Story Archives 2016

A breeze for Mark

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
div dir="ltr" div There was a small breeze that crawled through the graveyard in Vallejo, California. It seemed that that breeze was honoring along with us the amazing man Mark Flaherty who died January 28, 2016 at the age of forty-seven. When we got to the site of the funeral we saw a group of people spread outnbsp;span class="il"and/spannbsp;waiting for the hearse./div div When the hearse came, Vivian, Mark#39;s sisternbsp;span class="il"and/spannbsp;a long time friend of Poor Magazine came out of her car along with her three daughters. They were greeted by friendsnbsp;span class="il"and/spannbsp;family for the funeral. When the serviced started they had an open casket for the family to see Mark./div div ldquo;Mark was the kind of guy who helped people outrdquo; said a friend of Mark. After people payed their respects the funeral director lowered the casket into the ground along with holy waternbsp;span class="il"and/spannbsp;multicolored flowers. nbsp;/div /div
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A day For Mark Flaherty

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
p style="orphans: 1;"span style="font-size: medium; font-family: 'Trebuchet MS', sans-serif;"The funeral started around 11 o#39; clock on a Thursday. At first it began cloudy then about a couple of minutes later it got sunny. The car he was in came, then his sister went along as some of his familynbsp;andnbsp;friends saw Mark for the last time. It was sad seeing Aunt Viv crynbsp;andnbsp;depressing for most of his family. Then the pallbearers carried the casket toward the grave, then put it on top of something to carry the casketnbsp;andnbsp;lower it down./span/p p style="orphans: 1;"font color="#222222"font face="Trebuchet MS, sans-serif"font size="3"Then the catholic priest began to speaknbsp;andnbsp;say what was needed to be said. I would#39;ve gave more detail but I forgot some of the stuff he was saying./font/font/font/p p style="orphans: 1;"font color="#222222"font face="Trebuchet MS, sans-serif"font size="3"Mark Flaherty who was born July 14supth/supnbsp;1969, died January 28, 2016 at age 47 years old. It was a very young death but he will be very much missed in all of our hearts, but he is watching over us./font/font/font/p p style="orphans: 1"font color="#222222"font/fontfont face="Trebuchet MS, sans-serif" style="font-size: medium;"Mark was always solidrdquo; said, one of his long time friends./font/font/p p style="orphans: 1;"font color="#222222"font face="Trebuchet MS, sans-serif"font size="3"#39;#39;If someone asked Mark if he wanted to go somewhere he#39;d be the first at the door#39;#39; said one of his family members./font/font/font/p
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Hey Brother

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
p style="orphans: 1"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Life is short for some peoplenbsp;andnbsp;life is long for others andnbsp;it#39;s hard to except the value of death. But without death there is no living life to the fullest. That#39;s what Mark, a man who died too soon after a hemorrhagenbsp;andnbsp;facing the comeback of what the struggle can to peoplenbsp;andnbsp;sadly he had died leaving the worldnbsp;andnbsp;going on his journey. Mark Flaherty a man who was born in 1969nbsp;andnbsp;died in 2016./font/font/p p style="orphans: 1;"font color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"I was at his funeralnbsp;and I heard all theses stories on how he was a goofball and how he loved you if you hated himnbsp;andnbsp;he was the kind of friend who would be there for you no matter what. But what I seaw were these people who came. Some didn#39;t know him, I didn#39;t know him either, but he seemed like a lot of my other family. nbsp;I saw the toughest of people with a glum face. We were even at the place where he hung out most. At times I think that dying is the easy part but the hardest part is the people you leave behind andnbsp;that#39;s where we all are going. Andnbsp;Mark knew thatnbsp;andnbsp;that#39;s probably why he loved living life to the fullest./font/font/font/p
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Concussion Review

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"I#39;m going to be doing a review on the movie Concussion, a movie about footballnbsp;and the dangers of it. /font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"You could hate or love this guy: his name was Doctor Omalu./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Doctor Omalu had worked on autopsies to find out how people died. He would do it in a different way, He would respect the body for who they werenbsp;andnbsp;how they lived because he would respect the dead, not open someone up./font/font/font/p h3 class="western" style="font-weight: normal; orphans: 1;" font color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"Then he was doing an autopsy on a player who died in the movie, Mike Websternbsp;was anbsp;football player that played for the Steelersnbsp;andnbsp;made it to the hall of fame. But what he didn#39;t know-- if got tackled his head was taking severe damage. In this movie finding this out was very important because the players didn#39;t even know about this. During the movie they are trying to find this out what is affecting the people who are playing football./font/font/font/h3 pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"After finding the reason why Mike Webster had a diednbsp;andnbsp;saw that two more football players died, another autopsy was performed on both of them. They came up with the same results. It was not early Alzheimer#39;s or tumors. Iit was something else. Andnbsp;trying to find this was difficult. So was telling people who loved football that you will get severe head injuries./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"After telling people that you can head injuries he got so much hatenbsp;andnbsp;was even called out by the N.F. The N.F.L was worried about losing money, because football was America#39;s game where veryone comes together. The family yells with joy or sadness but there was always thrills./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"After three deaths this needed a name, the name was Chronic traumatic encephalopaty, After giving the biggest boogie man a name, they attacked back. They had took his job away, taking his life, taking everything he worked for away./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"But after one of their best people who diednbsp;andnbsp;was inside with the N.F.L had died of CTE the N.F.L knew that it was true./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"The reason that we had seen this movie because it was a very conscious movie on a very conscious day about Martin Luther Kingnbsp;andnbsp;last year we had seen Selma./font/font/font/p pfont color="#222222"font face="Times New Roman, serif"font size="3"The most important parts of the movie were when he was always for the best of people. He knew that peoples#39; lives would be in dangernbsp;andnbsp;knew that it was wrong how people like to hide the truth. If it ruins their profit they don#39;t win. And stillto this day people still get C.T.E.nbsp;/font/font/font/p
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Upcoming Film, A Small Temporary Inconvenience, Black Disabled Civcil Rights Activist, George Eames, In Louisiana 1950’’s- the 90’s

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body
