Story Archives 2014

The Wealth-Hoarders and land-stealers change the locks on Black History in San Francisco

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Phillip Standing Bear
Original Body

Marcus Books Raises $250,000 to buy back their own store and still gets locked out,- but they aren't giving up!

“We got a ‘Funky and low-down feeling, but we rock steady,” said Greg Johnson, Marcus Books co-owner addressing a small press gathering at Meadows Livingstone School in San Francisco yesterday. He was harkening back to the undisputed queen of soul, Aretha Franklin when he described the struggle of Marcus Bookstore in the Fill-no-more district of San Francisco, which is the undisputed vessel of Black history and literature, the original location of New Bop City and is currently fighting to stay alive in San Francisco, which might now be known as the undisputed pinnacle of wealth-hoarding and displacement.

 

“They locked us out of our home,” The recent unjust tragedy that inspired the press conference started last Tuesday when my own recently gentrified (out of the Mission) eyes were gazed up at by the tear-filled six year old eyes of the grandbaby of the Marcus Books family, who is also a youth skola at POOR's Family Project, relating the recent injustice of their long-time family store being locked out by the "new owners". 

 

"They (Sweiss family, owners of Royal Cab, Big Dog Cab & dispatch for City Wide Taxi Co) bought the bookstore for 1.6 million and now want us to buy it back for 2.6 million. We had a little more than one month to raise a million dollars. We were able to raise $250,000 and they locked us out anyway," 

 

"Contrary to several media reports Marcus Books is not in bankruptcy, it is a thriving business and we have no plans to close our store," concluded Greg. 

 

"Black history is everyone's history, said Karen Johnson, the other co-owner of Marcus Books. She then gave the crowd a powerful lesson in African deep structure and the ways in which this sale of this historical landmark is emblematic of the ways in which material values are guiding the world in this terrifying and destructive time of rampant displacement and removal. 

 

Karen's herstory brought my strong Black/indian Mama Dee into the small room at the Afro-centered Meadows Livingstone School, she and i learned back so much of our own her story that this wite-supremacist ruled world Never teaches you from the books and culture at Marcus Books. The values of our indigenity, of our multi-racial, multi-cultural ancestors, buried under so much settler colonial teaching doled out to poor folks like my mama and me, in institutional schools, orphanages, and jails, where so many of us Po' folks are sent live and breathe in the books and art and voices that have circulated Marcus Books for generations. We often say there would be no POOR Press without Marcus Books. 

 

"My family was displaced from the Fillmore district, and now this City, where my entire family has spent their life, are telling us that they don't want us here," said Tony Robles, Board president of Manailatown Heritage Foundation and co-editor of POOR Magazine. Tony went on to propose that the imminent domain concept that alloved the redevelopment agency to steal so many Black families homes in the 60's & 70's behind the first wave of "Negro removal" be used to take back the Marcus Books building from the Sweiss family who have only bought it now to profit off of it, which in and of itself is a crime of culture and life.

 

"We are asking Mayor Ed Lee to step up and actually do the right thing and save this crucial landmark we all need. The press conference was organized by Grace Martinez of ACCE and also included the powerful voices of Grace Martinez, Gail Meadows and Denise Sullivan--

 

The family is planning a series of actions to fight this unjust removal but for now readers can call Royal Cab and tell the Sweiss family to sell Marcus Books back to the Johnson family. To find out about the next actions to Save Marcus Books email sfacce@calorganize.org


More Coverage of the Marcus Books Press Conference:

 

 

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The Lumpen HAS Stood Up!

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

May 20, 2014

The people concentrated in US prisons are largely Lumpen. In the classical sense the lumpen-proletariat are a subgroup of the proletariat. In the US this can better be defined as simply the Lumpen class. A “class” simply means people who have a common social or economic relation to society. I.e. in our case, as prisoners we share common relations to the capitalist mode of production--we don’t have a pot to piss in--that currently exists in US society. Our interaction to the means of production results in us existing as Lumpen.

Prisoners have existed as Lumpen even if we have not realized it. Just as Brown, Black, or Red peoples would exist as internal semi-colonies within the US even if we did not realize it. Our interaction with US Imperialism would still validate our existence as internal nations whether it was acknowledged by us or not, for these are scientific laws that exist in the material world.

Class contradictions, like all contradictions in the material world, take on different manifestations. They contract and expand and interact with other phenomena in the natural world and these interactions allow new contradictions to arise and new reactions to develop in response. The Lumpen in not exempt from this process, and so understanding this process allows us to apply dialectical materialism where we can harness these dialectical laws in order to advance the Lumpen and further our class interests which have been out of our reach for decades.

