Home Blog Page 1006

View From Here: Trayvon, ALEC & White Supremacy

April 5, 2012 —
Forensic experts have confirmed the obvious in the killing of Trayvon Martin in
Sanford, Florida-— that the terrified voice repeatedly screaming for help was that of the teenager Martin and not the gunman George Zimmerman. And yet Zimmerman has not been arrested for hunting Trayvon down and shooting him dead. The thought that a black self-appointed neighborhood watchman would receive the same treatment after having shot a white teenager is a ludicrous one. And it is an impossible idea to hold in your mind because, and here again we state the obvious, there is nothing post-racial about the society we’re in.

In fact, there seems to have been a doubling down on racist rhetoric, actions and policies by white supremacists who are euphemistically called members of the Tea Party, ultra-conservatives or the Republican right wing.

The atmosphere of the media is permeated with their oily smog of propaganda always driving the national discourse, whether on labor policies, education, health care, voting rights, criminal justice, or any other public policy, toward the conditions extant during that Golden Age of white supremacy, slavery.

They reveal themselves in the voter-suppression laws, in the attacks on education, and with the so-called “stand your ground” legislation that allows the use of deadly force in self-defense of a perceived threat. (This means that if the middle-aged African-American woman who jumped back in startled fear when I entered a late-night elevator many years ago had a gun, she would be able to claim “stand your ground” as a defense as to why she shot me.)
This is an instructive piece of legislation because it is so powerful that it allows a man who took someone’s life in an extraordinarily incriminating way, to avoid arrest.
This legislation, and others like it, is the brainchild of a particularly nasty lesion on the political scene, the American Legislative Exchange Council. ALEC is a conservative think tank whose Web site claims that “To date, ALEC’s Task Forces have considered, written and approved hundreds of model bills on a wide range of issues, model legislation that will frame the debate today and far into the future. Each year, close to 1,000 bills, based at least in part on ALEC Model Legislation, are introduced in the states. Of these, an average of 20 percent become law.”

ALEC has major funding from David and Charles Koch, the right wing billionaires who have been causing havoc across the nation with their use of money to influence public policy.

The only way that entities such has these are going to be defeated is by substituting people power for the Koch brothers money. The results of their efforts have real-life consequences as personal as the justification for the shooting of young Mr. Martin, as a suppressed black and brown vote and as a newly-privatized school.

Money and technology have given these folks a head start in their relentless efforts to change the nation’s laws, and it is ever more imperative that eligible voters be registered, educated and active political participants. If they are not, we will find ourselves with fewer rights, less education and taken back to a darker and more dangerous country.

Interfaith rally draws residents concerned over medical center’s fate

Protesters fear closing or merger of the recently renovated Interfaith Medical Center will reduce health services in Bedford-Stuyvesant.
By Diane Dixon and Stephen Witt
Dozens of local residents held a candlelight vigil in front of Interfaith Medical Center last week hoping for the best, but fearing the worst regarding the fate of the community hospital.

The 287-bed Interfaith, located at 1545 Atlantic Avenue, in one form or another has for many years served both Crown Heights and Bedford-Stuyvesant.

However, the state, which is facing ballooning Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement costs, coupled with growing Brooklyn medical facility debt, commissioned Stephen Berger, chairman of a private investment firm specializing in private corporate transactions to do a report to remedy the crisis.

The report, released late last year, recommended Interfaith to merge with Brooklyn Hospital and the Wyckoff Medical Center, and for Brooklyn Hospital to be the lead facility.

Hospital officials, workers and residents now fear this merger will mean a reduction of some services at best and possible closure at worst.

“I am on the board of two day care centers in Crown Heights and both day care centers use Interfaith if a child gets injured there. It is very convenient for the child and the child’s parents,” said Connie Lesold, a local resident. “I’m also a member of the Fort Greene Albany Senior Center, just a few blocks from the hospital, and it’s very valuable to the senior center when someone needs emergency medical care. Ever since St. Mary’s Hospital closed, Interfaith has been all the more valuable, not just to individuals but to institutions in the area as well.”

