Story Archives 2014

It's Not About You

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body

 

 

 

 

The bespectacled Samoan

Preacher with the gray suit

And glorious head of hair

To match broke it down:

 

It’s not about the developers

And gentrifiers and the

People who crash Dia De Los

Muertos and eat Thai food

At the after party

 

It’s not about the landlords

Or the landlordless or the

Artists or the prevaricators

Of art-part-ied

 

It’s not about the worst

Men (AKA the cops) locking

Up our best men

 

It’s not about

Poverty courts

And lawyers playing

Dialing for liars

 

It’s not about McCain,

Obama, McKinney,

Nader, Quesada, Campos

Avalos, Sanchez, Mar

Or Elvis

 

It’s not about POOR Magazine

Or Sports Illustrated or Field

And Stream, Street Sheet,

El Tecalote or Architectural Digest

 

It’s not about KPFA or

Democracy Now or the SF

Bayview or the League of

Revolutionaries

 

It’s not about the army,

Navy, air force, marines

JROTC or the black and blue

angels

 

It’s not about the 49ers,

Raiders, the A-Team, The

Dallas Cowboys or

Team USA

 

It’s not about white

People, black people, red

Brown or yellow people

(or combinations of the above)

 

It’s not about the

Food cooking in

The kitchen

 

It’s not about you me

He she or

It

 

It’s not about

The last swig

Of beer

 

Or the last

Swinging limb

On a tree

 

It’s not

About

You or me

 

Finally the preacher

Took off his glasses

And in Samoan

Said

 

It’s about

God

 

See?

 

 

 

© 2008 Tony Robles

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Crappies' Crappy Coverage

09/24/2021 - 08:44 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body

(Photo from www.newstimes.com)

It’s funny how one can be in the middle of a happening—a protest or gathering of significance— and the people dispatched to report on it—writers and bloggers—get it wrong and backasswards even though they were there and saw everything in the flesh.  Such is the case of certain coverage of the recent “Crappies—Truth in Tech Awards” that took place Monday February 10th.  The Crappies coincided with the “Crunchies”--an award gala put on by the tech world to highlight the achievements of start-ups—a kind of academy awards of the digital kind.

 

The Crappies were just that, an award ceremony that took place outside Davies Symphony Hall—venue of the Crunchies.  Our gala was touted as the Crappies to draw attention to the crappy deal San Francisco has gotten from tech, which includes massive tax breaks for companies such as Twitter, so-called community benefit agreements  (CBA’s) with the city that benefit the tech sector, an eviction epidemic fueled by tech money that has accounted for a 178% increase in Ellis Act Evictions over the last 3 years and, of course, those luxury tech shuttles that have flooded the city streets, using public bus stops to scoop up their too delicate for public transportation workforce to their Silicon Valley jobs without contributing a dime towards the city’s transit system.

 

The idea for the Crappies was conceived by a coalition of tenants and advocates from groups such as SEIU 1021, SEIU USWW, Senior and Disability Action, SOMCAN, Jobs With Justice, Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment, The Gray Panthers, POWER and the anti-eviction mapping project.  The event began 30 minutes before the Crunchies, whose gala was to be held inside Davies.  Our event took place outside where participants, spectators and media converged on the corner of Van Ness and Grove Streets.  After 7pm the crowd swelled to 50 or more. 

 

I introduced the emcee for the event, housing advocate Tommi Avicolli-MeccaTommi came adorned with top hat, glittery bow tie and white gloves while I--the announcer for the evening--came in with a black shirt and white gloves.  A woman who came in formal wear that included a cape, shed the cape and draped it over me to full effect.  I looked like the duke of earl combined with count Dracula.  Tommi got the crowd fired up, passionately speaking about the eviction crisis plaguing the city, fueled by real estate speculation and tech money.  The crowd grew to about 50, made up of tenants, community activists and curious passersby. 

 

The Crappies were organized to let the self-absorbed tech community in San Francisco know that they , contrary to what they have been told, are not the wonderful and selfless community they think they are.  Many protests have taken place regarding the tech community’s lack of accountability in the city.  Their obliviousness to the concerns of the community has been quite striking.  Their standard response: Not a tweet, not a sound, not a peep.

 

So community members honored an elite group of the tech world’s finest with crappie awards:

 

*Tax Evader of the Year: Twitter

*The Tinted Glass/Eyes Wide Shut Transportation award: Google

*The Greg Gopman/Peter Shih Digital Diarrhea of the mouth award: Tom Perkins

*The Out of Control Enemy of Rent Control Award: Ron Conway

*CEO of the year: Marissa Mayer of Yahoo

*Biggest Fan of Tech Award: Mayor Lee

 

Community members accepted the awards—golden toilet brushes—on behalf of the winners.

The ceremony erupted in laughter and a feeling of community was felt under the night sky as several spotlights poked into the dark sky. 