Class struggle is very real and our class enemies understand this far deeper than many of us prisoners.Their understanding is reflected in the prison boom that has plagued the peoples deriving from the barrios, ghettos and reservations throughout the US. We must understand what class struggle really comes down to. Mao explained class struggle as such:

“A revolution is not a dinner party, or writing an essay, or painting a picture, or doing embroidery; it cannot be so refined, so leisurely and gentle, so temperate, kind, courteous, restrained, and magnanimous. A revolution is an insurrection, an act of violence by which one class overthrows another.” (Mao Zedong, 1927)

Mao said this to highlight that one class will not be swayed from power via the pen alone or by other reform, that oppression will not disappear easily but will have to be pried from the hands of the oppressor and this is the essence of a class struggle.

CLASS STRUGGLE IN US PRISONS

What we are currently facing in California prisons in general, and the SHUs in particular, is a concrete example of class struggle that is being waged by the Lumpen and our allies on the outside. Our common oppressor is refusing to budge in its oppressive grip that results in thousands being tortured and thousands more ensnared in the injustice system that imprisons us in these concentration kamps. Our examples of class struggle behind prison walls is seem in the prison strikes. These are class contradictions erupting even if most participants do not identify what the essence of these struggles area about. The State understands them quite clearly. The strikes are a beautiful example of struggle but strikes alone will never bring us totally to victory because political education is also needed in order for a struggle to stay on the right path and avoid sinking to the swamp of reformism.

WHY ARE THERE SHU’s?

In order to navigate the challenges we as Lumpen are faced with, let us first understand what exactly we are experiencing. We should understand that the SHU is not simply where they send the homies, it is much more than that. Solitary confinement is designed to render one mentally ill, that is to inflict psychosis. One of the architects who designed Pelikkkan Bay SHU stated it was “designed to hold Hannibal Lecter” (Tietz 2012). Now, for an architect to be honest and candid enough to admit what kind of environment the SHU was designed for speaks volumes to how the state views those of us housed here in the SHU!

People, there is one purpose for sending us to the SHU, and it’s NOT for “rehabilitation.” So if we take the statement of an architect who built this house of horrors, then the criminality of the state has been affirmed from the time the first shovel broke ground.

The hunger/work strikes of 2013 were a continuation of the 2011 strikes. These recent strikes peaked at over 30,000 prisoner participants, a historical record. It was powerful to see that the most brutal dungeon in the US can also produce the highest form of humanity: activism. Only by understanding dialectics do we understand how this is possible.

The strike-related death in Corcoran SHU harkened back to Margaret Thatcher’s handling of the 1981 prison hunger strikes in Ireland, in which she essentially allowed prisoners to starve to death. But prisoners are circling the wagons and remaining determined to stop the torture by any means necessary. Our strikes have unmasked our common oppressor in a way that has not been done for some time by US prisoners. But our resistance has only matched our oppression which has also peaked in a unity of opposites. This opportunity should not be lost, but built on and steered to take on a more revolutionary impulse.

When we really understand the nature of SHUs, we will find more ways to resist. Isolation attempts to destroy our sense of reality. Our interaction as social beings to other people helps ground us in reality, and for this reason the state works hard to keep its SHUs open for business. But profit is not the true motivator to this prison boom--not just in California but throughout the US prison system more broadly. Some have erroneously taken on the notion of the prison boom and mass imprisonment in the US being profit-driven in the form of private prisons and prison labor, but this is not true. The true motive that I have found, having spent most of my life in these dungeons, is in population control. The manner in which surplus labor is extracted from prisons as a whole does not conform to the thesis of prisons being profit-driven. This erroneous view actually negates national oppression which remains at the helm of the criminalization of millions in the US injustice system. Imprisoning huge chunks of the more rebellious sectors of the internal semi-colonies, coupled with neutralizing our leadership at key junctures, insulates the super parasite.

Our oppression as Lumpen is a microcosm of the world-scale and the periphery (oppressed nations) specifically. If we look at it economically, Che got at this when he said:

“Ever since monopoly capital took over the world, is has kept the greater part of humanity in poverty, dividing all the profits amongst the group of the most powerful countries...there should be no more talk about developing mutually beneficial trade based on prices forced on the backward countries by the law of value and the international relations of unequal exchange that result from the law of value.” (Guevara, 1965)

In the US, our poverty results in prison and for those still rebellious we get SHU. While the wealth extracted from third world countries is divided up by the monied class in the US (the bourgeousie) and its internal and external allies, oppressed internal nations on these shores are excluded from even developing economically so long as we are living under the heel of Amerikkka, as Che pointed out. So long as capitalist Amerikkka is breathing, our only options are to help develop it economically, or to resist.

