Story Archives 2019

Are We Finally Breaking Out of The Religious Model of Disability: The Black Community

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body
As Black disabled man living in the twenty-first century, who grew up in the disabled and Black community on the east coast in the 70’s and 80’s, I have seen how the Black community has been left behind in the disability movements, from civil rights that have led to disability pride, models of disability, disability arts/culture, and disability studies– leading to publications like newsletters to magazines to news articles to books to movies.
 
I wrote this to explain where the Black non-disabled community is at when it comes to all that is disability and how it affects Black disabled people today. These are only my assumptions and experiences. At the end there is a list on my resources i.e. my books, articles, videos, audio and terms
 
I start with the obvious and that is in the US race and racism plays a big role not only in our community, but in the movements and organizations we start, and who has the privilege to start movements/organizations. We have seen it time and time again– like in the women’s movement and LGBTQ movements, the ones who have the first crack in not only establishing civil rights, organizations, articles, and becoming scholars to change popular thinking and set up future norms, are those in the dominate culture– more often White males & females. So it’s a forfeit to say that White straight males and females who were parents of disabled children had first crack in not only getting civil rights/educational rights for their children with disabilities, but also were the main push to change societal attitudes towards their children with disabilities.
 
We also must realize and question who had the space, opportunity, time, and freedom from oppression to sit down, to think, write, and be empowered to come up with ways to see disability differently. To others like doctors, professionals, the state to parents to persons with disabilities in all of these groups had the power to come up with ways we view disabilities and most of the time these people were White middle to wealthy class and had institutional power and they ran with it sometimes in a good and bad ways. One good way was to write out stages of societal attitudes toward people with disabilities– what many have called models of disability. The people who had the time, privilege, and power came up with many models of disability but the most popular are:
 
Religious/Moral Model: the idea that disabilities are essentially a test of faith or even salvation in nature.  If the person does not experience the physical healing of their disability, he or she is regarded as having a lack of faith in God.
 
Economic Model of Disability: from the viewpoint of economic analysis, focusing on ‘the various disabling effects of an impairment on a person’s capabilities, and in particular on labour and employment capabilities’ (Armstrong, Noble & Rosenbaum 2006:151,original emphasis).
 
Expert/Professional Model: can be seen as an offshoot of the Medical Model. Within its framework, professionals follow a process of identifying the impairment and its limitations (using the Medical Model), and taking the necessary action to improve the position of the disabled person. This has tended to produce a system in which an authoritarian, over-active service provider prescribes and acts for a passive client.
 
Tragedy/Charity Model: depicts disabled people as victims of circumstance, deserving of pity. This and Medical Model are probably the ones most used by non-disabled people to define and explain disability.
 
Traditionally used by charities in the competitive business of fund-raising, the application of the Tragedy/Charity Model is graphically illustrated in the televised Children in Need appeals in which disabled children are depicted alongside young “victims” of famine, poverty, child abuse and other circumstances.
 
Medical Model: says that disability results from an individual person’s physical or mental limitations, and is largely unconnected to the social or geographical environments. It is sometimes referred to as the Biological-Inferiority or Functional-Limitation Model.
 
It is illustrated by the World Health Organisation’s definitions, which significantly were devised by doctors:
 
Impairment: any loss or abnormality of psychological or anatomical structure or function.
 
Disability: any restriction or lack of ability (resulting from an impairment) to perform an activity in the manner or within the range considered ordinary for a human being.
 
Rights Based Model: is primarily a fight for access to the privileges people would otherwise have had if they were not disabled. A focus on rights is not a struggle for fundamental social change; rather, it strives to make changes within the existing system.
 
The idea behind disability rights is that:
 
A human rights approach to disability acknowledges that people with disabilities are rights holders and that social structures and policies restricting or ignoring the rights of people with disabilities often lead to discrimination and exclusion. A human rights perspective requires society, particularly governments, to actively promote the necessary conditions for all individuals to fully realize their rights.
 
