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Autobiography of the Unborn

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/421/photo_2_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Samuel Irving/p pbr /Daughter drained by liquored fearbr / br /Daddy sets aflame momma’s cerebralbr / br /With past falsehoods and nickel worsted promisesbr / br /Splitting ties amongst paralyzed snuffles/p pbr /Blue boys greet doors with handshakesbr / br /IMy innocence is gone!/i/p pbr /Daddy responds with warm cursesbr / br /Scotched up by a twistbr / br /Of his self reality and poolsbr / br /Of iniquity’s pleasures /p pbr /Problematic name questbr / br /Come across drunk nothings in responsebr / br /But Daddy’s getting a new suit todaybr / br /As Momma awaits trials of doubt/p pbr /Daddy hangs onto the worldbr / br /As it spins around muffled soundsbr / br /Of fist on fleshbr / br /With no warm welcomebr / br /To Momma’s bruised cranium /p pbr /Announcing her engagementbr / br /To months of 9 upon vacationsbr / br /Non-existent, the cycle speeds upbr / br /I8,7,6,5/ibr / br /But it is halted at 4 /p pbr /Daughter sheds silent tearsbr / br /As the afterbirth names himselfbr / br /In face reflections,br / br /Forced by kicks in womb’s doors/p pbr /Daddy’s decadent lifestylebr / br /Catches 22 ounces of shallow downsidesbr / br /Mamma’s tired of slave beatingsbr / br /She’s breaking away for 40 days/p pbr /On behalf of the unbornbr / br /Before marital deliverance can come/p p/p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Keep the Poor Poor Pt 4: Useless Life Skills

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrongThe Insiders' Instruction Manual/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/426/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Donna Anderson/PNN Texas Correspondent/p pThe fourth in a series of satirical policy explanations for government and private social service providers. The prevalence of hypocritical practices in social services leads PNN Texas correspondent Donna Anderson to conclude that there must be an interagency conspiracy to keep the poor poor. The scenarios and statements presented here are based on her actual experiences during 12 years in social services./p p Maintaining the illusion of some actual intervention in the problem of poverty is important for both people experiencing poverty and the middle and upper classes. Intervention in the form of classes on subjects such as budgeting, parenting, job searching, job retention skills, nutrition and even literacy and GED classes, build the expectation that if one acquires certain skills and knowledge, it is possible to get out of poverty. We call these "life skills classes."/p p The name is crucial. "Life skills" subtly implies that the poor have somehow arrived at adulthood without the skills to live, when in fact we know that they do have skills. After all, it takes something to survive a winter on the streets in New York City. But if we put them in the mind that they have not learned the skills necessary for life, they are more likely to behave in a subordinate manner while in class./p p Acquiring skills and education as a way out of poverty is an important concept for the poor. By attending and completing classes, the poor get a feeling of accomplishment and of bettering themselves. It keeps them from focusing on the larger issue of social stratification in a capitalist society that actually requires that a lower class exist if an upper class is to exist. /p pPerhaps they better themselves by learning to read, obtaining their GED or improving their parenting skills. These minor milestones can divert their attention from their overall unchanging economic status./p p However, if they are unable to complete the classes, or the material is presented in such a way that they cannot benefit from the classes, the poor will be left with a feeling of self-blame. They may turn the rage they feel for their unchanged economic situation inward, blaming themselves for never finishing that job search class or never following through on what they learned in budgeting class. The poor person owns the failure, assisting our overall effort to keep them poor./p pAmong the middle and upper classes, life skills classes create a perception that personal initiative is the key to overcoming poverty, rebuffing the systemic obstacles that will be there waiting for life skills graduates. /p pSo in this regard, it is to our advantage that a few like Clarence Thomas who were born into poverty, have overcome the systemic obstacles and made education work for them. We can hold them up as beacons to the huddles masses, admonishing them that, "If he can do it, anyone can." /p pHere are some considerations for implementing a program of life skills classes. /p p1.. Tie continued benefits to life skills class participation. When a person comes to your agency for assistance, let her know that she must attend a schedule of classes. Even if she has already completed these classes before in another state, another agency or at the same agency, she must attend them again. This will create a hostility in her that will shut her mind down to learning. She will sit in the classes sieving about the loss of wages or expense of day care or other inconvenience the classes are costing her./p p2.. Teach over their heads. Even the most basic skills can be taught in industry terms that an average person cannot understand. Go back to those college textbooks and extract technical terms to replace for common sense terms. Here are a few examples from a class on feeding infants that is conducted at the Women, Infants and Children (WIC, a national nutrition initiative) office in South Texas. They use "progression of textures" to mean "adding solid foods"; "GI concerns" to mean "problems with digestion"; and "feeding relationship" to mean "making eating fun." "Shop talk" can confound class participants and discourage them from asking too many questions that