Lesold’s comments were echoed by one source at the rally who noted that every organization in the community including schools, day care centers, senior centers, churches, community groups, businesses, homeowners, tenants, block associations and health care workers were devastated that they were not informed of the list to close or merge hospitals.

Another source said there are fears that the hospital will be pushed to increase some hard services such as mental health while much of the physical medical care will be taken out of the neighborhood and be put into Brooklyn Hospital, which is increasingly serving the more gentrified areas of Downtown Brooklyn and Fort Greene/Clinton Hill.
Lesold said organizers against the merger approached Community Boards 3 and 8 and they wrote a letter to Governor Andrew Cuomo and the state Department of Health to express their concern about the merger.
But Community Board 3 Chair Henry Butler said there are a lot of rumors floating around about Interfaith and the board felt it was best to follow the lead of local elected officials rather than to write a letter.
“We’re working with the elected officials to see if this plan presented is in the best interest of Interfaith and the community of Bedford-Stuyvesant,” said Butler.
State Sen. Velmanette Montgomery spokesperson Jim Vogel said the senator was in transit, but she is keenly aware of the issue and is against any cuts in services. Assemblywoman Annette Robinson did not return phone calls.
Interfaith spokesperson Diane Porter stated her greatest concern was to have a good community hospital in Bedford-Stuyvesant. She would like to see a redistribution of services to support the needs of the community. With a high rate of diabetes, asthma, hypertension she wants to see the recognition that Interfaith plays a vital role in solving this problem.
“We hope to be recognized as a full community hospital. We want to remain independent and have some say in this,” said Porter.
Porter said Interfaith has been having conversations with both the state and Brooklyn Hospital and is focusing on managing their respective debts.
“In the end, it stems from a monetary issue and we are moving forward to put this in place,” she said.
State Department of Health spokesman Peter Constantakes said the state is reviewing medical facility applications for some of the $450 million statewide HEAL grants, for which both Interfaith and Brooklyn Hospital have applied.
This review takes some time and the state expects to make a decision on the future of Interfaith within the next six months, Constantakes said.

Dr. Lester Young Says Next Mayor Must Support Education Proposals

Dr. Lester Young
By Nico Simino

With two elected officials in attendance, one of the city’s foremost educators led a lively discussion on the state of the city’s public schools at last Saturday’s Vanguard Independent Democratic Association (VIDA) monthly meeting.

Dr. Lester Young, Jr, of the Adelaide L. Sanford Institute, who led an education reform focused conference last month at the Concord Baptist Church of Christ, 833 Marcy Avenue, reiterated many of the proposals he had brought up at the conference, as well as the importance of electing a new mayor next year who backs the proposals.

These proposals include focusing on comprehensive early childhood learning from the ages of one to five, designing culturally sensitive programs for all children, focusing on policies and strategies to identify “special needs” schools before they become low-performing schools and are forced to close, and devising a plan to include more history, practices, beliefs and traditions of the African Diaspora into schools’ curriculums, especially those located in largely black communities.

Young also highlighted other, more common and accessible goals that need to be accomplished like more after-school programs, which he said are “purposefully cut by the mayor to save money”, and more career and technical training opportunities in central Brooklyn.

“Nothing changes a youngster more than their first paycheck,” said Young about the importance of career training programs for young people. “How do we provide more jobs, through the help of the mayor’s office, to the kids in central Brooklyn?”

Young also touched upon the notion of electing a new mayor during the next election “who will endorse and fight for these proposals.”

“The mayor controls education, and if we don’t get the right person in the mayor’s office, then we are in trouble,” he said.”We need our community to stand up and advocate these recommendations. Our current elected officials should endorse a clear set of education principles.”

Myrna Williams, a former city public school principal and attendee at the meeting echoed this sentiment.
“(Mayor) Bloomberg is not serving the community well,” she said. “A child can pass any test as long as you expose them to it.”