 

Many media outlets covered the Crappies.  I found many of the media folk to be professional and gracious.  In the midst of the festivities, I was approached by a man who identified himself as a reporter.  He asked me what the purpose of the gathering was and what we expected the outcome to be.   The man jotted on his pad rapidly.  I mentioned that I was glad people took time to come to the event.  He asked me my name and my organization—Senior and Disability Action.  How do you spell “Action?” he asked.  I looked at the man.  He resembled the late Leslie Nielsen of those airplane movies—brilliant head of white, seemingly unbiased, well-adjusted hair.  Truth be told, he looked like one of those models whose picture you find in an airplane catalog modeling bathrobes, neck pillows or golf putting sets designed for the bathroom.

 

I saw his article a day or two after the crappies.  He described our awards event as threadbare, a flop, and quoted me as saying that I was glad people showed up—insinuating that I felt the whole affair were a losing proposition. 

 

Then I remembered something that my uncle had told me; people see what they want to see, they hear what they want to hear.

 

I also read that during the Crunchies, John Oliver, former correspondent from the Daily show gave a keynote address.  He asked the techies why, since they have so much money, they even need an awards ceremony at all?  He added that they have succeeded in pissing off an entire city.

 

Kind of funny, they could have gotten the same message outside from us, community people trying to preserve what community we have left.   They certainly wouldn’t have gotten it from that white-haired reporter.  Maybe he’ll change careers.  Maybe there’s an opening for a bathrobe model in an airplane catalog somewhere.

 

(To see the article in question, http://venturebeat.com/2014/02/10/protestors-stage-threadbare-crappies-awards-outside-crunchies-gala/)

 

© 2014 Tony Robles

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Freedom Now! --A PNN ReViEWS fOr tHe ReVOLuTiOn

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

Freedom Now! is a collaborative effort between community activists, artists, and scholars that reveals the organized abandonment resulting from the material desires of dominant social groups in Los Angeles. Freedom Now! is an example of work that bridges social action and education, and calls toward those in the streets willing to face up to what is killing us.


Editors Jordan T. Camp and Christina Heatherton heed the call of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to “break the silence” about wars on impoverished communities and wars abroad. For King, breaking the silence meant abolishing the “Triple Evils” of poverty, racism, and militarism, directing special attention to communities that have been specifically exploited and marginalized. We enter 2014 with an abundance of examples of the ruthlessness that the neoliberal state exerts on impoverished communities in general, particularly homeless people. The editors argue that King’s call resonates now more than ever.

Reclaiming “the visions of freedom that have grown out of Black radical and working-class traditions,” Freedom Now! centers the work of the Los Angeles Community Action Network (LA CAN), a social justice organization located in L.A.’s Skid Row that struggles for housing, civil, and human rights. Freedom Now! is an attempt to critically examine the housing crisis “from LA to Durban,” so we may understand why the demand for housing as a human right is not only a call within the the U.S., but a global one.


The book raises, I believe, many concerns about the complex involvement of university students and professors in poor peoples' movements. These concerns are described and legitimated by the experiences of POOR MAGAZINE and other families in the struggle. That said, Dr. Camp and Dr. Heatherton do not tell anyone’s story, or pretend to lead the movement they describe. As a Chicano Ph.D. student myself, from the City Terrace Barrio in East LA, I believe they present a great example of scholars' committed action, standing in unflinching solidarity with aggrieved struggling communities.

I became a graduate student to learn more about the East L.A. that my Big Dad would tell my siblings about: the fields he worked in; his pachucismo; the long-disappeared Steel Mills where he and many other working class Chicana/o and Black people labored. I wanted to learn why my community and others like it are disrespected by those in power. While I have come to find my own way into this work, Camp and Heatherton's work gets at the root of our communities her/histories in their own way. The book presents the issues of Skid Row through the voices, critical analysis, and desires of Skid Row activist/residents like Deborah Burton, Pam Wall, General Dogon, Lydia Trejo, Steve Diaz, and combines them with the resources, studies, and voices of long-time activists and professors dedicated to local and global civil and human rights struggles. In short, it’s work that working class scholars who enter academia to do work that matters, myself included, are proud of.


In the foreword, Ruth Wilson Gilmore and Christina Heatherton set the stage for understanding LA CAN’s work and the ways impoverished people catch hell in downtown streets and residential hotels of LA. A critical moment in the current hyper-policing of Skid Row is the 2006 Safer Cities Initiative allocation of $6.5 million dollars to the Los Angeles Police Department. The $6.5 million was to bring more cops to the street. Meanwhile only around $5 million was allotted to homeless services citywide. Guided by a punitive ideology of “broken windows,” in the first 3 years the police made 28,000 arrests in a community of less than 15,000 people. The arrests were executed at the behest of the dominant business communities and political elites. LA CAN in one of few organizations to stand up to the police occupation of their community and speak out against the injustices taking place on a daily basis in the name of gentrification.

The intersectional outcomes from racialized police repression and pushes for gentrification  continually appear throughout the book; residents of Skid Row identify them as constant threats in their daily lives. Essays by Rhonda Y. Williams, George Lipsitz, David Wagner and Pete White; plus a tour of Skid Row by Chuck D of Public Enemy; to conversations with Mike Davis, Daniel Martinez HoSang, Pueblo del Rio resident activists, General Dogon, J.R. Flemming, Sam Jackson, and S’Bu Zikode of the Abahlali baseMjondolo (shack dwellers) Movement of South Africa--they all introduce readers to a range of oppressive maneuvers that seek to transform people facing problems, into the problem itself. Conversely, we are introduced to a range of invigorating homeless peoples' movement traditions that assert home as a right--all toward a more socially just world. Because gentrification claims peoples' home-spaces, because the lack of roofs over our heads invites police repression, and because of un- and under-employment during transformations in the political economy of the U.S., the reality of becoming homeless is closer to more people than ever.