HOW ECONOMICS HAVE A ROLE IN OUR OPPRESSION

One’s economic relations defines one’s class, as surely as one’s land defines one’s nation. Even as prisoners, we can trace our class compositions from our economic origins. The analysis should be done so that we understand our origin and reason on existence. This also ensures that in our struggles we never fall to economism or other reformism which seeks mere cosmetic changes rather than real advances with teeth. Marx taught us that our social reality stems from the exploitative economic relations, that this is the essence of Marxism and is true even to the Lumpen. In The Poverty of Philosophy Marx illuminates class struggles when he says:

“An oppressed class is the vital condition for every society founded on antagonism of classes. the emancipation of the oppressed class thus implies necessarily the creation of a new society. For the oppressed class to be able to emancipate itself it is necessary that the productive powers already acquired and the existing social relations should no longer be capable of existing side by side. Of all the instruments of production, the greatest productive power is the revolutionary class itself. The organization of revolutionary elements as a class supposes the existence of all the productive forces which could be engendered in the bosom of the old society.” (Marx, 1847)

Here, Marx explains how an oppressed class can only truly free itself from oppression through the creation of a new society because the laws of Capitalism demand that class contradctions remain in place, that is that Capitalism cannot go on breathing so long as classes cease to exist. What’s more, prison oppression will continue to exist so long as Capitalism exists. So in prison we may gain small tokens such as colored pencils or the ability to purchase socks, etc., but our oppression as Lumpen will continue in a Capitalist society. We will continue to supper from national oppression and concentration kamp conditions because the ruling class understands this is indeed a class struggle and their class currently weilds power. As a result they are attempting to crush anyone who threatens their existence (us).

It is the vast majority of the public and prisoners who do not understand what is occurring. But at some point the Lumpen must grasp this truth and only then will we make true revolutionary advances in US prisons as well as out in the barrios and ghettos. The heart of the matter lies in the simple words Marx spoke of above, that in order for true freedom from oppression to come about, the ruling class cannot exist “side by side” with the oppressed class. And this is ultimately what class struggle entails.

Economic oppression is one manifestation we suffer from in the US and which is a factor in all the prisons and our dugeonization. So we need to broaden our understanding and in order to begin to harness the power of the Lumpen, it’s important that prisoners continue to be nurtured politically. This nurturing will derive from the physical realm as well as the ideological realm. In the physical realm, we need to identify and expand our modes of cooperation within the prisons which will serve to fertilize further struggle for prisoners’ rights. Finding ways to collaborate in struggle also serves to strengthen cooperation. Such behavior improves our social relations as prisoners and solidifies commitment to the prison movement.

The physical aspect is only one piece to the puzzle, it is one direction and the ideological realm is another. In order to ensure we have the tools to dig ourselves out of our oppression we need to expand our ideas and learn from history and struggle when people liberated themselves. How they transformed society so that their people no longer suffered under capitalism. Only when we obtain the most correct ideology can we ensure the people are lead down the quickest road to liberation.

WE ARE A MOVEMENT

The biggest hurdle has been overcome, which is to get prisoners to recognize our concrete reality as a prison movement. All prisoners should be proud of this accomplishment and for making history with our class struggle, but we are not done. Marx said in The German Ideology: “The separate individuals form a class only insofar as they have to carry on a common battle against another class; otherwise they are on hostile terms with each other as competitors.”

Many prisoners will read what Marx said and think how uncanny has words describe prisoners. Marx understood the dialectical laws and the class contradictions that apply to all classes, even the Lumpen. What we think is on;y a prison phenomenon goes on everywhere, even out in society. Marx’s truth is that even with the advances the Lumpen has made with a 30,000 person army standing up in dungeons throughout the US, so long as we continue this class struggle for our class interests we will continue our momentum. Our class character will solidify and become stronger which will translate into us making longer strides and acquiring greater gains and taking back our humanity. If we stop struggling against our common oppressors we will once more be not a prison movement, but simply competitors. As competitors we will be fighting for crumbs swept from the master’s table and in the process we strengthen our real class enemy: Capitalism. This competition will in turn strengthen US Imperialism around the world.

In the barrios and ghettos the people are competing for street corners rather than fighting for our land, our respective national territories and our class interests as well. It’s ok to be fighters and it’s great to struggle, but our efforts should be harnessed to our class interests and aimed at our class oppressors because for awhile now the ruling class has been doing all the fighting and taking the offensive in the US, while we act as competitors against ourselves. But today this is changing because the Lumpen as stood up!

What prisoners should understand is that this was a huge development for the prison movement. when all nationalities delivered a blow to the state. This was a huge development because it confirmed what the prison movement (activists, prisoners and ex-prisoners who work for prisoners’ rights): that prisoners by our very nature are a potential revolutionary force. While the majority of the US Left believes prisoners and Lumpen more specifically are of no use to real struggle and only exist as a burden to a future Socialist revolution. The prison movement discards the Trotskyist views and instead sees more potential for future revolution in prisoners and LUmpen specifically, than in American labor. Our 30,000 persyn army was only a glimpse of the potential that prisoners have, and it allowed us to see the possibilities that the small minority of the left which comprise the prison movement had seen long before us all. So our struggle was not only something special for us prisoners, but was also something for the long years of struggle from our outside supporters in the prison movement. Many times it is a small minority who identifies the truth. Numbers do not equate correctness, this is why we have cadres.

