Poverty Porn?

Just another day in media’s unfair portrayal of minorities.  This article is about the Native Americans – the Lakota Indian Reservation specifically. 20/20 had a special titled “Children of the Plains.” This piece was an unfair characteristic of the Lakotas without touching on the deeper issues that create the poverty in their communities…

this is all too familiar… BUT the Lakotas fought back putting out a video. So I know for certain that the unfair portrayal of minorities in the media is notjustmythoughts… check out the article by colorlines.com it icludes the video. http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/12/native_american_youth_to_abcs_diane_sawyer_were_more_than_poverty.html

And so I’m angry

This is just the kind of thing I’m talking about…

RACE, RACE, RACE!!!

This is happening to American Muslims… I know it’s a religion, but it’s a race issue! I mean Jewish is a psuedo race, when it’s a religion and ethnicity… so I guess that’s the same for Muslims… Either way… this is the stuff that makes me angry!

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/lowe-explanation-bailing-all-american-muslim-high-comedy-premise-weren-t-sad-article-1.990400

He, called me IGNORANT!

http://www.amptoons.com/blog/files/mcintosh.html

I responded to someone’s blog with a comment about “White Privilege”… would you believe the person responded back to me saying I was ignorant and that race doesn’t always have to do with the issues of society.

I am not big on judgement, but I do presume this person was a white male. Just the way he responded I could feel that his privilege has clouded his thoughts into believing that is something that does not exsist.

My belief is that race is inherently imbedded into every aspect of society. How could it not be…this country, from the moment Europeans set foot to land, persecuted those who were unlike them (Native Americans). Then it moved on to Slavery. Then the abollishment, that really was something that just happened and not necessarily what Lincoln set out to do. But even with Abollishment… we had Jim Crow and other segregation laws. Racism is something that is imbedded in the very nature of what it is to be America.

Now, just to clarify. I am happy to be American. I am thankful for the privilege that comes with being an American… and that American Privilege has sometimes clouded my ideas of other people…. but then I started traveling… and educating myself more… on things that maybe this country hasn’t shared so openly (and we know the gov’t hides things!) and sometimes… well sometimes I don’t like being an American… all the things that happened to get me here… I guess that’s really what I don’t like.

And now that I rambled a bit… I say all this, just say, check out the article on white privilege… It’s a real thing and white people write about it. 🙂

notjustmythoughts, keep reading friends and share your thoughts with me. I love to read your comments!

Racism Manifests

check out this article. It’s from 2005, but really, not much is different: http://blackcommentator.com/131/131_guest_black_struggle.html

Personally, I very much believe this (racism manifests) is real. I am Latina, but face a lot of the same fates. The racism I have faced is not in the form of Jim Crow or the ‘new’ immigration laws of Arizona or Alabama (yes I liken these to Jim Crow), but I have faced it. Here are some way’s I have seen it manifest…

I have never gotten a job where I went on the interview with my curly hair. In fact, I was turned down for the position and one year later was called back to work with this person’s associate. I wore my hair straight for that interview and got the job. Seeing the person who turned me down – well they “didn’t recognize [me] with straight hair.”

Whether my hair is curly or straight I often hear, “your black right?” I am not offended. Black (and every other race/ethnicity) is beautiful, but really? Why, I always ask. I have never received a reply. I believe this is a racist statement because my hair is on the verge of kinky.

People refer to all seemingly immigrant Hispanics as Mexicans.

On the note of Mexicans: the Coto/Margarito fight, someone commented about Margarito, “get him, he’s a damn illegal.” In fact, Margarito was born in California – though of Mexican decent. I sharply turned around with a scathing look and accused this person of being racist. He denied it of course. I told him how he was racist (by making such a comment of being illegal just because the person is Mexican) and realizing he was in a room full of Hispanics back tracked his statement. I did not speak to him again. 

Let’s not (or maybe we should) get started on the news. This is the GREAST racist tactic of all. Blacks and Latinos don’t grace the front page of the paper – they are mug shot there. What I mean, never the story of positive only a negative will be on the front page if they are Latino or Black… unless of course they are athletes…

I guess that’s all we are good for eh? crime, violence, or sports.

We have Obama you might say… well people have been hanging that man to dry since the day he was announced president.

I have tons more examples, these were just the first to escape my finger tips. The article I included really resonated with me because of the words “racism manifests.” I’ve been thinking about it a lot.

