Story Archives 2013

Nelson Mandela - Lala Ngokuthulala baba ube yiqhawe kithi/We shall continue where you left off - The Shackdwellers Union in South Africa on Our Hero Nelson Mandela

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

Nelson Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom has come to an End

By Bandile Mdlalose/Special From our Comrades at the Shackdwellers Union in South Africa

 

Our hero, the light of the nation, the father off all who feared nothing when it came to his children has now left us in pain. Our tears flow. Nelson Mandela’s long walk to freedom has now come to an end.

Our long struggle for freedom is still beginning. We will be guided by the spirit of Nelson Mandela as we confront Zuma, who does nothing for the people and only takes what he can for himself and his family. We will be guided by the spirit of Nelsom Mandela as we confront Piega and all those who want to use the police to crush our struggles and make sure that the Constitution does not work for poor people. We are highly aware that more of us will be killed by the police, and the assassins, in the years to come. The killing of the youth in struggle that started in 1976 is not yet finished.

 

The Black Boers have privatized the people’s struggle and they have turned our country into their own personal ATM. The times where English and round tables can take this country further have gone. Protocols have bought us nothing but shame. The Black Boers have made their intensions clear. They will ignore the courts and they will beat, arrest, torture and kill us so that they can keep filling their pockets. We need to fasten our takkies as the new era of oppression is just beginning. They have already killed us in the Free State, in Marikana and in Cato Crest just as the generation of 1976 was killed.

They kill us because they fear us. They fear us because we are the living truth of their betrayal. They fear us because we do not accept their lies. They fear us because we know our own power. They fear us because we have seen how they killed Andries Tatane, the Marikana Miners, Thembinkosi Qumbela, Nkululeko Gwala and Nqobile Nzuza and yet we refuse to be intimidated and we continue to occupy land and to go to the streets.

To hell with protocol. The only way for our generation to fulfil Mandela’s dream is to take power into our own hands. Together we must turn this country into a revolutionary democracy.

Mandela once said that if the ANC does to this country what the apartheid government did the people must not fear to do what the ANC did to the apartheid government. This country was not given to ANC by votes. Voting was a bonus but it was fought for very hard. There was a huge struggle from below. There was bloodshed and arrests. We do not believe that voting will win us our freedom. We will win our freedom when we as the poor build our power from below in struggle, when we build a revolutionary democracy from below.

The way to go is for us to unite and put on our takkies and go to streets. That is how we will show out loyalty to the Hero Nelson Mandela.

Lala Ngokuthulala baba ube yiqhawe kithi. We shall continue where you left off.

The struggle is just beginning.

 

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A TECH MYSTERY: SHIH IS MISSING--DAY 118

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body

Back in August I Wrote an article about Peter Shih, the founder of trycelery.com. Shih unleashed an anti-San Francisco rant, decrying the city's homeless population, condition of its streets, and the weather--among other things. At any rate, my "Open letter to Peter Shih" was an appeal to Shih to consider his insensitive remarks, in light of the fact that the tech industry has been the main cause of evictions of long term San Francisco residents. To see the letter to Peter Shih, go to: http://poormagazine.org/node/4892 My letter to Shih was a polite entreaty, an olive branch of sorts, to start a dialogue with him as a result of what I perceived as his sincere apology for his remarks and to make amends in some kind of way. My letter was written back in August. To date, 113 days have gone by with no response from Shih--no Tweet, no email, no post--nothing. I tried to reach him at trycelery but his name doesn't appear on the site, no email address, and no physical address.

I started to ask myself if Peter Shih ever really existed. So, I have decided to post a new article called "Shih is missing". So far, he has been missing for 113 days. Will he ever appear?

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Greg Gopman and Peter Shih: The Diet Koch Brothers Who Have Their Heads up Their Apps

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body

Another example of yet another tech boy executive who doesn’t know his app from a hole in the ground: Greg Gopman.  A tech boy that can be diagnosed with having "backside verbosity" (IE: a tendency to talk out of one's ass). Another uninvited pest from out of town—apparently from the “Ain’t No Sunshine/Stand your ground” state of Florida—spewing a rant-filled tirade about the city of my birth; the city that is home to the I-Hotel and the city that is home to a deep and long labor history that was not without violence and sacrifice and people working together to better the lives of every day people. The city I refer to is San Francisco, of which I am a fourth generation resident. It is a city that is fighting for its soul from the onslaught of the soul less who see nothing more than apps, applications, dollar signs and their own visions of themselves. Many of these folks who are blighting our city happen to be tech washed. But in the overall picture, it extends beyond the boundaries of tech and its multifarious churches.  