CONTRADICTIONS ON BOTH SIDES OF THE PRISON WALLS

When it comes to analyzing the prison movement, whether one is in prison or out in society, we must do so in a way that helps us see the strengths and challenges. Only in this way can we respond to advance the prison movement the farthest. The Lumpen exercises its class consciousness in the prison movement, so it naturally is something all progressive people should take notice of. The state utilizes prisons in order to drive a wedge between the people and the Lumpen in a divide-and-conquer tactic. The US Left has tended to put their money on US “workers” which are a bourgeosified sector and thus not revolutionary at this time. US prisoners have more to gain from revolution than does Amerikkkan labor, which often wants more crumbs, which ultimately derive from exploitation of third-world countries. Of course, the future may hold other possibilities, but for now prisoners taste oppression more than Amerikkkan labor, or as one article defined it:

“In Third World countries, individual masses in the unions can be won over and, so, are worth targeting since they have come to political activity in some form. In the imperialist country, the labor aristocracy is part of the petty-bourgeousie and has an interest in maintaining imperialism. These individuals can commit class suicide and join the revolution. As a group they will not do this now.” (MIM Theory ⅔)

Here it was defined where the labor aristocracy stands in class struggle in the US. It’s important to note that within our United Front efforts, out in society as well as in prisons, we always apply the concept of “one divides into two.” This means we have a united front but one divides into two will determine whether this front becomes stuck in reformism or takes a revolutionary impulse. This is what I am attempting to apply here to the prison movement, where we have this united front but we must define our political ideology in order to guide the struggle as a revolutionary course. There exist within the prison movement many different levels of consciousness and views, and without apply the concept of “one divides into two,” one would be unable to identify the most revolutionary aspect of the prison movement from the most reactionary. So, it is up to all conscious prisoners to allow the casual observer to see this difference in ideology while keeping the prison movement fully intact.

In an attempt to push the prison movement forward we must first find the principal contradiction. We do this by applying dialectical materialism, which divides all phenomena into its opposite. By identifying the opposing forces in any phenomenon, we can focus our attention and energies on a clear target area. In all phenomena we will find the principal contradiction and everything else will be considered secondary contradictions. In today’s world, the principal contradiction is between the oppressed nations and the oppressor nations. One cannot exist without the other, and they are interconnected like all phenomena in a unity of opposites.

We know the principal contradiction within the prison system is between prisoners and the state, because it is the state which keeps us existing as prisoners and if the state was to be dismantled we would be liberated. But the prison system is not the prison movement, and each has its different contradictions. Within the prison movement the principal contradiction is bourgeois ideology versus revolutionary ideology. This means, on one hand are those who make up the prison movement, including prisoners, in the camp of revolutionaries, who see this struggle to be ultimately aimed at the state and US imperialism, and so we realistically see this as a protracted struggle that will not be resolved anytime soon. Our approach is to chip away at state repression, gaining reforms while raising the consciousness of the Lumpen by educating prisoners and our external allies through practice. This is all done with the main thrust of guiding more prisoners, our external allies, friends and family out in society to the prison movement and ultimately to anti-Imperialism. This is all helping to develop the social conditions on these shores for future revolution. On the other side of the coin are those who cling to bourgeois ideology which expresses itself in parasitism, that is, individualism. Bourgeois ideology includes some who’re just fine with the way prisons are, or the way society is, so long as they are still allowed to oppress and exploit others. Those with Bourgeois ideology are more likely to want to settle for colored pencils or the ability to purchase sodas on canteen. These are two main camps that make up the principal contradiction within the internal prison movement.

As of this writing, the State refuses to grant us our five core demands. It’s interesting how the State attempts to blame strike-related deaths on “suicides,” because California has the most prisoner suicides in the US, almost half of which occur in SHU’s (Ramseth, 2012). This shows that conditions are so barbaric that many are driven to suicide in these torture chambers, but those of us held in SHUs for years understand that this has always been the State’s intent.

Those of us who participated in the strikes have seen retaliation from the State, in the form of write-ups, confiscation of our property (including legal property), and some re-housing. All this was coupled with cranking up the air conditioning so that our cells turned to refrigerators, opening the mechanical door every half hour for “counts,” and loud screaming into the speaker at all hours of the night to inflict sleep deprivation. Most of the world equates this treatment with torture. Even for those of us out on the mainlines, prisons use arbitrary detention in SHU to disrupt peaceful protests of prisoners. Not only are prisoners stripped of basic humyn rights and tortured, but are then disallowed from expressing distaste with being tortured.

