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Sunday, December 13, 2009

SOCIAL JUSTICE 101


San Francisco's DA is Running for CA Attorney General and she has a Fresh and Just Agenda

By Crystal Carter


Originally in McSweeney's The Panorama



When Kamala Harris decided to run for San Francisco District Attorney in 2003, she put her campaign headquarters in the most unlikely part of town, a place where most outsiders would feel uncomfortable visiting – Bayview Hunter’s Point.

It’s an isolated and bleak part of town, where drive-by shootings, drugs and violence are a way of life. Even the ground itself is dangerous, with the toxic legacy of a former Naval shipyard taking an environmental toll on residents.

Her supporters suggested that she put her headquarters in a more “central” part of town because they feared that no one would go there. But the candidate persisted. She wanted the marginalized to take part in the democratic process and feel like they had a stake in the future of the city as well.

“We pride ourselves in being a diverse city but we are also quite segregated,” said Harris.

The fears that no one would risk a trip to Hunter’s Point to help the candidate proved false. On any given weeknight there would be Pacific Heights moms, seniors from Chinatown to residents from Castro sitting in the campaign headquarters together, licking envelopes, making phone calls and seeking support, all at the direction of her mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, PhD.

And her move paid off. She captured 65% of the vote and beat her former boss, Terrence Hallinan. It was in the Bay View that Kamala Harris was announced as the new DA.

“On election night it was jammed packed at our headquarters you should’ve seen all the media with their satellite trucks. Everybody came to the Bayview that night.”

When you speak with her about her past it seems like her future was preordained. She was a child of the 60s, stirred by the struggle for civil rights from an early age. Her idols were the pioneers of the civil rights movement: Thurgood Marshall, the first African American on the Supreme Court of the United States. Charles Hamilton Houston, who was known as “The Man Who Killed Jim Crow,” Constance Baker Motley, the first African American woman to argue in front of the Supreme Court of the US.

Harris, 45, achieved many firsts leading up to her current campaign to become California State’s Attorney General. She was the first woman to be elected District Attorney in San Francisco, and she was the first African American to head a DA’s office in the state of California.

“You may be the first,” she recalled her mother telling her. “But just make sure you’re not the last.”

Harris’ mother was a Tamil Indian who immigrated to the United States from Chennai, India in 1960. Both her parents were civil rights activists and graduate students when they met. But they split up when she was five-years-old. Her father, Donald Harris, was also an immigrant of Jamaican descent and taught economics at Stanford University. Harris and her father were not very close after her parents divorced.

She recalls that her mother instilled in her and her sister hard work and moral values that were life changing.

“If you don’t define yourself, people will try to define you,” her mother preached as one of her first rules. “Don’t let anyone tell you who you are. You tell them who you are.”

Harris’ mother passed away on February 11, 2009. She was a scientist and a renowned Breast Cancer awareness expert and advocate. She worked at the UC-Berkeley Center for Research and Education on Aging where she conducted studies on how to cure breast cancer. Harris and the rest of her family view her as one of the most influential people in their lives and credit her for a lot of their motivation and strength.

Harris was born in Oakland and raised in Berkeley and Canada. She grew up in a predominately black neighborhood in the Berkeley flats. Here, she witnessed what people go through when faced with hard economic conditions that breed drugs, violence and a feeling of “no way out.”

“I attended Thousand Oaks Elementary School, and was part of the second class after the integration of Berkeley’s public schools in 1970,” says Harris.

Kamala and her sister went to public schools and they also both went into a similar profession, each dealing with law. Maya Harris, Kamala’s younger sister by two years is the former executive director of the Northern California ACLU’s Racial Justice Project, and is currently the Vice President of the Peace and Social Justice Program for the Ford Foundation in New York City.

According to her mother, Harris and her sister are well versed in Hindu traditions and mythology that can possibly be the reason they went into law. The Hindu belief system is based heavily upon law, especially in her mother’s caste of Brahmin (there are three other castes). In India, Brahmin, are usually priests, educators, scholars and preachers.

“My sister and I were raised with a very clear understanding of the history of community and the history of our ancestors,” she says with strong conviction. “It’s a matter of being taught your history and being proud of your history and being raised among people who are equally proud.”

“I feel that I’ve had a very rich life,” said Harris. “Because identity has frankly never been a problem for me.” Realizing herself as a person of mixed race in the predominately black community of Oakland, also known as the home of the Black Panthers, Harris says the community was close knit in the sense that “they wanted to know what was going on up and down their block.

Even though the area she lived in was not rich in finances, she realized that these folks had something that money or the most expensive education could not buy: awareness.

“Safety was among the most important civil rights issues people faced,” she noticed. “Women, immigrants, poor people and the homeless were usually the ones who were most vulnerable.”

As a student at Howard, the historically black university in Washington DC, Harris would spend weekends protesting South Africa’s apartheid. After moving on to Law School back in San Francisco at University of California – Hastings College of the Law, she became president of the Black Law Students’ Association and volunteered for Jesse Jackson’s presidential campaign in 1988. Her and Jackson have collaborated in the past to work towards defeating the Tiahrt Amendment calling for safer gun laws and eliminating mortgage scams by setting up a Mortgage and Investment Fraud Unit in the DAs Office.

Harris says that one of her fondest memories was at her graduation from UC – Hastings College of the Law. “My first grade teacher, Mrs. Frances Wilson, was in the audience. It was, and remains clear to me, that I would not have made it there without her and the other people in my life who convinced me at a young age to embrace and celebrate my education.”

After graduating Law school she accepted a position as Deputy District Attorney in the Alameda DAs office. From 1990 to 1998, she specialized in child sexual assault, homicide and cases dealing with robbery.

Terrence Hallinan, then DA of San Francisco, took notice of Harris’ potential when he witnessed how she worked the courtroom during a serious robbery case against a famed San Francisco attorney Tony Serra. “She was very articulate in handling the case against Serra,” remembers Hallinan.

When Harris came to work with Hallinan they got along just fine until they had a falling out. Harris says its because he was running his office inefficiently and his low conviction rate. Hallinan says that she was resentful because he replaced his chief assistant with his friend Darrel Salomon and not her. Hallinan saw it as a power struggle. She ended up having a sit in to protest Hallinan in the San Francisco DAs office. Hallinan was no stranger to sit-ins. He organized plenty in his day – to end discrimination against black employees at companies like the Sheraton Hotel, Mel’s Drive-In and a Van Ness Cadillac car dealership. “She alerted all of the news stations,” said a perplexed Hallinan. “I don’t know why she couldn’t talk to me first. She was pretty bitter.”

Harris described the office under Hallinan as “chaotic,” and in and earlier article she said there “was a huge dysfunction in the office.”

Hallinan still feels that Darrel Salomon is a smart man, “he was just not a people person.” In this moment, Harris showed that she would not let anyone get in the way of her fierce devotion to her career. This may be the reason that she has such a frequently turbulent love life. She is known to have been in a relationship with former Mayor of San Francisco, Willie Brown; and Phil Bronstein, former editor in chief of the San Francisco Chronicle who has been married to actress Sharon Stone. She received a lot of flack for these relationships from Hallinan, especially.

Hallinan is a champion for medical marijuana rights. During his time in office he tried to hold then police Chief Fagan’s son and two other off duty police accountable for beating up a man outside of a bar when he refused to give up his fajita. The case got really slippery when Hallinan said that he would clear the victims record so his case would have more credibility. This case is better known as “Fajita Gate.”

“I’m happy because Kamala carried on a lot of my policies,” such as his stance on medical marijuana, the death penalty and three strikes only for violent crimes. “She said she was going to do the same things I did but better.”
Hallinan has since retreated to Petaluma where he works for a private litigation firm with his son and is a staunch supporter of medical marijuana. Harris ended up running for DA again for a second term and went uncontested.

She lays down the iron fist and then completely mystifies you with quotes like this: “When it comes to crime, I don’t want to be soft or tough, I want to be smart. The law fundamentally gives a voice to the voiceless.”

Harris even has a book trumpeting her new coinage: “Smart On Crime, A Career Prosecutor’s Plan to Make Us Safer.” In her book she speaks on how to reduce crime levels by reducing recidivism and the appropriate punishments for offenders. She believes that violent offenders should be locked up but when it comes to nonviolent offenses she feels that prison is not the place for them.