 

In August it was Peter Shih who first put his digital footprint in his mouth by ranting about how ugly and inconvenient San Francisco is.  He decried “those homeless” (an easy target for those with privilege who are oblivious that they even have it), the city's nightlife, certain elements of the community--in short, he portrayed the city as barely short of a cesspool.  Shih later apologized for his remarks and has seemingly dropped into the digital rabbit hole/abyss.   I wrote him an open letter challenging him to be a part of the city’s Asian American community, which he is, by default, a part of.  I challenged him to be cognizant of the eviction of elders such as the Lee family and to do something with his money and privilege to serve someone other than that guy he sees in the mirror each morning (or whatever it is he happens to see).  114 days have elapsed since I wrote that letter to Shih.  His response, nothing—not a tweet, post, email—nothing.  Well, Shih happens, and so does the occasional miracle.  I might hear from him, but I won't be losing sleep over it.  (To read "An Open Letter to Peter Shih", open the link:  http://poormagazine.org/node/4892)

 

Enter Greg GopmanGopman is apparently the founder of something called Angel Hack.  He apparently thinks that the homeless should be put in labor camps and that the poor and those who survive through underground economic strategies should be relegated to places out of the way—sight unseen.  I read these statements and thought about Peter Shih, and how these two clowns must be joined at the lip; another digital footprint in the mouth.  When I first heard the name Greg Gopman, I asked myself, Greg who?  Then I asked a few other questions such as, who gave him a speaking part?  Who invited him to my city?  What qualifies him to say anything about my city at all?  Oh, I get it—having money entitles him a big corn dog sized microphone.

 

I looked at this tech boy’s face and wondered if he ever really worked in his life.  He has pampered written all over his face.  He says he been all over the world, to third world countries even (clap clap clap). I hope he wasn't as big an assh**e overseas as he is here in the bay area.  At any rate, he’s a well -traveled fool who has showed that he knows how to talk out of his ass--if not his app.

 

If Mr. Gopman is so concerned with the cleanliness of San Francisco, I have an idea—have him and a few of his buddies grab a broom and start sweeping.  Sweeping is good for the arms and mind—both of which, in Mr. Gopman’s case, have gone lax.

 

I'll tell you about real work.  Real work was the I-Hotel--the symbol of the struggle for affordable housing in San Francisco.  When the I-Hotel was slated for demolition in the late 60's, community mobilized to fight the eviction of its mostly senior residents.  The demolition would cap off the slow demolition of the San Francisco's Manilatown neighborhood, a  Filipino neighborhood with a long labor history.  As the financial district expanded, it saw no use to have "those" people close by.  So their expansion meant the destruction of a neighborhood. 

 

The International hotel was the site for massive direct action on behalf of the tenants, that brought together students, labor, artists, the church, community organizations and even local politicians.  When the hotel was torn down after an eviction that saw more than 3000 people surround the building in defense of its tenants, the community did not give up the fight.  My uncle, the poet Al Robles was one of those that fought.  It took 30 years of meetings and coalition building and not giving up to finally rebuild the I-Hotel, which stands at the corner of Jackson and Kearny Street--103 Units of affordable senior housing.  That was real work--done without apps, email and/or laptops.


The Gopman’s and Shih’s of the world aren’t concerned with humanity, or improving anybody’s lives except for those in their immediate circle.  They want a nice clean place alright, one in which nobody disturbs or inconveniences them with any kind of real concerns or problems--except for those that can be solved at a distance with an app.  Absent from their list of complaints are the multimillion dollar tax breaks that their industry receives in San Francisco, or how their business fuels evictions of seniors and families at unprecedented numbers. 

 

Greg and Peter, you sound like the Koch brothers but, since you aren’t quite as wealthy, I’ll refer to you as the diet Koch Brothers.  We are in San Francisco—people of color, the poor, the elders--here before you digital Barnum and Bailies ever saw the light of day. Perhaps if you pulled your heads out of your apps, you might have known that.   Which begs another question, Who invited you here anyway?

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2013 Krip-Hop Nation's Accomplishments

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

Hello Peeps,

Its that time again when we look back on another year and what we did. In 2013 Krp-Hop Nation & Leroy Moore did some amazing stuff with others and on our own so take a look. 2014, we are coming! If you want to get involve drop us an email at kriphopnation@gmail.com.

