have to tell them again that you choose to exercise your right to remain silent.

Please keep in mind the moment the police approach you, you are technically under arrest. Anything you do like run, pull away from them, or even argue with them can be considered resisting arrest.

As unfair as it may seem the police can arrest you and hold you up to 72 hours {3days} without filing any charges so don't resist arrest!

If you feel like they do anything inappropriate you can report it later. Check what the rules are where you are at the time, but just try to maintain your cool at all times.

Most importantly don't do anything that would draw their attention to you to begin with if you can help it.

If you do survive Thank God or whoever or whatever you believe in!

If you don't believe in something maybe you should reconsider!

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Stealing a Burger Gets You More Time Than A Murder

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Original Artwork by Jesse on the SHU. Jesse survived through 50 days of the recent Hunger Strike at Pelican Bay

Three Strikes

 

California’s shameful legacy holding it’s poor hostage,

Locked in a fascist visegrip without a conscious,

Don’t touch that bread for your hunger may cost you your head,

A caste-like system that would leave confederates in awe and without all the dead.

 

When stealing a burger gets you more time than a murder,

The public deceived when the vehicles a pervert,

Using Amerikkka’s pass time to steal oppressed lives,

The peoples victory will be triple runs, not flys.

 

Modern day slavery- a new plantation,

Lady liberty a witness, and our bodies the concession,

500 years of their regurgitated scheme,

Amerikkka’s air-conditioned nightmare was never a dream.

 

By: Jose H. Villareal

POOR Magazine Pelican Bay SHU Correspondent

  

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The Public Land that’s only for Some of the Public

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

The Public Land that’s only for some of the Public
The Albany City Council voted to started enforcing an ordinance against camping in October,to remove the long-time houseless residents from the public commons known as The Albany Bulb.

For the last two decades, houseless residents of the East Bay who wanted to avoid the oppressive structure of shelters, found respite at the Bulb which is an abandoned landfill located on the Albany Waterfront adjacent to Golden Gate Fields and the East bay Shore Regional Park. In the past, city officials have directed houseless residents in Albany and other East Bay municipalities to the Blub because it is out of the way.

The residents of the Albany Bulb have formed a strong community that provide stability for each other. There are approximately 70, residents of the Albany Bulb. According to their supporters the vast majority of the Bulb residents are lacking a steady income, if evicted from the Bulb the vast majority won't have a place to stay, and will be sleeping on the street. Many are worried about their health and safety without support of their community.

The City of Albany contracted with a Berkeley non-profit corporation to assist in finding the Bulb residents housing. However, inside the city of limits of Albany there are not any shelters, and very little if any services for homeless people. Albany constantly fails to perform its duty to provide duty housing for the homeless. The reasoning and rationale of the Albany City Council and the City is that the residents at the Bulb have to be evicted in order to transfer the Bulb to the East Regional Park District.

The remoteness of the Bulb allowed the unhoused residents to survive out of the sight of the middles class residents of Albany. In 1999, the City of Albany passed an ordinance banning camping to forcibly rid the Bulb of it's residents. At that time they could have transferred the land to the Park District. The fear and hatred of the unhoused in Albany is shrouded in lies and propaganda. City officials and residents are claiming there is an urgency to evict the bulb residents so they can transfer the land the Park District.

According to lawyer/activist/artist Ohsa Neumann there is no agreement to transfer the Bulb to the Park District. Therefore, there no need to evict the residents by October of this year. The Albany Bulb is a landfill site, there is no activity happening there that is a hazard to the public. There is no order by any agency supporting these claims. The residents of the bulb have acted as good stewards to the land. Not only is their a shortage of low-income housing in Albany, the city has shown disdain for low and no income people by not only failing to provide shelters and services for its low-income and homeless residents, it's fails to fulfill it's mandate to provide low-income housing. The City statement that they are attempting to find housing for the residents of the Bulb because they contracted with a Berkeley Non-profit is a farce.
These are lies that the government uses to oppress homeless people. The people residing at the Blub have being residing there for years, with the tacit the approval the City. Now all of sudden they want them out.. So what is rush? KC and Amber are two Blub residents that have been living at the bulb for 3 years and 7 years respectively, and don't know where they are to live once they evicted ,

Share the Bulb is a group of East Bay citizens formed to support the residents of the Bulb, they are seeking a commons sense solution in helping them find housing instead of forcing people on the street. At the Albany Council of Meeting on July 15, 2013, many of the citizenry stated fear of homeless as the reason for not going to the Bulb. However, there is no incident in which any resident of the Bulb has threatened any of their fellow Albany residents.

