Feb 12: Sen. Whitehouse Community Dinner in Narragansett


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As Rhode Islanders continue to struggle in this tough economy, U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse will host a community dinner in Narragansett this Sunday, to listen to local residents’ concerns and take questions.  Sheldon will discuss his fight to support Rhode Island small businesses, preserve Social Security and Medicare benefits, and implement the “Buffett Rule” to make sure the wealthiest Americans pay their fair share in taxes.

  • Sheldon Whitehouse Hosts a Community Dinner in Narragansett
  • Sunday, February 12, 2012, 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
  • Narragansett High School, 245 South Pier Road, Narragansett

Since taking office in January 2007, Sheldon has regularly held community dinners.  These dinners, which are free and open to Rhode Islanders, provide the opportunity to talk directly with Sheldon about the issues that matter most to them and their families.

Anyone interested in attending can RSVP online at http://whitehouse.senate.gov/services/dinners/, or by calling 401-453-5294.  RSVP’s are encouraged but not required, and the event is first come, first served.

Brown Students Call on University to Pay Fair Share


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A group of students attending Brown University are publicly calling on the Brown Corporation to increase its monetary contributions to the City of Providence. Tomorrow morning at 10 a.m., students will speak in front of the University’s historic Van Wickle Gates, announcing the beginning of their campaign to convince Brown to reconsider its current fiscal relationship with the Providence community.

“We’re doing this because Brown’s part of this community, too,” said Becca Rast, a sophomore. “As such, we need to step up and do our part to help make Providence the city we all want it to be.”

Brown and the City of Providence have been in negotiations for over a year about increasing the University’s payment in lieu of taxes, but recently talks fell apart when the Brown Corporation refused to pass part of an agreement in which the University would pay an additional four million dollars per year to the City, of which half would be earmarked for the Providence public schools and half for taxes on land in the newly-opened I-95 corridor. Following this breakdown, Mayor Angel Taveras recently announced that the City may run out of funds before the year is out.

“To me, it’d be different if Brown were the only entity being asked to pay more,” said Saski Brechenmacher, class of 2012. “But in the last year, Providence students and families have lost their schools, taxpayers have had their taxes raised yet again, and union members have given up benefits. As students, we are not willing to sit back and watch our university refuse to share in the sacrifices being made by so many other Providence stakeholders.”

“We love our school. That’s why we want it to do the right thing,” said Zack Mezera, a junior at Brown. “And it’s why we are calling on the Corporation to agree to contribute at least the $4 million amount that President Simmons endorsed earlier this year, as well as to begin an open and transparent review process of Brown’s fiscal relationship to the city, with participation and feedback from the student body and the Providence community about what a truly engaging and productive city-university connection should look like.”

Students made clear that they understand the many ways Brown contributes to Providence already, and say they do not think this is about the city becoming dependent on the University. “We’re not here today to in any way imply that Brown is the cause of Providence’s fiscal crisis or the answer to it,” said senior Tara Kane. “What we are saying is that Brown has a responsibility to step up and be part of the answer. Because that’s what good neighbors do.”

Feb 9: Art from the Heart Benefit Event


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Mark your calendars for the 6th Annual “From the Heart” Art Show to support McAuley House, a Providence-based organization that serves those who are homeless and struggling. The event will be held on Thursday, February 9th from 5pm to 7:30pm at McAuley House located at 622 Elmwood Ave., Providence.
This event is free and open to the general public. All of the featured artwork will be available for sale, and with Valentine’s Day around the corner why not purchase a great gift while still supporting a good cause! All artwork was created by McAuley House very own guests. Proceeds from this event will support McAuley House guests and the overall work of McAuley House.The evening will include food made possible through the support of RISD Caters/Artisan Events, City Line Distributors, and Johnson & Wales University, also flowers generously donated from Blooming Mad Florist. In addition the hospitality services provided to make this event possible are generously provided from St. Paul’s Religious Education. The McAuley House art show is sponsored by Holy Apostles Church in Cranston, and the arts program this year also was supported and funded by Rhode Island State Council on the Arts.