1) Feb 8th Leroy helped coordinate Porgy event at UC Berkeley with Susan Schweik brought Damon L. Ford who met Porgy's family to campus
2) Feb.12-17th Krip-Hop hosted our first Bay Area mini concert tour celebrating the life & music of the late Joe Capers with 5 local venues and six artists/musicians/poets. Look here http://sfbayview.com/2013/keeping-joe-capers-legacy-alive-in-oakland/

3)Feb 14th Leroy Moore released, The Black Kripple Delivers: Krip Love Mixtape http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/LeroyMoore

4) March 8th Kounterclockwise released the first Krip-Hop Nation's animated music video of the song WHIP starring Deacon, Kaya of Kounterclockwise and Leroy Moore. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJ1leQVhaOE

5) March 19th helped to bring Narcel Redus with his documentary, Not Home to UCB with Susan Schweik

6) May 8th Krip-Hop Nation Presented at Stanford University

7) May 9th Krip-Hop Nation presented and performed with DJ Quad and Gioioa Von Disterlo at University of Washington on the topic of police brutality against people with disabilities.

8)June 7th Leroy attended and spoke at the Black Disabled Study forum held by the National Black Disabled Coalition in NJ. Look here for more info http://blackdisability.org/

9) August 17th Krip-Hop Nation hosted Toni Hickman's 16th Strike film documentary at SF Main Library with Poor Magazine and SF Bayview Newspaper. Look & Listen here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qrt9ckwjmg

10) August 31st The first city-wide (Oakland, CA)honored the late Joe Capers with Naru and Joe's family. Now and forever Aug is Joe Capers Month in Oakland, CA thanks to Leroy Moore and Naru.

11)December 5th Krip-Hop Nation/Leroy presented at Napa Valley College.

12) Krip-Hop Nation made deep connections with artists in Africa, featured a journalist who wrote about a father and his disabled daughters who were looking for a wheelchair to get around. Because of Ronald Galiwango's article http://sfbayview.com/2013/disabled-and-riding-a-wheelbarrow-a-fathers-love/ And hosted Dagnachew B. Wakene's visit to the Bay Area. Dagnachew is from Ethiopia, Africa.
__________________________________________________________________

What is coming up for Krip-Hop Nation in 2014

1) April Krip-Hop Nation will be hosting a Hip-Hop workshop and performance at Tangled Art + Dsability Festival n Toronto, Canada with Kounterclockwise and Rob Da 'Noize Temple. More info http://abilitiesartsfestival.org/whats-new/

2) November Krip-Hop Nation goes back to DADA Festival in Liverpool, UK and possible a UK tour. Krip-Hop artists will be Binki Woi, Lady MJ, Rob DA Noize Temple, Kounterclockwise, Ronnie Ronnie and Leroy Moore For more info http://www.dadafest.co.uk/the-festival/

3)Finally Krip-Hop Nation website coming in March or April

4) New Krip-Hop logo soon

5) Krip-Hop international CD by November and more

KRIP-HOP NATION WISH YOU HAPPY NEW YEAR!

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Killed for Asking for Help While Black in Amerikkka- Oakland Marches for Renisha McBride

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

 

Families and Community march for Justice for Renisha McBride killed for asking for help

 


ON NOVEMBER 2nd RENISHA MCBRIDE, A 19 YEAR OLD AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMAN WAS INVOLVED IN A CAR ACCIDENT IN A DETROIT SUBURB.

FOLLOWING THE ACCIDENT, AT APPROX 1 AM RENISHA KNOCKED ON THE DOOR OF TED WAFER, A WHITE HOMEOWNER, WHO THEN FIRED A SHOTGUN AT RENISHA THROUGH HIS SCREEN DOOR, FATALLY KILLING HER.

"BLACK LIVES MATTER WHEREVER WE LIVE, WE MUST SPEAK OUT AGAINST THE RACIST KILLING WAR ON OUR BLACK AND BROWN YOUTH IN THIS COUNTRY, " said Linda Grant, march organizer

IN SOLIDARITY WITH DETROIT, SATURDAY's RALLY  INCLUDED A SPEAK-OUT, MARCH, AND RALLY THROUGH THE STREETS OF EAST OAKLAND TO EXPOSE AND BRING AWARENESS TO THIS GLOBAL EPIDEMIC OF MURDERING OUR YOUNG PEOPLE DUE TO US RACISM

Speakers Included:
Oscar grant foundation, Uncle bobby Johnson
Cyndi Mitchell, MARIO ROMERO FOUNDATION
DIONNE SMITH, JAMES RIVERA FOUNDATION
GERALYN BLUFORD,JUSTICE FOR ALAN BLUFORD COALITION
TRACY BELL BORDEN, KENNETH HARDING FOUNDATION
SHANGO, BLACK RIDERS LIBERATION PARTY
TONY COLEMAN, ONE FAM, WEST OAKLAND
ONYX ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
JESSICA HOLLIE/ AKA/ BELLA, SPEAKING ON GENTRIFICATION ON SEMINARY AND BANCROFT
JABARRI SHAW WILL BE PERFORMING
ANITA WILLIS
THE PO POETS PROJECT OF POOR MAGAZINE,
YOUNG OAKLAND