Social Model: views disability as a consequence of environmental, social and attitudinal barriers that prevent people with impairments from maximum participation in society. It is best summarised in the definition of disability from the Disabled Peoples’ International:
 
“the loss or limitation of opportunities to take part in the normal life of the community on an equal level with others, due to physical or social barriers.”
 
 
 
Ableism: is discrimination against people with disabilities or who are perceived to have disabilities. Ableism characterizes persons as defined by their disabilities and as inferior to the non-disabled. On this basis, people are assigned or denied certain perceived abilities or skills.
 
In ableist societies, people with disabilities are viewed as less valuable, or even less than human.
 
Ableism can also be better understood by reading literature published by those who experience disability and ableism first-hand. Disability Studies is an academic discipline that is also beneficial to explore to gain a better understanding of ableism.
 
As the dominant White disability society pushed from model to model of disability, the Black community of course faced different experiences throughout time in the US, from slavery to Jim Crow to lynching and survival all of these experiences add to the ability to take part of the movement of people with disabilities including moving from outdated models of disability.
 
Because of the above I say that the general Black non-disabled community, even in the twenty-first century, are still in the mixture of religious/charity model of disability that depicts disabled people as victims of circumstance who are deserving of pity and the Religious Model views disability as a punishment inflicted upon an individual or family by an external force that negatively shaped their views on disability. On top of the above with the institution of slavey that was focus on a strong body and mind the common practice of hiding disability was a chose between living or being killed. I think the mixture of slavery and a new religion where it taught of healing aka to take away the disability helped enforce the religious model/charity model of disability in early African Americans that hasn’t been fully challenged on a large scale with funding.
 
All of this with killing of bodies that couldn’t work reshaped early African’s minds. We concur with Dr. Joy DeGruy Leary’s (2005) proposition that African Americans experience what she has termed Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome (PTSS). Her thesis holds that the exploitation, pain, and trauma that endure in “slavery’s afterlife” (Hartman, 2003) were produced from the pervasive dehumanization and indifference to the harms caused by slavery to Black people. Black people have never received acknowledgement, apology, compensation, or therapeutic treatment that would enable them to both cope with and make sense of the abuses, teachings of slavery and the white supremacy that replaced it.
 
So as the dominate White disability continue achieve new heights that benefits us all, my question, will non-disabled Black community ever receive that needed education and a lift up to at least the social model of disability and up to date disability terminology?
 
Or with the new generation on social media and going into disability studies, disability justice/cultural movements that was began by Black/Brown artists/activists with disabilities like Sins Invalid and Krip-Hop Nation,  National Black  Disability Coalition, Harriet Tubman Collective among others will not only take over the thinking of the older generation but will and have created their own politics, terminology and arts. In 2019 we must continue the education of the Black community about appropriate terms when talking about people with disabilities.
 
The Black community must be open to receiving this education from Black disabled activists/writers and scholars and it must be in all avenues, from national organizations, to our political leaders, to our educators, to our entertainers, and so on. If not then the Black non-disabled community will be at risk of being harmful, holding back progress thus becoming irrelevant to the future of Black disabled people.
 
Some examples of appropriate terms:
 
Term no longer in use: the disabled
Term Now Used: people with disabilities or disabled people
 
Term no longer in use: wheelchair-bound
Term Now Used: person who uses a wheelchair
 
Term no longer in use: confined to a wheelchair
Term Now Used: wheelchair user
 
Term no longer in use: cripple, spastic, victim
Term Now Used: disabled person, person with a disability
 
Term no longer in use: the handicapped
Term Now Used: disabled person, person with a disability
 
Term no longer in use: mental handicap
Term Now Used: intellectual disability
 
Term no longer in use: mentally handicapped
Term Now Used: intellectually disabled
 
Term no longer in use: normal
Term Now Used: non-disabled
 
Term no longer in use: schizo, mad, crazy
Term Now Used: person with a mental health disability
 
Term no longer in use: suffers from (e.g. asthma)
Term Now Used: has (e.g. asthma)
 
 
 
Additional resources for Black families who have disabled children or who just want to learn about a small portion of Black disabled art history:
 