Despite the unfavorable stakes, Freedom Now! demonstrates that with committed and knowing actions we can win. As Lilian Payan of the Pueblo del Rio community of South Central states: “It takes work to have a home, to have a roof, so you have to go forward to struggle. If I have to continue going to meetings and protests, I will be there. I want to secure my roof, things for my children, a home. Asegudar un techo, cosas para mis niños, un hogar.”

For me, Payan demonstrates a political willingness guided by King’s call to “break the silence” about oppression, and reveals that when individuals take part in meaningful action with social movements like the Los Angeles Community Action Network, bystanders of racist capitalism become collective- up standers for peace and justice. Heed the call of Freedom Now!

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Ellis Act for Dummies

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

Let me explain about the Ellis Act. It started out as a simple way of protecting private senior landlords. But its just like the favorite phrase goes, "The road to hell is paved with good intentions." Why do I say this? Well, it started in 1989 when San Francisco had a total of 300 major landlord agencies, better known as holding companies. Nowadays these 300 holding companies have been swallowed up by big business into 10. These 10 found a loophole inside the Ellis Act that says you can evict tenants if you agree to stop being a landlord. This is what the companies are doing: they are converting them to tenancies in common where they own the mortgages of the tenancies in common and also become the buildings' managing companies. Each tenant owns a part of the building. It is like a condominium but too complicated to explain in this article.

With the Ellis Act they are kicking out tenants that have been there 20, 30 or more years. Some of the landlords do not go through the courtesy of the eviction process. They use harassment fraud and the whole kit and caboodle. Most of these seniors worked hard all their lives. They were not doctors, lawyers or college graduates. These are the day to day people that built the city you are living in today, your grandmothers, grandfathers and mothers or fathers. They get nervous with big fancy-titled lawyer’s envelopes in their mailboxes which offer $5,000 or more to move out. Meanwhile the average rent of a studio is $1,000 to $1,500 in the City of San Francisco. These rent-control tenants do not know the real value their apartment until they move out and look for a new place. They will sign under duress.

The ones that try to fight it, they may get more money. Most elders, including my wife, held out and their health issues took over. Her feet were the size of an elephant's hoof. Other elders had heart problems and nervous ticks from the greedy behavior of the landlords. If I signed a contract for a TV set at Sears and the sales person acted that way to sell me something I didn’t need, he would have been arrested.

There should be 2 amendments written on the Ellis Act if they're not going to repeal it. 1. No senior or disabled resident can be Ellis Acted; 2. You must own the property at least 5 to 6 years before you use the Ellis Act . This time period will give you some vestment in the community. This is the best I can do under legal terms in the present condition. This will keep away speculators from making profits on the backs of the elderly and the poor.

To any reader that thinks I am a communist or socialist: I am a anarchist. If you make comments below, put that as a comment I am not a communist or a socialist because that system doesn’t work, and I am not a capitalist.

Thank you, this is Bad News Bruce signing out.

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The New Greaser Laws

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

Editors Note: Jose is one of several power-FUL PNN Plantation prison correspondents who was involved in the Hunger Strike to end all solitary confinement and the in-human treatment of all of our incarcerated brothers and sisters.

The New Greaser Laws

 

After the U.S. War on Mexico in 1848 when Aztlan (the south west) was stolen, there came what has been described as “The Gold Rush” which erupted when gold was “discovered” in California at Sutter’s Mill. This “discovery” resulted in a mass migration of settlers from across the U.S. as well as around the world. These settler immigrants flocked to California in a quest to exploit its resources.

 

Suddenly post U.S. war on Mexico the peoples who had been living in California for hundreds of years and in some cases longer were now considered as competition to the settler. This resulted in racist legislation which codified national oppression. At this time the most successful mining operation came from those proto- Chicanos and Raza (Latinos) more generally who also migrated from Latin America. Raza were all lumped together by the settlers and referred to as “greasers”.

          

Beginning in 1850, Amerika began implementing a series of laws that were aimed at Raza in California who were thought of and labeled as “greasers”, thus these laws were known as The Greaser Laws. In this way the oppressor Nation had institutionalized oppression, that is, they made it “legal”. The initial law that began the greaser laws was the Foreign Miners Tax Law of 1850. When we learn about a historical event such as the greaser laws, we should not just reflect on the law and the physical restrictions thereafter, but also of the effect this must have had on the psyche of Raza at the time and for generations thereafter, when a people suddenly become a “foreigner” in their land as happened post 1848 and how the colonizer began legalizing oppression thereafter.