EVENT ENDORSERS:
ONYX ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
WORKERS WORLD
ONE FAM
OSCAR GRANT FOUNDATION
Kenneth harding Jr. foundation
POOR MAGAZINE
YOUNG OAKLAND
BLACK RIDERS LIBERATION PARTY
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Arrival of the Spiritual Walkers of the Longest Walk 4 in Vallejo,

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
    •  
  • Save Sacredsites
    • Press Release

      Sacred Sites Protection &
      Rights of Indigenous Tribes
      P.O. Box 4081
      Vallejo, CA 94590
      sspandrit@gmail.com

      By: Angel Heart
      Public Relations Officer/SSP&RIT

      December 15, 2013

      Vallejo, CA. - Sacred Sites Protection & Rights of Indigenous Tribes announces the arrival of the Spiritual Walkers of the Longest Walk 4 in Vallejo, California. The Longest Walk 4 will be at Sogorea Te, Native American Sacred Site located in Glen Cove on Wednesday, December 18, 2013; time to be announced.

      Chochenyo/Ohlone Activist Corrina Gould, Organizer of the Committee to Save Sogorea Te/Protect Glen Cove, held a spiritual occupation at the sacred site that began on Sunday, April 14th, 2011 and continued for 109 days. This was done for the preservation and protection of the ancestors & for the preservation of sacred land. A community show of support for the Longest Walk 4 on Wednesday, December 18, 2013 at Sogorea Te is requested & appreciated. Michael Lane & Sharon Heta of the Longest Walk 4 will be providing a discussion. Potluck dishes & monetary donations are appreciated and welcomed.

      The Longest Walk 4: Return to Alcatraz was initiated by those on the original The Longest Walk in 1978. It began on July 15, 2013 in Washington D.C. and will arrive at Alcatraz on December 21, 2013. The purpose of this Walk will be to reaffirm the heart of Traditional Tribal Sovereignty rooted in Ceremony and land based spiritual relationships. We call on all Indigenous & Earth people to come and support this Walk. For more information please call (202) 436-6576 or visit www.returntoalcatraz.com

      The Spiritual walkers of the Longest Walk 4 will be hosted by Kay Flavell of New Pacific Studio during their visit to Vallejo. Sacred Sites Protection & Rights of Indigenous Tribes is grateful for New Pacific Studios’ generous donation. Sacred Sites Protection & Rights of Indigenous Tribes, on behalf of the Longest Walk 4 would also like to thank the ACLU/Northern CA for their generous monetary gift, Fabrice Moschetti, of Moschetti Coffee for the donation of yummy, fair trade, organic coffee, and Tacos Jalisco for their donation of delicious authentic Mexican cuisine. A “Special” Thank You to Vallejo Citizens, Lee Pono, Elisa Vela, Christina Martinez, Melissa Hernandez, & Emmanuel “Tino” Perez for their donations & support.

      To learn more about the sponsors of the Longest Walk 4 in Vallejo, please visit: www.sspandrit.host56.com , www.newpacificstudio.org. , www.aclunc.org , www.moschetti.com & www.tacosjaliscovallejo.com

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The Land of my People- The Waray Waray

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

Eastern samar of the philippines...the land of my people the waray waray...I remember going to the river to catch shrimp too big to fit into my hands that would be fried with saba (the philippine plantain) or stewed with gabi leaves, banana hearts, bamboo shoots in coconut milk...i remember the cobras that were put into the rice silos to kill rats that got into the storerooms of freshly harvested and dried rice...i remember the tiki tiki lizards who lived in the rafters of the house and who always appeared when it was time to eat...I remember my family throwing rise up to the lizards when they would sing “tiki tiki tiki” in a loud chorus and how they would skillfully catch the rice midair with their long, fast tongues...I remember being fearful and unable to sleep as a monsoon passed by...i remember my family seemingly untroubled telling stories, laughing in the darkness as the storm rattled and raged outside...

On november 8, 2013 typhoon yolanda hit the eastern visayas. It was the 26th typhoon to hit the nation of 7,100 islands this year. And the strongest known recorded typhoon in the history of world according to merterologists. It was three times stronger than huricane katrina and four times larger. Four million people mostly waray waray have been displaced. At least 10,000 have died and the body count continues. An an ugly agenda of forgien imperialist interests is unfolding.