One of the issues that she has advocated for the most is recidivism. She sees this as one of the biggest problems facing the prison system and she offers ways to stop the cycle of ex-offenders being recycled back into the prison system.

Harris’ “Back On Track” Program funds reentry services for young adult non-violent drug offenders who are facing a felony conviction. “The war on drugs was a failure,” said Harris. She wants to make it right by bringing the “passion from the streets to the courtroom.”

The program offers a chance for the offender to make a smooth transition from prison back into the workforce through education and obtaining a GED, employment support services and healthcare. Preference is given to parents of young children and once they are admitted into the program they can choose from many programs such as childcare, anger management and tutoring. According to the DA’s office fewer than 10% have reoffended compared to a 54% statewide average recidivism rate.
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has recently signed the SF model into legislation as Assembly Bill 750. He says that he wants to encourage other counties to adopt the model that Harris created four years ago. Harris might be more motivated than most to break the cycle of crime and rogues preying on the disadvantaged because she saw it first-hand growing up.

“If you want to believe the stereotype of who we are, one would think that we don’t want people to go to jail. Well the reality of it is this,” she began in defense that all San Franciscans are a bunch of dazed and confused liberal lefties. “ We all want to make sure that the weak among us are given a voice, are given support and that the people who take advantage of them face the appropriate consequences.”

Harris has come under fire in the past because illegal immigrants went through her reentry program and were not deported back to their country of origin after their first criminal offense. In one of the cases, an illegal immigrant attacked a woman in upscale Pacific Heights, attempted to take her purse and then tried to run her over. It turned out that the offender, Alexander Izaguirre, went through the DA’s Reentry program. Since he had completed the program his record for selling cocaine in the Tenderloin was to be exonerated.

“It is not our job to find out if the people we prosecute are immigrants or not. We leave that up to US Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Juvenile Probation Center to find that out. What we do here is prosecute the cases, we are blind to immigration status of the people we prosecute unless we are notified otherwise,” said Russ Giuntini, Chief Assistant DA of San Francisco (AKA) Harris’ #2.

One of the things that Harris will have to leave behind, if she wants to be elected, is her current personal philosophy on the death penalty. Harris’ belief on the death penalty, which she believes is ‘flawed,’ has gotten her into some trouble in the past. Not once but twice.

During her first few months as DA, a 21-year-old African American male gunned down Police officer Isaac Espinoza in a shooting match in Bayview. On April 14, days before Espinoza was laid to rest, Harris announced at a press conference that she would not seek the death penalty. This left the San Francisco Police Department devastated and is said to have left a huge rift between the relationship of the DAs office and the SFPD. This may have since dissipated because Officers for Justice, which is comprised of mostly African American cops in San Francisco, are now endorsing her, along with SF Chief of Police Gascon and LAPD Chief Bratton.

“I am personally opposed to the death penalty but as Attorney General, I will uphold the law,” she said. “This is the same position that the current AG holds as well as four of the last nine AGs in the state of California,” added Brokaw, her campaign manager.

She is also not going to pursue the death penalty in a more recent case involving a gang member who killed a father and his two sons. The gang member is an undocumented immigrant and has caused the national spotlight to be put on San Francisco’s “Sanctuary City” policies.

Although San Francisco is known as a sanctuary city Harris agreed to not let “illegal’s” into the program anymore. The term “sanctuary city has taken on a different definition than was intended in the 80s. The main issue is San Francisco’s City of Refuge ordinance, adopted in 1989 as part of a national sanctuary movement intended to help Central Americans flee civil war in their country. After Bush’s proposal to build a fence to stop Mexicans from coming into the US the ordinance lost its initial meaning. The current definition of a sanctuary city is basically a city that harbors immigrants and it is raising concerns because of the number of undocumented immigrants who are committing crimes.

In response to undocumented immigrants Mayor Gavin Newsom has put into effect a statute that requires the police to report to ICE whenever they arrest a juvenile on felony charges that they suspect is undocumented. This has caused a lot of unrest for the immigrant population but Newsom said that he is sticking to his guns. This has pitted the board of supervisors against Newsom. The Board signed into approval a measure that would keep the city from turning over youth to ICE.

“The crime rate by illegals is enormous,” said Kenneth Walsh, associate director at San Francisco State University’s Criminal Justice Department. “We don’t have the resources to protect undocumented people who commit crime. We have enough homegrown crime.”

“As the AG she will have to execute the people’s will and it will set a bad precedent if she only wants to enforce her own personal philosophies,” said Walsh, when referring to her stance against the death penalty and its effect on San Francisco’s sanctuary city policies.

California has been served with a mandate to release 40,000 inmates to relieve the prison overpopulation problem. Harris says that she wants to ensure that prisoners transition into law-abiding citizens. Through “preparing nonviolent former offenders for entry into apprenticeships in multiple industries,” Harris says the prison overpopulation will be greatly reduced.
California has the most prisoners than any state in the country, 316,229 to be exact, over twice the maximum capacity according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

“We live in a state that would rather spend money keeping someone in prison than sending a child to college,” said Tammy Johnson, Director of Strategic Partnerships at the Applied Research Center based in Oakland, California. California spends $49,000 a year to keep a prisoner in the system when it costs $14,000 on average to send a child to a California university.

Johnson is an advocate for racially equitable public policy practices with a history in community organizing. She suggested a comparison between a white woman getting addicted and overdosing on her meds and a black person in the flatlands of Oakland with a drug addiction. The black man is usually the one who will get criminalized and the white woman will get medical rehabilitation, she explained.

“Both of those people need the help in terms of their addiction,” Johnson said. “They need medical and psychological treatment, they do not need to be criminalized. Until we begin to grapple with this issue, we will continue to see our prisons overpopulate.”

According to the DA’s office, there is a strong connection between truancy and crime. Researchers have estimated that an increase of 10 percentage points in graduation rates would cut murders and assaults by 20%. Let’s be as shocked as we are about a child not going to school, as we are when a crime is committed, she says.

The DA has successfully implanted her Anti-Truancy work into the San Francisco school district. According to the DA’s office, San Francisco’s school systems have lost as much as $10 million annually in attendance based state revenues.

Early results indicate that truancy is falling because of her program. At an elementary school the number of chronic truants shrunk 75% (from 20 to five). At a high school, overall attendance improved 40 percent among the 100 truant students in the DA office’s mediation. So far the DAs Office, in collaboration with the San Francisco Unified School District, have held 75 one-on-one conferences with parents. School district officials along with prosecutors held numerous face-to-face meetings, made phone calls and sent letters home.

If the parents still fail to send their children to school then they may face a fine of up to $2,500. “What if we don’t have enough money to send our children to school?” Is the question on some of the parents’ minds.

Keith Choy, Director of the Stay-In-School Coalition and part of the San Francisco Unified School District, says that the $2,500 is the last resort.

“Kujichagulia” which means self-determination in the African language, Swahili were her opening remarks to the graduating class of “Changing the Odds,” summer 2009 program. The graduates, ages 16-24, mostly black and Latino were dressed in their black cap and gowns on stage looking out at their family, friends, and professionals who claim that they “would put their life on the line for these kids.” All of the students, of which ninety percent are in foster care and fifty percent young mothers, were non-violent offenders and were in the criminal justice system for petty theft and small run ins with the police.

“Its not about where you start in life,” advised DA Harris. “Its where you finish. Keep your eyes on the prize.”

“Changing the Odds” reentry program was created by Kamala Harris, in collaboration with New America Media and Youth Outlook Magazine (YO!), along with Bay Area activists. Twelve students who were in an applicant pool of over 200, were chosen to participate. For 10-weeks the students received state of the art training in Final Cut Pro and Dream Weaver and produced over 50 multimedia projects. The published work focused on events and issues going on in their community such as immigration, healthcare and relationships.

The people who have the most to lose to crime are people of color. “We need to give them a skill that’s going to keep them off the corner.”

Changing the Odds Summer Internship 2009 from New America Media on Vimeo.



Lateefah Simon, is the Executive Director of the Lawyer’s Committee for Civil Rights of San Francisco. She also led the Reentry Division at San Francisco’s DAs office and worked with Harris to make their model a national example. Their model has helped reduce the recidivism rate for the population it serves. “

The class Valedictorian, Amanze Emenike, 23, said he is thankful that Kamala cares about them. “She’s from the community that I am from so she knows who are and what we go through.”

