25 September 2005

sharon olds is my new hero

So this is a week or so old, but it's great: http://www.poetsagainstthewar.org/sharonolds.asp

We went to the anti-war protest in San Francisco yesterday; you know, it always seems important to be counted. I have to say it was disappointing, lackluster even. It was the same old choir of Bay Area lefties trading flyers for mostly the same cause and Socialist Workers getting indignant that you don't want their paper. It truly felt fruitless, unlike earlier demonstrations. Naturally, there was a Santa Cruz contingent, but where was, for example, the Vallejo group? I wanted to see some suburban moms, some of these formerly pro-war Americans who've finally decided the war is a bad idea, mingling and getting active alongside the ones who are always out there. And where are all the people of color? You know, when you don't listen to or read mainstream news you tend to forget that not everyone is hearing the version of world events that you are, so when you go out in the streets, even in San Francisco, it doesn't look quite like you imagined it would, and you lose a little hope.

23 September 2005

damn spam

Okay, so I notice I got some spam here in the comments so I've instituted word verification for posts. I hope that stops it.

20 September 2005

Fazal Sheikh--2005 MacArthur Fellow


Could I be more happy? Another of my beautiful, dear friends gets his genius props! Maybe 2005 hasn't been a total waste. Congrats, Fazal!

19 September 2005

and now for something completely different...



I'm announcing the re-release of a t-shirt first designed in conjunction with my graduate thesis project, the reinvention of a children's playground in Santa Ana, CA. I've gotten so many inquiries about the t-shirt since, that it's coming out again, thanks to the print-on-demand possibilities of cafepress.com.

Above is the design on the front. The t-shirt back says, "What do we plant?" Together they are meant to suggest the revolutionary potential of an intense, long-term engagement with the physical and social space we occupy. In that sense are all gardeners. What will we plant?

So check it out.
http://www.cafepress.com/dbvisser

Love and wishes for peace.

Deirdre [my honey]

Rep McKinney Special Order Censored?

http://bellaciao.org/en/article.php3?id_article=8235

by Rep Cynthia McKinney

I mentioned the word impeachment on the House Floor Thursday late afternoon, but I don't see it in the official Congressional Record transcript. I was chided by the Speaker that it was out of order to question the President's motives. I didn't question motives, I questioned actions: from lack of actions on Katrina to cutting the budget of safety net programs, to rewarding the rich to the detriment of all the rest of us. This transcript directly from the Congressional Record is mangled and omits that word!!!! I can't believe this.

Please read the attachment (I don't normally do attachments) and see if I missed it. If I hear back from you that it is, indeed, missing, then I will say the word repeatedly on the House Floor upon my return to force them to put my words as I say them in the Congressional Record.

In this talk, I discuss Katrina, the State of Black America, the State of Hispanic America, poverty in America, and the Katrina timelines being developed that will keep us from falling victim to the White House spin. In addition to explosive information given to me from investigative journalists and whistleblowers, there is one particularly pernicious development taking place: bioweapons labs under water with who knows what having been released into the environment. People desperate for jobs must be informed what the heck has been unleashed in the devastated areas as a result of Katrina. Anyone involved in cleanup must have this information before entering New Orleans. I shudder to ponder all the ramifications of Katrina. Although I didn't finish my remarks, and I'm told they also shut the microphone off as I was concluding my remarks--something I don't remember ever having been done to a Member before--I think you get the message here that high crimes and more than misdemeanors have been visited upon the American people.

13 September 2005

oh, alright

http://www.snopes.com/politics/katrina/robertson.asp

but after the Hugo Chavez thing I figured him capable of anything.

12 September 2005

um, wow

ROBERTSON BLAMES HURRICANE ON CHOICE OF ELLEN DEGENERES TO HOST EMMYS
Lesbian is New Orleans native

Hollywood – Pat Robertson on Sunday said that Hurricane Katrina was God’s way of expressing its anger at the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for its selection of Ellen Degeneres to host this year’s Emmy Awards. “By choosing an avowed lesbian for this national event, these Hollywood elites have clearly invited God’s wrath,” Robertson said on “The 700 Club” on Sunday. “Is it any surprise that the Almighty chose to strike at Miss Degeneres’ hometown?”Robertson also noted that the last time Degeneres hosted the Emmys, in 2001, the September 11 terrorism attacks took place shortly before the ceremony.