The last time is was in the eastern visayas I was twelve years old. It is the ancestral lands and territory of the waray waray people – the third poorest region of the philippines and home to a warrior society that has a history of militant resistance against spanish, japanese, u.s and chinese imperialism. We have countless stories and songs of the waray waray people being hospitable to the forginers...until my ancestors realized that the agenda was of complete colonization of the islands and her people. Whether it be 1898 or 1948, once the waray waray realized what was happening, my ancestors organized and massacred foreign soldiers. One of the most well known masacares happened in banglagia. We completely defeated the u.s military attempts under general douglas mac arthur to remilitarize the area. In retaliation mac arthur declared he would turn the area into a “howling wilderness” and had every waray waray over the age of 10 years old killed.

Today the lands of the waray waray people are again a howling wilderness.

I remember sitting on pink beaches, dipping sweet juicy mangos I picked off the trees into the salty sea and devouring them with enthusiasm and delight... I remember unsuccessfully attempting to try to follow my cousins scampering up coconut trees on white beaches... I remember seeing crocodiles that were the size of fallen redwood trees and running faster that I have ever run in my life...

In a country that is used to the monsoon season this super typhoon was nothing that the islands have ever seen. Entire cities have been left without a building or a cococunt tree left standing. The beaches I ran on are were covered with debris and dead bodies. A month after the storm and some areas still have no electricity, no internet no phone. Some ares still have not received relief.

It took the philippine government five days to actually respond to the disaster. The first relief efforts came from other nations, not the republic of the philippines.  And once the relief efforts came, corrupt politicians repackaged the relief goods with notes that said “brought to you from senator/congressman/president so and so”. That took a few more days for the relief to arrive to the people. And other relief supplies never made it to the visayas. They were resold at stores in manila.

Imperialist military forces took complete advantage of the corrupt philippine government's inaction and disregard. The u.s and then israel and then china sent thousands or military forces to flood the region....not with relief...with guns to “maintain order.” Two weeks the philippine declared all grassroots relief efforts were outlawed and forceably evacuated grassroots volunteers. Last week the red cross came in with forced live polio vaccinations for the entire region. The philippines irradiated the polio virus in the 1940s.

Why this surge of military in the philippines? The philippines was a direct colony of the u.s from 1898 to 1940. From 1090 to the present we have been a neo-colony of the u.s. The philippine republic was set up by the u.s government. Every philippine president has attended harvard or yale. And every policy and budget item reflects the imperialist needs of the u.s. Currently the u.s. Government has more than 60 military bases throughout the philippines and is actively engaged in protecting and moving forward the interests of foreign multinatinal corporations, and of fighting the revolutionary new peoples army – the armed underground branch of the national democratic revolution in the philippines. The philippines has always been a startegic military stronghold for the u.s and other imperialist powers. It was always been a treasure chests of natural resources from gold to uranium to coconut to sugar to lumber to fish to cheap exportable labor.

In the new world order of 2013, the need to fully secure the philippines for imperialist military domination and for her resources is so serious that rather than help the philippine people who survived the typhoon they would rather kill them. Stories have been told that a week before typhoon yolanda u.s military HARP technology was seen in the waters off the coasts of eastern samar...The waray waray people after all are known to be resilient warriors who fight back and win...

I remember walking thru the rice paddys and the way the mud would ooze thru my toes... I remember watching my people farm the land and fish the waters...i remember listening to the stories of how brave and fierce and reslient my people are...i remember sitting in the jungle under giant leaves listening to the sounds of the place that runs in my blood and flesh and certain that with was paradise on earth...i remember...and I know that what I remember no longer is...

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A Crisp and Clear Santa Barbara Morning...

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

I was rushing out the door into a crisp and clear Santa Barbara autumn morning late for work the moment my father killed my mother. All my frantic efforts to get out the apartment came to a sudden stand still as a cold fear stopped my heart and feet dead in their tracks. One solitary thought repeated itself in my mind: mama's dead. And even though she was 200 miles away in Los Angeles, and although I had spoken to her on the phone just last night – every part of my 18 year old body knew and screamed that truth in silence.

Instead of heading out the door and going to work, I made my way to the living room couch and tried to call my mom. No answer. For hours. So out of the ordinary for my mama not to pick up her phone. So unlike her to not return not one but dozens of messages. I called my cousin Marietta who lived with my family. She was also trippin. When I moved out a year prior to escape the madness of my homelife, Marietta stepped up into the place I held as my mama's right hand helper. She didnt know where my mama was either, and also had a dreadful feeling in her gut. I called my Tita Linda who had plans to meet my mom at 10am. Mama never showed up. Not ordinary behavior for my super organized, word is bond, virgo mother. I sat on that couch trying to track my mother from 8am til the sun went down. And when the sun finally set I got into my car and drove down to l.a. to find her. By then the voice in my head was my mothers. She was saying “I'm dead. Your father killed me.”