           

The Foreign Tax Law stated that a non U.S. citizen that wanted to mine needed to pay $20.00 a month for the license. $20.00 was a huge amount at that time and this was enacted as a form of controlling the newly colonized people. Although the foreign tax law also affected Chinese laborers who were a strong presence in California at this time, the greaser laws were primarily enacted to uphold white supremacy and to criminalize Raza. From this point on Raza culture was criminalized and this worked to criminalize all Raza under the label of “greaser”. To the public, “greasers” became synonymous with criminals hence began the idea of our barrios as criminal. The Greaser Laws targeted things like bullfighting and cockfighting, which were part of Raza culture, were suddenly turned into crimes in order to add another tool in the oppressor toolbox used in carrying out national oppression. It’s essential that we grasp why the state cahoots with white labor at this time worked hand-in-hand with the Greaser Laws. Sakai summed this up:

           “What was the essence of the ideology of white labor? Petit-bourgeois annexationism. Lenin pointed out in the great debates on the national question that the heart of national oppression is annexation of the territory of the oppressed nations by the oppressor nation.” (1)

           

This I think cuts to the heart of the origins of the Greaser Laws and even more so speak to national oppression. Today the U.S. Prison population has skyrocketed, the quakers in their early experiments with prisons would probably be awestruck at the behemoth the dungeon has become. For our oppressor, this is only the beginning for the penological colonies. As Marx taught, matter is in motion, and prisons are no exception to this scientific rule.

           

What has been detected, initially in U.S. prisons, is ‘The New Greaser Laws’ which have been mostly applied in California. Just like in the early days, during the birth of the Chican@ Nation, when the Greaser Laws first arose, so too are we seeing a revival of the Greaser Laws at a time when Chican@s’ are making a leap in consciousness within U.S. prisons. What has become apparent and what not enough has been discussed about is that once again Raza culture has been criminalized within U.S. prisons in a concerted effort for the state to thus criminalize Raza and particularly Chican@s’ in the popular sense. Only today we are labeled “gang member” or “security threat group” whereas the old Greaser Laws labeled Raza as “vagrants” or “bandits”.

           

California prisons have been taking Raza culture and using our practice and enjoyment of such cultura to prove we are engaging in “criminal acts”, “gang activity”, or the newly worded “security threat group activity”. Today in California prisons drawings depicting Pancho Villa or Zapata, the hero’s of the Mexican Revolution are used as “gang symbols” by the state. Drawings or photos of art depicting Aztlan symbols such as the calendar, statues of depictions of warriors are used as points to validate us. The Aztec thunderbird that is used out in society to evoke the struggles of farmworkers throughout the U.S. is used against us to validate us as “gang members”. The Mexican Eagle which evokes the legend of Aztlan with the snake in it’s mouth and which is the flag of Mexico, is used to criminalize us.

          

 Language is not even safe, the use of Spanish, which is the Chican@ language, is used to brand us as engaging in criminal activity. Tattoos showing our history and culture are used as “proof” of us being criminals, gang members.

           

The way we interact socially in ways that promote interdependence and community as Chican@s’ and Raza more generally whether it be sharing, eating communally and expressing ourselves as a group is criminalized in prison. This behavior has nothing to do with “gangs” it goes back to our indigenous roots of how we interact and how we raise our youth. This tradition is twisted into a negative phenomenon by our oppressor and used to further our repression, to increase our torture and justify our placement in these torture centers also known as S.H.U.!

           

Our way of life, which has been passed on generation after generation, is criminalized in an attempt by our oppressor to sever us from our culture, from the very essence of what it means to be Chican@s’, of being Raza. This assault on the Chicano nation California in prisons is meant to discourage us from holding on to who we are and to stifle our political development i.e, to kill our consciousness. This is all re-run and is the same vein of oppression used on Raza in the original Greaser Laws- it is an attempt to assimilate s into Ameri-kkk-a!

           

The New Greaser Laws that we are experiencing in California prisons have a direct link to the Old Greaser Laws of 1848. The old greaser Laws are linked to the land grab and Amerikan Imperialism, thus our oppression ultimately tethered to U.S. Imperialism. Stalin once said “Imperialism was instrumental not only in making the revolution a practiced inevitability, but also in creating favorable conditions for a direct assault on the citadels of capitalism” (2)

          

 Oh how his words ring true today in that the New Greaser Laws are actually the fuel in the engine of the Chicano nation that has been rekindled due precisely to the assault at Aztlan.

 

 

Why the New Greaser Laws today?

           When we attempt to identify this stepped up assault on the Chicano nation, we must analyze the concrete conditions in the U.S. today.

            

The population growth is one factor that is playing into the scheme of things. It we look back to 1980, the U.S. population consisted of 80% white, 12% Black, 6% Latino and 5% Asian. If we move forward 30 years to the year 2010 the U.S. population was 64% White, 12% Black, 16% Latino, 5% Asian. (3) As this data shows most folks had their population reduced or stayed the same for the most part while Raza population made a leap in the U.S. and this leap did not go unnoticed by the oppressor nation.

           

This development ushered in more of these Greaser Laws and more enforcement of these assaults that came in many forms. Even the existing laws such as the California Three Strikes Law which is aimed primarily at the oppressed nations in the U.S. (Brown, Black and Red Peoples) began to increase. Indeed, almost 40% of California’s Three Strikes cases come from Los Angeles county (4) which, it should be noted, has the largest concentration of Chican@s’ in Aztlan.

