Since I’ve Been Gone

Hello all. My apologies, it has been almost a month since my last post. Much of the reason is I’ve been trying to finish a book that I’d like to dedicate a post (or several) to. BUT I’ve been slacking on my reading.

Today, I’d like to briefly talk about the little girl who was handcuffed by the police. I bring this up because someone has asked me to talk about it. Truthfully, I don’t think there is a HUGE issue. The child was being reckless, destructive, hurtful, and unwilling to calm down or cease her antics. What should have been done to restrain her? Should a grown man cop yoke her up? Twisted her wrists and held them together forcefully with his own strength? Should she have been allowed to continue to destruct school property and injure students or other adults in the school? Now, I can DEFINITELY see why people are outraged by this. I can see why people think it was excessive since she was just a child, BUT what I pose to you is, what should have been done? For me, I see it as the lesser of the evils. Now, don’t get me wrong, I have my own issues with the police and do think a lot of their antics are racially driven and an abuse of their authority, but I can’t think of something better that could have been done. Sometimes I think that people are always looking to make the police the scapegoat in EVERY situation, and even though they deserve the blame in most situations – your hatred towards the police should not cloud your rationale. I mean, what SHOULD have been done? The school tried to calm her down, police tried to calm her down, and nothing worked. A child should not be allowed to continue on a spree of destruction (child or anyone else for that matter). If they allowed her to continue that’s almost like saying, it’s okay go on rage filled spree of destruction. If you learn that behavior is okay at 6, what about when you’re 12, 16, 26? Would you then be allowed to go on a rage filled spree, possibly gun wielding? No, you wouldn’t, so how should they have stopped her behavior more appropriately at 6?

As I said, I can definitely understand why some people are outraged since she is just a child, BUT I really can’t think of something else that could have been done. Children need to learn their behavior is wrong, not tolerated, and if you break the law – there are consequences. I myself have seen the back of a patrol car, felt cold handcuffs tight against my wrists, and sat in a piss scented holding cell AND you know what that led me to do? NOT GET IN TROUBLE AGAIN.

notjustmythoughts

Say It Ain’t So

In a recent article from Colorlines it appears that many people in Sanford, FL have had mishandled cases by the police department. This comes to light in the aftermath of the Trayvon murder and scandal of an uncharged man. For those of you who may live in a bubble of seclusion, Trayvon was followed by a 240lb man on a dark rainy night. To which, Trayvon defended himself from attack and that man shot him, point-blank, in the chest. Said man claims self-defense. I’ve eliminated the racial identities of both Trayvon and his killer because honestly, as much as this may be racially fueled, this is more a matter of wrong and right. You cannot follow someone, approach them, and then claim self-defense when THEY were defending themselves against you – a stranger who pursued them on a rainy night. Anyway, in light of this tragedy, many others are stepping forward with claims of injustice in their cases. The Justice Department is stepping in to review the police department in Sanford. (article: http://colorlines.com/archives/2012/03/sanford_city_manager_asks_justice_department_to_investigate_entire_police_department.html)
An old adage says, “in every bad comes a good.” Maybe this is the good to come from Trayvon’s untimely and unjustified death. I personally support the national sensation surrounding this tragedy. I believe that some of the good coming out of this is 1. Sanford, Fl is being publicly put on display as on overtly racist town and community 2. racial injustices are being brought to the forefront of discussions and 3. people are FINALLY taking notice to much of what I’ve said all along – racism exists in systematic policy, government, and law. I’ve been hearing a lot of people say things like, “the way this world is going” or “how things have changed” BUT I disagree to those statements. Nothing has changed in our world and it is going the same place it always has been. This country was founded on systematic racism, discrimination, and injustice. The change is the internet and social media. People are finally becoming aware to the MULTITUDE of racial injustices of our country. Social media is allowing for the likely breezed-over story (of Trayvon and so many others) to come to light with force and magnitude.