For more information contact House Administrator, Reverend Mary Margaret Earl at 401-941-9013 x 302 or visit the website at www.mcauleyri.org.

Save the date for a wonderful evening filled with art, food, and just an overall good time!

Feb 5: The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for “Superman”


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The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting For “Superman”” highlights the real-life experiences of public school parents, students and educators to show how these so-called reforms are actually hurting public education. The film discusses the kinds of real reform – inside schools and in our society as a whole – that we urgently need to genuinely transform education in this country.

Sunday, February 5, 1pm at the Media Center at the Met, 325 Public St., Providence.

Join the Coalition to Defend Public Education for this film showing–and stick around for a discussion featuring special guest Brian Jones, co-narrator of the film! (via Skype)

Suggested donation: $5. Proceeds will be donated to the Grassroots Education Movement, the group that produced the film.

For information, call 401-400-0373 or email coalitiontodefendpubliced@gmail.com.

RSVP on Facebook

Restore Roger Williams Park Ponds

Pleasure Lake in Roger Williams ParkOne of the first things I did in Providence, even before the boxes were unpacked, was fish Roger Williams Park. People are sometimes surprised to hear how many fish there are in the ponds… largemouth bass, bluegill, crappy, white perch, and carp (considered invasive but real fun to catch). The ponds are truly a treasure for the urban angler but have long been plagued by poor water quality. That’s why I was so excited to learn of the plan for a multiphase project to improve the ponds’ water quality, habitat, and biodiversity (lot’s of additional info here). Unfortunately, I learned of it just after the initial meeting last fall. In any case, I don’t plan to miss the next one:

2nd Public Meeting to Restore Roger Williams Park Ponds
Where:        Roger Williams Park Casino
When:        Tuesday, February 7th, at 7PM

 

The plan itself is comprised of the following phases:

Phase 1: “Best Management Practices,” Community Engagement and Restoration Design.
Included in this phase, shoreline planting, wetland construction and waterfowl control to reduce water pollution in the Park, as well as development of a plan and cost estimates for restoration of the entire ponds system.

Phase 2:  Full-scale Restoration
Included in this phase, further reductions of on-site pollution and reduction of off-site impacts, continued restoration of biodiversity including control of invasive fish (sorry carp anglers). Of particular importance in this phase will be the planning of ways to address upstream sources of pollution, the watersheds surrounding Mashapaug and Spectacle Ponds.

Phase 3:  Migratory Fish Restoration
Included in this phase, restoration of the stream continuity and migratory fish passage along Belafonte Brook (*love it*).

If you can’t make the meeting, volunteers can get involved by contacting the Narragansett Bay Estuary Program (NBEP).

Providence Children’s Film Festival 2012: Feb 16-21

The Providence Children’s Film Festival was founded in 2009 to bring high quality, independent and international children’s films, animation, and documentaries to New England, and to present them as shared theatrical experiences for the community. Programming includes live action, animation and documentaries, shorts and features, and films made by RI youth, including the films made in our festival workshops.  The festival committee looks especially for films with content that speaks positively to children and families of diverse ages, backgrounds and ethnicities.

Rhode Island’s first and only festival dedicated to children’s films returns to Providence for its 3rd year, February 16-21, 2012.  This year, there will be six days and three venues (Cable Car Cinema and Cafe, RISD Museum, and RISD Auditorium) filled with high-quality, independent and international films for children and youth between ages 3-18!  Advanced Ticket sales starting February 1, 2012. See website for details.

 

Three Providence Leaders to be Inducted into the 9th Annual MLK Hall of Fame


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Mayor Angel Taveras will induct three leaders whose actions have had a significant impact on the lives of Providence residents into the 2012 Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Hall of Fame on Wednesday, February 1 at 7 pm in the City Council Chambers at Providence City Hall.

Leo DiMaio, founder of the College Readiness program and the Talent Development program at the University of Rhode Island, the late Providence Councilman Miguel C. Luna, and the late community activist William “Billy” Taylor have been selected as the 2012 MLK Hall of Fame inductees.

They’re being honored for their demonstrated efforts to carry on the legacy of the late Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. by making substantial contributions to acceptance, social justice, civil rights and equality. Mayor Taveras selected the honorees from a list of nominees submitted to the Mayor by the Providence Human Relations Commission.