might flush out truly useful information./p p 3.. Keep expectations high. Have you ever overspent on your budget? Have you ever shouted at your kid when you could have used redirection? Do you have more credit card debt than you can repay in your lifetime? Have you ever called in sick when you really just wanted to stay home? Can you act like you've never done any of the above? Good, then you too can be a life skills instructor. We must set the bar high for the poor. A convincing teacher can make her students think that the middle and upper classes actually do the things she is teaching. When a teacher has this kind of credibility, the poor students will feel defeated before they've even begun to try to apply their newly learned life skills. They will never measure up. And for those who try, inevitably falling short will take the wind right out of their sails. It's back to class, because they're required, but this time with a humble and defeated attitude. /p p4.. Condescend, Condescend, Condescend. Instructors should learn at least one good phrase like this one: "It's that kind of thinking that got you where you are today."br / Another advantage of the widely popular life skills strategy, is that it produces those tidy little units called "outcomes" that government and charitable funding sources have begun to require of late. Though the days of no accountability are over and we do mourn them, we must keep up with the times as well and find ways to produce outcomes without really impacting the problem at hand. /p pLife skills do just that. They instill hope. They produce outcomes. They provide useless and irrelevant information. They keep our society looking to personal initiative to solve the problem of poverty, believing that it can be remedied with a good solid upward yank on the bootstraps. If the public were to fully comprehend the problem, it might result in widespread feelings of compassion and charity and could spawn socialist legislative initiatives such as creating a guaranteed standard of living for all. This would either mean increased taxes or more drastic measures, such as diverting spending from national defense. /p pLet's keep America secure. Remember, "Poverty can be unlearned and life skills can teach you how."/p pStay tuned for the next strategy in the domestic policy to keep the poor poor, "Day Labor: Your career, one day at a time."br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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We are armed... with pens

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrongSeveral hundred very low and no income journalists, editors and economicbr / justice advocates convene in San Franciscobr / /strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/427/photo_1_feature.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Lisa Gray-Garcia/POOR Magazine(PNN) /p p"I'm Marsha Rizzo-Swanson from The Homeless Grapevine", an older woman ofbr / Native American descent dressed in her Goodwill finest belted out herbr / presence to the crowd at the Friday morning introduction session of The North American Street Newspaper (NASNA) conference that convened this weekend in San Francisco. In one hand was her homeless newspaper, or "street Newspaper", The Homeless Grapevine from cleveland, Ohio, and a video camera in the other. The beautiful paradox of poverty and media resistance was a constant throughout the NASNA conference that I had the privelege to attend..just think.. Over 200 other people like myself, coming out of poverty and homelessness still caught in the so-called cycle of poverty, resisting that oppressed position everyday with their "voice", through their own form of grassroots media- publishing daily, weekly, monthly or bi-yearly..By Any Means necessary.No, we weren't the mainstream media - we were better, we were the People's Media. And I Was home./p pThe NASNA conference, co-sponsored by The STREET SHEET, POOR Magazine andbr / Media Alliance ran from Friday through Sunday (jul 27-29) and included workshops on everything from poetry to civil rights, but most importantly it included the sharing and networking between poor folks who are normally viewed as just trying to stay alive - which of course we are - but we are also creating hard-hitting journalism, photo-journalism, poetry and solutions./p p"So what do we do with those images of people sleeping on the sidewalk?"br / Anthony Williams, photo-journalist from Picture the homeless and Street Newsbr / in New York asked me after my lecture on the power of "the photographicbr / gaze" in a photo-journalism class POOR Magazine offered at the conference./p p"Its very simple", I replied, ask yourself if when you were therebr / (referring to our mutual experience of being one of those people on thebr / sidewalk) would you want someone to take your picture and publish it - "No"br / he replied "no I wouldn't ..his answer was echoed by two other formerlybr / homeless photo-journalists in the class. Our interchange was what was sobr / unique about the conference. I was privleged to be in a room with otherbr / people who really understood that question , who understood the differencebr / in being reported on rather than reporting, being talked with.. rather thanbr / talked about, given justice rather judged. This reminded me of anbr / incident three weeks ago where myself and fellow PNN journalist Kapondabr / encountered a photographer from The Miami Herald taking a picture of a manbr / sleeping out at City Hall. We asked him why he was taking that "shot" andbr / he replied, " Because I am trying to show the dichotomy between thebr / beautiful City Hall of San Francisco versus the situation of homelessbr / people in San Francisco. Both Kaponda and I thought that was a noble andbr / interesting story idea, but that it was not necessary to objectify the manbr / who was sleeping to prove his point, that in fact that "image", of an anonymous man sleeping on the sidewalk had been "seen" a million times