These can’t be, no… notjustmythoughts…share yours…

Hi Friends

Sorry I’ve been m.i.a a bit. I am actually a full time student as well as full time employee. This is my last semester and FINALS.

Needless to say, i’ve been a little wrapped up in all my affairs..

Thank you all for reading and I’ll be sure to have something insightful for you soon.

HB 56

http://www.latina.com/lifestyle/news/watch-rock-center-special-report-crisis-alabama

Must see video. I can understand the concerns over immigrant workers, but at the same time, there are benefits to immigrant workers. Small family owned business depend on the help they get from these workers. The danger they pose to the economy NOT being arround surpasses the pros.

I know these are notjustmythoughts.

Thank You Ned Sublette

Below is a copy/paste of an email I am subscribed to. Ned Sublette: author, educator, anthropologist, and activist. Thank you for this email… what is so amazing to me is that a park can be owned privately. ridiculous if you ask me.

it’s been a dramatic day . . . helicopters going overhead nonstop . . .

livestream at http://www.livestream.com/globalrevolution

as i key these words (7:36 pm.), people have re-entered and are re-occupying zuccotti park, and OWS is issuing a call for support, but are being told they will not be allowed to stay there overnight. 

the occupywallst.org website phrases it like this:

http://occupywallst.org/article/nypd-occupying-liberty-square-demands-unclear/

NYPD Occupying Liberty Square; Demands Unclear

Posted 46 minutes ago on Nov. 15, 2011, 6:51 p.m. EST by OccupyWallSt

New York, NY — The NYPD have been occupying Liberty Square since 1:00am Tuesday morning, with the brand new occupation now set to enter its second day in just a few short hours. But will anyone listen to them when their message is so incoherent?

“What are their demands?” asked social historian Patrick Bruner. “They have not articulated any platform. How do they expect to be taken seriously?”

Critics of the new occupation allege that meddling billionaire Michael Bloomberg is behind the movement. Others question the new occupiers’ militant posture, concerned about the potential effects on the neighborhood.

“I suppose they have a right to express themselves,” said local resident Han Shan. “But I’d prefer it if instead they occupied the space with the power of their arguments.”

* * *

http://www.thenation.com/article/164615/occupy-wall-street-debates-next-steps

The Nation
Occupy Wall Street Debates Next Steps
Rachel Signer | November 15, 2011

At 9 am, the occupiers were bleary-eyed but full of fight. After a dramatic night, in which they were abruptly forced out of the park—while watching their possessions shoveled into a truck and their friends arrested or pepper-sprayed—they were beginning to get their energy back. About two hundred protesters gathered at the intersection of Canal and Sixth Avenue, and a group lifted themselves onto the top of a wall, where they sat, almost triumphantly, holding a banner that said, “OCCUPY WALL ST” and placards saying, “I will never pay off my student loans,” “I will never pay off my debt” and “I will never get a job in this economy.”

There were announcements that unions and representatives from faith-based organizations were on their way to meet the group and help them “find new real estate.” But instead of waiting, many people decided to go back to the park. Thanks to a temporary restraining order, drafted by the National Lawyers Guild and signed into effect by a judge at 6:30 am today, the protesters thought that they would be allowed to return to the park. The restraining order was set to last only until 11:30 am, and attorneys had gone to the State Supreme Court to ask for its extension.

But when protesters began returning to Zuccotti Park around 10 am, cops in riot gear had filled the plaza and put up barriers, prohibiting entry. Protesters tried asking the cops what right they had to prevent people from entering the park while the restraining order was in effect, but nobody found out the answer.

At the State Supreme Court House this afternoon, only a ten-minute walk from Zuccotti Park, Judge Michael Stallman listened to attorneys representing the Occupy Wall Street movement and representatives from Brookfield Properties, who owns Zuccotti Park. The main question for the judge was whether the eviction was a violation of First Amendment rights—and furthermore, whether the erection of tents and maintenance of generators in the park, which Brookfield Properties says they do not allow, is an essential aspect of the occupation’s right to free speech. The judge eventually denied the petitioners’ application [1] to extend the restraining order, ruling that the occupiers had not “demonstrated that they have a First Amendment right to remain in Zuccotti Park, along with their tents, structures, generators, and other installations” and therefore did not hold the right to a restraining order.