           

In a further attempt to curb the replenishment of Aztlan via newly arrived migrants, Amerika has created the “Secure Communities Program” which is another “Greaser Law”. The way it works is, anyone off the street who is arrested for anything, has their fingerprint sent to the FBI to check their legal status. As one writer put it…

           “Under the Secure Communities Program, those fingerprints are then sent to Homeland Security to check for immigration violations. People who are flagged are then examined by ICE and could be deported.” (5)

           

This program heightens the assault on Raza where now every Brown person in the U.S. becomes a suspect and criminalized in the eyes of the state and public. This program has been abused horrifically, indeed a study in 2011 found that about 3,600 U.S. citizens had been wrongly arrested by ICE.

           

What’s different from the Old Greaser Laws and the New Greaser Laws is today, many from within the oppressed nations have been bought off by the oppressor and end up unwittingly maintaining such low intensity war aimed at Aztlan. We know the “Secure Communities Program” is a product of the Obama administration, at the same time if we look at the numbers for those who voted to put Obama into office we find 93% of New Afrikans voted for Obama, 69% of Latinos, and 74% of Asians voted in his favor. (6) Ironically it is the Brown, Black and Yellow folks now feeling the brunt of the “Secure Communities Program”. The oppressed nations should take heed to these lessons because they we are to move forward. In our struggle for national liberation we cannot get lost in appearance, we should not be swayed by form but we should focus on content. When it comes to the oppressed nations there is class contradictions within each respective nation on these shores and Amerika's bourgeois politics attempts to lure the oppressed to get struck in its ballot box scam and conceal class contradictions at all costs. Mao spoke of class in his day when he said: "The ruthless economic exploitation and political oppression of the peasants by the landlord class forces them into numerous uprisings against its rule...it was the class struggles of the peasants the peasant uprisings and peasant wars that constituted the real motive force of historical development in chinese feudal society." (7)

 

Todays class contradictions affect all of the oppressed nations in the US and most prisoners derive from these oppressed nations and we will be the real motive force in ultimately resolving these class contradictions. Just as our efforts today to better our conditions and stop the the SHU torture are arriving via a United Front, so too will we reach national liberation in the future cia this same approved of the united front.

 

One of the things the left in the US is leaving out of the equation and must be dealt with is the states targeting of Chicanos at an enormous rate for SHU torture. More Raza are placed in shu solitary confinement that any other peoples in california prisons (8). Of these Raza the vast majority are chicanos. The shu has been identified even by Amerikan "liberal" groups like human rights watch or even amnesty international as 'cruel and unusual' torture. It is well known that solitary confinement creates psychosis after long durations and even for as little as ten days can cause psychological trauma. What this means is in California Chicanos are being tortured and rendered mentally ill more than any other group of prisoners even though chicanos are not the majority population of California prisons. The closest phenomenon to this in the US prison system is the fact that new Afrikans are the largest population on death row, the only difference is new Afrikans are also the largest population of the prison system whereas chicanos are a minority in California's state prison system. They are facing a legal lynching and we are facing a psychological legal lynching.

 

Those in the prison movement need to look more into this phenomenon and identify the changing contradictions for todays concrete conditions. We need to see more analysis of this phenomenon in movement publications to find ways to combat this situation and glean what can be gleaned to push the movement forward.

 

This phenomenon of the control unit and specifically California's "shu" can thus be seen as another aspect of the New Greaser laws that are aimed at neutralizing the Chicano nation. The shu is a formidable opponent, it is a big gun in the oppressions arsenal, solitary confinement is its biggest stick. Today, nearly 100,000 people are locked in solitary confinement. This is something that prisoners across the US prison system experience at some time and the impact it is having on the people's mental capacities is only imagined at this time. Terry Kupers, a psychologist, states in a deposition "Everyone who is in a supermax has some kind of psychological damage as a result." (9) The evidence is there that solitary is neutralizing a person without a visible weapon but the state is doing this intentionally in my opinion. No longer are they using a whole town to lynch the oppressed nations in the town square, no longer are thousands rounded up and placed in ovens or gas chambers, instead we are rounded up and locked up for the rest of our lives in solitary confinement! It is a bloodless torture we suffer for being born with Brown, Black or Red skins. White supremacy has only become more sophisticated.

The warden of pelican bay Greg Lewis has said, "In my experience ,the men that are housed within this security housing unit have suffered no ill effects from their segregation." (9) This is akin to Amerikkka telling the first nations that they suffered no "ill effects" from the trail of tears.

 

The new greaser laws are creating new contradictions and new struggles within prisons that have not been seen in decades. This mobilization of the lumpen works to combat the new greaser laws in the form of a united front against prison repression. But in our efforts we must raise this aspect of todays repression when we can and get prisoners and our outside allies to grasp this form of development. Our strategy on the ground should raise the consciousness of the U.S. left by being able to translate the changing face of today's prison oppression.

 

Revolutionaries commonly read, study and declare the Marxist method of the material world being in constant motion. Most people grasp this in theory, in practice however is a different story. Many have failed to implement this method when it comes to the assaults aimed at Aztlan. This parochialism leads to disconnect where nobody identifies the changing conditions and thus the proper response is not coordinated.