and that if Mayor Brown found out that the Miami Herald was "seeing" that homeless man on the City Hall lawn- he would step up the police patrols so to be sure that not only were the benches removed from City Hall/Un Plaza but the grass as well. But most importantly, that "homeless" man had not given his permission to have his picture taken. He had not even been asked./p p"I am an armchair Revolutionary" Gordon Hilgers from Endless Choices inbr / Dallas, Texas recited his stream of conscousness style of spoken word atbr / Displacement, a performance at the Women's Building on Friday night in honorbr / of NASNA which featured The Bay Area's own Po Poets Project , Raising Ourbr / Voices, Peter Plate, Tanyica Simmons and George Tirado . The artistsbr / performed poetry/spoken word and prose on issues of racism, gentrificationbr / poverty, and homelessness. The conference also included talks by authors and scholars, Ben Bagdikian and Bruce Jackson/p pOn saturday night (july 28th) it was time to take our truth to the streets, or more aptly to take the streets to the mainstream media. First there was a "vend-off at POWELL and Market featuring - all the street newspaper vendors who wanted to participate including Ms.Rizzo-Swanson who won by a landslide with the sale of 63 papers. Then a group of at least 100 media activists began a rally and march to the San Francisco Chronicle building at 5th and Mission to address the lack of truthful coverage of poverty and homelessness by the mainstream media. We began our march with "Hey.. Hey.. We won't rest - til the Chronicle covers our protest" When we arrived at the Chronicle front door, Terry Mesmen from The Street Spirit Newspaper in Berkeley, in collaboration with several folks from the Independent Media Center and The Coalition on homelessness led the act of civil disobedience when they began wheat pasting artistic renderings of mainstream media stereotypes on the Chronicle building, created by the Bay Area Print Collective for NASNA. /p pThe police showed up after about ten minutes and threatened to arrest us so we retreated- sort of… but not really… and eventually we went around to the other side of the building.Several writers from PoorNewsNetwork(PNN) were present including PNN staff writer, Ken Moshesh who had won a victory in the courts just last week over the lodging (homeless) laws but was dismayed to find a small paragraph in the Chronicle placed next to a picture of a homeless sweep in the tenderloin, that barely even recognized the significance of that court decision as well as the fact that he was a writer/artist and former UC berkeley professor. /p pAfter much joustling and the eventual ejecting of Robert Norse from Santa Cruz and Terry Mesmen at the front door by Chronicle security guards when we attempted to enter the building, we got a commitment from the Chronicle to meet with some of us to address the flagrant lack of coverage of poverty and homelessness as well as the promotion of stereotypes about poor folks in the mainstream media and more specifically, in the "one hearst town" of San Francisco./p pIn the end, the people, the people's media.. were heard.. not only by the mainstream press.. but by each other.. because we were armed..with Pens!!br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Tenant Victory In Oakland

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrongEviction for Profit System Exposed/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/428/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Lynda Carson/p pbOakland,Ca/b Late last week, details started to emerge regarding a law suit that involved a number of African American renters of Oakland being evicted, only to be quickly replaced by Spanish speaking immigrants being charged double the rents. A jury trial decided in favor of the African Americans who fought the evictions, and that it was the opinion of the jury that the evictions were discriminatory and unlawful. /p pDuring the past year a landlord by name of Paul Maguire bought up a number of properties in Oakland totaling around 155-180 rental units, many of which fall under local rent laws. Oakland has a Rent Arbitration Program meant to provide a system that decides whether or not landlords are allowed to raise the rents above the 3% annual cap on rent increases. Allegedly to avoid Oakland’s rent control laws, Mr. Maguire chose to evict the renters rather than to allow them to fight the desired rent increases through a hearing process of the Rent Board. Apparently it was African Americans who were the victims of Mr. Maguire’s criminal activities. At least 24 units were involved in the suit. Oakland does not have a Just Cause Eviction Ordinance in place, which means that landlords may evict for almost any or no reason at all. However, evictions that are retaliatory in nature or based upon discrimination are unlawful. /p pKen Greenstein, a local tenant activist attorney with an office in San Francisco, is very excited about the jury decision protecting the renters’ rights. Calls to Phil Rapier and Bob Salinas, who represented the victims, confirmed the jury decision. A press release may soon be forthcoming with more details. /p pWhen I asked Phil Rapier why landlords of Oakland believe that they can get away with evicting for profit in Oakland, Rapier replied that it is because THEY CAN! The jury’s decision that this was a case of discrimination certainly puts a different light on the situation in Oakland. Still, as known by tenant activists involved in Oakland’s rental battles, this is something that has going on a long time. Landlord tenant disputes continue to erupt throughout the city as the landlords try to raise the rents to heights unknown in Oakland’s history./p pOakland’s rental battles are heating up to extremes lately, with landlord and tenant forces boiling over in the Rent Program last Thursday in City Hall. Mayor Jerry Brown had his henchmen unlawfully shut down the Rent Program in an alleged