Friday, December 01, 2006

at a loss

Yet again the media finds another way to just piss me off.
Amid stories Michael Richards, and new playstations...this has somehow been conviently left off of at least any of my local news viewing.
Shame.
From indymedia.org
Chicago Musician Martyrs Himself for Peace

Chicago Indymedia has learned that [on November 3] local music and art afficianado and peace advocate Malachi Ritscher burned himself to death on the side of the Kennedy Expressway near downtown Chicago during the morning rush hour. Near Malachi's remains, police found a camcorder with videotape inside and a homemade sign that read "Thou Shalt Not Kill."

Besides the note and videotape at the scene, Malachi also left a longer letter explaining his actions and his motivations. "What is one more life thrown away in this sad and useless national tragedy?" he wrote. "If one death can atone for anything, in any small way, to say to the world: I apologize for what we have done to you, I am ashamed for the mayhem and turmoil caused by my country."

Malachi was among more than seven hundred peace protesters who were illegally arrested on March 20, 2003, when thousands turned out to protest the beginning of the U.S. war on Iraq. His death, to date has received very little news coverage and outlets that did report his death treated it as a simple suicide and the cause for slower-than-usual traffic that morning. The contents of the videotape he left have not been made public. Read more here, here and here.

Malachi's websites: savagesound | myspace

Coverage of Nov. 18 Memorial Actions: Chicagoans remember Malachi Ritscher, protest war | Campaign: "I Heard You, Malachi" | Photos | More photos

Additional Coverage: chicagofreespeechzone.org | Chicago Reader | Infoshop | Gapers Block | Pitchfork Media | Danny Schechter - News Dissector | Chicago Sun-Times




World Aids Day

Being the month of complete consumerism maybe you can make a difference if you are in the market for any of these items. Check it out and maybe you can show some support while staying trendy (motorolo, ipod etc...)Product Red

Light a virtual candle! Bristol Myer is donating $1 for ever candle lit on their website up to $100,000 to the National Aids Fund. It cost you nothing other than the 2 seconds it takes to go to their site and click the candle to light it. Light To Unite

For more information and how you can help: World Aids Day

There are too many statistics, stories, prevention etc...things to list here. But do your part. Learn how to protect your self, children, mothers, fathers, brothers, and sisters.

Become educated and help stop spreading the myths associated with this disease. Anyone can get it.
Be safe everyone. Take care of those you love, and help those you don't even know if you can afford to.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Abolish the "N" word



Ok...I highly suggest checking this site out. Abolish the "N" Word
It actually was on the news tonight, and so I thought I would go and check it out. I am sure that it was brought to our attention because of the whole Michael Richards crap. I warn you up front that the opening is pretty graphic.
Now...as for the "N" word...I agree with this site 100%. I hate the word. It makes me sick that my "brothers" and "sisters" think that this is a word that should be used as a term of endearment. But as for banning a word...I still get hung up on this whole freedom of speech thing. I would (and have) rather have someone call me a "N" out of hate than think that it was some sort of bonding between us. At least I would know how people stand. I have lived up and down the east coast of this country...From MA. to New Orleans. I gotta say...I prefer the racism of the south. I have had people cross the street to avoid me (guess little ole me is so threatening), I have had grown men (white) standing on my front porch in tears not understanding me and my bi-racial family. Having to explain that we all have the same parts doesn't matter what color our skin is...we can still make babies...(really...true story...he was drunk and had never seen/interacted with a bi-racial family before. Walking on the National Mall on the 4th of July, having ignorant kids walk by me and call me a pickaninny. I get it. Have gotten it. Will continue to get it. But guess what. People still have freedom of speech. Hopefully we are raising our children to know better today. But how can we expect white america to not think that it is ok to use the "N" word when our own children use it freely.
This isn't about racism. It is about education.
If we don't start educating our children today then they are no better than the slave masters, Jim Crow, racist that lynched our ancestors. We need to teach them to be proud. Embrace the word enough so that when others use it in anger and hate against you that you don't feel the need to react back in anger and ignorance. But not enough to think that your friend, brother, sister, partner...should ever be refered to in such vulgar terms.