The first time he had tried to kill her was four months before in may 1990. I was finishing up my freshman year at UCSB when I got a call from my mother. It was past midnight and I was already asleep. The phone rang and rang and both me and my roommate ignored it. I realized it must be some kind of emergency so half asleep I made my way to the phone, groping around in the dark, cussing the whole way. I could not recognize my mothers voice. She was calling from the hospital. Crying, drugged up, and out of it. All I could get out of her that was understandable was that she was in the bad car accident and my dad was responsible.

Now wide awake I got off the phone with my mama and called my family's home. My little sister answered the phone.

“Peanut what happened to mama?,” I asked. She was really quiet and in a scared whisper said “I dont know, I dont know where mama is. Mama hasnt been home in a week.” “What??!!!!!” I screamed. “Peanut shes in the hospital. She just called me. She was in a car accident. What the fuck is going on?” “I don't know.” “What is dad doing?” “Hes acting like everything is normal.” “Get him on the phone. Right now.”

When my dad got on the phone I asked him where my mother was. He said he didnt know. Maybe shes in Las Vegas.

“She just called me. She in the hospital cuz she was in a car accident. Why haven't you looked for her?”

At that point he started yelling at me. “How do you know she's in the hospital? All you need to be worried about is keeping your grades up in school and paying your rent.” And with that he hung up.

The next day my mom called me back. This time a little less out of it. She was in l.a. General. After talking to me, my dad showed up at the hospital and cussed her out and told her to stop bothering me with her problems. Since she wasn't as drugged up I could get more of the story out of her.

“I was downtown and out of no where a car came and rammed into me over and over and over. I was thrown out of the car. My tongue was lacerated and they had to sew it back on. Before I passed out at the accident your father appeared out of no where and took my purse and left. They said i've been in this hospital for a week. Last night was the first time I was conscious and I called you.”

Because my father had taken my mothers purse and she was unconscious, the hospital had no idea who she was. Due to my mothers illegitimate businesses her car was registered to her sister in london, england. For a week she was an unconscious jane doe in the hospital.

Later that day when i knew my dad was at work and my siblings would be home alone, I called my sister back and told her everything I knew. I said I would get one of our titas to take her and my brother to the hospital to see her. The hospital kept her for another week. During that time my siblings and titas visted my mother unknown to my father.

From what I understood when she got home, the incident was never spoken of. Except once when after a fight my father told my mother “you should have died in that accident.”

I was twelve years old where I first told my mother to leave my dad. My mother married my father in 1969 after knowing him for three months. She was undocumented and needed a permanent visa. In 1969 the first wave of philippinos immigrated to los angeles with temporary student visas. There were “boarding houses” throughout los angeles for single philippinas to live. The boarding houses were advertised to american men looking for philippina sweet hearts. My mom stayed in one in inglewood, california. That's where my parents met. They lived very separate lives from the beginning. My mother went to church twice a week. My father made fun of god. My mother had parties at the house every weekend. My father locked himself up in the garage during the parties. My father had a steady line of mistresses (one that I was named after). And was racist against philippinos who he called “fishheads” and “wetbacks” regularly. He was verbally, emotionally, mentally and physically abusive to everyone. But for years she would not leave him because it was a sin. In her mind the illegal activity she did to make her wealth was not a sin. But to divorce a marriage of convenience was. That's the catholic church of the philippines and centuries of patriarchal colonialism for you.

Then where she finally got over the sin, she wouldn't leave him cuz he would get half of her money. In california when a couple gets divorced all property is split in half. My mom was a baller.. She made her money working for the philippine mafia and swindling rich people. Everything we had came from her. My psychotic dad couldn't hold down a job cuz he would get fired for fights with his co workers. He was really crazy and super anti social. That's why he had to find a wife in a philippina boarding house and marry a desperate philippina cuz that was the only way his crazy ass was gonna find a wife. And when it became clear holding down a regular job wasn't working, he tried several times to start his own businesses but they all flopped. The thought of my dad getting half of everything my mother accumulated thru her illigitimate capitalism drove her crazy. Crazy enuf to stay in the marriage and put up with his abuse and psychotic ways. A month before her final disappearance that crisp autumn morning my mother found a life insurance policy he had taken out on her that she didn't know about. The beneficiaries were my siblings and myself. It shook her up. I told her yet again to leave him. But she hadn't reached clarity yet.