effort to remove Rent Board Member Andrew Wolff before his term expires in October 2001. Wolff, appointed by Elihu M. Harris back in 1998, is a pro-tenant Board Member under attack by the Mayor and landlords who want him out. He refused to comply with a July 24 fax notice from Mayor Jerry Brown dismissing him from the rent board, resulting in the lock-out on July 26. Oakland’s City Charter states that it takes a hearing and a vote of at least 6 Council Members to remove appointed Commissioners and Board Members before their term's expire. /p pWhen Mr. Wolff showed up at last Thursday’s Rent Board Hearing at City Hall to take his place among the other board members, the hearings were shut down after roll call. For now until further notice, renters and landlords are locked out of the process, thanks to the politics of Mayor Jerry Brown interferring with due process of law./p pFor more on that event, click onto the SF/IMC story "IPolitics Shut Down Oakland’s Rent Arbitration Program/i" by Lynda Carson: /p pa href="http://www.sf.indymedia.org/display.php?id=102452" title="http://www.sf.indymedia.org/display.php?id=102452"http://www.sf.indymedia.org/display.php?id=102452/a /p pTo contact the attorneys:/p pPhil Rapier 510/ 444-6262br /br / Bob Salinas 510/ 663-9240br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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CARLO'S WAY

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrongMumia Abu-Jamal comments on the shooting of the Italian protestor/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/429/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Mumia Abu-Jamal /p pThe recent police shooting of 23-year-old Carlo Giulianibr / in the riotous streets of Genoa has sent shock waves aroundbr / the globe./p pGiuliani, son of a Rome labor leader, was one of tens ofbr / thousands of anti-globalist demonstrators who fell on thebr / latest place where politicians and corporate representativesbr / gathered to insure their continued dominance of the world'sbr / economy. Carlo was part of a growing movement, unitingbr / the youth of many so-called first world countries with thebr / aspirations of many in the so-called third world. It was thisbr / movement that shook Seattle, and made the anagram, WTO,br / known throughout the earth./p pFor opposing the rule of capital, for opposing the Empirebr / of Wealth, Carlo Giuliani was shot by the hit-men of capital,br / and, as if this were not enough, a police vehicle rolled overbr / his prone, wounded body./p pWith the brutal state slaughter of Carlo Giuliani, thebr / message goes forth that anti-globalism is a capital crime.br / This is but the latest escalation by the armed forces ofbr / capital, which has utilized increasing levels of state violencebr / to intimidate the swelling hordes of anti-globalists./p pThe blood on the asphalt of Genoa did not begin whenbr / a cop pointed his semi-automatic into the face of a maskedbr / Roman anarchist. The blood of Genoa flows from thebr / streets of Goteborg, in Sweden, when the European Unionbr / was holding its summit meeting. There, police fired livebr / rounds at protestors, wounding three, one seriously./p pNow, an anarchist, anti-globalist lies dead./p pAs soon as the news hit the wire, came the wordsbr / of the Irish playwright, George Bernard Shaw, who oncebr / quipped, "Anarchism is a game at which the police canbr / beat you." Shaw, an ardent socialist, would perhapsbr / amend his comments in light of recent events (if hebr / could)./p pWhat is most telling is how the representatives ofbr / the state and their propaganda arm, the media, hasbr / reacted to this vicious tragedy./p pWhile politicians uniformly spoke with forked tonguesbr / about the "tragedy," not a single syllable was utteredbr / in criticism of the police, was it?/p pFor the media, however, a different game wasbr / played. In virtually every report, the coverage told ofbr / violent protestors -- and suggested that they werebr / uninformed, or simply stupid for daring to care aboutbr / the poor in Africa, Asia or Latin America. Examinebr / their biased, corporate-centered coverage, andbr / ask yourself one, simple question:/p pWhat would they have written if a Genoan copbr / had been shot, and run over with a Land Roverbr / driven by anarchists? Every corporate outletbr / would've blared about how "vicious" and "violent"br / the anti-globalist "terrorists" were. Of this therebr / is no question!/p pInstead, a muted silence./p pSilence, when the terrorists are the cops./p pSilence, when the killers are the cops./p pSilence, when the hitmen for the corporationsbr / act out./p pYou hear the fractured lectures of politiciansbr / talking about "assaults on the democraticbr / process," and the like./p pYet, how democratic is the G-8 (Group of 8)?/p pThis group, which is self-selected, is sevenbr / of the wealthiest nations on earth (plus Russia)./p pIf there are about 193 nations in the world,br / what's "democratic" about 4% of that numberbr / making all of the rules governing the rest ofbr / the world's economy?/p pLook at it another way: The G-8 consists ofbr / representatives for Canada, Japan, Germany,br / France, Italy, the United Kingdom, the Unitedbr / States -- and Russia. If you were to count allbr / of the people in each nation, and add them up,br / you'd come up with around 824 million people.br / That's a lot of folks./p p But there are 6,000,000,000+ people onbr / earth! /p pHow can 14% of the world's population setbr / down the rules for 86% of the rest of the peoplebr / of the world?/p pCarlo Giuliani wasn't "assaulting thebr / democratic process." He was protesting abr / profoundly anti-democratic process. /p pHe was fighting on behalf of most of thebr / people in the world./p pCopyright 2001 Mumia Abu-Jamalbr / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Just a Lucky So and So