“This is the second time in a row that God has invoked a disaster shortly before lesbian Ellen Degeneres hosted the Emmy Awards,” Robertson explained to his approximately one million viewers. “America is waiting for her to apologize for the death and destruction that her sexual deviance has brought onto this great nation.”
Robertson added that other tragedies of the past several years can be linked to Degeneres’ growing national prominence. September, 2003, for example, is both the month that her talk show debuted and when insurgents first gained a foothold in Iraq following the successful March invasion. “Now we know why things took a turn for the worse,” he explained.

In order to avoid further tragedy, Robertson called not only for the Television Academy to find a new heterosexual host, but to bar all homosexuals and bisexuals from taking part in the ceremony.

He said employees at the Christian Broadcasting Network had put together a list of 283 nominees, presenters, and invited guests at the Emmys known to be of sexually deviant persuasions.

“God already allows one awards show to promote the homosexual agenda,” Robertson declared. “But clearly He will not tolerate such sinful behavior to spread beyond the Tonys.”

11 September 2005

Katrina's Forgotten Victims: Native American Tribes

By C. Stone Brown
© 2005 DiversityInc.com®
September 09, 2005
(http://www.diversityinc.com/members/17137print.cfm)

The early news headlines for Hurricane Katrina highlighted some black New Orleans residents "taking" goods from businesses. Days later, the coverage shifted from "looting" to sympathetic coverage of black evacuees and criticism of President Bush and the Federal Emergency Management Agency. But despite the constant media coverage, Native Americans have become Katrina's forgotten victims.

Native American tribes that stretch across the Gulf States of Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi affected by the wrath of Hurricane Katrina largely have been ignored.

"What we are hearing is there has been no contact or minimum contact with most of the tribes," said Robert Holden, National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), who estimates there are several thousand Native Americans living in the hurricane's path. But like other news accounts regarding the dead, there are no firm numbers on the death toll. What we do know is there are at least six federally recognized tribes located in Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi. They include the Poarch Band Creek in Alabama, Coushatta India Tribe, Jena Band of Choctaw and Tunica-Biloxi Tribe in Louisiana, and the Chitimacha Tribe and the Choctaw Indians in Mississippi.

Although communications with the tribes has been very limited, Holden said there was one particular tribal area near in Chalmette, La., that had a gruesome story. "This tribal representative said they were using Chalmette High School as a morgue. Evidently, they are in proximity to New Orleans, and they have heard from no one in five or six days." Chalmette is located approximately nine miles east of New Orleans in St.
Bernard Parish, one of the areas hardest hit by Hurricane Katrina. "They were inundated with water, completely washed away, not only their homes, but their livelihood--fisherman, shrimpers, folks who everything they had was destroyed," said Holden.

The Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians remains unreachable by phone; however, news reports indicate power outages on the reservation with evacuees seeking shelter at the tribal hotels, according to the NCAI.
The Native American community has taken action. Instead of waiting for relief efforts by local, state and federal government officials, the NCIA has teamed with the National Indian Gaming Association (NIGA) to raise relief funds for Native American tribes in Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi.

The goal is to raise at least $1 million. NIGA started the fundraising effort by contributing $5,000.
"The word is beginning to go out--many tribes have already implemented relief efforts. Some have sent trained responders, police, law-enforcement folks," said Holden.

For more information on the NCAI relief fund, go to http://www.ncai.org/ .

10 September 2005

'nuff said

06 September 2005

kanye west is my hero

If you don't have a TV (like me), you can watch the clip here: http://movies.crooksandliars.com/Kayne-West-Bush-Black-People.wmv


Tuesday, September 6, 2005
4:00 p.m. CST outside the Reliance Center at Kirby and McNee

New Orleans Black Community Leaders Charge Racism in Government Neglect of Hurricane Survivors
Press conference to announce plan to save lives and demand role in rebuilding effort

HOUSTON - A national alliance of black community leaders will announce the formation of a New Orleans People's Committee to demand a decision-making role in the short-term care of hurricane survivors and long-term rebuilding of New Orleans.