pb(Pic ofnbsp;/bspanGeorge Washington Eames, Jr. aka Mr. Civil Rightssitting in his wheelchair with a Black hat, Black jacket covering a white shirt and a colorful tie)/span/p pbLeroy Moore:/bspan So, give us your name./span/p pbCleveland Bailey Jr./bspan: OK, my official name is Cleveland Bailey Jr., but everybody calls me Cleve./span/p pbLeroy Moore: /bspanAll right, Cleve. Can I call you Cleve?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Certainly./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK, good, good. All right. So let#39;s get started, Cleve. You#39;re based in San Francisco now, right?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I am. I actually live in Hayward./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOh, OK. Great. So I have a couple of questions, of course, based on the upcoming movie. Tell us the title of the movie again./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Currently, our working title is A Small Temporary Inconvenience./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bAll right, great. Yeah, just like I said, I#39;m starting to read the book, and the book is excellent so far./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Great. I#39;m glad you#39;re enjoying it. My aunt Kathy really put her heart and soul into it, and I think it#39;s a great historical piece./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore/b: Yeah, definitely, definitely. Now, you#39;re originally from Louisiana, is that right?/span/p pspannbsp;bCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I am. I am from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the Red Stick. Yeah, it was a great place to grow up and a great time. You don#39;t realize the historical significance of the place that you#39;re born until you grow up. And then you realize that we have the best football players, we have the best basketball players, we have the best looking women, everything down there. We have some of the best stories. It#39;s kinda crazy, you know. The Civil Rights movement, Jim Crow, slavery./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b Yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: A lot of our history is African-American in the South, and when you#39;re from the South, people have a tendency to think that it#39;s all doom and gloom. But I enjoy it very much, and there was a whole lotta love and support in my community, and I#39;m proud of that./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah. I know for me, being a music lover and being a Blues lover, the South has so much history with the Blues./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Right, right./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So it#39;s a very creative environment, from the African-American minister and the way that he puts on his show to all of the things that go on. It#39;s just a very interesting and exciting place to kinda come from./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bSo, you know as a Black, disabled researcher, journalist, and activist. So when I found the story of George Washington Emmett Jr., I had to get the book. The story is definitely important for the Black community and disabled community. Tell us about your movies all the way up until now. I saw a couple of YouTube clips about your other movies too./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Let me try to get that question. How does the book impact people who are disabled?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, and how to is the movie gonna impact? You know, this is the history of people with disabilities and Black people./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, you know, that#39;s a very good question. I think what the movie will imply is that you can get power from pain. It just depends on how you look at it and how you decide to process what#39;s going on to you and what you choose to do with it. I think that my uncle George was mad about what happened to him. He was so mad that he was willing to risk his life to make sure that it never happened to anybody. And so he went after the law and the institutionalized systems that perpetrated these attitudes, and he rose from a paraplegic to a Civil Rights and American hero. So I think the biggest thing that people can learn from this is as long as you have your mind and your voice, and you choose to put it out there and use it in a constructive way, that you can get rewards, you can get respect, and you can get things done if it#39;s all for the right motives and purposes./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm, yeah. You know, there#39;s a lot of ups and downs in the book like inter-racial marriage back in the #39;50s, George got shot in a white neighborhood, prison and disability. Give us some background on these times and how would the film bring some of these issues to the big screen./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK. Obviously, my uncle George represents any Black male in America who happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time or happens to be stereotyped, but not something that he did, was something that someone else did, and they couldn#39;t get a good description of him. So it#39;s the Black male. So he was shot because supposedly, there had been some activities going on at the house, not at the house. Someone had flashed themselves in front of the guy#39;s wife a week or so ago before George walked down the alley. And the guy shot Uncle George, thinking that he was peeping Tom or intruder or whatever the case might be. So it was just a situation of shoot first and ask questions later. He was left for dead in an alley. But by the grace of God, he lived and was able to use his disability to his advantage and to find strength and power in his healing. It helped improve the community for everybody. That#39;s the getting shot part and what he did with his life. In terms of the inter-racial marriage, you know, everybody I talk to says they couldn#39;t understand how this pretty, educated white girl whose father was in thenbsp;/spanSOUTHERN GENTLEMEN, more like a white citizen#39;s council could fall for a paraplegic Black man./p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: But in talking to my aunt Kathy, she said he was the most charismatic person that she had ever met in her life, and it was almost an instant attraction. And so I think what we can learn from that is that we, as human beings, have to try to be more focused on what a person#39;s character is as opposed to what the color of their skin is. And then, it goes even deeper as to how strong our family ties are, are they the ties that should go in our lives, and when do we, as young adults, make decisions that will make us happy for the rest of our lives, as opposed to our parents#39; happiness?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: That#39;s a very tough situation because Kathy lost her family per se, but we are now related. And I think that she really enjoys being a part of George#39;s extended family. And so I think that God works in mysterious ways and that he gives us what we need. If something is taken from us, he will replace it with something better. So we don#39;t need to be afraid in this life about social barriers and social change and all that kinda thing. I think that God#39;s ultimate plan is to have human beings work through all of that and see people for who they are, not separate them based on some physical attribute such as color or whatever the case may be./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMm, thank you. You know, now that this is a book, so why do you think that this book needs to be on the big screen?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, several reasons. First and foremost, I think that the Black voices of America are getting a chance. There are so many stories about bravery and courage under fire, about people who show great character and moral strength, that have not had a chance to be seen on the big screen because there were not enough Black people who were in the production business. And so, now that the reign of mass media and film and television are loosening up, I think that Black people are more interested in seeing stories about Black people that are written and presented from an objective point of view. Heretofore, when many white writers and directors portrayed us, they portrayed us as step n fetch it, an Aunt Jemima, the oldnbsp; buffoon. We were always the first to die in their films, and we seldom got a chance to be strong Black people in the center of their own narrative, driving their story, making the decisions, and pushing the envelope. And so I think in today#39;s society, people are tired of seeing those old images of Black people, and they want to see people who are more like people that they know or love:nbsp; the great football stars with their story, the great preachers with their story, the Civil Rights movement, and how did we go from slavery to having a Black President in this country?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK? Those are the types of stories that people want to see. Gone with the Wind and all of that old stuff has had its day, and now it#39;s time for new leading men and new leading ladies. There are enough outlets now. So when you look to television, you can watch films. They#39;re on television, they#39;re on demand. You can watch films on your phone. You can watch them everywhere and anywhere, almost. So we need more and more content in order to keep the audiences engaged. So with that being said, it opens the door for stories like these that are important but have never been told because African-Americans didn#39;t have access to getting their stories out and getting their stories finances. So I think that the golden age of African-American cinema is about to begin, or it has begun. And we#39;re gonna see more and more compelling and interesting stories about African-American people and their lives./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, thank you for doing it. I know for me, growing up as a Black, disabled boy in the #39;70s, I didn#39;t see myself on the screen until Porgy and Bess, you know?