A revolution needs to happen.
notjustmythoughts

Juvenile Lifers

I think crime is wrong no matter the age. I think murder is worse no matter the age. BUT I also believe in second chances and rehabilitation. I am not saying that every juvenile who gets life deserves a second chance. BUT I think that circumstances should be weighed. What was this child’s life like, mentally, physically, etc… was there abuse? Can the child get mental help and cure the demons prompting the violence? Furthermore, this IS a racial thing. If it were up to “whitey” he’d lock every black and brown kid up for his natural life… How is it so easy to give up on the youth? Which reminds me of “The Other Wes Moore”. If you’ve been following my blog you may remember this post. It was a book a read about to gentlemen names Wes Moore. They lived two completely different lives, in adulthood, but in childhood their paths were very similar. The author, Wes Moore, includes an antidote about his friend who was told to stay away from him by a teacher. The friend instead thinks, how is it so easy to give up on a 12 year old. It’s a sad reality, but people do it all the time. And sentencing a juvenile to life in prison without the possibility of parole is no different. Society, likely, failed them twice. First, by not offering opportunity. People believe this country is filled with equal opportunity, but it’s not. Let’s look at education. This is the most fundamental thing that can be offered to anyone…knowledge. Knowledge is the source of power because it opens one’s mind to a world previously unknown. But if you look at schools in poor/bad/ghetto/urban/forgotten neighborhoods, you will find graffiti desks, metal detectors, and children treated as criminals with random searches and assuming stares. How is this an equal opportunity? Your neighborhood injustices cannot be escaped even in the quest for knowledge. On and off the streets you are seen as a worthless criminal. The second failure being, the opportunity for rehabilitation. When you dive deeper into the juvenile lifer population you find that most of them have had psychological trauma that went untreated and lead them down the wrong paths… their paths never being steered in the other direction thru rehabilitation or outreach…

Maybe I am over simplifying, but check out this article and do some research of your own. These are my conclusions and likely, notjustmythoughts.

http://colorlines.com/archives/2012/03/juvenile_life_in_prison_without_parole.html

Slavery’s Last Stronghold

“Slavery’s Last Stronghold” by John D Sutter (pictures/video by Edythe McNamee)

Please read this article from CNN. This story was so moving. I believe slavery exists in this world in many forms, but even I did not believe that it still existed to this degree. While the world is screaming outrage for KONY2012 and other online articles make its way virally, let’s spread this reality like wildfire and spawn change.

link: http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2012/03/world/mauritania.slaverys.last.stronghold/index.html?on.cnn=1

you’re welcome,
notjustmythoughts

Recant

I am recanting my support for KONY2012 because I feel a lot of information was left out of the video with the purpose to incite people to support. This tactic I don’t believe this to be a just method for garnering support and thus, I must not support. I truly believe in the equality and honesty of all people and the video, while emotional and factual on some counts omits a lot of the truths. It wasn’t until I (and many of you) began digging deeper. I must admit, I too acted on emotion and was all for the support, but in learning some of the truths, I just can’t fully support this movement. I do believe, whether or not the torment continues Kony (and others like him) should be punished for their past actions. I support Kony’s capture and prosecution when that time comes, but cannot support the KONY2012 movement put out by Invisible children.

I found a pretty interesting article I thought I’d share about this as well. http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/invisible-children-hides-truth-article-1.1041118?pgno=1

Caste System

When you think of the Caste System largely you think of India, but today, think of Mexico.

Mexico has long been considered to be a non diverse country. Meaning, people there consider themselves to be of largely the same background, mostly of mixed race of European and Natives. However, this isn’t exactly truth. Yes, a lot of Mexicans are of mixed race, but there is still a large number of indigenous people. There are also blacks. Mexico was not sheltered and they experienced their own waves of immigration into the country which brought slaves and different European backgrounds. In a docu-series Black in Latin America, there was an episode exposing the truths of blacks in Mexico. While I knew there had to be (simply because I believe every country has their share of black, native, and European mix) I didn’t really know anything about it. While watching this episode on blacks in Mexico, I was surprised at the discrimination. I am not sure why I was even surprised. If you think about the Black community here there is an onslaught of discrimination against them and they American. So American in fact, that they helped build this wonderful country. Though much of it was through slavery under unfortunate circumstances, if it wasn’t for the Black community our country wouldn’t have made the progress it did early on (think about the cotton/textile industry, the tobacco industry, etc.). I am not praising slavery AT ALL. I am simply saying, that African Americans helped shape America and they are discriminated. So why did the discrimination of Black Mexicans surprise me? I am not sure. I guess maybe because I just like to hope things are better than they really are, which I am continually reminded of the fact that no, things are not better…they are just as I believe them to be (discriminatory, harsh, unforgiving, destructive, racist, etc).