The day before she was murdered she had an epiphany and called me.

“I'm going to divorce him. He can have half of it. I don't care anymore. I'm not happy. I'm going crazy. I'll be better off without him. I can always make more money. And I swear hes trying to kill me. I'm going to serve him the divorce papers tomorrow.”

I don't think my dad was happy when she served him those papers. The last time anyone ever saw my mom she was on her way to give him the papers. The gas attendant at the 76 gas station next to my dads office space that he rented testified that he waved to my mom when she pulled up. He saw her go in. but he never saw her leave. He saw my dad leave his office, jump in my mothers car and drive off. Soon later the gas attendant said he saw my dad walking back up the street. A week later the police found her car up the street.

The jurors found my father not guilty. Although all evidence led to him, it was my mom's illegal activity that created a “shadow of a doubt” in the jurors minds. Yeah the evidence led to my father....the testimony of the gas attendant, my father changing his story numerous times, his lies being brought to light, his tire and shoe tracks matching the tracks where her body was dumped, his destroying evidence that was later uncovered, the gasoline and rope used was found in our garage. It all led to him. But her business endeavours made it possible for my dad's lawyer to present the idea that other people wanted my mother dead. My mother went on trial for her own murder. And she lost. All my mothers assets and property were released to my dad. And the insurance money from the policy my mother found (which was never found for evidence in the trial) was cashed in. My dad got my siblings portions of the policy since they were minors. He called me and said he needed for me to give him my third of the insurance policy or else he would put my siblings up for adoption. I told him I knew that he took that policy out on my mom and that that money was his with my mother's blood all over it. I never wanted it. It never touched my hands. During the trial while he was in prison I had left college and took care of my brother and sister. I protected them from child welfare services who tried to take them away and put them in the system cuz I was not old enuf to be a guardian. I got two jobs to pay the mortgage, pge, telephone, groceries. And when I didn't have money for groceries I dumpster dived at the local safeway for food that was still intact. After my father was acquitted he got full custody of my siblings. After that phone call about the insurance policy I never spoke to or saw him again. A week later he had left my brother and sisters alone to fly to the philippines to marry his second wife: a 17 year old philippina mail order bride that he secured when he was in prison awaiting the trial. And when he came back to the u.s he started his own mail order bride business trafficking philippinas. Fortunately that was yet another of his business ventures that failed.

For several years after the murder and trial my little sister and I processed the murder and the injustice as much as we could given the circumstances she found herself in. My brother and I never spoke of it. But my sister told me once at 3am my brother called her and met her at the art garden at ucla and broke down the only time either of us know of and he admitted he knew my father killed my mother. Over the years my mother's murder became something neither of them talked about. Or wanted to talk about. From what I gather now, the official story my siblings stand by is that my mothers murder was unsolved. And that I am crazy.

I still hear my mama. I still talk to her. She's happy that this story finally is going to be told. And she said this only the beginning. I have to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

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Family First

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

As I came out of my mother’s womb she didn’t push me out. As a child I asked her how was my birth? and she told me I felt a hot sensation and she screamed because something was on fire. That was our first breath and my mom’s first set of twins. I was reared to be compassionate and loving, mentally dependent on my mother because she is my co-creator. For some reason, I’ve always thought whatever my mom’s pregnancy was like is also a reflection of me. And I made a bond with mom in the beginning from the first nine months.  My book is complicated, but everyone starts out helpless and dependent. It’s not necessarily a bad dependence, just the emotional bond you’re supposed to make for life. My Momma will do anything to take care of her children but as I write this story, it seems like a circle, which is the natural way of life: a loop.

            Yes, I came out of my mom who bonds us. but when I was young I put myself in a bubble of isolation.  I started hanging out on 24th and mission at ten years old. I never came home and was a run away for a couple of years. I went through different changes culturally, physically, and mentally. I ended up kicking it with Cholas to hanging out in Hunters Point, making friends with the wrong people. I was even banned from my school.  I would not only recruit people from my school to cut class, but other schools as well. We would cut school and kick it. My dad whooped me every night for years and I never broke down, I would even fight back. My Father, Mother, and Step Dad gave up on me, but I started studying Malcolm X and I practiced his consciousness. After I read his book in two days I changed, but I was still independent and never home with family

            As a teenager, I thought I was boss, and I wanted to sleep over at everybody’s house, mostly my home girls’ houses, and do my own thing. The crisis came when my friends, who I kicked it with and grew up with, turned on me. I hit the floor headfirst feeling like I couldn’t get myself back up, like I was kicked in the face, but the most miraculous thing was… I became dependent. I took care of myself but I got close to my family at twenty-one. I feel bad to this day because I never knew how blessed I really was when adulthood came. My family could have kicked me to the curb because of what I put my them through but the opposite happened.