Bedford-Stuyvesant City Councilman Al Vann, who was also in attendance, concurred with Dr. Young, stating that he voted against mayoral control of the education system.

“If he [Bloomberg] gets mayoral control, he controls the budget, and that’s what he wants. He doesn’t know anything about education, his chancellor was not an educator, so it’s destroying our system,” said Vann, adding with mayoral control over the city schools he hopes the next mayor endorses Young’s agenda.
Bedford-Stuyvesant state Assemblywoman Annette Robinson, who was also in attendance seconded Vann.
“There is no reason for us not to be on one accord about education,” she said.

Young also introduced the idea of having parents and community members determine whether a local school should be closed down or not, an idea that is already in practice in California and is being introduced into the state Assembly here in New York.

Currently, the city determines if a school is failing and can close it down if deemed necessary.
To find out more about Young’s proposals log on to http://www.sanfordinstitute.org/.

NABJ Exclusive: Lawyer for slain teenager Trayvon Martin's family expects state charges against gunman

At the spring board meeting of the National Association of Black Journalists, board members interviewed attorney Daryl D. Parks, the principal in the Tallahassee, Fla.-based law firm representing the parents of the 17-year-old who was fatally shot by a neighborhood watch captain.

Photo by Velvet McNeil

By Wesley Lowery
Special to NABJ

An attorney for the family of slain Florida teen Trayvon Martin on Saturday shed light on his legal team’s strategy, the status of state and federal investigations and the outpouring of support for the case.

In a wide-ranging interview with board members of the National Association of Black Journalists, conducted via Skype, attorney Daryl D. Parks said that after separate meetings with federal and state authorities, he doubts Travyon’s killer will be indicted with a federal hate crime.

However, Parks said he is increasingly hopeful that the gunman, George Zimmerman, will face state criminal charges.

The 17-year-old Trayvon was killed Feb. 26 as he returned from a trip to a convenience store to his father’s finance’s house in a gated community in Sanford, Fla. Unarmed, carrying Skittles candy and ice tea and wearing a hooded sweatshirt, he was spotted by Zimmerman, 28, a captain of the community’s neighborhood watch.

In 911 tapes released by Sanford police, Zimmerman tells the operator that Trayvon was suspicious and appeared to be drugged. Zimmerman then pursued Trayvon on foot and after a struggle shot and killed the teenager, according to police.

Police say Zimmerman was not arrested because there was no evidence disputing his claim of self defense, prompting national outcry for state and federal officials to level charges.

Members of Trayvon’s family met with U.S. Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigations officials on Thursday afternoon.

“It was rather clear that the attorney general is quite aware of the situation, and they have devoted a great deal of resources to this matter,” Parks said. “It’s very clear that this is a very high priority for this administration.”

The Martin family also met briefly Friday with attorney Angela Corey, who was appointed as special prosecutor this week by Florida Gov. Rick Scott to head the state investigation.

The legal team representing Trayvon’s family plans to pursue civil litigation against Zimmerman and the community’s Homeowner’s Association.

Parks, who also is president of the National Bar Association, said that, ultimately, he does not believe the Justice Department will pursue federal hate crime charges against Zimmerman.

Even without hate crime charges, Parks said it’s clear that race played a role in Trayvon’s killing and that the family believes Sanford police actively covered up the racial component to protect Zimmerman.

“Trayvon’s situation is very tragic for this family and, I think, for every black person who lives in America,” Parks said. “We all know many situations where the person of color was not given the benefit of the doubt. That’s a subtlety in America that a lot of people don’t talk about.”

Parks said he hasn’t seen any photo or video evidence documenting any injuries sustained by Zimmerman during the altercation with Trayvon. He also said Trayvon’s girlfriend, whom attorneys say spoke with him just moments before his death, has yet to give a statement to police.

Zimmerman’s attorney, Craig Sonner, said earlier Saturday that if charges are filed against his client, defense attorneys will argue that Zimmerman was acting in self defense.