The recipients’ names will be permanently inscribed in a plaque in Providence City Hall. The program will also include a spoken word performance by Franny Choi of PrSYM and performances by John Britto, RPM Voices, and the Eastern Medicine Singers. There will also be an American Sign Language interpreter.

April 29: WHEF Bowl-a-Thon

The Women’s Health & Education Fund has announced that registration is now open for the 2012 Bowl-a-thon!  You can register by clicking here and selecting the register button on the top of the page!  It is quick and easy to sign up and invite your family and friends to do the same!

I had a great time last year and raised a few hundred dollars with my team “Grabbing Our Balls for Women.”

From WHEF:

Last year we reached our goal of $20,000 with the help of our amazing supporters like you, but this year we are aiming for $25,000.  I know that we will be able to reach our goal again this year!  Our event this year will be held on Sunday, April 29 from 2-5pm at Town Hall Lanes in Johnston, RI.

I would also like to announce that we will be hosting another Bowl-a-thon Kick-Off Party this year on Wednesday, February 29 from 6-8pm at DUSK Providence.  (301 Harris Ave, Providence, RI)

I look forward to seeing you at the kick-off party and the bowl-a-thon!

Imagination, Collective Struggle, and the Inclusion of Artists and Ordinary People: Angela Davis Speaks at RISD in Providence

PROVIDENCE, RI – Click on the image above to hear a short podcast with Dr. Angela Davis.  It is from a brief interview I conducted with her after a keynote address she gave on Monday, June 23, 2012 at Rhode Island School of Design.  More information about her talk is below; in the podcast/interview, I ask Davis more about the history of race relations within the labor movement.  She replied with an abbreviated timeline of when and why Blacks were excluded, but went on to discuss the benefits of integration in the Labor movement, citing one group in particular – the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (the ILWU).  A labor union that primarily represents workers on the West Coast, the ILWU accepted Black workers as members as early as the 1930′s.

Later in the century, explained Davis, Black workers within the ILWU helped introduce new “radical” ideas into the labor union movement, including during the global campaign to dismantle Apartheid South Africa.

The podcast is produced by me Reza Clifton (Reza Rites / Venus Sings / DJ Reza Wreckage).  Music by (and played with permission from) The Blest Energy Band ft. Tem Blessed & The Empress. The song, “The Struggle,” comes from their album ”Re-Energized,” which was released January 20, 2012. The podcast and article written below are also available on www.IsisStorm.com.

***

(PROVIDENCE, RI) – Imagination, collective struggle, and the inclusion of ordinary and disenfranchised people.  These were among the themes and lessons shared on Monday, January 23, 2012, when famed scholar, activist, and former prisoner (acquitted of charges including murder, kidnapping, and conspiracy), Dr. Angela Davis, spoke at RI School of Design. Part of a week of service dedicated to Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Davis’ keynote address covered the topic of “Building Communities of Activism.”

Her talk included a discussion of King’s belief in collective action despite the memorializing of him as the face of the Civil Rights Movement; an examination of the New Deal from the perspective of the protests and direct actions that prompted the policies that emerged after the 1930′s era Depression; and an analysis of the “prison abolition movement” as an important part of the worldwide struggle for social justice, workers rights, and economic equality.

Davis also talked about and periodically referenced the Occupy (Wall Street) Movement throughout her talk, including the site here in Providence.  At times, she was thoughtfully critical about what many have documented as the movement’s absence or sparsity of space for discussions about race, class, and the “intersectionality” of these and other issues in the Occupy encampments, as well as concerns associating the US occupy movements with traditional American occupation narratives of Native lands, Puerto Rico, Iraq, and other sites associated with the rise (and ills) of “global capitalism.”  Davis displayed this same kind of caring admonition in reference to the exclusion of prison labor union issues in spaces created by the “free union movement,” expressing pride in the advancements but honesty in the historical tendency to leave certain groups out (ie. women, people of color, and prisoners).