Among the protesters, there were feelings of outrage mixed with a stubborn sense that the movement was moving forward, whether housed in Zuccotti Park or not.

A young man named Tim Weldon, who has been active in running a daily debate group in Zuccotti Park called Think Tank, said that he’d heard that Mayor Bloomberg had said, at a press conference that morning, that the protesters would now have to occupy the park only with their ideas. “What have we been doing all along?” said Weldon. “We’ve been here, discussing ideas about how to make the world a better place. Where has Mayor Bloomberg been?” He said that Think Tank would find a way to go on, even if they couldn’t hold it in the park.

“Mayor Bloomberg has been saying that we could stay here. But then he gave into his authoritarian temptations and kicked us out,” said Bill Dobbs, who has been involved with the Occupy Wall Street public relations working group, and has been at the park nearly every day over the past seven weeks.

“It’s too early to tell what will happen. This is a setback but we will regroup, continue organizing, and be stronger than ever,” Dobbs continued, as protesters swarmed around him, yelling, “Whose park? Our park?”

Outside the court house, 31-year-old Alejandro Varela, who is active in various OWS working groups and lives in Brooklyn, said that the park had mostly been a “survival mechanism” for the Occupy Wall Street movement. “It’s not essential that we have the park, but open space is essential. We’re going to have to spread out. But that’s something we wanted to do before this happened, anyway.”

Varela explained that physical space was a crucial factor in Occupy Wall Street’s ability to attract supporters. “We’re reclaiming the commons. These parks were designed as places to talk, to share ideas, perhaps over a meal.” He added that the location of Zuccotti Park in the financial district gave it a chance to send its message directly toward its intended recipient: Wall Street. “We disrupted ‘business as usual’ by being there,” he said. “We were a reminder that what Wall Street does is negative society.”

But with or without the park, most Occupy supporters do not appear ready to back down from the momentum the movement has gained through laborious organization, ongoing outreach and visible public actions. “No one piece of this movement is indispensable, except people—not even the park,” said Varela. “We need people most of all. Without the park, we’ll just have to be more creative.”
Links:
[1] http://www.nycourts.gov/press/OWS111511.pdf

Link

I have to thank a great lady for putting me on to this film. Julia Andino, thank you.

I hope that some of you will take the opportunity and let me put you on to this movie as well. It is fascinating. Annie Leonard is a great orator in her tale about the stuff in our lives from it’s extraction of materials from the planet to the waste we dispose when we are done with said stuff.

Please take the time and share in Annie Leonard’s thoughts. I know for certain with this one… notjustmythoughts.

Click the link or paste into your browser for the movie: http://www.storyofstuff.org/movies-all/story-of-stuff/

More on Human Rights

So I’m still on this Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Article 4.

  • No one shall be held in slavery or servitude; slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms

Slavery shall be prohibited in all forms. I wonder who dictates the forms. I would argue that Slavery does still exist. Continually the poor (especially in other countries) are subjected to low wage jobs, extended hours, and poor conditions. They are forced to stay in these jobs because their country (or possibly thier education) has limited them from other employment opportunities.

I recently watched a documentary about Haiti, prior to the quake. The title escapes me, but I will post a comment to this post once I have that information for you. The film was about women being the strong hold of the community and the sole economic provider within the family. They often work in factories making only a few dollars a day. They are forced to endure conditions that ended in this country years ago. They can’t speak, they can’t stand, they can’t use a sanitary bathroom. BUT they must stay at this job to support and provide for their family. Many of the homes are in shambles consisting of one room. This one room is the bedroom, kitchen, bathroom, etc.

Isn’t this servitude? A few dollars a day can’t be considered anything but…

These are my opinions, however i know they are notjustmythoughts.

Another part of the world – it’s not so different here.

In another part of the world…(http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/111107/peru-abuse-cases-reopened)

These people were discriminated and abused because of their class, literacy, and economic status.

But it’s not just another part of the world. It happened here with the Tuskegee Expierment and the Guantanomo Bay torture… It’s disgraceful.

What’s worse about this country – the government doesn’t subscribe to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Eleanor Roosevelt helped implement these rights globally. Not every country subscribes to these Universal Rights, but the US? Come on!?!?!?!

Here is a link to the Universal Human Rights (that isn’t so universal) http://www.un.org/en/documents/udhr/