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Mmhmm./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bSo yeah, it definitely needs to happen, especially for Black, disabled youth growing up now./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Right. And I think additionally, when you grow up, and you realize what your race what have gone through and how they were not allowed to learn how to read and write, how they were not allowed to own property and to have their families ripped apart explains some of the chaos that we see in our communities. And so, I think these positive images of us overcoming obstacles and pushing successfully in areas where inclusion is an important message for our young and old people to see./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMm, yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So that#39;s why I think this story#39;s important./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bThis movie will take place in Louisiana. How did you capture the Louisiana back in the #39;50s and #39;60s compared to today, Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So let me try to restate the question. I think you said how would I compare--/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bNo, how does the film capture Louisiana back in the day and now?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK. So our film is what we call in the film industry a period piece. And so, what we#39;re going to do is to, a lot of the buildings that were up at that point in time are still up, but they may not be in the very best section of town or to do a film. So we#39;re gonna do our very best to use art direction and an Art Director as well as a wardrobe person and a hairstylist to dress the characters. We#39;re gonna use the colors of the #39;50s, #39;60s, and of the #39;70s, and we#39;re gonna make it look like it was happening at that point in time. Is that the question?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, that#39;s the question, yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So it#39;s considered a period piece, where it looks like that period./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b:: And my job as the Director is to create the wardrobe, to scout the locations, the houses, the NAACP. All of those places are gonna be made to look like it#39;s the #39;60s and #39;70s./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK, gotcha./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So let#39;s say like basketball uniforms./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b: Yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: We would go back to LSU photos, and then we would use and recreate those type of uniforms for the basketball. And then, we would put that older photo from the #39;70s, and we would get a seamstress to make clothes for the actors and actresses./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK, gotcha. Wow./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: It#39;s quite a process./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, that iix a big process! How many characters are in the film, and how did you pick them, especially the one that plays the early days before he became physically disabled, and after?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK, so let me try to repeat that. You said there are a lot of characters in the movie. How did I choose them, and what was the last part?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bAnd how did you pick the one that plays your uncle George before he became disabled and after?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK, so as far as the characters are concerned, all of the lead characters are true in our film. So we have Uncle George, we have Aunt Kathy, we have Dale Brown, and we have Jim nbsp;Engster, we have Gloria. So most of the lead characters are picked from people who really existed and were really living and involved with him at that time. So a lot of it came from the book. But in the spirit of filmmaking, sometimes you have to insecure characters. So if 50 people were involved in doing something, in a film you might not be able, well you can#39;t focus on all 50 of them./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b:: You have to infuse some of the attributes or contributions of people into a specific character that you can follow and track. So instead of having 50 characters, you might only have five or six. But our main people are real, were real living, breathing people during those times. Now, in terms of who we#39;re going to choose to play Uncle George, we have not made that determination yet. We have to go through the casting call process. We have identified a number of young Black actors who would potentially play that role, and so we haven#39;t gotten there yet. That#39;s sort of where we are right now. We#39;re going after the actors and the money, and we#39;re getting Lynn Whitfield, who#39;s a famous Black actress, to help us with that process. Lynn is from Baton Rouge. She grew up--her parents and my Uncle George grew up together. So we have a connection to Hollywood through her./span/p pspanstrongLeroy Moore:/strong OK. Great. I was just wondering, if your uncle was alive today, would he be involved with the movie and with police brutality and the recent presidential race? Would he be involved in those aspects, if he was alive today?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Mm, I wanna say yes, and I wanna say no. He was 82 when he died, and he was kinda in bad shape. He died from cancer./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So it#39;s hard to say if he would be in the mental capacity and shape to actually be involved./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: But I think that he left us a strong and lasting legacy to pull from and to share with the world, which is why I thought that the film was worthy of being made in the first place. He has a website called Mr. Civil Rights, and it just lists all the things that he did in his lifetime to help other people and to help African-American people and other minorities gain a foothold in this country. He helped to bang on the doors so that they were open, so that he could go into any building that there was that one. So I think his spirit is guiding us in this process and that he would be very proud of the screenplay and how the film will look. In order to do this, we have to have Kathy#39;s approval, and she was very pleased with what we did with Uncle George. So when I say yes and no, if he were alive today, it would be like well, how old would he be [laughs]?/span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, yeah, that#39;s true./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: How old would he be? You know, would he be 85 and not in such good shape? Would he be 25? So that#39;s a yes and no question, and I think I answered it as best I could./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah. With this movie, after it#39;s out and after you do the film festivals, would you go into universities and have it there? I know Black history and disability history would definitely enjoy this film./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, our goal is not to do film festivals./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOh, OK./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Our goal is to have it released in theaters all over the country as a feature film. And so we want to have people to go to the theater and pay their $10 and watch the movie, and then we hope that it will go to on-demand and be available for both to rent and purchase. So this is a film that#39;s gonna be of the same quality as Selma and the same quality as The Butler, as the same quality as 12 Years a Slave. It#39;s gonna have those types of stars and that kind of distribution./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bWow. It#39;s so great because like what I said in the beginning, as a Black, disabled man, there#39;s like zero in Hollywood that represents me and my community./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Right. You know, I think that times are changing for everybody. And so we#39;re gonna see--I don#39;t know if you watch Empire, you watch Power. I mean, we#39;re seeing Black man projected or presented in an entirely different way than they have been in the past./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: And so I think that, like I said, the golden age of African-American cinema is just starting because only now are we able to have the money, the acting talent, the technical talent, the distribution. All the things that make film and television special are now working for us as well. And so I think you#39;re gonna see more and more characters of people who we haven#39;t seen before./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I think it#39;s gonna be exciting. That#39;s what people are gonna want to watch and see what these different worlds are all about. So that#39;s the beauty of film is that it allows us to go into places that we never would go in our normal lives, and we can see how the people live, what their struggles are, and how they respond to those struggles. And so film is one of the most powerful mediums on earth because we can empathize and put ourselves in other people#39;s situations or in other people#39;s shoes, and that can change the way we think about those people and those situations. And so it can help us to overcome racial stereotypes in the comfort of our own home, and I think that#39;s good for America./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah. True. Who is your main audience for this film, and how would you promote it?