Overall, though, Davis expressed an unbridled show of support and enthusiasm for Occupy activities (and the labor movement), citing Occupy as the main reason why a climate exists again in this country for discussions on economic inequalities and the failures of capitalism.  Notably, she also inserted occupy in her speech, reframing the syntax and lexicons usually used in historical texts about Civil Rights and Worker movements, where terms and phrases like “sit-ins” and “street demonstrations” became sites or examples of people who “occupied” spaces.

Conscious of her audience and the origins of the invitation – RISD, an art school – and in response to a question from a student, Davis encouraged artists to continue making their art.  Harkening back to the ordinary people who joined because of their collective abilities to imagine a world without segregation, racism, jails, etc. Davis says that artists are in the practice of imagining the impossible, and that alone is a gift to the world – and contribution to the movement.

Drinking Liberally Tonight at 8pm


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Some number of us will be gathering at 8pm on Wednesday at the Wild Colonial in Providence. (And we’re looking for new folks to help organize Drinking Liberally — if you’re interested, please come by and let us know.)

Racial Profiling Prevention Act


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Have you or anyone you know ever been racially profiled? Sick and tired of police abusing their power?

Well the Providence Youth Student Movement (PrYSM) has been working very hard on the Racial Profiling Prevention Act since last fall. To gather support, the Racial Profiling Coalition is holding a press conference on this Wednesday, Jan. 25th at 3:00pm inside of the State house (room TBA). PrYSM will be premiering the short documentary we made with Youth In Action’s Next Generation Media Team, about firsthand experiences of racial profiling.

Please come and make a difference for our community. You can also share your personal stories about racial profiling at racialprofilingstories.wordpress.com.

We’re also calling for submissions to our Photo Project! So please, send in a picture of yourself holding a sign saying “Do I look suspicious?”, “Do I fit the description?”, or any other saying you’d like. We’ll display them at the State House and online on our blog!

Understanding The Intersection of Race, Music and Politics

(RHODE ISLAND, MASSACHUSETTS) – If I were to describe some of the events I have coming up as political, I’m sure someone would ask me, “hey Reza, what is political about an event featuring spoken word poetry and world rhythms?”  This is the type of question I love to answer, though, sadly, few seem to find the courage to ask it.  Still, I think I want to spend a little time breaking it down for you.

Now, I hate to make this sound clichéd or ultra familiar in terms of the African-American experience, but, really, it’s not clichéd; the transatlantic slave trade and American chattel slavery is where it begins.  Remember, this was (is?) a system and a series of policies that made reading and using native languages illegal; made breaking up families, forced breeding, and forced sterilization standard during different periods; and made identity and self-determination a muddled concept at best.  Family stories, national heroes, indigenous recipes – banned, marginalized, or high-jacked.  From these conditions, a people fought onward and moved forward, often in the form of Negro spirituals, blues music, and later hip hop.  In essence, if personhood, pride, and goal-setting could not be achieved through homeownership, the right to vote, or access to living wages, then it was through music, oral storytelling, and creating new (creole) sounds within which people of African-descent found courage and voice.

Today, we see challenges and struggles such as low high school graduation rates, exorbitant prison/probation rates, and disparities in healthcare access, treatment, and mortality rates – again, caused or condoned by this country and state’s systems and leaders.  Therefore it is in the tradition of our ancestors, activists, and cultural rebels before us that “The Rhythm Heard Round the World” event happening tonight is, in fact, a political gathering.  There will be new spaces, new sounds, and new ways to communicate our stories and build community – strategies we are forced to return to again and again; a recipe that calls for a dash of politics and a sprinkle of art.

That is one of the reasons I’m so excited about another event I have coming up: Soul Rebels Unite: An Empower Communities Event and Reggae Bashment.  Don’t tell me that a genre of music known for a song called “Legalize It” is not a place to discuss or engage in political conversations.  As I’ve explained to some: it is one thing to perform about smoking weed; it is another thing to write and sing a song asking people to mobilize, advocate and change laws.  This song, for instance, alongside others about unifying as a people to fight illegitimate governance are the subjects that make up the content of the reggae songs that launched the international appeal the genre has today.