No Peace Allowed? Are you kidding me?

Wow...gotta love the neo-nazi goose stepping of homeowners associations around the country.
Well as you can probably see I am against them in all forms from the statement above...
Tell me what color my front door can be then watch the chips fall from there.
Well before I go off on my own rant check out this article!
I think i would rather live in that murderous community portrayed in the x-files than one that won't let me hang a...get this...Wreath in the form of a peace sign because it is considered....inciting conflict?
Peace! Peace...learn the definition! It is about avoiding conflict!

diane carman | staff columnist
Homeowner won't hold her peace
By Diane Carman
Denver Post Staff Columnist
Article Launched:11/28/2006 01:00:00 AM MST


What a difference a year makes.

In 2005, the outrage story of the season involved clerks at discount stores wishing customers "Happy Holidays." Apparently to millions of shoppers - particularly those who listen to right-wing talk radio - a Happy Holidays greeting was considered an insult.

Retailers responded immediately, plastering Santas everywhere and hiding the menorahs for fear of engendering the unholy wrath of the likes of Bill O'Reilly.

This year, the controversy is over peace.

I'm relieved to report that it appears most Americans are for it.

It all started last week in the upscale Loma Linda subdivision outside sleepy Pagosa Springs when Lisa Jensen and her husband, Bill Trimarco, hung a homemade wreath in the shape of a peace symbol on the side of their house.

The president of the Loma Linda Homeowners Association went nuts.

"Loma Linda residents are offended by the peace sign displayed on the front of your house," he said in a letter the couple received Nov. 21. "This board will not allow any signs, flags, etc. that can be considered divisive."

If the wreath was not removed by Friday, the letter said, Jensen and Trimarco would be fined $25 a day until it came down. It was signed by Bob Kearns, board president, and the rest of the board.

Jensen, who works for an insurance company and until now has never been confused with Abbie Hoffman, refused.

"We do have covenants here," said Jensen, a past president of the homeowners association. "Signs, advertisements, billboards - those kinds of things - require approval by the association. But not Christmas decorations."

Kearns, who has taken deep cover since the firestorm over his letter erupted on Monday, told the Associated Press that he perceived the wreath to be a political statement, and apparently he thinks political statements are forbidden in Loma Linda. "Some people have kids in Iraq, and they are sensitive," he said.

But Jensen and Trimarco, who have refused to remove the wreath with its red bow and holiday lighting, have been inundated with support for their display precisely because of its religious, spiritual, cultural - and political - message.

"At home, I'm getting about 20 calls an hour on my voice mail," said Jensen, who was struggling to get something done at work Monday. She's inundated with e-mail from across the continent as well.

People have offered to pay the fine. They've vowed to hang their own peace-symbol wreaths in solidarity. They are encouraging Jensen and Trimarco to stand firm.

"A lot of the calls are from military families saying they have sons or daughters in the war and they still want peace," she said. "Some people call practically in tears to say they'd fought in wars for freedom and liberty, and nobody could take our freedom of speech away."

Calls are flooding the lines at the city of Pagosa Springs and the local chamber of commerce too.

"They've all been pro-peace symbol," said Mark Garcia, town manager. "I haven't heard of any in support of the

homeowners association."

Garcia was quick to explain that the Loma Linda subdivision is in unincorporated Archuleta County, so the city has no jurisdiction over the area. "We support the peace display," he said.

Even in Loma Linda, support for Jensen and Trimarco is solid.

The five members of the architectural control committee resigned over Kearns' order that the wreath be removed. It all smacked of totalitarianism to them.

Loma Linda residents "are aghast," said Jack Lilly, former chairman of the architectural control committee. "Everyone who has called me has said, 'I can't believe this is happening."'

Jensen can't either and said she has no intention of paying the fine.

The message of the wreath is not just a political statement. "We consider it a much broader issue, more like a way of life," she said.

I think she's on to something.

Diane Carman's column appears Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday. She can be reached at 303-954-1489 or dcarman@ denverpost.com.