 

Today's lumpen experiences a multifaceted assault which has changed in some ways since the 1970s which was the pinnacle of the prison movement's last development, we as revolutionaries and activists whether in prison or out in society must change our response to the changing developments on the ground. should we apply a 1970 approach to today's contradictions, we will stray off the path of advancing the new prison movement and making real strides for people. but prisoners must take more responsibility for progress made and advances in the prison movement, it is after all us who are buried in this trench of despair. Our external allies may hand us a shovel and feed us oxygen but ultimately it must be us who dig ourselves out. In some ways, those of us in SHU have become slaves of the state since we exist in a caste like existence. One writer has put it this way..."The racialized idiom of slavery in the American social order depended on the legal fiction of 'civil death'; the state of a person who though possessing natural life has lost all civil rights." (10)

 

We are definitely alive and breathing yet we exist on life support obtaining sustenance to keep us breathing but without experiencing what it means to be human and stripped of civil rights like our counterparts in Guantanamo Bay.

 

We are seeing that todays prisoners are not mute partisans of violence but people who no longer will suffer in silence, our voices will be heard and voices shall be amplified by those who remain loyal to something called humanity out in society. the power we see manifesting in the strikes are symbols of solidarity of the lumpen class. the strikes coupled with the call to end hostilities reflect developments in U.S. prisons. These developments for prisoners are a leap from a quantitative stage to a qualitative stage or as Engels described simply from 'quantity to quality.' Where the imprisoned social forces have demonstrated a certain amount of consciousness to identify our common oppressor and the class contradictions that exist even in prisons, this knowledge was then used to make a decision to act as a class to advance out class interests. This action was a development not seen in the U.S. prison system since the uprising in Attica in the 1970s! This of course is great but our analysis and future struggles must go deeper and farther if we are to regain our humanity as people and our civil rights as prisoners.

 

Ultimately, like most contradictions in Amerikkka that result in the interests of the oppressed nations, the fight against the new greaser laws, supermax torture, the Anti-SHU struggle or prison conditions, more generally will only come from how we explore United Front efforts, that is manifested in a lumpen class-wide movement. Prisoners in some aspects exist as the canary in the coal mine where we serve as the social thermometer to where the state is going in its repression projects that will be used on the broader society at some point, so we play an important role in identifying which way the wind blows behind prison walls but this can only be done if prisoners are conscious and able to put critical thinking to the task. To satisfy our responsibility prisoners need to study the contradictions in today's society which revolve around Nation, Class and Gender. Only in this way will we find solutions and understand the interconnection of us and the outside society, only then can we attempt to add to what is bubbling in today's theoretical realm in the internal semi-colonies here in the U.S. and internationally.

 

The stranglehold of U.S. prisons will continue with employing the New Greaser Laws and other modes of repression until all our energies can be properly harnessed to breaking this link that is one of many in the long chain of oppression unleashed by U.S. Imperialism.

 

By Jose H. Villarreal

 

Notes

(1) J. Sakai, "Settlers: The Mythology of the White Proletariat," Morning Star Press, 1989. pg 32.

(2) J.V. Stalin, "The Foundations of Leninism."

(3) Analysis of census data by Barnett Lee, John Iceland, Gregory Sharp at Penn State's Dept. of Sociology and Population Research Institute.

(4) Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone Magazine. April 11, 2013, "The Stupidest Law Ever."

(5) Alan Gomez, USA today, Nov 6, 2012 "Immigration Policy Review Delayed."

(6) NEP Exit Poll 2012

(7) Mao Zedong, "The Chinese Revolution and the Chinese Communist Party." (December 1939), Selected Works, Vol II, p. 308

(8) April 26, 2013. The Michael Slate Show, KPFK Radio, Los Angeles.

(9) Jeff Tietz, Rolling Stone Magazine. Dec 6, 2012. "Slow-Motion Torture."

(10) Colin Dayan, "The Law is White Dog," Princeton University Press, 2011. p 44.

 

 
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Jahi McMath: A Hellthcare Nightmare

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

 

The Jahi McMath story is one that inspires us to stand firm in our faith. It also inspires us to not always take the word and opinion of those who "practice" medicine- or what we at poor like to call it "wite science" as the last and definite answer. After a tonsil operation went awry early December of last year, Jahi McMath was written off and declared brain dead by staff at Children's Hospital in Oakland. The spirit  crushing way the staff handled the situation-and not owning up to their "practices" not being perfect in any way was insensitive. The attitude of "oh well, she's brain dead" was the obvious vibe that tell us that the hellthcare system is not a 100% human one. No one has the right to tell a family, or to make them feel like they should just give up on a loved one, and with the venom of taking offense as if the family is doing something wrong by fighting for their child's life. Is having faith and fighting to save a life a crime? Or have these staffers at CH been exposed as the hypocrites-with money that they are? I'm sure had it been one of their loved ones, they (with mad money) would have bent every rule or broken every bone to make sure that everything possible was being done for their child.
 