“George Zimmerman is trying to turn the story around,” Parks said. “At this point … you charge the guy. If he wants to try to explain it away, explain it to the jury.”

Parks said that Zimmerman’s legal team has not been in touch with the team representing the Martin family, and that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement has been in contact with Zimmerman.

In addition to a slew of civil rights leaders, various celebrities have reached out to the Martin family. Parks said the family received a call from Oprah Winfrey and is appreciative of the public support from various professional athletes.

Members of the Miami Heat, including Lebron James and Dwayne Wade, posted on their social media accounts pictures of the team wearing hooded sweatshirts in support of Trayvon’s family. Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis, who has three sons living in Sanford, has talked to the family by phone, Parks said.

“I don’t think it’s a political statement,” Parks said of the professional athletes who’ve expressed support. “Trayvon’s situation speaks to all of us. We’ve all had some situations where we felt that race played an issue … and they can identify with that.”

Park said Trayvon’s killing, which has prompted a national dialogue on racial profiling in the U.S., is not unlike the historic case of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black boy murdered in 1955 after allegedly whistling at a white woman in Mississippi.

Till’s death and the choice of his mother to have his casket open during the funeral prompted a national effort to eliminate Jim Crow laws.

“Most of us, especially those of us who live in the South, can clearly identify with this type of interaction with the police.” Parks said. “It’s not too often
that we as African Americans get to help America with its conscious just a little bit. This is our opportunity.”

Parks spoke from Atlanta to NABJ board members, who had gathered in Boston for a meeting.
Wesley Lowery is the Student Representative on the NABJ board of directors. He is a senior journalism major at Ohio University.

To continue

John Witherspoon Cooks… and Brings Humor to “A Thousand Words” and More

Comedian John Witherspoon

By Stephanie Green

Paramount Pictures recently released their latest comedy A Thousand Words which stars Eddie Murphy as Jack McCall, Kerry Washington as his wife Caroline McCall, Cliff Curtis as Dr. Sinja, Clark Duke as Aaron, Allison Janney as Samantha and John Witherspoon as the Blind Man. The film opened in the Top 10 at the box office and is holding steady there.

A Thousand Words poses the question, if a person only had a thousand words left to say before their demise, how would they use their limited number of words. Jack is faced with that question and being the type of person he is – a selfish, fast-talking literary agent who now must learn to live without words, he begins to struggle and learns a lesson at the same time.

I think the focal point in this film is people should learn how to communicate and listening is a key starting point to attaining that goal.

I had the pleasure recently to speak with John Witherspoon who plays the character of a blind man in the film. He had more than a thousand words to say, and much to announce about upcoming roles:
How did your role come about?

Well, they’re showing the trailer so much… it turned out to be so funny with Eddie and I, I’ve worked with him so many times.

Eddie called me and asked me to be the “Blind Man.” (I happened to be) just walking across the street and I said, “Oh, sure.” It turned out to be so funny. It’s amazing how we worked on that scene about three to four days, maybe five. They had to do the timing with the cars and everything and I could see out those glasses I had on. But those buses coming at me, I was like “oh my god I’m going to die…”

Do you think it would have been easier to act out your character if you were actually prevented from seeing?
I think it would have been better. I was told to just keep walking, they were going to do their jobs, but I cut my eyes to the left and I said oh, oh, oh oh…

Are you still voicing the character “Robert Freeman” aka “Granddad” on the Boondocks Television Series?
We’re going back at the end of this month to do the fourth and fifth seasons. Regina King plays the two kids [Huey and Riley] and Gary Anthony Williams plays Uncle Ruckus – he’s Black and hates Black People, it’s so funny. Of course I play the granddad, Samuel L. Jackson plays Gin-Rummy and Charlie Murphy plays Ed Wuncler, III. Ed Asner plays Mr. Ed Rothschild Wuncler, Sr. Plus, I spoke with Ice Cube and he said they’re working on doing another Friday.