According to Albert Felipe, Back on Track Graduate Service Component Program Coordinator, there are no other DA’s who are doing the kind of grassroots work that Harris is doing. These programs do not use government money, they are all privately funded by donations,

Kamala is said to be receiving more endorsements than any other candidate running for AG. In the Bay Area alone and within one month, Kamala Harris was able to raise more than $43,000. Jerry Brown is said to have amassed over $7 million for his AG campaign. Most of Harris’ endorsements are friends of Obama’s campaign either as significant donors or as fundraisers.

Her two major opponents, based on how much money they are fundraising, are Alberto Torrico, California State Assembly member who is working towards taxing big oil to fund education. He entered the race in the beginning of February and has raised close to $1 million. According to the Oakland Tribune the whole race could cost $5 million or more. And Rocky Delgadillo who is the former City Attorney of Los Angeles has raised $935, 624. Tom Harman, serving on the State Senate, is the only Republican running thus far and he has made $429,067.

Overall, in her campaign for Attorney General, she has raised more than any other republican or democrat who is running for the seat, over $1.3 million. More than 2,400 donors have contributed to her campaign and more than $500,000 was raised online.

The organizer for the Facebook website is Kamala Harris’ niece, Meena Harris, who has worked for AG opponent, Chris Kelly, in the past and knows all of the Facebook secrets, such as posting videos and invitations in order to have high visibility. Meena Harris (born on the same day as Kamala), following her aunt and mother’s path, is in her first year at Harvard Law School. She said that her and “Boss Kelly” were able to keep things civil in the work place and they have a great relationship outside of the campaign. Harris gives all the credit to Meena Harris, who has contributed greatly to the “Buzz into Bucks” Campaign, referring to the “buzz” on social networking sites.

Speaking of “buzz,”, they call Harris the ‘female Barack Obama’ because of the biracial background and political trailblazing. She was a strong supporter of Barack during his campaign canvassing in Iowa all the way till the night of this election. She is known to fill in on the behalf of Obama for campaigns such as the Democratic National Convention. During this time she was able to make a lot of connections from people and organizations that would later come to support and endorse her.

“Harris’ and Obama’s friendship goes back several years,” said Tony West, Harris’ brother-in-law and Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division in the White House Justice Department. “He has always viewed her as a friend and has looked to her for support and advice. I expect their friendship will continue.”

West went on to stress the importance that a state that is as diverse as California needs to reflect that diversity in its political chairs in order to convey its cultural heritage.

You can definitely see that diversity in Harris’ staff. Paul Henderson, Chief of Administration, in the DAs office prides himself as being one of the first gay black men in his position.

“Gay black men are victimized just as much as anyone else and it’s important that they are represented by people who look like them,” said Henderson who greets everyone that comes to the DAs office with a hug.

Brian Brokaw is Kamala Harris’ campaign manager says that fundraising is a big part of the campaign. He was the deputy communications director for Phil Angelides for Governor from 2004-2006. He has also worked as an aide for John Edwards in the 2004 presidential elections.

Among her endorsers is LAPD Chief Bill Bratton. Brokaw said that was “about as big a law enforcement endorsement that you can receive in a race like this.”

“Bill Bratton’s endorsement is a big boost for DA Harris because he is one of the most respected law enforcement officials in the state, if not the country,” stated San Francisco Police Commission member and Executive Director of the Berkeley Center for Criminal Justice, David Onek.

She has also been endorsed by San Francisco Police Chief George Gascon, which goes to show that her relations with the police department have been bridged. I believe that Kamala Harris’ ‘smart on crime approach, with its proven track record in San Francisco, is what California needs to get tough and smart on crime, said Gascon.

“I hear she is going to get here early,” said one of the young professionals at the evening mixer. “She usually gets here toward the end of things. It should be interesting to see how long she stays.”

DA Harris came after everyone had arrived and left before everyone left. There were over 50 out of about 90 members who turned out at the event for the finance committee, also known as the Young Professionals for Kamala Harris.

The mixer took place at Mr. in the Financial District, a Barbershop and lounge fully equipped with alcoholic beverages for the competitive businessperson’s choice. Two African American students from Stanford University started the barbershop in 2007 for the urban professional. Former Mayor and Harris’ ex-lover, Willie Brown, frequents this barbershop as well.

“I want to thank you for all of the phone calls and emails,” said Harris in regards to fundraising. “You did whatever you had to do legally or illegally!”

Lucky for Harris, there is no spending cap on how much you can spend on a statewide election. Back in 2003, during her run for DA against Hallinan, she far exceeded the city’s cap without notifying the city’s Ethics Commission, which resulted in a hefty fine and being forced to place ads in local newspapers notifying the public of her mistake. Although Harris allowed for her humor to shine through, the atmosphere was competitive. “I already raised my $2,500. How much have you raised,” asked one of the professionals to the woman standing by him. The Young Professionals are made up of young doctors, lawyers, public officials, and students. Not only are they in the Bay Area, they are in Southern California as well.

The Young Professionals, also known as the finance committee, is an all-volunteer committee who have committed to raising $2,500 by June 2010, which is when the final elections will take place.

Celebrity supporters looking for things to pour their money into have taken a liking to Kamala Harris who is not too shabby on the “Hollywood looks” herself. She is smart and attractive and she blends right into the elite social circle of Brentwood and the Hollywood Hills. Lisa Ling has hosted fundraisers focusing on the Asian Pacific Islander community among many other big spenders in Southern California. Harris has also caught the wallet of San Francisco’s Sean Penn as well.

“The work of being California’s Attorney General, to a certain extant, will be a continuation of the work I have been doing for twenty years as a prosecutor,” says Harris.

An Italian Proverb says: “At the end of the game the king and the pawn go back into the same box.” But at this point there is still a big question mark on who is going where and who will check whom? There are a number of contingencies in the California Democratic race for Attorney General. Jerry Brown will only run for Governor if Diane Feinstein opts out. Harris has said that she would not run against Brown if he decides to keep his seat as AG even though she unseated former boss Hallinan.
“Everyone knows he [Jerry Brown] is going to run for governor,” commented Brokaw.

But does everyone really know that? Mayor Gavin Newsom has already dropped out of the race for Governor so who is to say that Harris might not fall into the same box with him? Jerry Brown has put together an “exploratory committee” that will test the waters to access if he has a chance of winning the race. He has yet to announce, officially, that he is running for Governor. Although Brown has served two consecutive terms as California’s governor already he will be allowed to seek a third term because term limits provisions approved by California voters in 1990 passed after he left office in 1982.

He is said to be both raising money for a reelection bid as California’s top cop and actively courting a run for governor. “It’s just too early to tell,” says Barbara O’Connor, Professor of Communications at Sacramento State University. The race elections will not take place until about a year from now.

Dianne Feinstein, 76, says that she might run for Governor and if she does then everyone’s plans will be thrown off track. O’Connor has reason to believe that Feinstein will run for Governor.

“I believe that Jerry Brown is doing good work and if he decides to continue on as attorney general I will not challenge him,” said Harris to KGO/ABC TV.

If she becomes California Attorney General and implements programs like “Back On Track” Reentry, she will absolutely have a positive impact on the prison system, said Keith Kamisugi, Director of Communications at the Equal Justice Society. EJS is a San Francisco based strategy group heightening consciousness on race in the law and popular discourse.

Recently, Harris won an environmental and hazardous waste case against U-Haul. She collaborated with Jerry Brown along with seven other DAs and settled the case after U-Haul agreed to pay $2 million and also agreed to inspect its hazardous waste on a weekly basis to make sure they are not exceeding their waste limit.

Kamala says she is superstitious and doesn’t think too far ahead. “What’s important to me is to do what I’m doing now and do that well,” said Harris when asked about her future aspirations, which can be based on how Brown and Feinstein move. “If everything works out perhaps other opportunities will present themselves.”

Tune into the History Channel Tonight @ 8/7C

THE PEOPLE SPEAK



The History Channel is getting more and more risqué

The hip-hop “Generation Next” vanguard, Lupe Fiasco, never ceases to amaze me with his prophetic lyrics that protest to little black girls to get a passport (“Paris, Tokyo” – Remix) and also warns little boys that the pop music that they are listening to is dumbing them down (“Dumb it Down”).

What he is claiming is even more amazing is a new documentary that he is featured in called The People Speak. Voicing the speech from the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party “The War on Vietnam” and performing his song “American Terrorist,” Fiasco helps us to remember to speak out against injustice because movements stem from everyday people.