Black Disabled Art History 101 (Paperback)
By Leroy Moore Jr, Nicola A. McClung (Editor), Emily A. Nusbaum (Editor)
 
Leroy Moore Resources Books & Moore
Krip Hop Nation Graphic Novel Vol 1
 
 
Video: Profile on Krip-Hop Nation
 
 
 
 
Krip-Hop Nation’s Fact Sheet
Part One of Leroy’s Short Historical view of Black Disabled Bodies in America Dealing With Slavery Part two Will Cover Lynching https://www.poormagazine.org/node/5788
 
Artist/Activist/Krip-Hop Nation Founder Leroy Moore’s busy 2019 inc. African Disabled Musicians Summer Bay Area Festival in July
 
Black Disabled Men Get Together (2016) (Captioned)
 
Episode 33: “Welcome to Krip-Hop Nation” – A Conversation About Black Disability Issues w/ Leroy F. Moore Jr.
 
Black Disabled Men Talk – What Does the Black/Black Disabled Community Need To Do!
 
 
 
Painting by Asian Robles of Leroy Moore Jr. teaching
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People Skool for Poverty Skolaz- Joe

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body
A Payee
 
In 2017 mid-November, in crisis, my fear grips me vice-tight. Already missed two housing dates, a third postponed.
 
At last! I visit a Mr. Olive.
 
He's a real estate person who says, "A tenant moved out wants to move back in, but I think you'd fit better and honor and enjoy this place more."
 
We shake hands, exchange paperwork-money. Suddenly! I've got KEYS! They Glitter as if they're Pearls in my Hand! The Payee is a person, business, or third party given part of a recipients monthly income by the state, government, or both. Representative Payee's like their clients are struggling to survive. 2.5 million or more may be cheating their charges out of their checks every month. [Though I could be wrong on statistics].
 
My worst fear: talking my way free of my payee. When my courage is at it zenith; I'm told "Don't speak or contact your payee in anyway, Live your life in your new space."
 
Simultaneously, a family crisis happens, I believe that's what caused my courage to flair.
 
Which is the most urgent between three conflicting problems! I had to deal with two but not a third. My Payee Had To GO! I switched from a personal payee for an impersonal one.
 
Later I'm freed from this payee too [Fine With Me]. The gripping vice-tight fear gone, my way to self-entitled survival enable me to live a better, stable life. Other lives like my own have depended on many people, organizations, helping me/us at critical junctions when I was psychologically paralyzed in vice-tight fear. I avoid all kinds of hassles. At this stage of the game, I'm lazy if not wise. My opinion: Those that can use debit cards do so. Those needing more help, the use of charitable orgs or reputable businesses with proven integrity may be a better way.
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Escuela de la gente /People Skool for Youth Poverty Skolaz- Mariela

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

(scroll down for English)

 
Me llamo Mariela y tengo 22 años. El 16 de junio de 2014, crucé la frontera, cuando era menor de edad. 
 Fui capturado por ICE, y fue llevada a un centro de detención. Las llamamos las cajas de hielo, por el frío extremo dentro de esos lugares. Acababa de cruzar el río Bravo, y todavía estaba empapada. Tenía mucho frío, y era media noche. ¿Cómo puedo olvidar ese día? Es algo que marcó mi vida.
Se llevaron mi suéter, mis cordones e incluso mi braziel. Me dejaron con mi camisa y mis pantalones, empapados. A veces nos daban sándwiches viejos, manzanas y agua.
Había niños, bebés, mujeres embarazadas y todo tipo de mujeres de diferentes edades. ¿Cómo se siente el corazón al ver que todavía nos tratan de esta manera? ¿Nosotros, los migrantes?
Con las mujeres embarazadas en 2019, ellas están viviendo en las condiciones más difíciles. Cómo tratan a los bebés, y a las familias. Cómo se han separado en la frontera. Incluso los niños, son dados en adopción aquí en los EE.UU., a pesar de que tienen sus propias familias. Pero por el único acto de haber estado separados en la frontera, el gobierno siente que ahora somos de su propiedad.
En la frontera, los recursos son muy limitados. Ni siquiera puedes comunicarte con tu propia familia.
Las estadísticas dicen que alrededor de 1,000 niños han sido puestos en la lista de espera de casos de asilo. O incluso simplemente tienen la oportunidad de que el gobierno de los Estados Unidos escuche lo que ha pasado. Tienen acceso limitado a muchos servicios esenciales para su supervivencia. Por ejemplo, la educación, el apoyo psicológico e incluso la atención médica
Muchos niños pequeños cruzan la frontera y ni siquiera saben por qué. Muchos de ellos han sido explotados, abusados, extorsionados o simplemente en extrema pobreza en sus países.
Desearía que todo cambiara y dejaran de discriminar a los migrantes. Porque al final, este país no es nada sin la gente migrante.
Si vas a un restaurante, es gente migrante trabajando allí. Si vas al campo, la gente migrante trabaja allí. Si vas a obras, es lo mismo. Los migrantes trabajan allí. ¿Por qué nos discriminan? Al final, todos somos americanos. Estados Unidos es América del Norte. En nuestros países, como de donde soy, somos Centroamérica. Al final, todos somos americanos.
 