OUR WAY FORWARD

Like most people who have spent most of their lives incarcerated, I understand suffering and repression to be entwined in the very fabric of our lives, moreso than any other sector of the US population. But as prisoners, we must develop ways to regain our humyn rights even in these dungeons. In order to advance the prisoners’ rights movement, we need to focus on six steps of development in all US prisons:
1) Achieving a United Front in all prisons
2) maintaining the call to end hostilities
3) Politicizing prisoners for humyn rights activism
4) Regaining national liberation struggles
5) Ending oppressive prison conditions
6) Regaining lost privileges in prisons

Such points of development are ways to strengthen the prison movement for humyn rights: in regaining our humynity, insulating what has been accomplished thus far, while pushing this development to the next stage of evolution.

Although our efforts are prison-centric, it’s important that we understand that resistance is a global phenomenon, because the world center is an individualistic construct (Capitalism-Imperialism) and the periphery (oppressed nations of the world) exist hand to mouth, living and surviving day to day. There will continue to be resistance.

As prisoners, our resistance is limited but not totally restricted. Voice, symbol, and gesture are methods of communication that are low-hanging fruit which prisoners can and must engage in. We may be held captive in the physical realm but we are free in the realm of ideas, and we must recognize this truth. Our communication should arrive wrapped in the social reality that we experience and that we aspire to. In order to achieve this we must educate ourselves. Just as the task of physical science is to know the laws of motion in the physical world, when it comes to social science we should understand the laws of social development, and in this way we can translate the concrete conditions from the masses to the masses.

The US corporate media gives CDCR a platform for propaganda. We have seen this recently when the local news outlets painted our peaceful protests as gang activity. Not only was this ridiculous, but it showed corporate media’s biased allegiance to the State, even when people are being tortured en masse. This proves that we do need our independent institutions such as revolutionary press and we should always work toward supporting and nurturing publications that work for our class interests as prisoners of the State.

A beautiful development came out of the prison strikes: the participation of imprisoned youth and women prisoners, particularly the revolutionary women prisoners in Chowchilla, who stood up with their fellow Lumpen. It is powerful that the prison movement is not confined to just men, and that we are only seeing the beginning. Eventually we have seen women prisoners across the US finding their humynity and participating in struggles, as they too realize they are part of the prison movement. People develop at different rates, some faster than others depending on their oppression, so we should not be too hard on those who are not yet conscious. Rather, we need to find ways to reach them and bring them to our side, the side of jsutice. Another powerful development was at the youth prison at Green Hill in the State of Washington, where youth supported the prison strikes and took their rightful place amongst the prison movement. This too will develop more fully as time goes on, when youth prisons across the US will discover that they too are a part of the prison movement and will follow the amazign example of the revolutionary youth at Green Hill.

CONCLUSION

Out peaceful protest is far from over, is has just begun. Although our strikes are temporarily on hold, they will continue at some point because our oppression and torture continue. Our five demands have yet to be granted, and this new step down program is a joke, and continues to hold us in SHU for ridiculous things like a drawing or some confidential lies. The State has only made it easier to validate more of the prison population and attempt to cover it up by allowing us to purchase color pens and more candy bars. We are engaged in a protracted struggle, and we mean to wear down our opponent while building up the people politically between battles. Our biggest hurdle has been overcome: mobilizing the people, mobilizing the Lumpen by tens of thousands.

People’s power siempre!
 

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Paper Cuts Through Concrete

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Trapped in a capsule unable to breathe,
My mind grapples with thoughts beyond years in solitary,
My pen is my friend and this I know,
My imagination explodes as my environment proves weary.

Buildings constructed to strip one’s humynity,
Ravaging the mind in ways that leave no physical marks,
The public unaware of this dugeonization,
If this were a physical act my limbs would be fed to sharks.

The situation reacts from such despair,
Our hunger strikes signal a tipping scale,
US history made from a solitary cell,
Heroic act invite censorship of mail.

With this madness of which I speak,
Of the downtrodden, destitute and deceit,
I find my comfort inside my pen,
It’s the realm of ideas where I’m most complete.

Ink flows from my mind and onto these pages,
Creating goodness in prison like igloos in the desert heat,
Bending steel bars so my thoughts may soar,
It becomes a place where paper cuts through concrete.

Antiheroes and archetypes live within my cell,
Blank verse clogs my dreams and sparks new narratives,
Canon works I devour with the appetite of a SHU prisoner,
Would society’s chorus reach a catharsis when reading our comparative?

Comic relief is my true meaning of course,
Diction arrives draped in shackles and razor wire,
The Dramatic monologue echoes off my concrete walls,
Poetry erupts and epiphany in my subconscious like a volcanic fire.
 