Community Labor United (CLU), a New Orleans coalition of labor and community activists, has put out a call to activists and organizations across the country to work on a "people's campaign" of community redevelopment. Organizing efforts will take place across hundreds of temporary shelters. The population of New Orleans is 67 percent black and over 30 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, reflecting the current demographic of hurricane survivors displaced all over the South. While the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the White House, and Governor Blanco attempt to regain the public's trust by evading the question of who's to blame, a short and long-term plan for New Orleans hurricane survivors has remained in a political vault of silence.

"This is plain, ugly, real racism," states Curtis Muhammad, CLU Organizing Director. "While some politicians and organizations might skirt around the issue of race, we in New Orleans are not afraid to call it what it is. The moral values of our government is to 'shoot to kill' hungry, thirsty black hurricane survivors for trying to live through the aftermath. This is not just immoral-this has turned a natural disaster into a man-made disaster, fueled by racism."

Leaders of CLU, in alliance with nearly twenty other local organizations and several national organizations will discuss their plan at a press conference on Tuesday, September 6, 2005, at 4:00 p.m. CST outside the Reliance Center at Kirby and McNee. The coalition will announce:

· The formation of the New Orleans People's Committee composed of hurricane survivors from each of the shelters, which will:
1. Demand to oversee FEMA, the Red Cross, and other organizations collecting resources on behalf of the black community of New Orleans
2. Demand decision-making power in the long-term redevelopment of New Orleans

· Issue a national call for volunteers to assist with housing, healthcare, education, and legal matters for the duration of the displacement

Tax-exempt donations for the People's Committee and the national coalition
can be made out to: Young People's Project, 440 N. Mills St., Suite 200,
Jackson, MS 39202 or visit www.qecr.org.

Community Labor United is a coalition of progressive organizations in New Orleans formed in 1998. Their mission is to build organizational unity and support efforts that address poverty, racism, and education. CLU organized in the areas hardest hit by the hurricane.

Curtis Muhammad is a veteran Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) organizer and co-founder of CLU.
For more information, please contact:
Curtis Muhammad
Community Labor United (CLU)
muhammadcurtis@bellsouth.net

Becky Belcore
Quality Education as a Civil Right (QECR)
bbelcore@hotmail.com

Becky Belcore
Volunteer Organizer
Louisiana Research Institute for Community Empowerment (LaRICE)
bbelcore@hotmail.com


Also:

The 'Dream Center' Shelter is in desperate need of volunteers. To help them, please contact the Dream
Center in Los Angeles at www.dreamcenter.org or in Louisiana call (it's mostlybusy- but keep trying) 225-474-6688.

05 September 2005

inevitable

The Navy has hired Houston-based Halliburton Co. to restore electric power, repair roofs and remove debris
at three naval facilities in Mississippi damaged by Hurricane Katrina.

Halliburton subsidiary KBR will also perform damage assessments at other naval installations in New Orleans as soon as it is safe to do so.

KBR was assigned the work under a "construction capabilities" contract awarded in 2004 after a competitive bidding process. The company is not involved in the Army Corps of Engineers' effort to repair New Orleans' levees.

http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/business/3335685

There's so much information and discussion out there right now and I'm trying to keep up...thank you to everyone for their support and as soon as I know more I'll definitely take you up on any offers to help.

Oh, and how can I not post this—while people were dying in the streets the air conditioning was on to protect art?????



NOMA survives intact
By Dante Ramos and Doug MacCash
Staff Writers

The New Orleans Museum of Art survived Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath without significant damage.

But when Federal Emergency Management Agency representatives arrived in the area Wednesday, NOMA employees holed up inside the museum were left in a quandary:
FEMA wanted those evacuees to move to a safer location, but there was no way to secure the artwork inside.

Six security and maintenance employees remained on duty during the hurricane and were joined by 30 evacuees, including the families of some employees.