So as I get ready to go out to do this musical-political work that I’m regularly engaged in, I ask those working on political and social change to take a peek at the events I have listed, and reconsider your stance about who and where you will or will not engage audiences.  Try analyzing things similarly to how I did above – tracing the historical perspective to trends we see today.  For the event on Saturday with Girls Rock! RI and Sojourner House, remember how long before women were granted the right to vote, observe the lack of women holding office today, and investigate the dismal number of women making decisions within the entertainment and communications fields.  Then tell me that there is no room for art in politics or no reason to mix the two topics.

If you still feel that same way – well, as Mr. T used to say, I pity the fool.  If you’re open, or just want to debate me, I hope you’ll join me over the next few days.

***

1) “The Rhythm Heard Round the World”
A Night Of Spoken Word Poetry, World Rhythms & An Open Mic

Thursday, January 19, 2012
7:30 – 10:00 PM
Roots Cultural Center
276 Westminster Street
Providence, RI

Price: $5.00

Presented by VenusSings.com, Isis Storm & Funda Fest 14, the event features Singer-Songwriter and Recording Artist, The Dubber; Pecussionist Kera Washington and Bassist Joanna Maria of the band, Zili Misik and performers from the women’s art collective, Isis Storm. The event also includes talent from the RI Black Storytellers’ Funda Fest.

To sign up ahead of time for the open mic, email singsvenus@gmail.com or leave a comment here.

FB EVENT / MORE INFO: https://www.facebook.com/events/243212192414449/

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2) VenusSings.com, rhymeCulture, Isis Storm & La Soul Renaissance Present

Soul Rebels Unite:
An Empower Communities Event and Reggae Bashment

Friday, January 20, 2012
Black Watch Pub
266 Dartmouth Street
New Bedford, MA

Confirmed Artists:
Tem Blessed & Blest Energy ft. the Empress, aka Cita-Light ~ Isis Storm ~ The Dubber ~ King-I ~ Erik Andrade ~ The AS220 Criss Cross Orchestra ~ DJ Blade Mon ~ Rebel International ~ and more.

12-2 PM:
Empower Communities Youth Workshop with YouthBuild New Bedford

7-9PM:
“People of Culture Mixer and Marketplace” with local, regional and national activists, entrepreneurs, poets and musicians

9PM-2AM:
Hip Hop and Reggae Performances, DJ’s, and Sound Systems. PLUS album release party for “Re-Energized” by Tem Blessed & Blest Energy ft. the Empress, aka Cita-Light.

FB EVENT / MORE INFO: https://www.facebook.com/events/224041467674515/
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3) GIRLS ROCK THE SOJOURNER HOUSE: A JOINT BENEFIT FOR:
Girls Rock Camp Alliance & Sojourner House
And A Gathering for Empowerment

Saturday, January 21, 2012
7:00 PM – 1:00 AM
Roots Cultural Center
276 Westminster Street
Providence, RI

FEATURING:
-> Me Jane
-> Simple Etiquette
-> The Bookmarks
-> 5th Elament (CO-FOUNDER OF ISIS STORM)
-> ROUTE .44
-> JERI AND THE JEEPSTERS

FB EVENT / MORE INFO:
https://www.facebook.com/events/226863584050679/

Providence Geeks with StudyEgg – Tonight!

Providence Geeks with StudyEgg 1/18/2012

Wednesday, January 18th, 2011, 5:30 – 8pm
AS220, 115 Empire Street, Providence, RI
FREE (buy your own food and drink – it’s cheap)
RSVP at Facebook

Tonight, Providence based StudyEgg

With educational costs soaring and performance…ummm…not, e-learning is heating up to become what many believe will be a trillion (yes, with a T) dollar worldwide industry. Providence-based StudyEgg is gearing up to take a bite of that apple.

StudyEgg aims to replace 18th century pedagogy with personalized, interactive learning tools – think study guides on steroids.

At the January Geek Dinner, Co-Founder & CEO Josh Silverman – backed up by Co-Founders Jason Urton (CTO) and Bill DeRusha (CMO) – will give an overview of StudyEgg including its short, but interesting history to date (pivots!), and the first public look at its new product (already producing revenue!)