 
 
My name is Mariela, and I'm 22 years old. On the 16th of June, 2014, I crossed the border, when I was a minor. 
I was caught by ICE, and was taken to a detention center. We called them the ice boxes, because of the extreme cold inside these places. I had just crossed the River Bravo, and I was still soaking wet. I was really cold, and it was the middle of the night. How can I forget that day? It's something that marked my life. 
They took my sweater, my shoelaces, and even my bra. They just left me with my shirt and pants, soaking wet. Sometimes they would feed us old sandwiches, some apples and water. 
There were children, babies, pregnant women, and all kinds of women of different ages. How does the heart feel to see that they still keep treating us this way? We, the migrant people?
With pregnant women in 2019, they are living in the hardest conditions. How they treat babies, families. How they have been separated at the border. Even children, they are given out for adoption here in the US, even though they have their own families. But for the sole act of having been separated at the border, the government feels like we're now their property.
At the border, resources are very limited. You can't even communicate with your own family. 
Statistics say that about 1,000 children have been put on the holding list waiting for asylum cases. Or even just have the opportunity for the US government to listen to what they've been through. They have limited access to many services. Essentials for their survival. For example, education, psychological support and even medical attention
Many young children cross the border and don't even know why. Many of them have been exploited, abused, extorted or simply in extreme poverty in their countries. 
I wish that everything would change, and they would stop discriminating against migrants. Because at the end, this country is nothing without the migrant people.
If you go to a restaurant, it's migrant people working there. If you go to the field, migrant people work there. If you go to construction sites, it's the same. Migrant people work there. Why do we get discriminated against?
In the end, we are all American. The United States is North America. In our countries, like where I'm from, we are Central America. At the end, we're all Americans. 
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Escuela de la gente para savios de pobreza jovenes/ People Skool for Poverty Skolaz- Alex- Youth Poverty Skola

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

(scroll down for English)

 
Mi nombre es Alexander y tengo 12 años. Cuando tenía unos 4 o 5 años, me mandaron a patadas del lugar donde vivía con mi mama. Pienso que era uno de los días más horribles de mi vida. 
Mi madre e yo terminamos viviendo en la calle porque no teníamos refugio ni donde ir. 
 
Nos quedamos dormiendo en las calles. Pero nunca nos quedamos en la misma calle, siempre nos movíamos por el miedo. Asi que nos mudamos de calle a calle para poder descansar un poco.
 
Lo que me pasó a mi no es algo que sucede raramente. O no. Lo que me pasó a mi es más común de lo que crees.
 
Solo en San Francisco, hay unas 7,000 personas viviendo en las calles. La mayoría son familias con niños pequenos. Imaginese cuántas familias sin hogar en una ciudad llena de lugares habitables y vacíos. Y Por qué? Porque los propietarios no los acceptan si no tienen buen crédito o dinero.
 
