Artemis Moonhawk, Sarath Suong receive Red Bandana Awards


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2016-06-05 Red Bandana Awards Bill Harley
Bill Harley

Two local organizers, Artemis Moonhawk and Sarath Suong were honored at the Red Bandana Awards held at Nick-A-Nees in Providence Sunday. Music was provided by local virtuoso Chris Monti and the boisterous partying of the Extraordinary Rendition Band. Bill Harley, who heads up the Red Bandana selection committee presented the awards.

Artemis has been a long time advocate for the homeless, spending a large amount of her time and money helping to prepare meals and advocating for homeless rights. She came to the stage surrounded by the people she advocates for. She had invited them to the event to share the award with her and gave everyone who accompanied her a chance to speak if they chose.

Sarath Suong
Sarath Suong

The second award went to Sarath Suong, co-founder and organizer of the Providence Youth Student Movement, (PrYSM). Growing up in a Southeast Asian community in Boston, Suong told the audience that he learned two important lessons from mentors, “One, What’s happened to you and your people and your community is not because it’s your fault. And the second thing they told me is that what’s happening right now and what’s happening in your community, you have the power to change it.”

“I understand my place in this country as a child of war,” said Suong, “When we came here we were sort of a reminder of the Vietnam War, a reminder of a war that the US had lost.”

Suong used his time on stage to advocate for two important projects PrYSM is currently working on. The first one is the Community Safety Act. “We are trying to get passed a city ordinance that will hold the Providence Police Department accountable to the ways that they profile young people, poor people, people of color, queer and trans people… We need more police accountability. We need the police department to get their boots off our necks while we are trying to live.

“We need help,” continued Suong, “For those folks who live on the East Side of Providence or have friends and family or any influence in Providence, please contact Councilpeople [Samuel] Zurier and [Seth] Yurdin. And please urge them to really support the Community Safety Act.”

The second project Suong mentioned was getting the All Students Count Act 2016 (H7235) passed in the State House. “What’s really important for Southeast Asians is that we are lumped into a larger Asian racial category. What that does is erases the real struggles of Southeast Asian young people who will only graduate at 60 percent of the regular rate.”

Here’s a sample of some music from Chris Monti, who opened the show, followed by a song from the Extraordinary Rendition Band, who closed it out. Because of the rain, ERB was forced to perform inside, which is a shame because they are a wild outdoors dance band.

 

 

And here’s the entire awards ceremony, which starts with Bill Harley giving a short biography of journalist and community organizer Richard Walton, and explains why these awards are given in his name.

Artemis Moonhawk (left)
Artemis Moonhawk (left)
Extraordinary Rendition Band
Extraordinary Rendition Band
Chris Monti
Chris Monti

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RIF Radio: Raimondo running for governor; Monti at Nick-a-Nee’s; why Finland has better education


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Thursday Dec 19, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. That was local musician Chris Monti kicking off today’s podcast. You can hear him live and in person tonight at Nick-a-Nees, so I hope you can check him out.

waterfall121913This is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

It’s Thursday, December 19 … the first day that Gina Raimondo is officially a candidate for governor. The :

“To her fans and political contributors, the 5-foot-3-inch Raimondo is the scrappy pension-reformer who saved taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars annually. To her relentless critics within organized labor, she is the fist-pumping opportunist who used “pension reform” as a guise to enrich her “Wall Street friends” and possibly herself through blind trust holdings in the venture-capital firm she founded.”

To me, she’s both. A scrappy opportunist who saved taxpayers money by using pension reform to enrich her Wall Street friends.

The only thing the local media enjoys exaggerating more than the need for milk and bread every time it snows is the old saw about the overly-indulgent public sector retiree, most recently evidenced by the mass attention on the ex-fire fighter who was caught lifting weights while collecting a disability pension. Seriously … George Vecchione makes $8 million bucks a year running the local hospitals and good luck finding it in the Providence Journal but a union member makes $40,000 a year and it’s stripped across the top of page A1. Not to begrudge – or defend – either of these economic actors, but which one seems to you to be more responsible for the sorry state of our economy?

Only 74 undocumented students have taken advantage of new state policy that allows them to attend state colleges for in-state tuition so long as they went to a local high school. says WPRI reporter and RI Future alum Dan McGowan.

Hey before you enjoy your next hamburger consider what factory farms feed their cows. According to Mother Jones it’s an unhealthy diet of corn, soy, drugs, sawdust, candy wrappers and chicken shit. God bless the vegans. Yumm … I’m not saying I don’t enjoy the occasional burger, I’m just saying us Americans have gross diets.

The New York Times asks why American schools can’t compete with other first world nations around the world. Of the famous Finnish education model, they write it provides “daily hot meals; health and dental services; psychological counseling; and an array of services for families and children in need. None of the services are means tested.” Here in America, we have high stakes testing which isn’t means tested… See the difference?

Rest in peace, Billy Jack. Tom Laughlin, the man who wrote, directed and starred in the 70’s counterculture classic Bill Jack movies died earlier this week. The New York Times called these indie classics, “a low-budget fusion of counterculture piety and martial-arts violence that struck a chord with audiences and became a prototype for independent filmmaking.”