RI Choice Coalition to Commemorate 39th Anniversary of Roe v. Wade at State House on Thursday


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The Rhode Island Choice Coalition will gather in the RI State House Rotunda on Thursday, January 19th at 3pm to recognize the 39th anniversary of the landmark Roe. v. Wade decision. In Roe, the Supreme Court found that a woman’s right to decide whether to become a parent deserves the highest level of constitutional protection.  The commemoration event will recognize decision makers who play a vital role in protecting women’s health in the state of Rhode Island.

Advocates from all walks including nonprofit leaders, legislators and members of the clergy will convene to discuss the state of reproductive justice in Rhode Island and the ongoing efforts to ensure access to reproductive health services within the state’s newly formed health care exchange.

The Rhode Island Choice Coalition exists to preserve, promote and protect all aspects of women’s reproductive health care and reproductive justice through advocacy and legislative action statewide and nationally.

With special guests

  • First Lady Stephanie Chafee
  • Senator Josh Miller (D-28)
  • Representative Edith Ajello (D-3)
  • Representative Teresa Tanzi (D-34)
  • Rabbi Peter Stein
  • PPSNE President & CEO Judy Tabar

For more information contact Paula Hodges, RI Policy & Advocacy Director for PPSNE at 401-421-7820 x3145 or paula.hodges@ppsne.org.

TONIGHT: The Providence Blogosphere Post-Holidays Party


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Come out tonight and celebrate the return of Rhode Island’s Future at the Annual Providence Blogosphere Post-Holidays Party, TONIGHT from 7 – 10pm at The Salon, 57 Eddy Street in Providence.

Confirmed bloggers are Greater City Providence, Providence Daily Dose, Rhode Island’s Future, and I {Heart} Rhody.  Everyone is welcome!

It’s free, and we’ll be joined by the Netroots Nation team, who’ll be talking about this summer’s huge conference — through which they’ll be bringing 4,000-plus geeks, activists, artists, and politicos to town.

No need to officially RSVP, but you can sign up via Facebook over here.  (It’d be helpful for us to have some very rough sense of numbers.)

Also, I will be on Brown Student Radio tonight prior to the blog party talking with Reza Clifton about the return of RI Future.  Check it out here.

National “Occupy” Day in Support of Prisoners: February 20th


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A proposal passed yesterday by the General Assembly of Occupy Oakland is to generate a national day of action that will call attention to prisons across America.  While presidential candidates take to their stumps, one might be unaware that America is the international leader of incarceration with no competition in sight.  February 20th, amidst American Black History Month, has also been declared by the United Nations as “World Day of Social Justice.”

The call coincides with a recent call to action by supporters of Mumia Abu Jamal to condemn solitary confinement as a means of torture.  Mumia has been transferred to solitary since leaving Death Row.  Read more from the Human Rights Coalition, here.  The call also comes amidst growing awareness of the relationship between Wall Street, prisons, prison labor, and paid lobbyists pushing policies that create more prisoners.

“We are calling for February 20th, 2012 to be a ‘National Occupy Day in Support of Prisoners.’

“In the Bay Area we will ‘Occupy San Quentin,’ to stand in solidarity with the people confined within its walls and to demand the end of the incarceration as a means of containing those dispossessed by unjust social policies.

Reasons

Prisons have become a central institution in American society, integral to our politics, economy and our culture.  Between 1976 and 2000, the United States built on average a new prison each week and the number of imprisoned Americans increased tenfold.

Prison has made the threat of torture part of everyday life for millions of individuals in the United States, especially the 7.3 million people—who are disproportionately people of color—currently incarcerated or under correctional supervision.

Imprisonment itself is a form of torture. The typical American prison, juvenile hall and detainment camp is designed to maximize degradation, brutalization, and dehumanization.

Mass incarceration is the new Jim Crow. Between 1970 and 1995, the incarceration of African Americans increased 7 times. Currently African Americans make up 12 % of the population in the U.S. but 53% of the nation’s prison population. There are more African Americans under correctional control today—in prison or jail, on probation or parole—than were enslaved in 1850, a decade before the Civil War began.