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrongA Former Cocaine Addict’s journey back to life and jazz/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/430/photo_1_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Gordon Hilgers/Endless Choices PNN (Dallas Affiliate)/p pFrom all appearances, it’s the sheer, unmitigated sway of jazz. The way it soothes the heart like a mother’s touch and stills the soul which defines, rules and embellishes Victor Cager’s life. It’s an irremediable situation, he says, but at least it feels good. Real good. /p pIf you believe what Victor says, in fact, jazz literally swims in his blood. He claims he’d be nothing without it. It’s indescribable and odd, this feel, like noodling trout around your toes in an ice-cold mountain brook. It’s both ticklish and scary. Some of those staggering fish apparently just can’t stop dancing, wiggling, and cavorting, the sum of which, he says, transports him to a place where nobody does anyone any harm./p pYes, he’s played and sang with many of Dallas’ most precious musical legends: pianist Cornelius "Red King" drummer Saul Samuels, singer James Belk, and even Willie McDuff and the Jive Five. At the age of six, he began playing saxophone. Now forty, he unequivocally states, "I was a child prodigy." He’s probably right./p pIt’s Thursday night, here in the small universe of Dallas Jazz, and Victor is about to sing to both the knowing and the innocent. A murmuring crowd of some of Dallas’ most well-heeled socialites and avid jazz fans gathers to listen closely, as many of them do each week, as the Dallas Museum of Art’s "Jazz in the Atrium" gets underway./p pThe sound of wineglasses tinkles under the atrium’s high ceilings as the band pauses between tunes, waiting for Victor to reach the stage for another of many guest appearances. Yellow sunlight can’t help but streambr / through Dave Chihuly’s window installation, hugely delicate glass blossomsbr / that mirror flowers on a lake’s glassy surface. One woman hushes her table. It seems she’s heard Victor sing before. As the group strikes up another tune, it’s probably the last thing on anyone’s mind that this man, vocalizing the parameters that make jazz an exquisitely arcane experience only a few can truly fathom, spent the better part of a decade living on the streets of downtown./p p"Sometimes when I’m up there on stage, I’m thinking, God, look at how far you’ve brought me. Man, sometimes I just can’t believe it. All these people with diamonds on their fingers. They’ll probably never know I was a homeless crack-head. Whenever I sing, people come up to talk to me, and congratulate me," Victor says. "Yet, back then, when I was using crack, I remember when I didn’t bathe for a week. The contrast is really interesting."/p pVictor Cager’s tale of a journey from the sickening circumstances of an addict’s lifestyle to singing in prestigious nightspots like the Crescent Hotel’s Beau Nash may be an unusual one in the Dallas homeless community, but through Victor’s eyes, it doesn’t seem so strange. He wants people to know where he’s coming from. He wants his friends on the streets to know if he can make it off the streets, they can too. Also, he wants strangers to know that you really can’t make the measure of a man by his circumstances./p p"I don’t really go over my life that much, you know," Victor says.br / "But, I’ll tell you, I’ve really been blessed. I go around all day long, knowing that I’ve been given God’s extreme grace and favor. God’s grace would have to be extreme to free me from that ditch."/p pVictor knows he isn’t alone. In fact, it’s a small secret that Dallas’ homeless community is "home" to several present and former jazz musicians. Victor’s one of a much smaller group that has made if off the streets alive. /p pBy every measure, Victor knows he’s been on a long, difficult journey through the hardest circumstances. He’s known times when his voice wouldn’t work because of the effect crack cocaine had on his vocal chords. He’s seen things that he says numbed him to the spirit of jazz. He remembers moments when he smoked crack rather than eat. Even now, he says, there is always temptation to go back to that life. But, he says he remembers the gift he’s been given and his childhood, a blessed time./p pAlthough Victor is currently a jazz vocalist, singing to growing audiences in a number of clubs and lounges around Dallas, as a musician he actually started out as a saxophonist. He started early: He was already playing in churches at six years old./p pVictor credits his musical family for fostering his childhood abilities.br / "My grandmother was a vocal teacher. Although she was already dead before I was born, she left a musical legacy in our home. People still talk about her, about how great a vocalist she was."/p pAside from leaving behind a spiritual legacy, Victor’s grandmother also left one relic that really whet his appetite and his feel for jazz: the piano in the living room./p p"That piano got lots of use. All the big cats in the Dallas jazz scene in the 1960’s practiced at my house. My parents had opened their door to these guys. Through my dad was a barber, he owned a saxophone. Those cats would borrow his sax, the first sax I ever touched./p p"Listening to these great jazzmen was like being in Heaven," Victor says. "The way those guys would create jazz was something you can’t describe. I was listening to the masters. These cats loved what they did. It was also obvious many of them were involved with drugs."/p pVictor’s mother and stepfather, a man he came to call Uncle Jim, were deeply involved in a burgeoning, and relatively underground, West Dallas social scene. A vibrant confluence of neighbors that, while it didn’t make the social pages, left an impression on people, especially the children.br / Live music at every party./p p"I had to be only about four. I clung to those jazzmen. They were my heroes. Roger Boykins, Claude Johnson. Still living, and still my heroes. When they wasn’t playing, they’d tell stories about the real jazz giants. When those guys would get up from the keyboards, the keys were still warm from their fingers. I’d put my hands where theirs had been and play what they’d just played. It never worked."