Harold Lyons, a security console operator who stayed on at the museum, said FEMA representatives were the first outsiders to show up at the museum in days.

They immediately tried to persuade staffers to leave the building. That would have left no one to protect the museum's contents and no one inside the museum had the authority to give that order, Lyons said as he inspected the grounds.

Museum Director John Bullard was on vacation and assistant Director Jacquie Sullivan had taken a disabled brother to Gonzales.

"We can't just leave and turn out the lights on the say-so of someone we don't know,'' Lyons said.

The phones inside the museum had failed. Lyons asked a reporter to pass a message to Sullivan as soon as possible.

Interviewed by telephone, Sullivan said she had been in close contact with emergency management officials all day Wednesday. State Police had promised to take her back to the museum at 7 a.m. Thursday, she said.
City Park was littered with fallen trees, but evacuees' cars, clustered around the museum's walls, were mostly unscathed. The museum itself was spared any wind damage and floodwaters had not reached the building.
Inside, the museum's generators whirred away, providing air conditioning to preserve the priceless artworks inside.

Sullivan said museum workers had taken down some pieces in the Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden before the storm.

But a towering modernist sculpture by Kenneth Snelson was reduced to a twisted mess in the lagoon.


And finally, this is a rather unbelievable discussion of the "looted"/"found" photo captions that have been widely circulated: http://www.snopes.com/photos/katrina/looters.asp

Thulani Davis on Katrina

I've been talking often to some of you and when I woke up today, the only thought that came to mind was Jesse Jackson's indignant cry, "This is the bottom of the slave ship we are looking at."

I think Jesse actually put his finger on what happened to all of us this week. Those shots we've seen are, as he said, the bottom of the slave ships. I think that really goes to why all the rest of us watching are so traumatized. and I think it is necessary to repeat what he has said about how the people in this country have a high tolerance for viewing "black pain." Yes, while we are asking the unheard question as to why a third of New Orleans' population is so poor and all black, everyone from the president on down is comfortable with these realities of our ongoing unemployment, overcrowding, homelessness, drug addiction, neighborhood crime and despair.

Jesse's metaphor is also so apt in that you only have to listen to five minutes of reporting to know families have been separated in ways that could be irreparable--across states, even mother's from month-old babies...just evacuating babies without contact with the parents is such a nightmare, I hate even hearing about it.

These are the people who were marginalized from the Internet as well; are they going to run to a computer site? African Americans in this crisis are further having the devastating experience of watching parents
suffer and die right in their faces on sidewalks where people have been forced to stand, not even sit for days.
And the people crowded next to them are experiencing the same deaths.

And like our ancestors, the poor today will have no access to therapeutic treatment. This is where you just have to agree with Jesse that the people in charge have the capacity to tolerate scenes of suffering they know have been suffered by blacks for generations. At the same time, people among the stranded have been made aware that they are being portrayed as lawless by media people who are freaking out at the idea of thousands of black people not guarded by police.

That in itself is a legacy of slavery. And even as we watched, the reporters and anchors on both NBC and
CNN yesterday both misidentified Congressman John Lewis as Congressman Elijah Cummings for
HOURS. This is one of the staples of the era when I was young and black people first appeared on TV
and no one could tell one of us from another. This is really tired, old nonsense. I find myself filing email
complaints to the networks, even though I know John Lewis and many others probably told them.
Lastly, there is now what is called the Katrina Diaspora. This diaspora of people without resources
puts the restoration of families and community at risk, and in the case of New Orleans' black community,
probably makes that impossible. Even people who own land there are going to be in deep trouble
trying to hold onto it when the real estate boondoggle gets in the courts. I'm afraid we'll be reading a lot of
stupid crap about how they couldn't be found, taxes were owed, etc. as in times past throughout the
South. That's why I hope Jesse gets someone to bring people like Congressman Bennie Thompson into the fold, as he is familiar with the commission that had to be set up in the Delta because people are still trying to get back land stolen in the 1930s. And the developers are probably asking for eminent domain to be declared even as I'm typing.