So this goes back to the age old wite nonsupremacy  unjust rule of who's deserving or undeserving. Money talks, and the underprivileged gets written off, plain and simple. I remember when I was pressured to take my younger brother off life support, because his organs were "needed". I refused and allowed for my brother Marcus to pass on his own, when it was time. It's bad enough I had to endure losing him, but to have the hospital staff nag me about pulling the plug so he could hurry up and pass away was a kick to the heart that I still feel to this day. I still had faith, why try and crush that? Worst yet, I received a $1800.00 bill for a headache pill and some water when I fell to the ground after I couldn't take seeing him the way he was.
 
Taking it back to our hoods, I have spoken personally to several different families about the hellthcare system, and how it serves us "common folks". I heard an frightening, exodus of stories- from being misdiagnosed, and being sent home with errors, leading to death. Like in the cases of Mama Dorothy Whitfield and Mama Trisha, sent home with internal bleeding and other ailments just to suffer and transition on. Just written off!
 
There are many, many stories of poor people and people of color not receiving the proper hellthcare due to lack of funds and inhumane attitudes. Mama Carol X was fine when she created her own medicine, using only natural medicine. Once she started the wite science medicine she transitioned on in a very short amount of time. I guess it pays not to deal in chance.
 
QUEENNANDI X, PNN...
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Three Stories from Benito

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

Painting by Tiffany Aldridge

News room was crowded and popping as usual. Before I started asking questions of this new guest we had named Benito, I saw a man playing a drum. Drumming in my mind automatically reminds me of the root of music with indigenous people. I know this because as a graduate out of the Africana studies department I studied music relating to Africa. I learned people in Africa used the drum as a means of communication and expression without words, and sometimes the women would dance and move to touch the earth mentally and physically. 

 

The guest known as Benito had already attracted everybody spiritually when I saw him playing on his drum. When it was his turn to talk about his story he talked about being a first generation Filipino-American in 1950. HIs last name was senator, and his family destined him to become a lawyer. He expressed how he learned how to meditate because he was always forced to stare at the wall when he got in trouble in school. Then when he didn't own up to his parents dreams in 1971 he decided to do dance theatre at SFSU with an emphasis in creative arts. 

 

He came from doing gigs around the bay area to working for the San Francisco Unified School District working with children that have been diagnosed with ADD. He has worked at Philip Burton high school since 1999. He expressed how he is the only one who can get to the kids because of his skills with a drum. The hardest kids that supposedly never listen light up when Benito has a drum circle every week, and invites everybody. Even if you are in a wheelchair or if you are deaf, he wants everybody to come to the drum circle. The other teachers are amazed because all of the children behave (even the one's they usually cannot control). Benito came outside the box. He is bringing children back to the indigenous way of healing and fun. He said the children got heart and everyone has to release in a positive voice. He feels he is the spokesperson for people who cannot speak. He feels that he could leave (die) right now and still be blessed. He loves to use his drum to make a connection. Not rainy whether or anything else will ever make him stop. 

 

Despite this story the real experience he wanted to talk about was how he got attacked by skin heads. There were a couple of white men in a car, and they stopped for him. Not knowing these people were racist they ran him over as soon as he walked the crosswalk. He flew out into the street, and to this day he doesn't know what happened until he woke up in the hospital. He couldn't move and now after hella physical therapy, he wakes up around four o'clock in the morning straightening out his spine, because he refused to get surgery after the incident. 

 

Last but not least he was really at news room to advocate for his housing. So, this article became three stories in one. What I admired about Benito was that he did not talk about his tragic experience of getting forced to leave his home, but he talked about his experience with children and the drum. 

 

Under the Ellis Act, Benito has been given an eviction notice. POOR magazine is filing a law suit against his landlords and he is thankful. He said he does not have a second plan on where to live but he was still smiling no matter what. At the end of this magical story about him he lead a drum circle with a prayer and closed the whole news room down. People were touched by his drum and his beat, along with his ability to talk to Mother Earth.

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Open Letter to the DOJ about Police Brutality

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

February 12, 2014


State of California, Department of Justice
Office of the Attorney General, Kamala D. Harris
Attn: Public Inquiry Unit
P.O. Box 944255
Sacramento, CA 94244-2550

To Attorney General Kamala D. Harris:

 As a California resident who has lived here my entire life and as a Legal Advocate who works with mentally ill communities in California, I am writing you this letter in regard to the recent mass influx of police brutality that continues to be committed against our citizens, children and communities throughout California in near-epidemic proportions. Police brutality is rapidly increasing each day, where unnecessary brute force by sworn-in, P.O.S.T. law-enforcement officers/peace officers is being against our citizens, children and communities.

Most importantly, police brutality is being used against our citizens, children and community members who have either mental illness or are having a mental crisis at the time of incident, where in most instances has lead to inexcusable death committed by a law enforcement officer. This includes but not limited to incidents with citizens, children and community members who were unarmed or posed no real threat at the time of incident, being wrongfully harmed by improperly trained law-enforcement officers, who either lack and/or have no education, training or experience dealing with citizens who have mental illness and/or a mental crisis.