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Devil-opers Steal & Pillage Black History

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Phillip Standing Bear
Original Body

** UPDATE : STOP THE SWEISES FROM RANSACKING MARCUS BOOKS !!! ** A picture of Marcus Books TODAY. The bookstore has been emptied and we're unsure where the contents of the bookstore are.
We are asking everyone to call the Sweis and DEMAND they do the following:

Ask for Chris, Nishuan, or Suihala Sweis
City Wide Cab: (415) 920-0700
Royal Cab: (415) 643-9500

Please share, post http://bit.ly/savemarcusbooks and tweet this !!
!!! Bay Area STAND UP !!!

Stop the destruction of the Marcus Bookstore Property NOW!
*Let the Johnsons, the proprietors of the bookstore, to access the contents of Marcus Books and pack
*Compensate the bookstore for what was stolen in the time the Sweis refused access to the bookstore and for anything that has been destroyed or dumped since the eviction
*Sell the property BACK to the community through San Francisco Community Land Trust

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Black Families’ Love ones With Developmental Disabilities On Stage & In Film: Tatum’s Family Short Film, I AM MORE

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

As you know I’ve been writing about Black disabled people from activism to music to film etc.  In 2006 & 2007 I covered & interviewed the director of the Hollywood movie, My Brother that starred Christopher Scott and Donovan Jennings, two Black young men with Down syndrome.  And in 2012 I interviewed Playwright, advocate & mother, Yvonne Pierre, about her play, Then We Stand, about a Black couple dealing with the news that their baby will have Down Syndrome.   Now today the Tatum family, Brandon, Kinaya, & their daughter that have Down Syndrome & is a budding actress, Kei’Arie along with her brothers, Jay’C & Ocean. all had their hands in making the short film, I AM MORE that came out this year.  I asked the whole family some questions about the film & other topics.

 


Leroy Moore:  Ok my first question is how did the whole family become interested in this film & how did you all work together as a family on this project?


Tatum’s Family: We came together on this film to spread awareness about Trisomy 21 (Down Syndrome), on how bullying could be in the home. Also this film was made to show Kei’Aries’ and our whole family’s passion and ability as one unite, to create films for families. Working together was fun as we represent our company Better than Great (B.t.G) Entertainment Inc


 


Leroy Moore:  I was excited to see this movie as a Black disabled man.  What was it that pushed you all to make this movie?  Who is/are your target audiences?


Tatum’s Family: We felt that the special needs community would take a likening to this film because it was starring an actress Kei’Arie who has Down syndrome. Also we felt that this movie will bring attention to other film makers to write movies for our special needs community in giving our children/adults the full chance that strive for what they desire as authentic talent. Kei’Arie has been acting and modeling but never had the opportunity to get speaking roles until now.


 


Leroy Moore:  Kei’Arie, you really want to be an actress so is this film a true story about your future goals?


 


Tatum’s Family/ Kei’Arie: YEAH!!!!


 


Leroy Moore:  As parents & Black parents what do you see that needs to change in our community about youth & young adults with developmental disabilities?


 


Tatum’s Family/Parents: Well, there needs to be more! There is a need for education for our youth and young adults. Not just in math, reading and writing, but in areas that interest them and their talents. We need to help cater to their needs because were in this world together.


Leroy Moore:  I know when I was growing up sometimes my sisters would get frustrated with me because of my disability.  Was some of your acting true feelings/treatment sometimes towards your sister?


Tatum’s Family/The Kids: OCEAN: Our sister acts just like a regular little sister, spoiled and bossy.


                                               JAY’C: The movie was just acting, we don’t treat her that way. We love and appreciate the gift God gave our family


Leroy Moore:  Throughout my years of looking for movies/books on and by Black disabled people only recently I’m finally seeing more and more that look like me.  Do you think that the Black community has been supportive or pushing to open more doors for Black disabled or families who like you all trying to produce movies etc.?


Tatum’s Family: We feel that our black community is open to supporting however, we as a whole seem like we need to hear or see about it first, and that I feel, needs to change. We as a whole should be more sensitive in helping push our special needs community in reaching their goals/dreams. Our job as parents, advocates and friends is to help individuals like Kei’Arie receive Grammy’s, Oscars, Billboard Awards, Best Actor, Number One Album, Doctor, Nurse, Lawyer or Judge degrees.


Leroy Moore:  What was the hardest point in making & acting in this short film?


Tatum’s Family: The hardest part was actually having to see the actors act. Being mean and saying mean things to Kei’Arie wasn’t easy to act out or watch. However, we believe our daughter is heaven sent, for the most part she knew it was acting as well as the affirmations of the rest of the cast loving all over Ker’Arie.


 


Leroy Moore:  How did your classmates & friends react when they saw the movie?


Tatum’s Family/The Kids: Our classmates and friends reacted out of shock. They all respected the movie for its cause, creativeness and that we made it as a family.