I’ve digressed from the point of this post… the point is that there are unofficial caste systems all around the world (even here in America). And I wanted to shed light on one of them – Mexico. Check out the link below. It is from globalpost.com and and talks about some of the injustices in Mexico faced by the black and indigenous community. The article specifically highlights 3 YouTube videos that have gone viral showcasing the upper “white” class of Mexicans berating other Mexicans. It seems that with money, people believe they can treat others without it anyway they want. The sad reality is, this is mostly true. The saying Money, Power, Respect isn’t just a moniker used in rap songs. This is tried and tested in the workings of government and policy. Money buys you the power (over people, power to buy government [hello, this is EXACTLY what lobbyists are]). Money buys you the respect (albeit respect garnered in fear of repercussions). Money is the highest caste system of all.

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/mexico/120309/social-gaps-on-youtube

notjustmythoughts

Power of Voice

I support the KONY2012 movement that as been sweeping the internet and the nation these last few days. Below I’ve copied my email response to a friend who has been sending me information on the criticisms about the movement. While I do hear and understand a lot of the critique, for me this represents a bigger picture of the POWER OF VOICE.

Me: They may have left Uganda 6 years ago but the fight isn’t over. they still exist, just have been in hiding and not as active. That doesn’t mean he should go without having justice brought against him. And i think that Kony represents a bigger picture of the power of the people and the internet to spread the word to troubling things that happen in other countries. at least that is what i see from this. Nothing is perfect. No revolution is sought and found without first being met with resistance. These people (the critics) are resisting the positive effects that come along with this KONY2012. I agree that they should’ve said made him infamous rather than famous and they should’ve added something to the KONY2012 posters to not seem like he is running for election, but the posters as they are, will get people to look it up and they will find that he’s not running for anything. I stand by this 100%. I am prepared to hear criticisms and down right opposition to the movement. But I still support this because of the meaning behind this. I see the bigger picture in showing the nation/world, that people can stand up for what they believe and that many people feel the same way. Voices are being heard and 26yrs after this man ravaged the country he is FINALLY coming close to his doom and justice. He may be in hiding for 6 years, but look at Osama…he was hiding since 2001.

notjustmythoughts

KONY 2012

Join the cause. If you have never stood for anything now is your chance to take an important stand. History is YOURstory to make.

www.kony2012.com
To buy action kit/bracelets: http://invisiblechildrenstore.myshopify.com/
To make a donation: http://bit.ly/yp5Ffv
To sign the pledge: http://www.causes.com/causes/227-invisible-children
To watch the film: http://vimeo.com/37119711

I look forward to seeing you there.

notjustmythoughts

Ain’t this some sh*t

Colorlines.com never fails me… please check this artilce out. It is worth the read. Essentially this is another day in the life of systematic racism in the form of government policy… think, Jim Crow. It seems he’s been resurrected (and not just in the incarcerated sense like the 2010 book THE NEW JIM CROW, by Michelle Alexander)…
http://colorlines.com/archives/2012/03/voter_id_card.html

I just don’t understand (although sadly I do) how this can happen in 2012….

notjustmythoughts

Occupy

This is a copy and paste from a newletter I subscribe to. In times when much of society can get you down, I figured I share a little something to uplift. As you will read, there is power in numbers and we must continue to “fight” for our rights. I use quotes around fight because it should not be with force or arms but rather force in numbers and educated rallies. I feel as though the time has come in our society for a new age Million Man March… This can be done… Occupy in many ways, is trying…

Ned Sublette Newsletter: 
[Nedslist] 03/06/12: Occupy Wall Street: Facing Global Protest, G8 Retreats
We barely had a winter this year.  Spring will be heating up soon . . . http://occupywallst.org/article/facing-mass-protest-obama-hides-g8-camp-david/

Facing Global Protest, G8 Retreats

Posted 5 hours ago on March 6, 2012, 4:48 a.m. EST by OccupyWallSt

The Group of 8 Summit, a meeting of the governments of the world’s eight largest economies, was supposed to convene in Chicago this May. For months, Occupy Chicago, international anti-war groups, Anonymous, and hundreds of allies have publicly planned to shut it down. Now, only two months before the meeting is scheduled to begin, U.S. President Barack Obama is moving the assembly of over 7,000 leaders from the world’s wealthiest governments to the Camp David presidential compound, located in rural Maryland near Washington, DC, one of the most secure facilities in the world. The Chicago Tribune reports that summit organizers are “stunned” by the news.