The prison system is the most visible example of policies of punitive containment of the most marginalized and oppressed in our society. Prior to incarceration, 2/3 of all prisoners lived in conditions of economic hardship. While the perpetrators of white-collar crime largely go free.

In addition, the Center for Economic and Policy Research estimated that in 2008 alone there was a loss in economic input associated with people released from prison equal to $57 billion to $65 billion.

We call on Occupies across the country to support:

1.  Abolishing unjust sentences, such as the Death Penalty, Life Without the Possibility of Parole, Three Strikes, Juvenile Life Without Parole, and the practice of trying children as adults.

2.  Standing in solidarity with movements initiated by prisoners and taking action to support prisoner demands, including the Georgia Prison Strike and the Pelican Bay/California Prisoners Hunger Strikes.

3.  Freeing political prisoners, such as Mumia Abu-Jamal, Leonard Peltier, Lynne Stewart, Bradley Manning and Romaine “Chip” Fitzgerald, a Black Panther Party member incarcerated since 1969.

4. Demanding an end to the repression of activists, specifically the targeting of African Americans and those with histories of incarceration, such as Khali in Occupy Oakland who could now face a life sentence, on trumped-up charges, and many others being falsely charged after only exercising their First Amendment rights.

5. Demanding an end to the brutality of the current system, including the torture of those who have lived for many years in Secured Housing Units (SHUs) or in solitary confinement.

6. Demanding that our tax money spent on isolating, harming and killing prisoners, instead be invested in improving the quality of life for all and be spent on education, housing, health care, mental health care and other human services which contribute to the public good.

Bay Area

On February 20th, 2012 we will organize in front of San Quentin, where male death-row prisoners are housed, where Stanley Tookie Williams was immorally executed by the State of California in 2005, and where Kevin Cooper, an innocent man on death row, is currently imprisoned.

At this demonstration, through prisoners’ writings and other artistic and political expressions, we will express the voices of the people who have been inside the walls. The organizers of this action will reach out to the community for support and participation. We will contact social service organizations, faith institutions, labor organizations, schools, prisoners, former prisoners and their family members.

National and International Outreach

We will reach out to Occupies across the country to have similar demonstrations outside of prisons, jails, juvenile halls and detainment facilities or other actions as such groups deem appropriate.  We will also reach out to Occupies outside of the United States and will seek to attract international attention and support.”

Endorsers Include:

Angela Davis
California Coalition for Women Prisoners
Campaign to End the Death Penalty
Jack Bryson
Kevin Cooper Defense Committee
Labor Action Committee to Free Mumia Abu Jamal
Mobilization to Free Mumia Abu Jamal
National Committee to Free the Cuban Five
Occupied Oakland Tribune
Oscar Grant Committee Against Police Brutality and State Repression
Prison Activist Resource Center
Prison Watch Network
San Francisco Bay View Newspaper
Stanley Tookie Williams Legacy Network

“Social justice is more than an ethical imperative, it is a foundation for national stability and global prosperity. Equal opportunity, solidarity and respect for human rights — these are essential to unlocking the full productive potential of nations and peoples..” 

-Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon

Nov. 17: YouthBuild Providence – Picture A School

Join YouthBuild Providence at their first annual Meet and Greet – “Picture A School @ Gallery Z” – on Thursday, November 17th, from 5-8pm at Gallery Z, 259 Atwells Avenue, Providence, RI.  This event is to benefit YouthBuild Providence, a fantastic organization that helps out-of-school youth gain the academic, job readiness, and work skills necessary to make the jump into high growth, high demand occupations and careers.   Please consider coming to celebrate the amazing work YouthBuild has done in the past by supporting its future!  RSVP on Facebook.

As an added bonus, Broadway Bistro is catering (yum), and the Max Cudworth Trio is performing.

For more information, contact Hillary Sorin @ 401.499.4352.