“Close your mind/Close your eyes/See with your heart/How do you forgive the murderer of your father?/The ink of a scholar is worth a thousand times more than the blood of a martyr”


Lupe has recently finished up his college tour where he participated in Q&A’s and a gave a sneak preview of what to expect in the film. Other people who participated in the tour were Matt Damon and Howard Zinn who wrote the book that the inspired the film.

The star-studded documentary is slated to premiere on the History Channel Sunday December 13 at 8pm/7pm central.
Hollywood activists such as Rosario Dawson, Don Cheadle, Danny Glover, Jasmine Guy, John Legend, Marisa Tomei and many more will be performing letters, diaries and speeches of historical figures at historical pivotal moments in American society. With such a sensational cast one would think that the message is just sensational but it is really quite enlightening.

“Democracy is not a spectator sport” is the motto of the documentary that was inspired by Howard Zinn’s best selling books, A People’s History of the United States and Voices of a People’s History.

I definitely welcome the History Channel’s tenacity of questioning the government’s intentions. They recently aired a UFO Hunter’s episode citing that “Men in Black” have been conspiring against people who have claimed to see UFOs and they have questioned the government’s reluctance to speak about life on other planets and citings here on earth.

With Obama sending 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan, struggling with healthcare and overlooking protests that are going on right outside of the white house, this documentary couldn’t have come at a better time. Obama is not going to be able to run this country without positive feedback from the community. This is a call to all people to speak out and participate in our democracy because if we don’t then nothing will get done.

Saturday, November 7, 2009



Friday, November 6, 2009

Community Demands Emergency Hearings


Hunter's Point community voiced their concerns about their health and environment



One after another, concerned citizens approached the podium at the San Francisco City Hall Legislative Chamber to voice solidarity with the Bay View Hunter’s Point District in support of justice.

Close to 500 people from all over the Bay Area spilled out into the North Light Court of the city hall on September 15, 2009 at the Board of Supervisors meeting that took place on the second floor chambers. They were there to address a number of issues that plague communities of color, the Bay View in particular.

“Why do you ignore the obvious,” asked Fulu Tuiasosopo, a representative of the Samoan community, addressing Lennar and its relation to the asbestos exposure at Parcel A, of the Hunter’s Point Shipyard. “All you’re doing is delaying the dilemma until new people [with money] move in.”

The residents of Bay View Hunter’s Point believe that they were contaminated by asbestos containing rock that was drilled up by the developer, Lennar Corporation. The residents of Bayview Hunter’s Point in San Francisco, California are exposed to a large amount of toxic waste everyday. The residents have reported that their children are having a hard time breathing and their eyes turned blood shot red during the three month period that Lennar said that their monitors were broken. The dust was so thick from the drilling that you could see it in the air, BVHP witnesses said.

According to the community, Lennar has proven difficult to regulate or to hold accountable at “Parcel A” in BVHP. From April 2007 to August 2007, Lennar, which is a contractor that builds houses, reported that their systems “stopped working” and they were unable to report the levels of asbestos that the people in that area were exposed to. The Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) fined Lennar $515,000. This money has yet to be given to the people of BVHP.

“I have seen people get nose bleeds out of no where,” said Tuiasosopo. “People are getting cancer and they don’t know why.”

Fulu Tuiasosopo brought his 20-year-old son, Denton Tuiasosopo, to the Supervisors’ meeting so he could be educated on the issues that people in BVHP community are facing.

“I see the violence and poverty, and the war on drugs is not the answer,” Denton said. “It’s an economics issue. How are people supposed to get money if there are no jobs?”

One of the main organizing forces behind the convergence that took place at the city hall is the Nation of Islam’s local chapter in San Francisco, headed by Minister Christopher Muhammad. They are calling their movement “Caravan for Justice” and people from different parts of the world are getting involved. The Caravan for Justice has established many connections with other organizations that are geared toward education, social justice and civil rights issues. They have lobbied at SF City Hall and Sacramento Capitol building as well as held weekly town hall meetings in various places in the Bay Area. The meetings started taking off at the beginning of the year after Oscar Grant’s death at the West Oakland BART station.

“It takes the hood to save the hood,” were the words that were written on the backs of the many United Playaz’ t-shirts who were in attendance.

“We are organizing to save the hood,” stated Rudy Valentino, the founding director of United Playaz. “If we don’t stand up for our community, who will?”

United Playaz is a violence prevention and youth-led leadership program that works with San Francisco youth through outreach programs and has been around for 15 years.

E’Dreana Black, 21, was a student at Thurgood Marshall Academic High School when she was introduced to UP. After her graduation in 2006, she decided to stay with UP and she is now working with the organization as a Psychology Coordinator and conflict mediator.

“Now, I really understand the value of education,” she said. “There are students who come over here from different countries and dominate in our classes. I think its time that my community step up and take advantage too.”

After waiting to hear the different agendas on property taxes and environmental findings that the Board of Supervisors had to discuss for almost two hours, the people of the community were able to speak. They were each given two minutes to speak, some spoke beyond that point.

Minister Christopher Muhammad was among one of the first to address the Board of Supervisors. President David Chiu had to restore order after the crowd raised and applauded.

“I think that at a certain point this community is going to need some emergency hearings,” said Minister Christopher Muhammad. “Men are being criminalized, families are being evicted and policies coming straight from this city hall are running gentrification programs all over Northern California.”

Shawna Sanchagrin, 25, program coordinator of the California Coalition for Women Prisoners expressed her solidarity with the Bay View. She expressed her concern that the number of black women in prison is on the rise. According to the Drug Policy Alliance Network, the problem of women in prison is directly tied to current U.S. drug policy. The Bureau of Prisons reports that almost 80% of the female populations being incarcerated are serving time for drug related offenses. She said that she was concerned about the impact that this statistic is having on the black community.

Jaron Browne from POWER (People Organized to Win Employment Rights) was in attendance at the meeting as well. He expressed their concern about California Senate Bill 792, a bill state Sen. Mark Leno introduced that would allow the state of California to sell 42 acres of state parkland on the shoreline at Candlestick Point in Bay View Hunter’s Point for private condominium development. She believes Lennar represents “corporate greed.”

“We want to make sure that Lennar delivers on their promises,” Browne asked. “They’ve had a poor practice of engaging the Bay View community.”

The Chinese Progressive Association, an organization that caters to low-income Chinese immigrants, announced solidarity as well.

“The Bayview has the highest asthma rates in the city,” said the representative of CPA. “All while having the least amount of access to healthcare, hospitals and health clinics.”

“My cousin died of cancer and my uncle died a couple days later,” said Lonnie Mason. “I feel that I’ve paid for that dirt up there.”

Back in the 2000 citywide elections, Proposition P was the largest vote getters on the ballot. The mandate that over 200,000 San Franciscans voted in favor of demanded the navy to clean up the shipyard in BVHP.

The shipyard was closed in 1974. The land has since been divided into six parcels. Prop. P stated that San Franciscans want no compromise on health concerns for residents of the surrounding BVHP district and future residents and workers of the shipyard. Proponents note that Bayview residents are afflicted with the highest levels of cancer, respiratory diseases and other illnesses in San Francisco such as headaches, nosebleeds, and stillbirths.

Lennar was chosen by the city as its master developer for the redevelopment of San Francisco. Lennar, a Miami-based housing corporation has different housing projects all over the country and is one of the largest home developers in the country. Reports have shown that Lennar has suffered financially from a number of homes going unsold which may make future ventures harder to accomplish.

During the testimony single mother and author, Neessee Joshua, 31-year Bayview resident, approached the podium and began to address Sophie Maxwell who is the supervisor of the Bayview District.

“Please refrain from addressing a member of the board directly,” asked President Chiu while pounding the gavel.

The woman said that Maxwell never “had her back." There was an outbreak of about 12 people between the city hall security and representatives from the community after one of the sheriff police tried to restrain Joshua who refused to leave the podium and continued speaking her agenda. Sophie Maxwell intervened and asked President Chiu’s permission for the woman to finish.

Sophie Maxwell responded to the heated situation by stating that she did not take Joshua’s comments personally.

“There are a lot of changes taking place and the people in Bay View need to get themselves prepared,” said Maxwell after the testimonials. “My main concerns for my district are economic development and to have a healthy, clean environment.”