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, I mentioned Selma, I mentioned The Butler, and I mentioned 12 Years a Slave. So those were American films. They had Black lead characters, but they had strong white characters and alike. So we think it#39;s a film for everybody. It has Civil Rights in it, it has inter-racial relationships in it, it has a handicapped lead person in it, it has the integration of LSU sports--which makes it a sports film--it deals with social justice, it deals with the prison system. So it#39;s a very, very wide net that we#39;re casting, and we want potentially everyone in America to go see it. Young people can learn that we can work together if we put aside our past issues. And so those are some of the things that I think will make it attractive to a very, very wide segment and audience in the United States and maybe even, on an international basis, some as well./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bSo how can we keep up with your work and this film? When is it gonna be out in theaters?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, that#39;s hard to say exactly right now. Basically, what we#39;re doing is going after the actors and the money at this point. We have the screenplay finished. So once we do that, it could be as early as next summer or next Christmas, but it#39;s hard to say. As we move closer to production and things of that sort, we will do the circuit of the late night shows, things like Good Morning America, and let everybody know, do billboards, talk shows, things of that sort, like people do when they promote a film./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm. Tell me again how is the book really captured in the film? Is Kathleen really tied to the film?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: You know, a lot of times when you hear people, and they say, I read the book, and the movie was nothing like the book./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, our situation is a lot like that too because we focus on basically just Uncle George and Aunt Kathy#39;s relationship, how their families reacted to it, and some of Uncle George#39;s Civil Rights work, but more specifically LSU basketball, and then his prison stint. So we had to do what#39;s called condensed time. So when you go into the theater, it#39;s like you#39;re there, this is the story. Whereas the book was more of a autobiography of Aunt Kathy and Uncle George. So she#39;s writing this story in her voice, from Kathy#39;s point of view. Whereas in our story, the characters themselves are talking. And so it#39;s just a different medium, and you have to deal with it differently. Sometimes people think that the movie#39;s gonna be exactly like the book. But a book is not a movie, and a movie is not a book./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bExactly!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So the novelist is the person who writes a novel. The screenplay writer is the person who writes the screenplay. So they#39;re really two different mediums./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bMmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: But what we communicate in the film, and what the book communicates, is the spirit of truth of a segment of the book. So was Uncle George shot in the back? Yes. Did he stay in the hospital for a long time, and they thought he was gonna die? Yes. Did he meet Aunt Kathy? Yes. Did they get married? So a lot of it#39;s true, but a lot of times, in order to make it the most exciting it can be, it has to spruce it up a little bit. That#39;s what we do with the film./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah, yeah. Now, one more question. I know Kathy told me that Uncle George was a poet. Is that gonna be captured in the film some way? And also, she told me that he was a good public speaker./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: OK, so I think Kathy is the poet./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Kathy is the poet, and she is--I don#39;t know if it#39;s a licensed poet or professional poet, but she has some type of designation as a poet. So that#39;s Kathy./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Now, Kathy also was a English teacher, and she helped Uncle George with a lot of his speeches./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOh, OK./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So they kinda worked together as a team. Uncle George was not educated per se. He only went to about the 10th grade, and so she helped him with a lot of his public speaking and his speeches and helped kind of formulate that for him or with him./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK, great, great. Now, is there a website for the film yet?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: No, there#39;s not. We#39;re waiting until we get the actors and the money./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bYeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: And then we start kinda getting it. We have to go through the process of going through Louisiana Film Office, and they take us through this process of qualifying for certain tax breaks and things of that sort. So once we get the money, the actors, and we have our principle photography dates set, then we#39;ll start a Facebook page and things of that sort so people can know what#39;s going on./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK. So how can people get in contact with you now?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I have a Facebook page, Cleve Bailey on Facebook. That#39;s the way. And then, my email address: a href="mailto:clevebailey.jr@gmail.com"clevebailey.jr@gmail.com/a. And if someone wants to touch bases with me through email or Facebook, that#39;s great./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bOK. I know there#39;s a Facebook page about the book too. Can you give that too?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: T/spanhe book title: nbsp;WARRIOR FOR JUSTICE: nbsp;The George Eames Story, it is available at Amazon.com and can be ordered by Barnes Noble. nbsp;/p pspanbLeroy Moore: /bAll right, great. Thank you. Anything that you wanna add?/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: Well, this is my first feature film./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b Wow!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: I went to the Academy of Art University to learn this, and I spent three and a half years learning film, learning directing, learning writing. It#39;s a tremendously energizing process. When I was younger, I never really understood--I knew it was important to read and write, but I never imagined that I would be a film director. And so I#39;d just like to say to everybody who#39;s out there struggling with school that it#39;s important because once you learn how to learn, you can basically do anything./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b Yeah./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So I went back to school at like 40 years old to learn this, and it was easy. But I#39;d been learning all of my life, and then with the right opportunity, I would also want the right opportunity or the big opportunity. But I think life was preparing me for this, but I had to put in some time to learn how to read and write. And then, when I found something that I was sufficient in, I had to be willing to spend the time and burn the midnight oil to make it a strength./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b Mmhmm./span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: So keep up the grades, put in the work. You#39;re never too old. It#39;s never too late. It doesn#39;t matter if you have a disability. It#39;s just a made up mind: this is something that I want to do, and I#39;m gonna see it through. That#39;s what I#39;d like to leave with everybody./span/p pspanbLeroy Moore:/b OK, thank you so much!/span/p pspanbCleveland Bailey Jr./b: All right. Thank you for your time. I really appreciate it. It#39;s very interesting, and I look forward to talking to you at some point in time in the future./span/p pspannbsp;bLeroy Moore: /bOK, great. Take care./span/p