            As I was experiencing my nervous breakdown, keeping it one hundred, the only person who visited me was my immediate family and my cousin who everybody makes fun of because she is severely disabled. She was my strongest support. I called my one best friend while in psychosis and she told me to call her back.I had to think a lot as well as get medicated with some rest. I realized my family is all I got in this world. And I am blessed to have a Mother who cares about me with a responsible Father. I think, damn my dad took care of three kids at thirty by himself being dark skinned and around people who were never close to his culture or life. He worked on the bottom of a company with all Asians and slept in the living room half his life so we can have rooms of our own.

Now that I think about that I realized I can barely take care of myself and my dad did it alone with no help. Mom was sick. After I was older in adulthood is when I found out why momma used to shake, pace up and down the halls, cry, and sleep a lot. She was considered too sick to take care of her kids. I hated that and maybe that’s what contributed to my isolation at a young age. My worst crisis felt like millions of people stabbing me in the heart, but the light came when my mom and I got hella tight.

 Now I am following the way indigenous people used to practice, Family First. I feel guilty for fucking up my parents’ life but I realize now what I have. I changed my ways by doing all that I can to stay tight with my parents, twin, and brother. My Mom gave me life and my cycle of life ended up positive because I learned how to be with the family that god gave me and that’s all I care about now.

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I Am

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

 

”Notice of eviction: 30 days to vacate premises”, a neon yellow piece of paper pinned to the front door broadcasted down the block. In that moment, standing outside on the cold pavement street looking in, I realized this could soon be home.

 

This must be a mistake, I rationalize to myself, it’s probably just a mix up; maybe if I circle the block it will be gone when I get back. My fingers are already dialing before my brain can grasp the situation.

 

”Hey Dad, there’s an important notice from the landlord posted on our door; is he kicking us out?” I asked hesitantly.

 

Regardless of what the answer was, I didn’t blame or feel ashamed of my dad for a second. Making a living as a self-employed painter in San Diego, where the job market around manual labor is particularly competitive, can be constant hustle. Sure there’s plenty of work in Southern California, especially with the construction business picking up again. The only problem is, the modest wage my dad has earned for years, cannot compete with the cheap labor available so close to the border. We tried to compensate by collecting food stamps or welfare, but since my dad has worked off the books for so long, we weren’t eligible for a penny nor would they lift a finger to provide us with something to eat. Instead, the IRS picked a random number, put a dollar sign in front of it, and demanded it be paid before we would receive any government crumbs. Needless to say, my dad hadn’t found stable work in a while, and it was catching up to us.

 

The disappointment in his voice confirmed it, “I’m sorry kiddo, you know I’ve tried hard to round up any work I can”. ”Don’t worry hun”, he assured, I’ll figure something out, you just do your best to stay focused on school”.

 

His voice became distant, and even though I was fully clothed sweatshirt and all, I felt exposed to the elements. Maybe if I didn’t insist on dessert, or run the washing machine during the times I’m suppose to conserve energy, then maybe we could’ve put up a Christmas tree this month instead of ringing in the new year in my 91’ Volvo parked next to the sewage plantation where the police are less likely to hassle us.

 

Day 23 of 30 quickly approached, and we still had no plan of action, no place to go and a fist full of Washington and Lincolns. My dad was behaving like a teenage girl about to spill the news of her pregnancy to her parents, as he swallowed his pride and made a call to his mom and dad.

 

”Hi Mom”, my dad began, “I’m okay, I’m actually calling to chat with you about our financial situation”.

 

The long pause followed by my dad’s silence and occasional eye twitch suggested the conversation would be a heavy one. My dad excused himself from the room and I didn’t see him again until dinner. Nothing further was discussed on the matter until the next evening when my dad received an unexpected call from his sister.

 

He answered the phone only to be remain silent for the next few minutes.

 

”What are you talking about?”, my dad finally blurts. “Report us for senior abuse!” ,he continues, ”When did asking your parents to lend you money become a form of maltreatment!” .

 

My aunt continues to voice her concerns about how we are leaning too heavily on my grandparents and how we should be ashamed of our failure, but no one empathized with our situation and the reality my dad and I soon faced. A week  from now, my aunt will arrive home to be greeted by a warm fire place rather than a final notice to vacate the premises, while my dad and I will officially become houseless.

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