You seem to be one of the hardest-working men in this industry, is that intentional?
Well, you know I get out to do stand-up; I work about thirty weeks a year in and out of LA. I will be at Carolines on Broadway in April. It’s a pleasure working at Carolines.

Are you working on any other projects?
Well, you know I’m working on my own cooking show, I’m producing my own cooking show. It’s called Cooking for Poor People. When you’re hungry everything tastes good.

To have a cooking show does it mean that you are a good cook?
Oh yes! I cook all the time. I couldn’t sell my show because I don’t have a shirt on I just have an apron on. They said why don’t you put a shirt on and I said “No, I’m cooking for poor people. I’m on YouTube cooking for poor people.”

On my first show I’m cooking tilapia and tomatoes. I had to go next door to steal tomatoes from my neighbor. So, it’s not just a cooking show, it’s comedy.

What inspired you to create your own cooking show?
Well, you know I’m a cook and a lot of the stuff I like to eat my kids don’t like, i.e., ox tails and white beans and my kids say ughhhh! I remember one time when I had a partner and he had a Jamaican maid, she used to make a seven-bone roast and that thing cost about $3.00! It was a good piece of meat. So I said I can produce a show called Cooking for Poor People and show people how to eat cheap and well. My first show is on YouTube, it can be found at “YouTube/TheJohnWitherspoonCookingFor PoorPeople.com”.

Are you considering your show to debut on television or will it stay online?
People saw my show when I was a guest on David Letterman and said this is a funny show, do you want to do something else with it? I said, “No, I like YouTube.” I don’t have any pressure on me and I cook all I want. I know people who are broke now, like I know a lady who used to be a stripper, she’s too big now to strip so she comes to my house and I cook something good up for her. I have a pole in my kitchen. I know a lady who got ripped-off by Bernie Madoff and she comes by. She used to have servants and live in West Palm Beach, Florida, now she’s eating neck bones with me.

Are you originally from the South?
I’m actually from Detroit but my family is from Mississippi and Arkansas. I lived in Detroit until I was about 27 years old and then I moved to New York City. I couldn’t make it in NYC… I tried to be a fashion model in New York, those cats were taller than me and much prettier than I was. I said, “Let me get the hell out of here!” I left there, got myself an old Mustang and drove all the way to California by myself from Detroit. But it was cool, I was by myself.

Did you not have concerns about being a fashion model in LA?
No, I didn’t have to worry about that. I didn’t tell anyone until they found out I’d been a fashion model in some old pictures they found in Detroit.

Are there any possibilities for you lending your voice to other characters?
Since I’ve been on the Boondocks I’ve been called for other characters and they like my character voicing on the Boondocks so much that they want me to try out for other characters but I say nah, “I’m good on the Boondocks.”

So you have no interest in expanding your voice characters?
I really don’t have the time for other characters. I’m doing very well, especially since we’re entering our 4th season.

I love the design of the characters, they are so amazing and true to life, please speak a little about their design?
They shoot the characters in South Korea that’s why it takes so long to get on the air. At one time Aaron McGruder (Creator and Executive Producer of The Boondocks Television Series based on his comic strip of the same name) was going to quit, he didn’t want to do the series any longer but Sony talked him into getting syndicated. So, that’s why he’s back now.

A Thousand Words is directed and produced by Brian Robbins (executive producer of The CW series SmallVille, and One Tree Hill, Nickelodeon’s Supah Ninjas. He has also directed and or produced films such as Disney’s Wild Hogs, Paramount’s Coach Carter and The Perfect Score, DreamWorks Norbit and Sony’s Radio.) Stephanie Danan and Nicolas Cage are also producers along with Norman GoLightly and Sharla Sumpter Bridgett.

If you need comic relief, catch up with the John Witherspoon Show [April 19th – 22nd] at Caroline’s Comedy Club, located at 1626 Broadway or phone [212] 757-4100.