Tags

Keewantinawin: The Wind That Goes North

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
p dir="ltr"By Lisa Ganser/p p dir="ltr"[image description: A beautiful black ink hand-drawn portrait of Jack Sun Keewatinawin, a tall, 21 year-old Cree man, drawn in a cross-hatch style. Jackson is smiling softly, wearing a t-shirt, and has long flowing black hair. In the background are bricks that are suggested with hand drawn dots. The drawing was commissioned by Tabitha Johnnie, Jacksun#39;s younger sister, for their mother, Samantha, who has since passed away.]/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanIt#39;s been three years since Montantilde;o Northwind#39;s brother, Jack Sun Keewatinawin, was killed by Seattle police, and he is still reeling from the violence and loss./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;Everything they said on the news about my brother was a complete lie,rdquo; says Montantilde;o. ldquo;I don#39;t trust the police, they are racist bullies. Have you seen the Seattle police? In full body armor with assault rifles. Being trained by Israeli military.rdquo; He pauses and continues, ldquo;One of my kids will be out, and I#39;ll hear a siren,rdquo; he sits straight up and abruptly looks out the window, ldquo;I sit up at attention. I don#39;t want the cops to kill my kids. I don#39;t want the cops to kill anyone,rdquo; says Montantilde;o./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanOn February 26, 2013, Montantilde;o and Hawk Firstrider each made phone calls to 911 because their brother, Jacksun, was in a mental health crisis at his home and needed help. The police had been called a number of times to help Jacksun get to a hospital to treat flare ups related to schizophrenia and PTSD, in fact Jacksun was even known to call 911 on himself when he was panicked and experiencing hallucinations. On this evening, Montantilde;o and Hawk feared for their brother#39;s safety, and the safety of their father, Henry Northwind, who Jacksun lived with in Seattle. In previous times of crisis, de-escalation and even hospitalization had proven very helpful in reducing harm. This time, however, when the militarized Seattle police department arrived, they had collectively turned off their dash cams and already committed to the irreversible use of Force. The police themselves admit that within 30 seconds of initial contact with Jacksun, he had been shot and was bleeding out on the ground./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanSeattle police officers created their own false narrative about Jacksun#39;s killing. They quickly demonized and spread their version of what happened in the media, they interrogated and intimidated his family, they intimidated and possibly paid off neighbors and witnesses. Montantilde;o#39;s home (with his three children) has been watched and photographed by officers in police cars, and both Jacksun#39;s parents are now dead with no pending Federal wrongful death case./span/span/p pnbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="451" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/2qypo-XBoIVGZFI32I7g4SVxMDrb5OlknFtnghEmOGvExdBO05268cux7dVVLcu6OSIeq0GsgbaaCDlHRiWwll2fBMV-JCAg_cFAEO3GJwUxJKJkJ6TP529buCXHjH7SWoYUAOO3" width="602" //span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span[image description: a colorfully chalked sidewalk in San Francisco that says ldquo;Loved Ones in a mental health crisis, instead of getting help, got killed by police or arrested died ldquo;in custody.rdquo; You are loved missed. We will not forget.rdquo; These names and words are drawn with hearts around them: Jack Sun Keewatinawin, Yanira Serrano-Garcia, Natasha McKenna, Herbert Benitez, Bipolar, Ezell Ford, Kayla Moore, Paul Castaway, PTSD, Idriss Stelley, Aura Rosser, Depressed, Norma ldquo;Angierdquo; Guzman, Errol Chang, Schizophrenic, Keith Vidal, John T. Williams, Tanisha Anderson, Sadru-Din ldquo;Sadirdquo; Muhammed, and Phil Quinn. The words ldquo;Loved Onerdquo; is written in a heart for those not named here.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHenry Northwind and many of his neighbors were the non-police witnesses to Jacksun#39;s death, and there is said to be no video surveillance. Police told Montantilde;o that was due to a ldquo;shift change.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;My dad was winning a fight with cancer at the time of Jacksun#39;s death,rdquo; Montantilde;o tells me as we sit in his Seattle apartment in February 2016. Aggressive treatment had successfully regenerated healthy liver tissue. The outlook for Henry was stable and hopeful. Then Jacksun was killed. Henry#39;s health declined and he died just four months later. Montantilde;o views his father#39;s swift decline in health, and his abrupt death in the hospital, as mysterious, questionable and suspect, and directly related to his brother#39;s police killing. Henry had been the family#39;s outspoken leader in the Justice struggle for Jacksun, all the while incredibly grief stricken. ldquo;If you ask me, I believe my dad died of a broken heart,rdquo; Montantilde;o says./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHenry#39;s account of what happened was published in the Native press Indian Country Today Media Network in April 2013:/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;Henry Northwind was an agonized witness to the horrifying events of that day, and he insists the killing of his son was unjustified. He is a former policeman, and says he is familiar with the proper police protocol for such situations. He says those procedures were not followed./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHe says that by the time police arrived in response to the 911 call, his son had calmed down, and that he and Jack were in their front yard. Northwind says he told the police that his son had a knife and a piece of iron. #39;Hersquo;s calmed down now, you donrsquo;t have to kill him,#39; he says he told them. #39;Donrsquo;t kill him, please!#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHe says the lead officer pushed him aside and said, #39;Hersquo;s heavily armed.#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;I said, lsquo;Hey donrsquo;t kill my son!rsquo; I was in front of them and Jack was [about five feet behind me]. At that time Jack turned around and ran straight back to the house and, in unison these guys moved hellip; and Irsquo;d say there were about 15 cops on the curb ... They all had shotguns and pistols drawn...[Jack] got to the porch and he turned around and two guys got him in the chest with the Tasers and he just ripped them out and took off againhellip;he had thin, thin, really thin jacket and a real thin, super thin t-shirt, I saw [the Tasers] stick to his [chest] and he went like thatrdquo;mdash;indicating grabbing both Tasers and pulling them outmdash;ldquo;and he just tore them away, and uh, you know thatrsquo;s at least 50 thousand [volts]! [One policeman] said, lsquo;He just shook it off like somebody just slapped him!rsquo;#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanAt this point, Northwindrsquo;s telling of what happened that night diverges radically from the police account. The police report says Keewatinawin ran and one of the officers pursuing him fell at his feet, and appeared to be vulnerable to an attack. Northwind says this is not true. #39;When Jack ran over here, he slippedmdash;there was no cop that slipped, I swear to God there was no cop, no! Jack was on the ground... and /spanspanhe /spanspangot up. He (Jack) was on one leg, he was getting up with his hands, and he went like thisrdquo;mdash;he throws his arms in the airmdash;rdquo;and when he did that, they opened fire on him!/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;They said he had something in his hand. There was nothing in his hand, nothing, not a damn thing. That last shot, my knees buckled on me and I said, #39;They killed my son!