Y Sabes por qué no hay dinero? Porque no hay trabajo para los pobres. Solo hay trabajo para los que ya tienen dinero. ¿Y por qué los ricos quieren trabajar cuando ya tienen dinero? ¿Por qué no dar empleo a las personas que realmente necesitan esos trabajos? 
 
Mi opinión es que el gobierno necesita decirle a las empresas que contraten a gente pobre. Porque si trabajamos, tendremos dinero. Y con dinero, puedes rentar donde vivir. Y cuando la gente vive en viviendas, no habrá gente viviendo en las calles.  
 
 
 
My name is Alexander, and I'm 12 years old. When I was about four or five years old, I was kicked out from the place where I was living with my mother. I think it was one of the most horrible days of my life. Me and my mother wound up living in the streets, because we didn't have refuge or anywhere to go to. 
 
We ended up sleeping on the streets. But we never stayed in the same street, we always moved, because of fear. So we moved from street to street, just to get some rest. 
 
What happened to me is not something that happens rarely. Oh no. What happened to me is more common than you think. 
 
In San Francisco alone, there's about 7,000 people living in the streets currently. The majority are families with small children. Imagine how many houseless families, and in a city full of vacant, livable places. And why? Becuase the landlords won't accept them. If you don't have good credit or money. 
 
And do you know why there's no money? Because there is no work for poor people. There's only work for people with money. And why do rich people want to work, when they already have enough money? Why not give employment to people who really need those jobs?
 
My opinion is that the governement needs to tell companies to hire poor people. Because if we work, we'll have money. And with money, you can rent and have a place to live. And when people live in housing, there won't be people living on the streets.
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People Skool for Poverty Skolaz- Tacuma

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Everything is a Waiting List

 

I was on my way home from middle school one day. WHAT! A sheriff deputy is at my house with a pink lockout notice on the door and my mom's in tears. What to do, another homeless family in SF. My mother has been on the Section 8 waiting list for years.

It took 20 years to get a Section 8 place. The old apartment went from $650 to $3500 in one month. After years of homelessness as a single mother, three young boys and two girls our lives are now devastated. You grow up in the streets then lives change daily. Drugs and everything that goes with that life. Mostly death. 

I myself have been homeless for 10 years waiting in lines at Glide. Sometimes there were no beds so back to the streets. Long ass waiting list destroys lives. 

There are 8,011 homeless families in San Francisco as of now. And here we are in 2019. The waiting list for Section 8 says four to five years. A lot of things change in that time. Families are divided. It trickles down to the next generation of homeless.

Will I have to be on the waiting list all my life? What we need is to make new homeless laws to protect families and just homeless people in general. We as San Franciscans have gotten over 60 million in homeless funds. Where is the money? Tied up in City Hall.

I'm going to City hall and taking some friends in to talk to those who are accountable for this waiting list. The money is here. Why do I have to wait!

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Roofless Radio Nashville- Denzel Caldwell

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

I want to make known some of the work that we're doing here to fight poverty. My name is Denzel Caldwell, I'm one of the co-founders of Nashville Economic Justice Alliance, along with Howard Allen. We're here to reclaim this land. As colonized people, as people who are homeful, as people who are considered less than human here. And one of the primary things that we're trying to do in this city and ultimately in this state is to bring about a guaranteed basic income in the city and state. And we want to make it clear that this is nothing like some of the things that you may see on the presidential level. We're trying to enhance the things that are already provided, that should be provided. Because housing is a right, it's a human right. It's not a privilege. It shouldn't be a privilege. It should be a right. Nashville Economic Justice Alliance is here, we're about to make this happen with y'all. Not for, but with y'all. And we just wanted to make our presence known.

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Roofless Radio Nashville- Brian Jones

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

My name is Brian Jones. I'm with Open Table. Supporting this event today, and I'm glad to share back. Homeless was hard for me. I didn't have nowhere to go, no feelings. I was going place to place to lay my head. Cried many nights, praying to God for a way out.