Michelle Obama Highlights Hooping Culture

Michelle Obama, the youngest first lady since 31-year-old Jacqueline Kennedy, is 45 and America’s new embodiment of health and femininity. Obama was photographed hula hooping on the White House South Lawn to promote physical fitness at the Healthy Kids Fair last week. She also double-dutched and completed an obstacle course.



“Hooping is a strong symbol of health and power,” said Cressie Mae Akin, 22, a hooping enthusiast and freelance hoopmaker. “Some people think that it’s just a toy from childhood, but it’s so much more.”

Akin has been hooping as long as she can remember and notes the growing popularity of the holistic art form.

“The pill hype has died down and I see that women are tired of dieting,” says Akin. "Fitness is definitely a more logical approach.”

Hooping is known to strengthen and tone your core, improve balance, provide a cardio workout, and build self-esteem. For women, it’s hard to not feel good about yourself while hooping because your natural beauty really shines through, said Akin.

Akin discovered the hooping community while taking a circus course in her hometown of Brewster, N.Y. She discovered a very supportive network of hoopers, who she says range from circus hippies to mothers to students, teachers and fashion designers.

“Hooping is addictive,” said Akin. “I liked it so much that I started ordering supplies to make my own.”

Akin’s hoops are decked in colorful tapes that range in color and style. In addition to her glittery purple, white, and silver hoops, she has one that is reggae-inspired (black, yellow, red and green). She also makes pairs of hoops that can be used by the arms, which are thinner and smaller.

She plans on organizing hoop-making sessions where she will invite a group of prospective hoopmakers over to teach them how to build original hoops of their own.

The poly tubing usually used for irrigation is ideal for hula-hoops, says Akin. Tubing usually comes in 100-foot coils, and can be found at irrigation supply stores, and at some Home Depot and Lowe’s retailers. Prices range from $15-$25 per 100 feet, enough to make eight hoops. You connect the hoops by fusing them together using heat from a blow dryer or hot water and then adding a “connector” made of plastic. Hoop makers also use tape to add candy-cane-like stripes, and the tape can be ordered from a website called identi-tape.com.

Other forms of hoops are known as fire hoops, where fire is vented from a number of holes in the tube and the LED (Light Emitting Diode) hoop - a hoop that emits bright fluorescent color lights that is visually stunning to the viewer.

Hoops can also be made from metal, wood or vines. In ancient Egypt, over 3,000 years ago, children would fashion circles made from dried grape vines, swing them around their waists, roll them on the ground and toss them to each other. There is also a Native American hoop dance known for storytelling, used in a festival that takes place every year.

A growing subculture of hula hoopers is expanding in range and popularity. Some hoopers have adopted a hooping dance form, which interprets forms of rhythmic gymnastics, hip-hop, freestyle dance, fire dance, twirling and other dance and movement forms. A feature documentary, called The Hooping Life, consists of intimate video blogs by hoopers (they also call themselves hoop-dancers), who claim that the art form has saved their life. A hippie jam band, String Cheese Incident, throws hoops out into the crowd at their shows. Even the virtual world game system, Wii Fit, has hopped on the hooping bandwagon, and some at-risk youth are using them along with fitness gurus and modern circus dancers.



“Once you learn how to make your own hoop it’s going to be with you for life,” said Akin. “Its like your own personal dance partner.”

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Speaking Out on the Issue of "Rape"

The rape that occurred in the city of Richmond is a wake up call to society as a whole. The fact that there were at least 20 bystanders watching and laughing while this 15-year-old girl was getting assaulted at her homecoming dance is pitiful.
It is a call to the Richmond Unified School District as well as to all school districts that rape is not just a problem that happens on college campuses. It happens to high school students and to students who are still in middle schools and even elementary schools. I have no doubt in my mind that these children had the worst sexual education a school could give. The best way to make students aware of sex, rape, and other issues is not to keep silent. The best ways to address these issues is to speak about it.

All too often issues like rape are kept secret while children are struggling to understand and trying to grapple with the thoughts or experiences that they are going through. I blame these rapes on the adults in our society.
I began to understand how crucial sex education is after watching the documentary, No! It was a documentary by Aisha Simmons who was a rape and incest survivor. The documentary confronted rape in the black community and the stigma that was associated with victims of rape crimes. The statistics stated that one in three women would be sexually assaulted in her lifetime. The documentary also brought to light that people of the same race as the victim commit rapes and the victims are usually silent.

Rape survivors and activists were the main people who were interviewed in the documentary so they were able to offer a framework behind why rape happens. One of the women said that rape is a “community based issue.” The fact is that children that commit acts of rape know very little about sex. And most of these children and minors have misconstrued assumptions about a female’s right to say no.

“Why are we silent about one of the most barbaric, intensely painful, ultimately destructive acts that any community can endure?” Asked Johnetta B. Cole, Ph.D, and former president at the Bennett College for Women in North Carolina.
According to the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN) 44% of rapes happen to minors.
The fact that most rapes go unreported does not mean that the victim’s suffering do not exist. The psychological effects of rape are real and they need to be addressed because victims of rape are three times more likely to suffer from depression and are 13 times more likely to abuse alcohol.

What we need is visible support in our communities. Rape awareness needs to be advocated more in sexual education classes and sexual education needs to be addressed in the home. While rape and sex may be very uncomfortable things to talk about they need to be addressed or we are going to have a generation of youngsters who know nothing about sex or rape and despite their ignorance they are still going to be pressured by obscene images on the television screen.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

NY Fed stays undiversified...possibly more corrupt

Op-Ed

By Crystal Carter and The GreenLining Institute


Our economy collapsed because of corporate greed and malfeasance and we have just added two more greedy moguls to the mix. The New York Fed, an institution that is supposed to pursue maximum employment and to “support financial stability in the U.S. and abroad,” just named Jeffrey Kindler and James Tisch to fill their public interest positions. These two men had an estimated compensation of over $22 million dollars for the year of 2008; all while the people living at or under the poverty level was 37.3 million in 2007.

If success was measured by how much money you had then these men are successful but one must wonder why the Fed couldn’t find more qualified directors especially in light of the fact that communities of color have been hardest hit by the current economic crisis. For instance, while the national unemployment rate is 9.7 percent, African-American unemployment is 15 percent and Hispanic unemployment is at 13 percent, stated Chairman Edolphus Towns at a recent House Oversight and Government Reform meeting. With the addition of these two directors, there are only white board members and only one woman on this board.

We call on President Obama and his constituents to investigate this appointment, especially considering the controversial pasts of the New York Fed. Witnessing the resignation of Stephen Friedman because of a conflict of interest with Goldman Sachs, which he owned in the nineties. Also AIG awarding highly inappropriate bonuses to its executives after receiving over $180 billion in government bailout money is a wake up call that the NY Fed needs a lot of alterations.

Pfizer, under CEO Jefrrey Kindler, has a net income of $8.1 billion as of 2008. While receiving a 100% on the corporate equality index it has spent a lot of its earnings bribing people. This company has been sued at least four times in the past decade for off-label promotional practices and fraudulent promotion and bribery by paying medical providers to promote drugs for uses not approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

Loew’s Corporation’s President and chief executive officer, Tisch is busy pouring all of his company’s money into cigarette companys is in it for the money and obviously not about the American people’s health.

In addition, the Fed should adopt strict new rules that more adequately define the public interest that includes somebody with a proven track record of standing up for consumers’ and not on its own need to make a quick profit.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Landmark Town Hall Meeting in Bay View Hunter's Point

Very first Town Hall Meeting hosted by the Asian Pacific Islander Community in Bay View Hunter's Point

A Community that was once separated by religion, district, and color has come together. No one is untouched.

Bay View Opera House (3rd Street @ Oakdale)

July 16, 2009

"I think the Bay View has great needs, especially when it comes to it's economic needs. Bay View has a very rich history. Home to people who migrated to California from the south. They were part of an industry that was flourishing at the time.
There is some of the highest home ownership in the entire city, right in the Bay View. There are families who have been there for generations. Unfortunately as certain industries closed, the economic base of the community deteriorated. For a community to thrive it needs to have an economy that sustains income and revenue.
Every community needs to have a grocery store and a dry cleaners a family doctor and local physician. In San Francisco, we pride ourselves on being able to walk everywhere we need to go. In Bay View, you could be walking for a very long time in order to maintain a healthy, productive life. Bay View should be a focus for the entire city in terms of what we should be doing in order to achieve job prosperity."
~ District Attorney Kamala Harris, July 2009



On my way to the weekly townhall meetings that take place in the BayView Hunter's Point I walked through the scene of a drive by. There were cop cars surrounding the car that had the front door open and the side window shot out. I asked one of the brothers, " what happened?" He told me that another brother was shot while two kids sat in the back seat. I wondered where was all of the love behind this hood tragedy.