#39;#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanNorthwind says a police officer ran up to him and said, #39;What are you doing over here?#39; Northwind says he told the policeman, #39;Thatrsquo;s my son you just murdered.#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanNorthwind claims that officers then put two guns to his head to keep him from running to his son./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanHe says that when he told one of the officers, #39;Thatrsquo;s my son you just murdered!#39; the officer replied, #39;Ugh,#39; and ran to the large group of officers. Moments later Northwind says he heard one policeman say, lsquo;Hey, found it!rsquo; and another officer respond, #39;What?#39; #39;An iron bar,#39; came the reply. Northwind says he then heard the first officer say, #39;Oh, damn, now at least we have a story.#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;Right in front of my fucking face they said that!#39; Northwind says. #39;One guy said, lsquo;Thatrsquo;s the father!rsquo; and the other guy says, #39;Oh, shit.#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;They were wrong, and they were in fear. I could see the fear in this guyrsquo;s eyes. I just gave him a tongue-lashing.I asked him, #39;Are you happy? How many more Indians you think you need to kill?#39;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span#39;Finally, I just screamed, lsquo;They killed my baby boy!rsquo;rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanRead more at /spana href="http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/04/03/neighbors-dispute-police-account-shooting-native-man-seattle-148519"spanhttp://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/04/03/neighbors-dispute-police-account-shooting-native-man-seattle-148519/span/a/span/p pnbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="451" src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/cUrbZr2seZKxv2OqU1ZwaNu_QpcYWail4ycOz5mNJlY1YSkgW_c5q7Z7hHiG63O0C7CSw5DFOHPffBl4TMlUg4zWyTvYNjYETEXKIgaT62srNnA72HJwXz96Y6JeBoLNoMtxROW5" width="602" //span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span[image description: it is Feb 2016 and Montantilde;o Northwind, a handsome First Nations single father, holds up a sign in his 3/spanspanrd/spanspan level apartment home in Seattle where he lives with his children and a bunny rabbit named Mr. Bunny and sometimes Thumper. The sign reads ldquo;Justice for Jacksun Keewatinawin,rdquo; and there is a sun drawn between the words Jack and sun. Montantilde;o just started the sign and says he will be coloring it in. Montantilde;o wears rectangular glasses and has a short beard and mustache.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanWhen Montantilde;o and Hawk arrived to their father#39;s home, Montantilde;o described the scene as swarming with police and like a ldquo;shark feeding frenzy.rdquo; There was confusion and yelling and in a moment of fear, Hawk turned to run away. A police officer pointed a gun at Hawk. Montantilde;o yelled, and another officer glared at him and stepped toward him with his hand on his holstered gun. ldquo;Don#39;t run! He#39;s gonna kill you!rdquo; Montantilde;o screamed. The police kept the two sons from speaking with their father. They were put into a police car, and told ldquo;Your dad#39;s okay. Your brother was shot, but he#39;s okay.rdquo; What they were not told was that the police had a gun to the head of their father, and their brother was dead./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanJacksun#39;s family were whisked from the scene of his death into separate mirror-lined interrogation rooms at the Seattle police department, where they were questioned for many hours. Montantilde;o says they weren#39;t allowed to speak to each other and were there until at least 2:30am. Montantilde;o kept asking if they were done. ldquo;I have kids to take care of,#39;rdquo; he said. He kept being told that an investigator was on the way, and that these questions were ldquo;standard protocol.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanWhen the ldquo;investigatorrdquo; finally arrived, he asked Montantilde;o all kinds of intrusive questions about Jacksun, about his sexuality, his sexual preference and drugs of choice. ldquo;Why are you asking me this?rdquo; Montantilde;o asked. ldquo;What does this have to do with you killing my brother?rdquo; These questions have nothing to do with what happened tonight.rdquo; Montantilde;o believes it was during this time that they were building their cover up story, grasping at anything they could to justify the murder of his unarmed brother./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="676" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/4bVWcTtU2koIiP8wJH5fkRBugP3Yy0aiQieyaD8sFZqMN7frOcmEUOlEKOxUM5jeGdqffZ8D6zxKaBKwhcAGPWm_pwKDXh5zxqFSuCNoiAon3hHIiRWfJIiblfatY8z6qZe-UIZx" width="602" //span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span[image description: Two Cree kids playing at the park together, a young Jacksun is lifting his younger sister Tabitha up off the ground to reach handles above their head at a play area. Jacksun#39;s arms are around Tabitha, he is smiling and wearing a black t-shirt, and Tabitha#39;s shirt has flowers on it and she is reaching very far toward her goal. This brother and sister love each other very much.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanMonths after Henry Northwind#39;s death, Montantilde;o made plans with Jacksun#39;s mother, Samantha, to go together to scatter Jacksun and Henry#39;s ashes at the Salmon La Sac area of the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. Salmon Le Sac is between the Cle Elum and Cooper Rivers, and a place that Jacksun used to happily dive into near-freezing ice melt. Montantilde;o smiles when he talks about his big and younger brother, a gentle giant he says, and how he would jump right into that near freezing water, all by himself, and was so happy doing it. ldquo;This was the place they were both happiest, in the mountains and the wilderness with Mother nature,rdquo; said Montantilde;o. At the time the plans were made to spread ashes of their Loved Ones, Samantha was in the fight for Justice for her son, and she was also making great strides in managing her struggle with drug addiction. Montantilde;o says she was doing well, and was living in a sober house. Montantilde;o was looking forward to this time with Samantha, but a month later, she mysteriously died and authorities ruled it ldquo;an overdose.rdquo; Montantilde;o questions this cause of death. ldquo;I believe she was murdered,rdquo; he says. ldquo;Before she passed she said she was attempting to get legal Justice for Jacksun.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="543" src="https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/r4jWBA4qAlItgwL31etVpX3m51WnRmUKpATqIhwq_IxPcNPMhUnAFMc7NSSCncJhh1-8lObwIPYB9ZbynPFnWpfVqFJ93d5M38fESR3-nhXZb0cw-lbXWg75EX71M1NgGhRxBSWA" width="602" //span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"span[image description: Montantilde;o shares the only photo he has of his brother Jacksun, taken in 2002 at the Freemont Street Fair in Seattle. Jacksun is looking at the camera and lovingly holding Montantilde;o#39;s infant son Nahiyaw, and a very young Montantilde;o Jr. is to the left of them. Missing from this photo is Montantilde;o#39;s not yet born daughter Stormy.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;Keewatinawin is Cree for #39;the wind that goes North,#39;rdquo; Montantilde;o says. He continues, smiling. ldquo;My dad told me that - but he also told me some other things that didn#39;t translate the way he said,rdquo; he says with a laugh./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanldquo;Crees are like trees in Canada, we are everywhere. The Cree Nation is one of the largest, but you don#39;t learn about Cree Nation in history. We were late comers to the plains,rdquo; says Montantilde;o. ldquo;We came down and settled in Montana. My dad told me that too.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanWhen asked what Justice looks like for his brother, Montantilde;o says, ldquo;Justice for our family would be to have the case reopened. Accountability for the officers involved, an apology for my brother#39;s wrongful death, and negligent use of force admitted. I want a safe environment for my family to live and grow without worry of killer cops. A wrongful death suit would be the best, but there are no lawyers willing to take the case.rdquo;/span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanimg height="451" src="https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/JLiw1u2ojLynYzHzJvcdMlt0DUJwhwqqwNR0qaZc-TztvF1jWbXiSCl4m82IDewtnVYG1i2a1hKpJa10mg1TrF0EmiHnNIT4Auw4FtnU8KDhptRdocncA1OVBGMfl00WD9ydcg_L" width="602" //spanspan[image description: outside a screening of #whereishope at the D Center at UW-Seattle the sidewalks are brightly chalked with Disabled Loved Ones names lost to police violence with hearts chalked around each name. Jacksun Keewantinawin is in the foreground, surrounded by Idriss Stelley, Kayden Clark, Paul Castaway, Kayla Moore, John T. Williams, Victoria Arellano, Jeremy McDole, James Boyd, Freddie Gray and Tansha Anderson.]