Several public interest law firms, plan on representing any Bulb residents if they receive citations under that unlawful camping ordinance on the grounds that it is unconstitutional because sleeping is a necessity, and you can’t punish people for a necessity as it is a violation of the 8th Amendment prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. For more information go to www.sharethebulb.org.

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Audio interview Leroy Moore on Letters & Politics on KPFA 94.1FM About Police Brutality Against People W/Disabilities

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

On Th Sept 19th/2013 KPFA 94.1 FM  Letters & Politics Host Mitch Jeserich.  Leroy F. More Jr. Talks about police brutality against people with disabilities.  Song title:  Disabled Profiled by Keith Jones and Leroy Moore.  Here are the points that didn't make the cut (Listen to the full audio interview here below):

 

Police Brutality Against PWD A Different Answer.  Talking points/Resources:


·      Broken promises of decreasing cases of police shootings of people with disabilities by introducing more training. This answer has been around since the late 80s when I began to get involved in this issue.  There has to be more answers but if we have to only deal with training and be force to live with this broken record then lets tweak the evaluation of these trainings, how?


·      Have an independent board of people with all kinds of disabilities that would go from state to state city to city not only evaluate the training but collecting data of these cases for a national report.  Remember there is not one report, data or anything on cases of police brutality against people with disabilities nationally.


·      Disabled orgs/activists can learn from the Malcolm X Grassroots Center in NY who did a report on police brutality against Black people (http://mxgm.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/07_24_Report_all_rev_protected.pdf), on pg. 7 of the report it talks about Black people with mental health disabilities.  The disabled community/orgs must take on this issue nationally and locally.  We live in a country based on numbers for example we do the US Census every ten years, non-profits keeps numbers to get more funding.  So the same with this issue we need to keep records, data, reports and numbers. 


·      Add race and class to police brutality against PWD.  The recent case of a white young man with developmental disability rough up at a movie theater and passed away in custody.  Now National Down Syndrome Congress discussing with media coverage their efforts to develop a nationwide-training program for law enforcement and first responders on how to handle individuals with developmental disabilities.  For people of color with disabilities at this time there are very few local organizations and on a national level it is almost 0.  The disabled rights movement haven't deal with their racism and because of that many national disabled organizations lack strong voices of POC with disabilities.  National org of people of color need to work with people of color with disabilities and the National Black Disabled Coalition etc..


·      As we all know the majority of cases of police brutality against people with disabilities don’t come under training but just blunt discrimination, profiling and not listening as we will soon see and hear from these video and audio clips: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmhjKjjJKIU


·      One thing has been common in some cases is parents, providers and other call police for help but ends up deadly.  Can we have an alternative phone number?


       Tap into local orgs that have been on the front line on this issue like Idriss Stelley Foundation, Poor Magazine....


       Increase cultural work on this issue into the broader arts/media arenea like Krip-Hop Nation/5th Battalion Mixtape Hip-Hop CD by artists with disabilities.


Great articles to read on this issue:


 

Police Violence and People with Disabilities

 

Author: Thomas C. Weiss
Subject Category: Editorials
Publish Date: Disabled World - Sep 01, 2013 | Updated: Sep 01, 2013
Author Contact Information: Thomas Weiss+

http://www.disabled-world.com/editorials/cops.php

 

When Cops Criminalize the Disabled

http://www.thenation.com/article/175561/when-cops-criminalize-disabled#

 

Latest Krip-Hop Compilation Addresses Police Brutality Against People with Disabilities


http://www.amoeba.com/blog/2012/06/jamoeblog/latest-krip-hop-compilation-addresses-police-brutality-against-people-with-disabilities.html


IDRISS STELLEY FOUNDATION


http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeo9ewi/idrissstelleyfoundation/


 

Rochester, NY Police officers Assault Disabled Man in Motorized Wheelchair


http://www.copblock.org/31222/rochester-ny-police-officers-assault-disabled-man-in-motorized-wheelchair/


 

Police use Taser on deaf crime victim

http://www.kirotv.com/news/news/crime-law/police-use-taser-deaf-crime-victim/nP9mZ/

 

D Center, SDC host police brutality workshop

http://dailyuw.com/archive/2013/05/12/news/d-center-sdc-host-police-brutality-workshop#.Ujuy-SSoXOt

 

Malcolm X Grassroots Center/

Report on the Extrajudicial Killing of 120 Black People

http://mxgm.org/against-and-beyond-police-brutality/

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