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Roofless Radio Nashville- Q&A with Clarissa Hayes and Open Table

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Q: So tell us, how does the po'lice interact with us folks on the street here?

 

A: It's hurting my heart. When I come downtown, I see people sleeping at bus stops. In the grass. Stuff like that. I'm telling these people to get off these streets, try to find a room or something. I'm helping a couple right now, named Tony and Leanne, get off these streets.

 

Q: And do the cops give citations when you on the street? How does that work? You said that happened to you.

 

A: I got one at 3 o' clock in the morning. They pulled up on the sidewalk with their flashes on my eyes. Woke everybody up. It's like, wake up, we've got cops right here.

 

Q: And, then did they take your stuff? Because in the Bay, they take our stuff and throw it away, and they pretend we're going to get it back.

 

A: We kept most of our stuff. I had a little small things with me.

 

Q: Do you know about encampments? Do they take their stuff?

 

A: They used to. And at the higher profile encampments where a lot of advocates and outreach workers are present, we've gotten a little more savvy and people know their rights a little bit more. But they used to. We've had situations of entire sweeps, where they pull stuff in the dumpster with no notice. And people lose their birth certificates, their IDs, their only possessions in this world. We've done so much advocacy here, that that's one of the things that happens less now. But it does still happen in small ways.

 

Q: Your local politricksters, are they mainly Republican?

 

A: Tennessee is a mostly Republican state, but we have some Democratic cores in the cities. Like Nashville, Memphis and others. But what's really hard is that we'll finally get some good legislation passed on the city level, that'll be good in terms of housing or criminalization or wages, and then what happens is the state comes in and they shut it down and they preempt it. And they say, you can't do that in this state because XYZ. So it's a battle. We want revolution, but even reform is a battle, getting those small things passed.

 

Q: Can one of you tell me about you guys trying to build the tiny houses, and what's going on with that?

 

A: Yeah. So I work with a non-profit, Open Table Nashville, and we're in solidarity with our friends who are dying. And we have people dying every month on waiting lists for housing. A lot of medical vulnerabilities, we've got a lot of other issues. Getting discharged from the hospital to the streets. And we are building a micro-home village because we want to end the deaths, and give people a place to recover and kind of respite, and community. And we decided to partner with this church here to use religious land, because there's a lot of great legal loopholes with religious land use. And groups that really truly believe it is their religion to care for the poor and provide housing and justice. They can use their land for things that can't be overly burdened by zoning laws. So, we didn't have to go through a zoning change for this land to build the micro-home villages that we have up. But what happened is, the neighbors got really pissed. Some of them, not all of them. A small group of neighbors came and they said, we're suing the church. The neighbors are suing this church, for trying to house our people that are dying. And we are fighting that, of course. We've won a couple levels, they keep appealing it. So now it's up at the Tennessee Supreme Court level. 

 

Q: Let me back up. On what law are they suing?

 

A: They said that they-- well, it's bullshit, first of all.

 

A: That's too much. It's extra.

 

A: That is. So they said that going through the zoning process didn't substantially burden the church. But it did. Because we would have never gotten it through the zoning, a zoning change. Because the council memburber in this district didn't want the project. So, he would have been against it. And we said we would have been substantially burdened.

 

Q: That's a law, to say substantially burdened?

 

A: The in the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. It's RLUIPA. And it allows religious groups to provide things like sanctuary. It allows them to do things like that, that zoning may not allow. But that their freedom of religion trumps the zoning laws of the area. Basically.

 

Q: OK, so that was how you moved on it.

 

A: That was how we moved on it. 

 

Q: And these people are saying that that's not true?

 

A: Yep. And they're losing. So.

 

A: None whatsoever.

 

Q: Right? Because how can they say that's not true. Under what authority.

 

A: They're losing. They just-- they're making it really hard.

 

A: Just like yesterday, they tore our trees down.

 

A: Where in the park. 

 

A: In the park, they tore our trees down, where nobody cannot sleep.

 

A: What else did they put in, in the park?

 

A: Cactus.

 

A: They put in cactus, so they couldn't lean their back against the wall.