/p p"Music was already inside me," Victor says. "Like any kid, I wanted to play foot ball. I’ll never forget my old man coming up to the school and whipping me because I’d quit the band and joined the football team."/p pVictor’s Uncle Jim also left a musical mark on him. "He listened to the big bands: Jimmy Dorsey, and Woody Herman. He also knew the lyrics to every standard jazz tune. His singing was my first inspiration. Back then we listened to KFJZ, a big band station back in the Sixties, so even when I was a teenager I was steeped in jazz."/p pAnd so was the neighborhood. "There were some bootleg houses, but we were’t used to being prisoners in our own homes like people in some West Dallas neighborhoods are these days. In fact, back then, people used to sleep with their doors wide open. When I was playing in the street, I could hear music coming from those houses, mostly blues stuff: Lightning Hopkins and John Lee Hooker. The neighborhood might have been poor in some ways, but we weren’t poor."/p pLike many musicians who were born in South Dallas, Oak Cliff and West Dallas, Victor credits the church for much of his early training and inspiration. "Oh, yes. I remember the church," he says. "Sweet Home Baptist./p p"Reverend S.A. Armstrong. He was crippled in one leg, but man! He could really sing. He could tear a church up. I don’t know how many programs they had me playing in."/p pVictor remembers school, he skipped plenty of class, but for unique reasons. "Us guys who really loved music all skipped class to listen to Charlie Parker, Wes Montgomery, Stan Kenton. We’d sit around the record player and commune with the really great ones." Even after his Uncle Jim transferred him from Pinkston to Thomas Jefferson, thinking the boy needed discipline, Victor continued playing jazz. "On weekends, I played with James Belk, a vocalist who imitated Nat King Cole, and with Willie McDuff and the Jive Five, the hottest RB outfit in the city. I also had a soul band, The Power House of Soul."/p pHe was smoking pot, too. "All the guys in the Pinkston band did it. I was 14 when I started smoking it. I didn’t know it would escalate into something serious." /p pAfter a brief stint in the Navy, Victor returned to Dallas and to jazz.br / "I played with Benois King at the Judge’s Chamber, a spot in Wynnewood Shopping Center. I also played The Main Event. I played at The Sunday Jam Session, too, at Tim Ballard’s club at Lemmon and Inwood. That’s where I hit my first home run. I was playing baritone sax at the time. I played ‘Misty’- Ion barry sax, man/i! I don’t think that crowd had ever heard something like ‘Misty’ on a baritone sax. They went crazy."/p pVictor tells us that anyone could see he had a rising star in the 1970’s. He was playing lots of the big clubs around town. But then, an incident he believes shot down that rising star turned all the good times around./p p"In 1985, the most traumatic thing that ever happened in my life happened. My mother had a stroke. Today I cringe whenever I think about it. Over the next eight months, I watched her deteriorate right before my eyes. She was the family matriarch. To see her completely depleted was devastating. She lost her mind right before she died. The family was just never the same. We stopped having gatherings at the house. People stopped visiting. Most important was the money I got after she died: with it, I bought and used my first crack cocaine./p pEven as late as 1985, Victor claims, very few in Dallas had learned the devastating consequences of crack use. Crack, he says, doesn’t just destroy an individual, it destroys entire communities. And when the cloud of cocaine rolled over West Dallas, not only neighborhoods were destroyed and turned into the haunts of criminals, an entire way of life vanished with them./p p"Initially," he says, "there was no crack in West Dallas. We had to go to South Dallas to score crack. There were these two streets down there: Myers and Jefferies. Down there was the first time I ever saw people stand right there on the street, selling dope. It was also the first time I saw someone carrying something called an Uzi. That was when the Jamaican drug possies were running the dope show down there. Those folks were treacherous. A lot of people fell victim to the crack they were selling. God always seemed to have a hedge around me because I’ve never been busted for drugs. But I did see people get shot and beat up. I saw young girls, not even out of junior high, going into prostitution. I have seen a lot of terrible things because of crack."/p pAnyone who has been involved in hard drugs like crack cocaine will tell you that, for awhile, it’s not all that difficult to maintain the pretense of a normal life. Before the compulsion to smoke the glass pipe gets so strong that you’ll do anything to keep your ears ringing, things seem relatively normal. In his fall from a life of relative happiness, Victor’s story isn’t all that unlike the stories of many men and women who have been reduced to homelessness because of crack cocaine. "Before I hit the streets, I was bingeing regularly, spending all my money. The biggest binge I ever had was a $1000 binge. When you’re smoking crack cocaine, you just keep on spending until you don’t have any money. It wasn’t uncommon to be in the dope house, smoking crack right alongside professional businesspeople. Some of the guys I got high with were lawyers, engineers and one of them was a minister. A minister, free-basing cocaine!"/p pAt one point during this slide down the dusty trail, I did get married," he says. "I even had two children. But because of crack, it just didn’t work out. When things got bad, my wife saw that it was obvious I wasn’t going to be the breadwinner she’d hoped I’d become. I was still in West Dallas, living with my wife’s family spending all my money on crack. But there’s one side to crack that I can’t forget: Crack teaches you who loves you and who doesn’t."