The BayView is plagued by a high murder rate and gang activity. Just recently has it gained access to a super market that sold fresh and healthy foods.

The townhall meetings offer hope to community that is in need. This specific townhall meeting was sponsored by the Pacific Islander community. The reception was very welcoming and I was quite happy to see so many black and Samoan people in the same place, having dialogue about how they can come together and make their community better. For so long the powers that be have divided people of color, tonight proved that the fact is no longer true.

Pastor Alex Toeaina started the meeting by stating, "Our Communities are Suffering."

Minister Christopher Muhammad touched on the issues of gentrification and how the "greedy corporate entities" are not focused on communities of color and their family but instead on the single, urban professional. He focused on the fact that the city does not want to clean up the BayView Shipyard for the sake of the current residents but will clean it up for new development.

JT the Bigga Figga, a well-known bay area rapper stated his concern for his community by stating that children are at the center of his movement. He wants children to realize their God given talent. He says through the cohesiveness of community children will be given the love and attention that they need.

It was great to see the number of young adults in attendance. I could see the hurt in these young scholars eyes but I also saw the glimmer of hope and that they are willing to fight for justice and equality. They brought up the fact that the number of women (the bearers of life) being incarcerated is rising. They were aware that the system works against them. They understood the fact the drugs might be cut in the community but the people in the community do not bring them there. They understood the ethnocentric educational system.

Willie Ratcliff, editor of the BayView Hunters Point Newspaper, remembered when people in the BayView didn't have to lock their doors. He urged the point to support locally owned black businesses and to understand the importance of economic sustainability.

Another woman from the audience stated that when she took her daughter to the doctor the doctor suggested that she move out of BVHP because the air is toxic. She wants to know why don't they move the poison out.

According the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, Lennar, a housing development agency, was cited by the city because they were not monitoring asbestos containing dust correctly. Instead of going to court, Lennar paid the BVHP community $515,000 to pretend that nothing happened. There is still a debate going on about what should be done with the money that the community was given. A great suggestion would be to set up a clinic that will assess the impact that the asbestos containing dust had on the community.


BayView has some of the most beautiful views in the city of San Francisco but at the same time it is home to one of the most toxic waste sites in the country. I am amazed and inspired by the fighting spirit of the people in BVHP. They are exposed to toxins that make them more susceptible to cancer, asthma, still births, bloody eyes and nose bleeds on a daily basis and they are thoroughly concerned. How can this be justified and why isn't the government doing something about it? They are fighting for their right to life, liberty and the pursuit of land and they are not giving up.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

CARAVAN FOR JUSTICE III



JT the Bigga Figga, rapper and activist, poses with scholars on the steps of the State Capitol in Sacramento after he spoke at the podium. – Photo: Francisco Da Costa



Students from Le Conte Elementary School in Berkeley stand behind their teacher during her time at the podium. – Photo: Francisco Da Costa




Caravan for Justice III brings the heat to the lawmakers
by Crystal Carter

May 28, 2009



Signs reading “Justice for Oscar Grant,” “Abolish the Three Strikes Law” and “Demandamos Justicia Ya!” floated above a sea of ralliers of different ages, religious beliefs, genders and ethnicities.
From Bakersfield up to Sacramento, activists, teachers and family members came together to rally against laws that have failed to serve the betterment of their communities.

The third installment of the Caravan for Justice took place Tuesday, May 26, on the steps and inside the State Capitol building in Sacramento.

“It’s a hot day today,” said Minister Christopher Muhammad. “But it’s going to be even hotter for the legislators if they don’t listen to our demands.”

Minister Muhammad, the leader of the Nation of Islam as well as the executive director of Muhammad University of Islam in San Francisco, is one of the main organizers in the Caravan for Justice.

So far the Caravan for Justice movement has been a success. Their last visit to the Capitol on April 8 caused two legislators, Tom Ammiano and Leland Yee, to initiate a bill promoting “civilian oversight” to handle complaints against the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) police in the wake of Oscar Grant’s death. The protest has also focused on issues involving gang injunctions and succeeded in prompting Sen. Roderick D. Wright and Leland Yee to inject a bill to combat them.

Dana Blanchard, a fifth grade teacher from Berkeley, brought 14 of her students with her to participate while voicing her concerns to the crowd. She understands that not everyone can get to the protests but she offered other alternatives: signing petitions, writing letters and attending events when you have the time.

“I brought my students with me so they can learn how to stand up for what they believe in,” she said.

Blanchard said that the state we live in doesn’t care about its students. She is worried about where her students will end up if they don’t know their rights. She says that she tries to let her students understand that there may be things that they disagree with and there may be things that they don’t understand but she always makes it a point to let the children know that their opinions do matter.

Tom Helme, 26, graduate of Humboldt State University, spoke about the project that he and a group of other community members started called Cop Watch in the city of Modesto.

“We decided to take matters into our own hands after realizing how much police can get away with,” said Helme. “Now when we see someone getting wrongfully harassed by the cops, we pass them out our ‘know your rights’ card.”
The know your rights card spells out a step by step process of what one should do when being questioned by the police. One part of the card reads:

“If the police stop you, ask, ‘Am I free to go?’ If not, you are being detained. If yes, walk away. Ask, ‘Why are you detaining me?’ To stop you, the officer must have a ‘reasonable suspicion’ to suspect your involvement in a specific crime (not just a guess or a stereotype).”

“Getting involved in protests like this gives us a sense of community,” said Helme. “We are transforming energy into action.”



Bisola Marignay, an activist who participated in the caravan insisted that although there are a number of issues that were addressed in the protest that she would not have it any other way.

“Separation is a weakening factor,” she said. “When we come together, our energy is that much stronger.”

Oralia Cortez, 62, along with her group, Families to Amend California’s Three Strikes (FACTS), came from Bakersfield to get their word heard. Cortez has a vested interest because her son is serving 35 years to life for his third strike for stealing $1,000 dollars. She says that in order to influence the legislature, you must use your words as your weapon.

On Nov. 2, 2004, the state’s voters rejected an amendment to the statute - offered in Proposition 66 - that would have required the third felony to be either “violent” and/or “serious” in order to result in a 25-years-to-life sentence. In the last week before the election, Gov.

Arnold Schwarzenegger launched an all-out campaign against Prop. 66. “It would release 26,000 dangerous criminals and rapists,” he stated. When, in fact, there were only 8,000 people sentenced to 25 years to life under the Three Strikes Law.

Currently, there are more than 8,400 inmates serving possible life terms under the three strikes law, according to the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

“Wickedness prevails when good people do nothing,” she said. “An unjust law is no law at all.”

According to Minister Christopher Muhammad, the fourth Caravan for Justice is scheduled to take place sometime next month. Plan to get on one of the dozens of buses that will take you there from around California. For more information, visit www.caravanforjustice.com, email info@caravanforjustice.com or call toll-free (877) 549-8657.

Crystal N. Carter, a 2008 graduate of San Francisco State University, is a member of the Bay Area Black Journalists Association (BABJA). She writes for ColorLines Magazine and can be reached at ccarter6@gmail.com.

Friday, May 29, 2009

RESPONSE to PAWNED SOVEREIGNTY: Sharpened Black Perspectives on Americanization, Africa, War and Reparations



Crystal Carter
May 28, 2009

Comparative Analysis : Two African Countries Affected by the US Economic Crisis
Senegal and Ghana

INTRODUCTION

“People from Africa are so used to struggling,” said Tifsihet Hailemariam, 28, an immigrant from Ethiopia. “We have to deal with so little, we really are not that surprised when hit with a crisis like this.”
For people who live on the world’s poorest continent the current global crisis is old news. They face a crisis of survival everyday. Some will find it hard to believe that a continent comprised of 47 countries and an abundance of natural resources is facing a decline in GDP, but it is.