/span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanThe Seattle police officers that killed Jacksun Keewatinawin are Michael Spaulding, Stephen Perry and Tyler Speer. Michael Spaulding was the first officer to shoot, the police narrative says that he slipped and fell just before shooting, and that Jacksun raised a weapon (a weapon found by onlookers no where near Jacksun#39;s body). Montantilde;o says that it was his brother that was on the ground, on his knees, unarmed and with his hands in the air./span/span/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanOn February 26, 2016, the three year angelversary of Jacksun#39;s death, Seattle police officer Michael Spaulding is currently on paid ldquo;administrative leaverdquo; for yet another ldquo;officer involved shooting.rdquo; On February 21/spanspanst/spanspan 2016 officer Spaulding shot and killed Black Loved One Che Taylor. Montantilde;o#39;s family is in solidarity with the family of Che Taylor, and has already reached out to them./span/span/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"nbsp;/p p dir="ltr"span id="docs-internal-guid-60cd2a82-1e92-6302-e8de-354d4afa12e0"spanLisa Ganser is a white Disabled genderqueer artist displaced from San Francisco and now living in Olympia, WA. They are the daughter of a momma named Sam and this is their third story as a writer for POOR Magazine./span/span/p
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How You Subject Yourself to Danger

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
p style="margin-left:.75in;"nbsp;/p pWhen you gang bang you subject yourself to danger on a daily basis./p pWhen you gang bang you can get hurt and killed in many different ways./p pWhen you gang bang you can get hurt and killed by your own so called lsquo;homeboysrsquo; from your own gang./p pThere are so many rules that come with gang banging./p pRules are very important in every aspect of life, and gang members find rules to be just as important. When you gang bang you have to follow the rules that are established by gang members before your time. If you somehow break these rules it is a great possibility that you will be disciplined. Discipline comes in many shapes and forms and in the gang life discipline often times mean:/p p(1)nbsp;nbsp; A fight with your own lsquo;homeboyrsquo; from your gang./p p(2)nbsp;nbsp; A fight with more than one person from your gang. When I say lsquo;fight,rsquo; I mean you will get the worst of the deal. If it takes two people to beat you down, it will be two people. If it takes three people, than it will be three people fighting you at one time. All that matters is that you know that you broke a rule and you should never break that rule again, or the fights will happen time after time again./p p(3)nbsp;nbsp; When you gang bang and break a rule that is very important you can be stabbed or shot by your own lsquo;homeboysrsquo;./p pWhen you gang bang you better never break the most important rule. The rule is never to talk to the police. If you talk to the police and tell the police about anyone or anything, you are breaking the rules and you can be killed. In most cases when you gang bang and break the rule of talking to the police and lsquo;snitchingrsquo; on someone you will be killed because to snitch goes against everything true gang bangers believe in. To gang bangers the police are the enemy, and you are supposed to never tell the enemy anything./p p(4)nbsp;nbsp; If you leave your gang to join another gang, it is a great possibility that you will be killed because you will become one of the worst kind of enemies. Once you are a part of a gang you become friends with people and learn where they lay their heads at night. When you gang bang you learn where peoples families live. If you break the rule of switching gangs it is a great fear, and an even greater possibility that you may share your knowledge to the gang bangers in the new gang, and if you do this, than you are again giving the enemy information, and the opportunity to go and kill people or their family. If you switch gangs it is a great possibility that you will be a dead man walking./p p(5)nbsp;nbsp; When you gang bang you have other gang bangers from other neighborhoods who are your enemies so therefore you subject yourself to fights, knife fights, gun fights, and anything else that goes with war./p pWhen you choose to gang bang, you choose a life of war because that is what gang banging is stronguWAR!/u/strong War breeds danger and death, so if you would like to know lsquo;Why you shouldnrsquo;t gang bangrsquo;? To gang bang is to be at war for the rest of your life, that is why you shouldnrsquo;t gang bang./p pnbsp;/p pemldquo;She Ainrsquo;t Never Been Around a Real Man, Until She Been With a Revolutionaryrdquo;- Coming Soon By King William E. Brown, Jr. (AKA) Pye face/em/p p style="margin-left:.5in;"emMinister of Information Litigation for the United K.A.G.E. Brothers International Union i.e. nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;ldquo;Antihostility Grouprdquo;/em/p p style="margin-left:.5in;"emFor the following see: a href="mailto:editor@sfbayview.com"editor@sfbayview.com/a/em/p p style="margin-left:.75in;"- em5 Core Demands/em/p p style="margin-left:.75in;"- emI Contribute to Peace Pledge lsquo;from prison 2 the streetrsquo; /em/p p style="margin-left:.75in;"- emUnited K.A.G.E. Brothers Demands: nbsp;http://sfbayview.com/2013/06/july-8-2013-united-kage-brothers-demands//em/p p style="margin-left:1.0in;"emMin. King William E. Brown Jr. #T58106 nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp; nbsp;nbsp; /ememP.O. Box 7500 PBSP ASUnbsp;nbsp; nbsp; nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Crescent City, CA 95532/em/p pemnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; a href="mailto:Freedom_UKB@yahoo.com/"Freedom_UKB@yahoo.com//a Facebook Kage Brothers/em/p pemP.S. Learn More aboutnbsp; us and how to get involved with a P.Y.E. STREET TEAM i.e. lsquo;Positive Youth Encouragers for 2supnd/sup Chance Self Reliancersquo;/em/p
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Prison Plantation Psychosis/ Notes From the Inside

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
pustrongPrison Plantation Psychosis/strong/u/p pemspanEditors Note: Dr. Voodoo is one of several power-FUL PNNPlantation prison correspondents. As currently and formerly incarcerated poor and indigenous peoples in struggle and resistance with all plantation systems in Amerikkka, POOR Magazine stands in solidarity with all folks on the other side of the razor wire plantation. /span/em/p pem(See attached file for full size image of letter concerning Dr. Voodoo#39;s gang involvement as determined by the razor wire plantation.)/em/p pSolitary confinement health issues are very serious. I did 14 years at Pelican Bay state Prison Isolation. Irsquo;m now writing about Prison Plantation Psychosis and the effect of being isolated. Released from isolation ldquo;hellrdquo; in May 2015, any questions?/p pContact Dr. Voodoo/p pKeller John #H-52472/p pPO Box 290066, B-5-115/p pRepresa, CA, 95671/p pInnocent Grass Roots Activist who could prove my innocence: ldquo;Soul Brother nbsp;J Voodoordquo;/p
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Writing by T. Yeargin: While Men and Women Weep Father Who are You? Who Am I and Human Development

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