It is clearly imperative at this point that you Attorney General Kamala D. Harris and The Department of Justice of the State of California implement legislation that would establish an independent, non-law enforcement involved review board specific to this issue, mandating that all law enforcement agencies in the State of California who are involved in such acts of police brutality, be subjugated to a full investigation by this board on each individual case when a citizen has been wrongfully either verbally and/or physically brutalized, abused and/or killed by any P.O.S.T. law enforcement officers from any law-enforcement agency in the State of California (ie: Highway Patrol, County Sheriff’s Department, Municipal Police Department, Transportation Law-Enforcement agencies/BART Police; with several agencies listed here, but not limited to).

Not only should a full investigation be conducted in regard to each specific case in the instance where law-enforcement officers have inflicted severe physical harm to a citizen, leading to either injury and/or death, but that full judicial due process be mandated through legislative law and policy which would hold any of the law-enforcement agencies involved, who have committed such wrongful acts of police brutality fully accountable monetarily to those affected by such egregious acts of terror and violence upon citizens in compensation for incurred costs (medical bills, financial hardship, funeral costs, etc.).

 

 

In addition to this legislative law, it would be required that all involved P.O.S.T. law enforcement officers and/or law enforcement agencies in the State of California be held fully liable and accountable for their wrongful conduct and acts of violence, being tried with due process in criminal court and that those affected by such (ie: victims, affected family members, impacted community members, etc.) have the option of filing criminal charges against any law-enforcement agency and/or the law-enforcement officers involved in the wrongful act of police brutality. This would also pertain to any instance during the time of investigation on an open case/matter that any law enforcement officers involved in such an incident of police brutality to not be awarded with ‘paid leave of absence’, including being prohibited from active duty/serving the community.

At a time when this trend of police brutality is on the rise with the rapid increase of wrongful death incidents of unarmed citizens and children in California, it is also critically imperative that the Law Enforcement Officer’s Bill of Rights in California be extensively reviewed by an independent citizen-based/non-law enforcement review board in an effort to implement up-dated, just and fair amendments to this bill with legislation that would protect citizens from acts of police terror/violence being committed upon them by law-enforcement agencies and/or officers in the State of California. It is time that we here in California begin this process, so that the inexcusable act of police brutality and violence will stop in our communities. As a former victim of police brutality myself, due to wrongful identity by a law enforcement officer, I thank you for your time in reading my letter.

Sincerely,

Vivian Thorp 

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Ellis Act Evicted Tenants Meet with the District Attorney–The Elder Abuse Crime of Ellis Act Evictions Part 3

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

They were posted up at every cubicle. Threatening, over-muscled, green beret-like necks bulging with implied violence. Police officers, swat team members? The miniscule 1940’s doorways could barely hold them and there they stood anyway, watching us as we filed in to meet with the San Francisco District Attorney to file criminal charges of elder abuse under penal code 368, on the speculators using the Ellis Act to evict elders for profit.

 

“We don’t have the people-power alone in this office to investigate these cases alone which is why we want you to also approach the police department” said DA office manager Sharon Woo.

 

After a second press conference featuring more voices of displaced elders and their families who have lost their elders to the crime of Ellis Act eviction, we proceeded into the Hall of Injustice to meet with the District Attorney’s office. Once inside, we met with four staff members of the District Attorney’s office, two of them were the ones who investigate elder abuse cases.

 

In the meeting which lasted a little over an hour, Sharon Woo, who manages the District Attorneys, spent a lot of time trying to tell us, as she did in our first encounter the week before when she took our original claims, the many different reasons why the DA couldn’t help us. And just like in the first encounter, revolutionary lawyer Anthony Prince, along with all of us houseless, evicted and displaced mamaz, daddys and advocates present, pushed back.

 

“Are you saying you can’t investigate these claims,” Anthony Prince said.

 

“No I’m saying I need more evidence, which I understand you all have brought me today,”Sharon responded.

 

“When you end up homeless as an elder, many times you end up in a shelter or dead,” said Queenandi X, mama and poverty skola from POOR Magazine.

 

From 98 year old Mary Phillips who has no idea what is even happening to her and is in shock, to 75 year old Miss Smith, disabled African-American resident of the Fillmore for 43 years and is now unable to leave her apartment and yet has been harassed by the new owners speculators attorneys after they gave her the Ellis Act notice, to the well-known story of Jeremy Michaels who is still fighting to stay in his community where his medical care and network of support is, because he is an elder, disabled and has full-blown AIDS, these elders and countless families with young children have been abused by these speculators and like any criminals need to be charged. 

 

California Pen Code 368 (Elder Abuse Law)
Any person who knows or reasonably should know that a person is an elder or dependent adult and who, under circumstances or conditions likely to produce great bodily harm or death, willfully causes or permits any elder or dependent adult to suffer, or inflicts thereon unjustifiable physical pain or mental suffering, or having the care or custody of any elder or dependent adult, willfully causes or permits the person or health of the elder or dependent adult to be injured, or willfully causes or permits the elder or dependent adult to be placed in a situation in which his or her person or health is endangered, is punishable by imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding one year, or by a fine not to exceed six thousand dollars ($6,000), or by both that fine and imprisonment, or by imprisonment in the state prison for two, three, or four years.

 

PNN reporters will be collecting stories/evidence to take into the special investigations unit of the Police dept on Tuesday, February 25th, 2014. If you want to include your story of Ellis Act eviction abuse please email us at deeandtiny@ poormagazine.org.

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