Africa has made some of its biggest gains in the past few years as China, India, Europe and the US has competed for its natural resources. But now that the money has dried up, Africa, along with the rest of the world is starting to feel the heightened affects of the global economic woes. Africa is unique in this global crisis because the affects will be more paralyzing than a country whose economy was thriving in the beginning.

In times of economic unrest and instability people are apt to become more competitive and money hungry. Citizens begin to see a person who was once a comrade betray them to ensure their place on the economic ladder of wealth, success and so-called financial independence. During times like this it is hard to remember that family and relationships come first.

Although we are in hard financial times, we have discovered just how interconnected the whole globe is. Although large bodies of waters and different languages separate us we must understand that when one country fails, we realize that all countries will fail. It is because of this that we must realize that we must do away with the fact that capitalistic competition is good and embrace the term: cooperation.

Nature, history and the global economic system have combined to deprive Africans of much potential wealth and well being. Until about 100 million years ago, the earth’s landmasses were bound together as a supercontinent known as Pangaea. The southern landmasses constituted Gondwana, with present-day Africa the keystone. Through the phenomenon, of plate tectonics, or continental drift, Africa’s “children” began to leave the nest and scatter to their present positions. The presence of deep rift valleys in eastern Africa suggests that this continental separation is not yet complete. Africa’s destiny began with much potential in expanding the growth of the earth as well as the exploration of humans and nature into new and unchartered land. We must not take this beautiful story for granted. We must connect the dots.

Between the Indian and Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean and Red Seas lies a vast, curving land mass called Africa. It is home to the great Pyramids of Egypt, the first written language, and the first astronomers and explorers. Many great resources are found here: silver, gold, diamonds and more. A lot of blood was shed in order to have strict control over this country and a number of countries are at their current economic standing because of the free labor that indentured servitude that the hands, wombs and backs of Africans provided.

Because of the current recession that seemed to have started with the US banks and money grubbing politics. There is less money chasing resources and more and more people are becoming unemployed. No one knows when the recession will end and because of this investment is becoming scarce and people in the Third-World are facing another dilemma.

THESIS

Senegal and Ghana are said to be one of the most successful economies in West Africa. So a comparison and contrast of these two countries will help be a marker on how well other countries are doing in comparison to their neighboring countries as well as the US in its current economic crisis.

SENEGAL: SEEK INVESTMENT IN NEIGHBORING COUNTRIES

The country of Senegal has seen sparks of economic growth here and there but for the most part things of have been quite unstable. A major spark of success that Senegal has seen was its thriving fish industry, which accounts for 25% of exports. But because of the financial crisis that is being felt all over the world there has been a drop in overseas order leaving many fishermen unemployed. In an interview conducted by Al-Jazeera, some laid-off fisherman said that they have had to take work helping grocery shoppers to their cars.

Tons of exotic Senegalese seafood is being left to rot as Europeans stop buying from producers. Falling demand has caused the businesses to cut their prices in order to survive. Sadly, some of these fish are too expensive for the people of Senegal.
On the business side of the fishing market, a local business owner had to cut 90% of his staff and reduce exporting to major buyers like the UK, Italy and the US. In the last attempt at a stimulus plan Senegal has looked to fellow African countries to do trade with, especially Ghana and the Ivory Coast. According to the blog called Trade Africa, Ghana remains the easiest place to do business in West Africa and one of the top 10 economies in Africa by overall aggregate.

GHANA: OPTIMISTIC ABOUT OIL

Whereas Ghana is known for having a vibrant democracy and being economically sound. Although Ghana has signs of a growing economy it is still not up to par. There have been signs of corruption within the government; there is not an abundance of clean running water and proper sanitation. The Health Ministry of Ghana reported that eight people are killed per hour because of the unhealthy water.

While Ghana is known to be the second biggest cocoa producer in the world, the discovery of oil has promised Ghana much more economic independence in the future. With plans to start digging in 2010 some still remain skeptical. According to the South Africa Daily News, most Ghanaians remain among the world’s poorest people earning an average of $3.80 a day.
Oil rich countries like Angola and Nigeria have said that they see oil as a curse that has not improved the lives of the poor. Still Ghana’s leaders are optimistic and feel that oil will benefit Ghana’s future for the better. They say that oil money will go towards building roads, bridges and schools.

While there are many things to be optimistic about for the industrial expansion that is happening in Ghana, the global financial crisis is impacting foreign aid, commodity prices, remittances and private capital flows in Africa. Africa’s GDP growth, initially expected to be 4.9 percent, is now expected to fall to 2.4 percent. Africa is likely to be the worst hit region by the global financial crisis, although it is the least integrated region, the World Bank warned on April 21, 2009.

AFRICA’S DEPENDANCY ON FOREIGN AID: PROBLEMATIC

Africa’s dependency on foreign aid is a very sensitive issue. Since the economy is doing so badly right now, countries may be apt to slow down on the Aid that they are giving Africa. But this is a very bad idea because a decrease in aid may leave thousands of Africans in poverty.

According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), banks are working towards helping protect the most vulnerable during this global crisis. They will focus on better targeting and higher social spending in Senegal. Based on a Poverty and Social Impact Analysis (PSIA) conducted in 2008, the authorities sought to mitigate the impact of the food and fuel price shock by establishing a targeted subsidized rate for small electricity users (implemented in August 2008). With support from development partners, the authorities intend to explore the scope for introducing a conditional cash transfer system, which would provide support to poor families conditional upon investment in human capital, such as sending children to school or visiting health centers.

CONCLUSION

There are many questions that have yet to be answered when it comes to the well being of Africa’s economy, especially during these trying times. One thing that we must realize is that we are not in this alone. We need to reach out to different countries and reward them for their economic uniqueness and work together to see how things can improve. One thing that we must do is to be inclusive. The best way to figure out how to make things work is to speak to everyday citizens and ask them what they would do in order to make their situation better. There is no reason that a country that is so rich in resources should be so poverty-stricken. We have to remember that this is not a competition its about cooperation.

Monday, May 25, 2009

The Linear Time Frame




Notes taken when listening to the "Student of Life" ---
(The Student of Life is a father, R&B singer, aspiring husband, and philosopher)

- We live in a different world where we can manifest our own reality.
- We should think of our reality as a puddy.
"The world should have a main focus. And that focus should be to become a better species." --- In order for us to do that, we must change who we are fundamentally.

Meditation:

When you were a kid, when were you a kid? Was that just a moment in time or are you still in that same mindset? --- That was in the past.

* How does a brain process the past, present and the future. (That is yet to be learned)...

If we look at life in the past then we have no control over our life in the present or future. We need to be able to prepare for what happened then and what is happening now.

"NOW" is very chaotic. We must plan ahead to we can have more trust in the NOW...we must have no regrets.

Imagine if you lived in a world where everything that you dreamed really happened. We do that all the time in our dreams.

Meditation:

In your own vivid memories --- Imagine the things that you wanted to happen and then the reality of what really happened.

* Our brain is emitting what we feel emotionally. The emotions transfer to the brain and (POOF) our reality is in front of us!

The emotion comes before the thought.

Example:

My body is not hungry.

--- Try telling that to someone who's starving.

When you say that you're hungry that is actually you doubting that you can survive.

All in all, these issues are not necessary because we can change our relationship with reality.

~ EMOTIONAL STRESS KILLS LIVES AND DESTROYS FUTURES.

- Why let something that you did yesterday kill you today?

~ As a human being you have memory.

And as a rational human you can come up with a better formula for life. GET WITH THE PROGRAM.

- I am in the business of experimenting with different ways of perceiving ourselves in relationship to society. We are part of the human race. The human race are my people...we are 7 billion strong and everybody helps everybody.

- We should be each others support system. Imagine being born into a family of 7 billion. You would never have to fear anything because you always know a human being will catch you!

On education:
-Education is great but the monetary issues behind it kills a students creativity.


SEVEN BILLION STRONG!


We have some mingling to do!

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

WORKING TOWARD THE DREAM

Peers: Thurgood Marshall students work to restore popular peacemaking program
by Crystal Carter
(Published in BayView Newspaper)



Conflict Mediators Gregory Claybron, Mary Pon and Anita Nicolas give a peer education workshop on drug prevention at the annual Youth Are Resources Conference at Fort Mason in San Francisco. Though the popular program was a source of pride and passion at Thurgood Marshall Academic High School in Bayview Hunters Point, that is the only school that lost the program to budget cuts.