Wednesday Night: Angel Taveras and Drinking Liberally

Carol Santos Aguasvivas, Andy Andujar, Anthony Autiello, Jr., Peter Baptista, Jake Bissaillon, Hon. Chris Blazejewski, Sandra Cano, Victor Capellan, Suzanne Da Silva, Jeff Dana, Adriana Dawson, Jason Del Pozzo, Doris De los Santos, Hon. James Diossa, Michael Fontaine, Amy Gabarra, Meghan Grady, Teny Gross, Chris Hunter, Arianne Lynch, Daniel Meyer, Alex Moore, Albin Moser, Lauren Nocera, David Segal, Tony Simon, Brett Smiley, Chris Vitale & Cliff Wood
(Host Committee in formation)

invite you to a Young Professionals Event
honoring

Angel Taveras
Mayor of Providence

Wednesday, August 24
6:00 to 8:00 PM

At the Wild Colonial
250 S Water Street
Providence, RI

Host: Raise or Contribute $125
Individual: $25

Please RSVP to rsvp@angelforprovidence.com or (401) 454-0991
Or RSVP online via the link below

Please make checks payable to:

Angel for Mayor
PO Box 2533
Providence, RI 02906

**Please join us afterwards for Drinking Liberally with Rep. Chris Blazejewski** starting at 8PM.

Coming Up in the RIPTA Fight

Scheduled for Monday is the next public RIPTA board meeting, pushed back a week. With no commitments from General Assembly leaders yet for additional funding, cuts are still to be expected. The RIPTA Riders will be meeting with House Speaker Gordon Fox on Monday before the meeting of the RIPTA board. Thanks largely to the efforts of organizers Randall Rose and Abel Collins, the grassroots group has successfully raised the profile of the fight, evident by the long list of press coverage on their website.

What’s worth being hopeful about is the newly scheduled September 8th special hearing by the Senate Committee on Oversight. Chair Tassoni has asked RIPTA to attend to discuss cuts in service and the RIde program.

Monday RIPTA board meeting
1:30 pm, Monday, 269 Melrose St (#22 Elmwood Ave bus)
Please wear blue, bring signs.

Tuesday RIPTA Riders general meeting
5:30 pm, Tuesday, 17 Gordon Ave, Suite 208 (#11 Broad St bus to Public)

Join Congressman Cicilline in telling Republican Leaders that Corporations Are NOT People

I know its been conservative philosophy for over a century that under the law corporations are people….but it never really made sense. And to hear Republican leaders like Mitt Romney say it out loud…well, they just need to be called on it. Congressman David Cicilline has an online petition going right now asking Republican leaders to get their priorities right – start focusing on REAL PEOPLE – not phony corporate people.

You and I know that corporations are not people, but in case you missed it last week, one of the leading Republican presidential candidates thinks they are.  That’s right, when former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney actually said out loud that “corporations are people” he articulated what we alI know to be the real priority of the Republican Party, and that is tax cuts and special treatment for corporations while American families continue to try and make ends meet during these tough economic times. Statements from party leaders like Romney really do make you wonder, just whose side are they on?

After this recent debate over our nation’s debt ceiling, it’s now even more clear that theRepublican Party has totally lost sight of who ordinary working families are and what they need.  We know that working families are not corporations, because unlike corporations they have had to bear the brunt of this economic recovery.  As corporations like big oil companies continue to receive taxpayer subsidies and tax breaks are extended to companies that ship American jobs overseas, working families are trying to afford basic things like the higher cost of food, gas, health care and college.  And it doesn’t end there.  While Republicans fight tooth and nail for “corporations” they also propose to make deeps cuts in our most sacred programs like Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and federal student loans for our young people.

I hope you’ll join my petition to Republican leaders to tell them that we want corporations to pay their fair share.

I understand that we cannot continue to ship American jobs overseas and provide additional tax cuts for millionaires and billionaires at the expense of working families.  Congress needs to focus on jobs and securing Medicare and Social Security.  Everyday, I am pushing back against right-wing Republicans as they try to undermine vital services in order to help the special interests, but I cannot do this alone and I need your help to send a strong message that we’re not going to stand for it.

Stand up with me to tell Washington that we need to concentrate on fighting for everyday Americans, and stop protecting the special interests of millionaires and billionaires and the most powerful.

Please sign my petition to tell Republican leaders that corporations are not people, and they need to stop protecting them at the expense of the middle class and working families.


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