 


Leroy Moore:  As parents what would you like to see improve in the near future for your daughter?


 


Tatum’s Family /Parents: BRANDON: I would like to see her light shine on the world in all areas.


                                             KINAYA: I would like to continue to watch her father Brandon Tatum create phenomenal roles for her, to continue out her journey/passion craft as a courageous talented, well known actress. Inspiring the world to never give-up and to make the non-believer a believer.


Leroy Moore:  In the disability field when I was growing up I saw a lot of mothers being everything i.e. advocate, networkers, caregiver.  So it is really good to see a Black father like yourself, Brandon.  What is your advice for other Black fathers who have sons or daughters with developmental disabilities?


Tatum’s Family/Brandon: Thank you Leroy, my advice to our black fathers is, be grateful.  I know it gets tuff but you were made to be the father of the baby God gave you (precious gift). Love, protect and be what you were meant to be when you found out you were having a baby; a father! You’re robbing yourself if you don’t push harder or apply a better effort, you have a “special” baby so you must be a special dad.


Leroy Moore: Do you see Bullying toward your sister at school or in the neighborhood where you live? 


 


Tatum’s Family/Kids: OCEAN: No, she was bullied at school under her teachers watch. No one bullies Kei’Arie around us or in our neighborhood.


                                        JAY’C: everybody loves Kei’Arie, she makes people laugh and smile.


Leroy Moore:  color:#1A1A1A">What are your plans with this film & will you continue to make more & if so what is next?


Tatum’s Family/Brandon: Our plan with this film is, to keep it going viral and getting viewed/liked. As a family we just finished another short film called THE BLACK BAG that is in postproduction right now. Were looking for investors to help the budget for our feature films that we have, one of which is a feature film starring Kei’Arie.


 


Leroy Moore: Please tell us what else is on your mind that people should know.


Tatum’s Family/Brandon: I want people to know that the Tatum family is headed to the top as a family with our company B.t.G ENTERTAINMENT Inc. Stay tuned for our movies, music, clothing, games and inventions. We are looking forward to working with great and loyal people.


 


Leroy Moore:  How can people order the film & contact you?  Also where will the film be shown?

 


Tatum’s Family/Brandon: Every body can go on YouTube, type in this link http://youtu.be/yf5cSfPqvms  and purchase it with a “like”/”thumbs-up”. This film was shown at the DOWN SYNDROME ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL FLORIDA convention at UFC March 7th, 2014.


(407) 202-0001


https://www.facebook.com/BetterThanGreatEntertainmentInc


http://www.youtube.com/user/BtGENTERTAINMENTinc


Btgentertainment10@gmail.com


 


 

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Invisible/Reflections

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Phillip Standing Bear
Original Body

March 25, 2014

Since you never recognized me even when in the closest contact with me, and since you doubt, You hardly believe that I exist. Why should I now become visible...When everything I see is brown, yet invisible to you at the moment.
It’s better that way as I ease my way up the social ladder, from lower class
Stratisfied, to revitalized, oppressed, suppressed to vital progress.

My invisibility has become my ally… It works in my favor in many ways
And if you do happen to see me I am certainly conscious.
You’ll be there to mangle and muffle and silence my progress.

So invisible at this time works for me
Only brown productive brown I wish to see…
Don’t contemplate on revealing my visibility cause in your heart
You know it’s not brown you wish to see
If that be the case there would be no politicking, litigating, advocating, the border tagging-and-bagging
Racial profiling
Stigmatization or provisions on brown, brown education that stratisfies my visibility.

Ignorant, voiceless, dumb and blind. Caged and enraged is what you wish to see
That’s your ideology of visibility
Not the reflections of my brown brown me.

You play on the concept that reality is invented, therefore you create your own perception, your own meaning of the truth what you (WISH or WISH NOT TO SEE).
Therefore I give you my brown reality!

Frida Khalo: (Inspire me) “The harmony of revolution is all but color, form, texture, and everything exists under one law: Life.”

Jose Clemente Orozco: (Guide me) “It’s in every artist’s nature to learn and evolve and attain artistic dignity...What is tragedy? To be at odds with oneself but not to blame others, to blame oneself.”

E. Zapata: (Empower me) “It’s better to die on your feet than to live a lifetime on your knees.”

Octavio Paz: (Educate me) “We are nihilists,” Paz said of the Mexicans, “Except that our nihilism is not intellectual but instinctive and therefore irrefutable.”

I refuse to believe the Raza is this big giant snake who bites everything in its path including itself. My brown grown me I open my eyes and now I see pride, education, cultural identity, goals, dreams, aspirations to achieve, nothing invisible (but reality and visible to me) my brown reflection, my brown brown me!