p align="center"uWHILE MEN AND WOMEN WEEP/u/p p align="center"As they do now, Irsquo;ll fight for their rights/p p align="center"to be free,/p p align="center"While little children go hungry as they do now,/p p align="center"I will try to feed them with the truth so they will/p p align="center"never go hungry./p p align="center"nbsp;/p p align="center"While men go to prison,/p p align="center"In and out as they do now,/p p align="center"Irsquo;ll fight to be free and stand on/p p align="center"The word of god!/p p align="center"nbsp;/p p align="center"While there is a poor lost girl or boy/p p align="center"In the streets,/p p align="center"With nowhere to go,/p p align="center"I will try to lead them/p p align="center"To the right way./p p align="center"nbsp;/p p align="center"While there remains one lost dark soul/p p align="center"With no cause/p p align="center"And is confused about who they are/p p align="center"And donrsquo;t know the truth,/p p align="center"Then Irsquo;ll fight to the very end to let them know!/p p align="center"emBy Brother Shabazz AKA T. Yeargin/em/p p align="center"nbsp;/p pstronguFather, Who are you?/u/strong/p pI ask this because we serve life sentences and have left our children and teens to do for themselves./p pSome of us donrsquo;t like the way other people raise our teens now, but you and I are left out of the job that was ours. We are upset because our sons and daughters took on another person as their idol because we were not there./p pNow, I ask why you always do what he says. I am your father. Why donrsquo;t you listen to me?/p pOur young teens will say to us who left. Dad, who are you? Because you were never around, I talked to my uncle and my stepfather about life and what I wanted to be./p pThey were my idols growing up and also some of my friendsrsquo; fathers and mothers./p pNow you come into my life asking me who are they to teach me because thatrsquo;s your job! Dad, you let mom and us down./p pNow, my brothers want to know who you are and where you have been./p pI ask again, who are you? If you know who you are, take time to love and understand your children. Care for them and talk to them too./p pI come to you in concern for all prisoners that are locked up and trying to do something better with their lives, so that we can get back into society. We have a lot of inmates here in prison that have families out there trying to do their best./p pHere at Chuckawalla Valley State Prison we are trying to start a young menrsquo;s awareness group dealing with insight into criminal behavior, etc. Since we are a group of older fathers in prison we do need help from the public. We do need volunteers to serve as mentors for men who want to change their lives so they can be better fathers. This program needs to be here. Some fathers in here are really hurting and donrsquo;t know how to let it out. This is why when society hears about fathers behind bars many people on the outside can say this program is helping our young fathers to learn to avoid violence./p pOur young men need help and our children too, so will you please hear our cry so all of us can save our children. To help our young men, it takes all of us. It has to be something that we in here can use or feel that hits us hard at home, so we fathers can look at ourselves with more pride and dignity. As we lift up one another we lift up ourselves./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; -T. Yeargin/p pemHelp us to look out for our young children and young men out there!/em/p p align="center"nbsp;/p pstronguWho Am I/u/strong/p pOne of the greatest loves anyone can experience is having the ability to feel a deep clearness of concern for another person./p pNow I have the capacity to love myself and others and their feelings as well, in the sense of true concern./p pBecause now I do know, itrsquo;s not about me all the time. I have to think about others too. First, I must see and value myself as a good person worthy of being loved as others love themselves and their families./p pWho am I? Now Irsquo;m a person who has to think of others as well as myself.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; Once Irsquo;ve made this change, then I know I was the cause of the problem dealing with other people not them./p pAs I learn these programs about violence and the magnitude of impact especially with life crimes, I know there is never just one victim. I share this with my ability to understand who and how my crime affected me and others./p pYes, there were many people I hurt that were around me like family and friends. Being a father, a son, and a teacher of men here in prison, I now can look honestly into myself and my past actions, so I can help others as well as myself./p pnbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp; -T. Yeargin/p pemP.S. Do you men, and women, on the outside know who you are?/em/p pnbsp;/p pstronguHuman Development/u/strong/p pControlling Criminal Behavior: When men are in prison trying to stay at peace with themselves, some staff add to the bad behavior by turning men against each other. This makes us seem like we are the ones starting all the problems. A lot of us lifers and other men with lesser time are really trying to get out while it seems that some of these C/Orsquo;s and staff try to make it bad for us, so they can keep a job by saying we will never be rehabilitated. Why do we keep false hopes alive, when we as men know that our young men need help? I say this because drugs and street life donrsquo;t help any of us. Stop saying its drugs; itrsquo;s not. Most of us were poor and lived in low rent housing with our mothers and fathers. Some of us donrsquo;t even know our fathers. When you grow up poor in a low rent environment, with your mother just barely making a living for your little sisters and brothers, you take to the street life and try to be the man of the house. You stop going to school because you want to make it better for all of you. I say a lot of these words to let others know that some of us have been raised in unstable homes, and bad behavior brings us to prison. We donrsquo;t want anyone telling us what to do. It didnrsquo;t work then and it doesnrsquo;t work now, because of lies and false hopes. We can make a fast buck and live the good life. Drugs are not all the causes of criminal behavior. It sometimes goes back to childhood, poverty, your up-bringing and neighborhood. This is another reason why the powers that be say that we donrsquo;t want to be rehabilitated. Some of us get help out of coming to prison knowing that this isnrsquo;t it. The powers that be never talk about the ones that get out and try to give back our communities. Some young men are lost because of their upbringing. Right now I live here in prison and I hear all the time itrsquo;s the environment, so anything that doesnrsquo;t make sense is what we go for. The human being has to start his or her development at home. Then later he or she goes off to school and out in the streets. Then he or she starts picking up good or bad habits. Yes, drugs play a part sometimes. The problems that society is missing are that growing up poor, living in low rent housing, mother on welfare, just barely making ends meet, causes people to do anything to survive. Let me say before theirs any misunderstanding not allnbsp; of us were on welfare, but living in an environment of low rent housing causes some of us to be unstable and have behavioral problems. Yes, some of our young people make something of themselves, but some just choose the easy way, crime! Itrsquo;s not all in the home where the mother or father did the best he or she could. Now stop saying drugs are behind every crime because there are so many problems in society that play a big part on how our childrenrsquo;s minds develop. These problems also affect all of us. Donrsquo;t turn your back on the young men and women who are trying to grow into something better./p pBy,/p pT. Yeargin/p
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Men and Women's Awareness Reaching Out to Young Parents- Notes from the Inside

09/24/2021 - 07:17 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
puMen and Women#39;s Awareness Reaching Out to Young Parents/u/p pI am writing this program on behalf of myself and other older men, who have benefited somewhat over the years from self-hope programs that were available. These programs gave us not only valuable insight and knowledge, but also the ability to grasp, interpret, and address issues in our lives and to become more responsible men. I felt that the best way for us to offer help to these young men was for us to seek approval to start a Young men#39;s and Women#39;s Awareness Group. This program would wake up some of our young people; addressing some specific issues no one knows about. We would use unscripted dialogue with our young people, to address their issues and help resolve problems. Problems we didn#39;t know about, as opposed to using a scientific, dispassionate or a clinical approach that sometimes does not appeal to their interests. We have created a Young Men and Women#39;s Awareness that will use straight talk, which will help them be honest and sincere and exchange valuable information between young and older men and women. The purpose is to help them find better ways to deal with their negative behavior that has gone unchecked for so long. This eight week program will be the foundation for exchanging meaningful dialogue and using the facts to obtain a better relationship with our young men, women, and children./p pRespectfully Submitted,/p pT. Yeargin/p pProgram Director/p
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