Occupiers and allies celebrated the decision with a victory party last night. The Coalition Against NATO/G8 War & Poverty Agenda (CANG8) and Occupy Chicago issued the following statement:

    The G8 moving to Camp David represents a major victory for the people of Chicago. The leaders of the 1% are moving because of the overwhelming resistance to the NATO/G8 war and poverty agenda in Chicago. Our city is filled with tens of thousands of people who are struggling to keep their heads above water, fighting against the effects of the economic crisis caused by the leaders who would have been gathering here. The communities of Chicago are fighting to save their schools, keep healthcare available, and to defend their jobs from cutbacks that are a hallmark of the governments of the G8.

    The city has carried out a campaign to intimidate and vilify protesters, claiming that protests lead to violence. In fact, the main source of violence in the world today is the wars being waged by NATO and the US. “We will march on May 19th to deliver our message: Jobs, Housing, Healthcare, Education, Our Pensions, the Environment: Not War! We and tens of thousands will be in the streets that day for a family friendly rally and march, with cries so loud they will be heard in Camp David and across the globe. We will be in the streets that day to fight for our future, and speak out against the wars and their cutbacks are designed to benefit the 1% at the expense of the 99% of the world.”

While officials claim the decision to move the G8 was not related to fear of protesters, Chicago police have admitted to expecting tens of thousands to show up in Chicago this May, and have been stocking up on “less lethal” weapons to use against protesters. Following Occupy Chicago’s Call of Action and Adbuster’s call for 50,000 people to come to Chicago, the City Council granted Chicago Mayor Emanuel extraordinary powers to make security decisions and suppress free speech during the NATO and G8 summits. The city also tried to spread fear by warning downtown businesses to ramp up their security in anticipation of conflicts between riot police and protesters.

Chicago will still host NATO allies and partners on May 20 and 21 to discuss the war in Afghanistan and other topics, and will remain a focal point for the Occupy movement this spring and beyond. Everyone is still encouraged to go to Chicago this May for a major mobilization, or organize actions locally! Occupy DC and Occupiers in Maryland have also begun to consider their response to the moving of the G8 to their area.

Coinciding with the G8 and NATO summits in the U.S., the Occupy movement, trade unions, organizations of migrant workers and the unemployed, environmentalists, youth, and anti-war protesters throughout Europe have also called for days of action from May 17th to 19th centered in Frankfurt, Germany against “the crisis dictatorship of the European Union:”

    We resist the disaster that is applied to Greece and other countries, against the impoverishment and denial of rights of millions of people and the practical abolition of democratic procedures resulting from the decisions of the Troika consisting of ECB, EU and IMF. The days of protest in Frankfurt directly succeed to the International Action Day on May 12th and the anniversary of the first assembly in Madrid on May 15th. We are therefore sending a visible sign of solidarity to those people in Europe who have been and are resisting against the debtocracy of the Troika and the attacks on their livelihood and their future. Simultaneously, protests are being organised in the US against the G8 Summit in Chicago.

    The choice of Frankfurt for the protests results from the role that the city has as headquarters of the European Central Bank (ECB) and of powerful German and international banks and corporations. On May 17, we will occupy parks and main squares of the city to create spaces for discussion and exchange. On May 18, we will block the running business of banks in Frankfurt and turn our anger about the Troika’s policies into action. We will gather for a large demonstration on May 19 and visualise the broad base of the protests. From many countries and regions of the world people will travel to Frankfurt and participate in the days of protest.

The decision to move the G8 is a victory; it shows that the political and economic powers-that-be are scared by the power of the 99% when we awaken and join together. We must continue to use our collective strength to fight the greedy agenda of the G8 governments, who only serve the interests of the global 1%. Occupy Chicago and their allies continue to mobilize. Stay involved in organizing against the G8 at Camp David and NATO in Chicago! Follow #OccupyCampDavid, #CANG8, #GTFOG8, @OccupyTheG8, and @OccupyChicago on Twitter.

While Obama may think he can hide world leaders from dissent or shield them from our protest, our message will be heard clearly across the world – including Camp David. Those responsible for the economic crisis, widespread inequality, and manufactured austerity – the G8, NATO, EU, IMF – will be held accountable, wherever they choose to meet. From Chicago to Camp David to Frankfurt, the #GlobalSpring is upon us.

your welcome,
notjustmythoughts