/p pAs Victor sees it, the determining factor in love is need. He doesn’t refer to this observation as wisdom, possibly because he’s still so close to the realization that having a very real, tangible need tends to alter your relationships in odd ways. Once you’re in need, the fair weather friends simply vanish. If people can’t get anything from you, he adds, if they’re still for you, ready to go to bat for you, willing to do anything for you, then you can rest assured that they love you. "Like my father," he says. "My father never gave up on me. Some people might say my real father was crazy. But because he hung in there with me, I’m a better person for it."/p p"But, you know, my wife walked out. Other family members walked out. Friends walked out. I couldn’t even go back to the family house, either. My brother lived there, and he didn’t want me there. I remember I came downtown one day. Where else? I found the Stewpot. There was this guy named Big John. He was a police officer. He was one of the nicest people I ever met. He would always talk nice to people. He didn’t ever down you. When he laughed, you could see he didn’t have any teeth."/p pFrom there, the details of Victor’s life are all too familiar to those who really know the streets of Dallas. Like many men and women strung-up and strangled by addiction to crack, he rode the merry-go-round of moving from one emergency shelter to another. He lived in The Dallas Life Foundation. He livced in Union Gospel Mission. Even during this period of almost complete and utter poverty, Victor says he used crack cocaine./p p"I used, but it was off and on. I really didn’t have a lot of money passing through my hands. I wasn’t going on the $200 binges that put me on the streets. Still, many times, the dope house was the closest thing I had to a home. You ever hear the term ‘den of iniquity?’ You see a lot of lost souls in a crack house. You see every kind of immorality. You see people being beaten. People getting robbed. People selling their shoes. One cold day, I sold my own shoes so I could get a piece of rock, man. You see people selling the coats off their backs. You see prostitution, by both men and women. I’ve seen people whose skin turns to a pasty gray or a real dark black, and it tears women down faster than anything. It’s really sick. It’s not a glamour trip. Believe me."/p pOnce, Victor says, he was looking out the window of the Newland Hotel, a fleabag motel on South Akard, when he noticed a man running. "Suddenly, I heard gunshots. I mean, I’d seed guns. Anybody who uses crack sees guns. But I’d never seen them being used to try and kill someone. I don’t know what the guy had done, but he was really running hard. Thank God, he got away."/p pSlowly, surely Victor wound down to the very bottom of the barrel. Even if the only direction to go from there was up, he says, he wasn’t all that sure which way ‘up’ was. He was pretty turned around. /p p "Nobody wanted to have anything to do with me," Victor says , referring of course, to his slow approach to what addicts and alcoholicsbr / call hitting "bottom" Even old friends didn’t want to have their possessionsbr / stolen. "I had already been reduced to being broke most of the time. even when I was working." Victor decribes that, just as the most experienced "low bottom" alcoholics and addict will attest. At the bottom, he had a single, lucidbr / moment of utter clarity. Sometimes, he says, he wonders if that moment was a miracle. /p p I was at the Burger King on MockingBird Lane. I’d gotten my paycheck for the umpteenth time. I was on veteran’s disability because I fell off an aircraft carrier in the Navy., " he laughs, " and I’d already spent it all on crack. I was sitting outside when I was when I started crying. I started crying out to God, " If I’m going to have to go on living like this, go on and take me. Just take me" Then I got an answer. It seems like God was talking to me. He said, "No, I’m not going to take you" Then something really weird happened./p p"This guy walked up. He was an older guy. He sat down and when he saw me crying, he asked, "Hey. You got a quarter I can get?" All I had was a dollar. "Here. Take it" I said. He said, " Thanks, Victor" Man, I’d never even met him in my life. I still can’t figure out how he knew my name./p p "That really woke me up. I stopped crying. In fact, I started laughing. I slept that night at the Mockingbird train station. I never did crack again. Of course, that wasn’t an easy ride. There were a lot of hard times."/p p"When I got my disability check, I used it to rent an apartment. I slept on the floor for the longest time. My sister sent me a little food now and then. But once I got clean, I just sort of started to prosper" /p pAbout that time, Victor heard about the Dallas Museum’s "Jazz in the Atrium" programs. Feeling steadier than he had in a long time, he got a change of nice clothes from his sister, and simply walked into the museum’s atrium. Doubtless, after everything he’d been through, simply walking through that door took a lot of guts./p p" I heard about Roger Boykin playing there. Once the show got started, Roger saw me in the audience and invited me on stage to sit in with the band. Isn’t that weird? It all seems so easy. Since that Thursday evening about a year ago, I’ve been off and running"/p pVictor Cager, a really fine jazz singer, isn’t all that shy. When I asked him to put on an impromptu performance Victor began to sing what could easily be a signature song. "I’m just a lucky so and so" , he roars out, "The birds in the trees …they seem so neighborly…they sing to me wherever I go.." Jazz, he says, is his personal anti-drug. It’s a kind of feel inside the beat that keeps you alive.br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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To Evolve Or Devolve?