The end of this school year will mark the one-year period since the 8-year-old Peer Resources program at Thurgood Marshall Academic High School was discontinued. In the past year, two students have been jailed, fewer interactions between ethnic groups were witnessed and administrators have yet to do anything about it.

Sharolyn Bautista, former student leader and organizer in the Peer Resources class, knows that the absence of this program is negative for the future students who could have benefitted from the lessons that the class provided. Not only did she use what she learned in class but also outside of school with her friends and family.

“The program was a place for us to connect regardless of race,” she said. “Communication is key and it’s better than being violent. I wish everyone would be exposed to this program because it would only make them better.”

San Francisco Peer Resources (Peers) is a program created in partnership with the San Francisco Unified School District and the San Francisco Education Fund, devoted to creating capable youth leaders who can be effective allies to their peers. It is a service that is extended to other schools in San Francisco as well.

Conflict mediators help their peers resolve disputes peacefully. Youth are also trained in conflict management and learn how to help their peers talk through and resolve conflicts before they escalate into physical violence. Peers is also geared to giving students leadership roles and preparing them for college and higher education.

After students and teachers found out that this class was to be cut they decided to come together. But a firm set of limits was placed on the concerned teachers and students when they decided to raise money to save the program.

Conflict mediators help their peers resolve disputes peacefully, to talk through and resolve conflicts before they escalate into physical violence. Peers is also geared to giving students leadership roles and preparing them for college.
Resident and poet mentor, Kirya Traber, 23, who spent a few months working with the students of TMAHS, remembers asking the students how they felt about “not being supported by their administrators.” She said that “by the end of the seventh period, not only had they drafted a letter to the principal, but they also made initial plans for a sit down meeting, a leafleting campaign and a potential protest.”

After the first meeting that included the principal of TMAHS, Guillermo Morales, in agreement with the executive director of the San Francisco Education Fund, Hugh Vasquez, a list of rules and guidelines were put into play.

“I apologize for and accept responsibility for any miscommunication that left other possibilities open and contributed to any confusion,” stated Brian Stanley, director of the Peer Resources program for all of the San Francisco Unified School District.

And since the statewide student, parent and teacher strikes that took place in opposition to the cuts at the beginning of the spring semester of 2008, there are still demands that have yet to be addressed. Amidst the $4.8 billion budget cut to education in the state of California last year, TMAHS is the only school that had its Peers program cut.

“The principal said if we could provide the funds for the coordinator position we could have the program,” said Mica Valdez, 33, former coordinator of the Peer Resource Center at TMAHS. “But then (Brian Stanley) changed his mind at the last minute. I was really let down and so were my students.”

A total of $79,542, roughly a teacher’s salary, had to be raised in order for TMAHS’ Peer Resource program to continue into the fall 2008 semester. How this figure was accounted for is questionable because, according to Peers, the school pays for half of the teacher’s salary and the San Francisco Education Fund pays for the other.

“There’s always a plan,” she said when referring to the policy of the school officials. “It’s not that we do not have the money. It’s just that we are not spending it right.”

One of the guidelines that was placed on the fundraiser stated, “All funds raised for Peer Resources must be (a) submitted to the San Francisco Education Fund and (b) must identify the San Francisco Education Fund as the fiscal agent.” In other words, it was not guaranteed that the money would go towards the preservation of their class.

“I am donating because I had a conflict mediation this year,” said Dominique Crutchfield, 18, TMAHS graduating senior, before the effort to raise money was stopped. “I was about to get in a fight with this Asian kid, but then Peer Resources helped me. So I know it’s a good program.”

On Sept. 15, 2007, during physical education class, a rubber ball hit a young girl and the teacher immediately blamed a student who was known as a troublemaker. He was sent to the office. Distraught at being wrongfully accused, the student did not want to speak to the dean or the principal.

“It is standard protocol to use resources such as Peer Resources and other mediation before bringing in the police,” said Valdez.

When the principal confronted the child in the hallway, the student said, “Back away! I do not want you to come near me because I am afraid of what I might do.” Disregarding the child’s wishes, the principal approached the child to grab him and the child pushed back and ran off the campus. Instead of notifying the parents, the principal called the police and the child was charged with assault.

Marcus Hicks, 17, who is a student conflict mediator and works to racially integrate students, says that some adults make the youth feel “jumpy.” Students think if they go to an adult, they’ll get in trouble. But when it’s peer-to-peer, students feel at ease and more willing to talk about whatever their problem is, he said.

TMAHS is in the Bayview District and mostly caters to African-American, Latino and Polynesian youth. Due to the socio-economic disadvantages of living in this area, this school relies on additional resources to support students with special needs.

“Many schools are going to suffer next year and there will likely be higher dropout rates and incarceration of youth of color,” said Valdez. “Equity and a child’s right to a good education is what is at stake here.”

The U.S. prison and jail population has reached a record high exceeding 2.3 million people, according to a new report by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Rodney Robinson, 32, has been a mentor to incarcerated youth at the Youth Guidance Center in San Francisco since 2000. He believes that the only way to make a positive effect is to connect with the community.

“Teachers need to get involved in the students’ life not just at school but doing home visits as well,” he said. “You’d be amazed by how much the child appreciates that.”

Robinson went on to state that from his experience with the youth, he has realized their need to vent their frustrations to a trusting ear is imperative.

Mica Valdez, who is now pursuing graduate work, gave students statistics about the rate of young people of color who are currently being incarcerated. She made it a point for students at TMAHS to connect what they were learning in class and to understand it by connecting it back into the neighborhood in hopes that their ideas will make a difference.

“How are disenfranchised youth to compete in a global market if they are not given access to the educational tools that will allow them opportunities to be successful?” she asked.

Peer Resources Director Brian Stanley stated that the school anticipates rebuilding the program in either 2009 or 2010. While there are still Peer Resource programs at Martin Luther King Middle School and Willie Brown Academy in the Bayview, there has been no notice as of now when the program will be re-implemented at TMAHS.

“The faculty has not shown that they care about getting the program back,” said Hicks. “Some students took the program for granted and the teachers failed to realize that this program meant a lot to us.”

If you are interested in contributing to getting Peers back in Thurgood Marshall Academic High School, please contact Peers directly at (415) 920-5211.

Crystal N. Carter, a 2008 graduate of San Francisco State University, is a member of the Bay Area Black Journalists Association (BABJA). She writes for ColorLines Magazine and can be reached at ccarter6@gmail.com.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

The President Refuses to Let America Fail

Presidential Address to Congress


Tonight, Obama was successful at reassuring Americans that he will not let us down. Between the long applauds and standing ovations Obama's words were very strong and I could tell that he truly cares about the state of our economy and his dedication to the recovery of the current recession.

He stated that he cared more about the well being of his people as opposed to spending billions on the war. He promised to raise the pay of active military and to give full medical benefits to war veterans. He will also end the tax breaks for the wealthiest two percent. If you make less than $250,000 a year, your taxes will not be heightened a "single cent." Obama has seen how a small percent of people have benefited from the tax cuts and bailouts. On top of these bailouts the banks still have not distributed the money to the streets. Instead they are giving their CEO's bonuses and sending them on extravagant vacations. Instead of giving these corrupt individuals bailouts, we should be bailing out the people who are getting their homes foreclosed on, or the people who are receiving less than minimum wage. What about these people who need it the most.

Regarding education, he plans to draw seven million more Americans into higher education if they promise to volunteer in their community. "By 2020, America will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world." Being that the economy has a vested interest in the university and higher education, Obama's idea is excellent. Imagine the quality of life that people will enjoy if they were given a chance to pursue their interests more while not having to worry how they will eat of afford books. Why didn't we see this before?

As inspiration he put the spotlight on a banker who received a hefty bonus and instead of keeping the money he gave it to the people who worked for him as well as the people who worked for him in the past. He said that he "didn't feel right keeping it." He also pointed out a young 8th grader who wrote a letter to congress asking them to help repair her school. She said that she and her peers want to aspire to be doctors, lawyers and one day president. She went on to say that "we are not quitters."

Along with these inspiring people, Obama said that he will put more money into energy and health care. Hopefully this will consist of "going green" and pushing people to quit smoking by giving money to smoke free ad campaigns!

The President's Economic Stimulus has passed and now it is time to see the results. He said that the stimulus checks on their way. Please let us know when you receive that check. We want to make sure he is delivering.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

In Collaboration With...




 
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