 

A: Like downtown. And they tore our benches up too. We had two benches, one by the fence and one by the trash cans, and they tore that up.

 

A: Over 30 have been removed.

 

A: Over 30 have been removed.

 

Q: They do that same thing [in the Bay].

 

A: And now, 505 bought the library park from us.

 

A: Not yet. There's a developer that is trying to buy the park in front of the National Public Library.

 

A: And it will turn into--

 

Q: Wait, wait. A devil-oper is trying to buy a public park. That's on a new level fam.

 

A: It is.

 

A: It is. And turn it into a 65-story luxury condo.

 

Q: Wait! Under what loophole is that BS.

 

A: And then they would make the library park move to a different location. 

 

A: He wants to do a land swap to dominate Church St. Because he's already got three or four developments on Church St. 

 

Q: Let's call this wealth hoarder out. What's his name?

 

A: His name is Tony Giartano. We call him Tony G, which is the mafia name we gave him.

 

A: They're going to turn our library into a strip mall.

 

A: We're fighting back. A lot of people are not happy about it and a lot of people are writing back.

 

A: I'm not happy about it at all. When I found out, I was about to cry.

 

Q: I'm sure. That ain't even right though. That's even not legally right,

 

A: It was a big mess.

 

Q: Under their own laws that's not legal.

 

A: That's where all the kids go after school. 

 

Q: Right. And it's probably conveniently located, for a reason. 

 

A: It's right on transportation. The downtown library is where a lot of folks are able to access all of the internet, clearly. But also the downtown library's found this balance of holding that space for folks. They're great. It's one of the few spaces downtown that you can actually go to the bathroom.

 

Q: And the other bathroom you can go to is the one down the parking garage.

 

A: Yeah. So we've got some work to do here. 

 

A: I've going to sit and start making a list of what's going on in the park.

 

Q: Yeah, because you can report every week, right?

 

A: Yes. Because this is what I do. This is what I do for the homeless. Trying to tell them where to sleep, where they can lay their heads.

 

Q: And for people listening and viewing, Poor News Network and Roofless Radio, our up and coming Roofless Radio reporter is:

 

A: Clarissa Hayes.

 

Q: Get ready. Because Nashville and Califaztlan has a new reporter. And she's going to be telling the truth every day.

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Roofless Radio Nashville- Susan

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Hi, I'm Susan, and I'm from Nashville. I've been in housing for almost two years now. I had let some houseless people stay with me, that were living in their car. And it was 100 degrees plus outside. I thought, well, I can let them stay a couple days. In the meantime, over time, their car got towed from the parking lot at the apartments where I live. And then luckily, they had another vehicle. That was on its last tire, so to speak. Anyway, I went to the apartment complex to the office, and the manager said, well, I have some papers for you that's going to be in the mail. And I thought, oh no, I'm fixing to get evicted. Because I let some people stay the night.

 

She's a sick woman. They're in their 40s, but you can be sick at 10 years old, and still need a place to stay. Just because they're not elderly or my kinfolks-- and even if they were my kinfolks, would they have let them stay then? 

 

Another friend of mine, he had some medical issues, and he had spent the night. The next day, he said Susan, please call me an ambulance. He said, I've got to go to the hospital. Well, before the ambulance even got there, the apartment manager was down there. And she's like, did he stay with you last night? I said, yes ma'am, he did. You know, I said, he's very sick. He wound up staying at the hospital for nine days. Nine days in the hospital. I'm like- give me a break.

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Roofless Radio Nashville- It City

09/23/2021 - 14:22 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

They call it the It City. May have left off two letters in front. But it's Nashville, Tennessee. I'm one of the faces that's houseless, in what society calls homelessness. The system is not a fair system for people in poverty. I call it domestic terrorism. We're all here just for a short time. And I'm housless, what society calls homeless. One day I'll have a mansion, because my savior said I would. I forgive those that know not what they do. My savior was poor and housless also. But he saved the world. So I'm in pretty good company. I speak to teach. But my words are hollow, because they don't listen. But I still know that I'm not alone.

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