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pstrong pA Complete Cloning Banbr / br / Tuesday, July, 30, 2001,br / Is a really bad idea.br / /p/strong/p pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Joe B./p pFor the 162 House Reps. voting against Stem Cell Cloning ban./p pYou are not alone... This isn't over./p pIn Washington, D.C., between Select ‘Preident Bush, the House of Representatives vote 265 for - 162 against a Cloning Ban Tuesday night onbr /July 30, 2001 for me represents a continuing split in humanity./p pFirst five supreme court judges bSelect a president, women's right over their own reproductive lives is at risk,br / then oil and coal are new again,br / /b now banning all human cloning including limitedbr / br / Therapeutic cloning for research b[to gain knowledge of this "embryonic" science.]/b /p pThroughout human history there has been the activist,br / the conservative, and a third group looking at these two extremesbr / trying to choose which group to join./p pThank whatever divine spark Mr. Bush has to make a compromise Friday, August 10. 2001 that gives scientists and researchers a chance under federal guidelines to be proceed with extreme caution. /p pBut a complete ban should make one choose up sides, either we br / evolve further improving our species or die out./p pIts serious when Mr. Roger Pedersen, professor of biology, Stem Cell expert and UCSF researcher may leaves for Britain becausebr / br /of America’s br /political strangle hold over Federalbr / Funds for cloning research. /pp His work: using stem cells from human embryos andbr / learning to br /control their development into nerves, organs, or other internal organs is too hostile a work place here./p pOther research scientists are leaving or thinking of doing so. br /Didier Stainier, who’s recent discovered how stem cells develop in internal organs. /p p America has benefited from international brain drains from the past lets not reverse that process./p pAmerica’s Puritan streak and fear of change even as inventors improve our lives has br /always been diametrically opposed to each other./p p A growing schism of past and future is colliding,br / br / No congress, judges, should dictate how long we’ll live!/p p Folks, we have dodged a huge bulletbr / which target could have been another dark age!/p pI for one tell you now,br / br /its time to begin choosing how we want to live and not br /people in power fearing change. /p pWe cannot obey every law from on high especially br /if they are not in our best interests. /p pReady for a new kind of revolution?br / where the longer one lives br /the more you learn, the better your chances of survival?/p pWe cannot go through another near 10 year moratorium like President R. Reagan did in the 1980’s for Genetic Engineering - Not This Time!/p pUnless its no nukes, biochemical warfare or ethnic cleansing prevention.br / /p pI can understand safeguards, guidelines for cloning and other life saving, improving technologies, its not quite Aldous, Huxley’s "Brave New World" however if we speed to quick it could be./p pIn every era or epoch there is a moment when people make a stand br / in this one, it means literally a longer, healthier life span, going out among the stars or fall back into a evolutionary dead end./p pShould we continue on orbr / go back tobr /the socalled ‘good old days? br / Am I slightly paranoid, if I am then write me tell me what’s best. /p pWe are at a crossroad either direction is full of peril and promise. /p pI’ll take a few steps into a murky abyss; but having friends along the road will make this new journey less bleak and dangerous. /p pHow about you… readers - what fears, joys, dangers, safety awaits us?/p pI’ve many questions and would like to know a few answers, how about you? ... Bye./p pPlease donate what you can to br /Poor Magazine or C/0 Ask br /Joe at 255 9th St.Street,br /San Francisco, CA.94103 USA/p pbr /For Joe only my snail mail:br / br /PO Box 1230 #645br / Market St.br / br /San Francisco, CA 94102br / br /Email: askjoe@poormagazine.org/p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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The Plank

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby OTTO/p pComplete emptiness I breathe standingbr / br /fast and straight, hard and beneath me.br / br /Try self-walk the plank life ongoing,br / br /day after day, night overwhelms me./p pStraight I will stand getting harder.br / br /Harder to maintained thy stance./p pReady man I had foreseen the makingsbr / br /of this time, I exist with thyself makingbr / br /my mind go insane inside an empty holebr / br /of nothing and emptiness./p pI muster how do they comprehend all ofbr / br /this nothingness./p pStanding fast I Foresee blackness andbr / br /Death. Unhappiness will sure to comebr / br /and push me toward the plank again.br / br /It has been foretold and so it has been so.br / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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Three Generations of poor women

09/24/2021 - 11:34 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
root
Original Body
pDIV align="left" TABLE cellpadding="5"TR VALIGN="TOP"TDIMG SRC= "../sites/default/files/arch_img/230/photo_4_supplement.jpg" //td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TD/td/trTR VALIGN="TOP"TDTR VALIGN="TOP"TD pby Tiny/p pIncarcerated for crimes of poverty- that’s being homeless, on welfare and poor in this br /capitalist society/p pBorn into povertybr / br /3 generations of poor womenbr / br /consumed by marginalizationbr / br /3 generations of women destroyed by subjugation.br / br /3 women Not resisting just existing./p pme - child of a mixed race mamabr / br /she-orphaned as a child- tortured as a childbr / br /she-born of a another tortured woman beaten by a man...br / br / a man who had a plan to use and abuse until there was no more left to have /p pauntie with no teeth..no soulbr / br /lost to dpression and cigarettesbr / br /bearing more tortured children more tortured women who did not eat - who did speak br /who harm each other and themselves cause there are no more tears to grieve./p pthese women’s livesbr / br /are inter-twinedbr / br /with the oppressor,br / br /the oppressor’s name is Shamebr / br /Shame tells them it is wrong to be poor,br / br /it is your faultbr / br /and whatever you do - br /don’t ask for a hand-outbr / br /starve your childbr / br /consume that winebr / br /sleep on the streetbr / br /you’ll be finebr / br /but idon’t /iask for helpbr / br /these women believe the oppressor as tho he is the lover they can never keep-they br /starve their children in honor of shame, they remain homeless in honor of shame- br /they lose their soul... in honor of shamebr / br /Shame is the name of the new colonizers, the gentrifying landlords, the policy br /makers, the presidents/p p3 generations of poor women destroyed by margin-a-lizationbr / br /Not resisting..Just existing/p pI am born of these women - I am born of this pain ...of the impossible relationship with br /the new lover- shame-br / br /at a young age I give up - unable to change - unable to save - ready to die, dead from br /too many reasons to cry - /p pbut wait there is a happy ending... No not happy... just angry... but anger has hope - br /anger has possiblitites anger has names like Dorothy Allison, Shange, Toni Morrison, br /And Zora Neal Hurston -br / br /anger has clarity and words like resistance and strugglebr / br /survival and organize/p pso now the story can readbr / br /3 generations of poor women fighting back-br / br /3 generations of women.... Healing not Grieving -br / br /Resisting..... Notbr / br /just Existingbr / /p/td/tr/td/tr/table/div/p
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