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Rest In Poetry Mama Maya - POOR Magazine family Honors Ancestor Warrior Poet Maya Angelou

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Phillip Standing Bear
Original Body

"We may encounter many defeats but we must not be defeated." ..Maya Angelou The Art of Fiction No. 119, the Paris Review

At 11 when so much of life fell apart for me and everything i thought i knew became dangerous and violent-my mama-teacher gave me, "i know why the caged bird sings" and with every page turned i saw myself and i felt words and i dreamed images and i truly learned how its possible to write so much beauty out of so much pain.

Throughout the years of me and mamas struggle we would return to listening to her words of poetic resistance carrying this poor single Black/indian mama and daughter through more pain...

"You may not control all the events that happen to you, but you can decide not to be reduced by them." Excerpted from Letter to My Daughter, a book of essays (2009)

And then after so much I was incarcerated for me and mama being houseless... both of us seemed to fall apart, unable to pull ourselves up this time...but we did, knowing that if we could make it we could begin to make some essential change, somehow... returning back to Mama Maya's powerful words...

The need for change bulldozed a road down the center of my mind."- I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

This is when my mama began seeking out/learning back her own stolen pre-colonial Black/Raza and womens' herstory.. sitting in on classes taught by other fierce African warrior women and men like Dr. Chinosole, Erica Huggins and Dr Wade Nobles.

Me and mama began to read other great writers like Toni Morrison, Zora Neal Hurston and Luis Rodriguez- bringing us words and images of liberation, revolution and transformation.

"You are the sum total of everything you've ever seen, heard, eaten, smelled, been told, forgot - it's all there. Everything influences each of us, and because of that I try to make sure that my experiences are positive." Maya Angelou

Eventually, after more unbelievable struggles, too many to mention or reflect upon, me and mama launched the poor people-led, indigenous people-led movement that is POOR Magazine/Prensa POBRE, the words of inspiring fire that are Maya always acting as a fountain of hope for both of us.

Whenever we felt beat down by the immensity of our life nightmare, we reflected upon her survival through rape as a child, racism in amerikkka and self-imposed silence, only to realize that these experiences, no matter how horrible were also her art and like Uncle Al Robles - ancestor board member of POOR said, your struggle is the best part of your art and your art is the best part of your struggle.

"My mission in life is not merely to survive, but to thrive; and to do so with some passion, some compassion, some humor, and some style." Maya Angelou

From the beginning of POOR, we also dreamed, visioned and hoped for change led by us Po' folks, landless peoples movement in the stolen indigenous land that is Turtle Island. This deep tissue change, embedded with art, poetry  and humility was always rooted first in decolonization. This is what we call Homefulness

To this day, beyond all the false borders, institutional cages and brutal systems that keep Po folks Po and oppressed all across Mama Earth, we poor mamaz, daddys, uncles, aunties, tias, y tios determined to manifest a vision of change and resistance rooted in art, poetry and liberation. We have beautiful women warriors like Mama Maya and Mama Dee to thank for this. We walk in humility on their strong shoulders.

Ase Mama Maya from your POOR Magazine family- Rest in Poetry..

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Ask This Old House

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Muteado
Original Body

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ask This Old House

If  You ask this Old house who built it, it wasn't the three white man from the TV. show "Ask this Old House".....it was poverty scholars with the knowledge and skills who in other spaces never get the credit for building or creating..
 
This house was built by community effort from ground up, at the Homefulness Project we have what we call "The Revolutionary Construction circle" which is a group of community folks and comrades who help and support the building process where we learn from one another....Each one teach one...
 
Like thousands of people, we have worked, cultivated and planted seeds, never to see or enjoy the fruits of our labor.
We have made and cleaned the most beautiful gardens that I have seen in my life in the mountains of Berkeley for people with money. Earning $10 an hour, we have built and managed houses with immense beauty, only to never see them again.
 
In construction where so much supremacy and hierarchy can be found, we move humble and softly, like my carnala tiny would say, to not act like the man in the boss worker mentality, but to built, create and share knowledge with each other challenging the capitalist construction culture here in Amerikkka..I seen it before in job sites where the boss signs the contract and gets the check and throws crums to our Brown and Black  folks to built it, and at the end the boss gets  the credit because they design the blue prints.
 
"Change wont come from a savior, a pimp or an institution Change will only come from our own poor peoples led revolution"
 
Some how some of our folks have bought into believing that we always need some institution or someone to come and save us, when the reality is that we have the power of self determination in our hands and mind and communities, we have many folks in our community circles that have different skills and knowledge that we ignore or don't utilize to strength our communities.
 
So, if you Ask That Old House who built it, it would answer, Poverty scholars,Super babys mamas,Revolutionary workers scholars, under-ground economic scholars, recyclers, Migrant trabajadores,decolonize architect, Houseless folks,revolutionary comrades, decolonize Academics,youth scholars....
 
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. indeed, it is the only thing that ever has"- Margaret Mead
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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