Will Jesse, Al, Elijah, et. al. be asking after the fact, after they've read it in the paper that the black community
be represented at the table of planning "the NEW New Orleans?" The cultural heritage of New Orleans, which is so unique is in serious jeopardy. The perfect mix of forces and cultures was based in a particularly unique feature of the dispersion of Africans during slavery: a disproportionate share of the Yoruba brought here (who were a minority within the groups in Middle Passage) landed in that area. What happened after that in encounters with the French, the Caribbean and the peoples of the States, cannot be replicated. Replacing the architecture with vinyl versions of shotgun and camel back houses will not produce any Buddy Boldens, Jelly Roll Mortons or Louis Armstrongs. And as a writer, I myself have used the invaluable records kept there of this unique heritage. Just as one had to worry in the several rounds of the bombing of Baghdad that not only were untold people being killed but some of the oldest treasures of human life, I feel even more concerned that no one will care that thousands have died in New Orleans, others thousands dislocated and that one of our own cultural treasures, the city of New Orleans itself, will be deprived of its cultural engine.

This is a tragedy not only for the millions there on the ground, and the national economy but for the culture at large. We are witnessing in one week a dislocation one-fifth the size of Middle Passage--which took place over more than 200 years. And all those conveniences of modern social organization which would mitigate its effects for most of us--phone, internet, cars, gasoline, and family with ample housing--do not apply to this country's poor.

For them, getting lost may mean not being found any more easily than in 1865 when people went on foot and in wagons following word of mouth leads to find where family members may have been sent.

It is unbearable, and unconscionable.

http://www.blackcommentator.com/149/149_davis_new_orleans.html

03 September 2005

katrina


UPDATE: My mom's family is from New Orleans, so we have lots of people there. Everyone is now accounted for. Here are some links for general assistance/information.

http://neworleans.craigslist.org/about/help/katrina_cl.html

http://gofugyourself.typepad.com/go_fug_yourself/2005/09/a_momentary_fug.html

http://katrina.com/

Also check out: http://www.leftturn.org/Articles/Viewer.aspx?id=670&type=W

http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/september2005/010905redcross.htm

Below are some small, grassroots and New Orleans-based resources, organizations and institutions that will need your support in the coming months.

http://www.sparkplugfoundation.org/nolacommunityoversight.html
http://www.rebuildgreen.org/
http://fflic.org/

Social Justice:
www.jjpl.org
www.iftheycanlearn.org
www.nolaps.org
www.thepeoplesinstitute.org/
www.criticalresistance.org/index.php?name=crno_home

Cultural Resources:

www.backstreetculturalmuseum.com
www.ashecac.org/
http://198.66.50.128/gallery/
www.nolahumanrights.org
http://www.freewebs.com/ironrail/
http://www.girlgangproductions.com/

people and animals (or, is peta the new stupid?)

Given the way in which people of color are being treated right now in New Orleans, this adds a little more to the discussion. This is as I received it, including the introductory comment below, which I find troublesome:

this was too much not to pass on.......in the name of so called liberalism....you can always leave it up to the hippies and liberals to show their truest COLOR.....

click on the link below to see PETA..the animal rights people's newest campaign....click on hanging and scroll through the pictures.....do it before they suspend the site.......

http://www.peta.org/AnimalLiberation/display.asp

here's an article if you want to read futher...

New PETA Campaign Sparks Outrage
By Dana Williams Writer/Editor, Tolerance.org

The lifeless bodies of two noosed black men, dangling from trees as a mob of whites sheepishly surveys the scene.

The smoldering corpse of a black man, burned alive atop a pile of wood.

The terrified face of a slave, wearing only a piece of cloth about her waist as a man presses a hot branding iron to her back.

Alone, the images evoke the kind of gut-wrenching horror that makes people want to look away.

But place them alongside photos of slaughtered cows, burning chickens and branded pigs, and for many, they evoke a different emotion — pure outrage.

Such is the juxtaposition of a new PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) exhibit, "Are Animals the New Slaves?"

[Okay, I don't want to violate copyright. For the full article and an update go to http://www.tolerance.org/news/article_tol.jsp?id=1266].