Home Blog Page 490

What is Black August and how is it Different than Black History Month?

By Harmeet Kaur, CNN

What is Black August and how is it different than Black History Month?
Activists and social justice organizations are celebrating the history of Black resistance this month in what’s known as Black August.
This year’s commemoration follows months of ongoing nationwide protests over systemic racism and the killings of Black people at the hands of police.
And no, it’s not a second Black History Month.
“During Black August, we honor Black freedom fighters, many of whom were killed by the state or imprisoned for defending Black lives,” Monifa Bandele with the Movement for Black Lives said in a statement to CNN.
“This month is a time to reflect and learn about the legacies of Black revolutionaries, while we rededicate ourselves to the protracted struggles against white supremacy, colonialism, capitalism, and imperialism. We study, plan, and pledge to continue the work and fight for Black liberation.”
Black August is a tradition that originated in California’s prisons in the 1970’s after the deaths of brothers Jonathan and George Jackson as well as other incarcerated Black men who sought freedom.
Here’s what you need to know about Black August.

The history behind it
George Jackson, an activist, died at a California prison on August 21, 1971.
He had received one year to life in prison in 1960 for allegedly stealing $70 from a Los Angeles gas station, according to a 1970 book review from The New York Times.
During his time behind bars, Jackson began studying the ideas of Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin, wrote Eric Cummins in “The Rise and Fall of California’s Radical Prison Movement.” He is considered one of the most outspoken voices on racism in the criminal justice system at the time.
In letters to his parents, his younger brother Jonathan, activist Angela Davis and others, Jackson articulated his frustration and rage over systemic racism and his imprisonment. The letters were ultimately published as a collection titled “Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson.”
Then in 1970, Jackson and two other incarcerated Black men were charged with the murder of a White prison guard. That same year, Jackson’s brother Jonathan was killed in a shootout with police outside the Marin County Courthouse after taking a judge hostage to try and secure his brother’s release, the Los Angeles Times reported in 2015.
On August 21, 1971, George Jackson, who was incarcerated at San Quentin State Prison at the time, used a gun to take a prison guard hostage and forced him to open several cells, according to the Los Angeles Times. Jackson was killed in the ensuing chaos as he and several other inmates attempted to escape from prison. Three guards and two other inmates were also killed.
A group of incarcerated people came together to commemorate the death of Jackson and other prisoners in what became known as Black August.
“So there was an idea that this could be a time that imprisoned people in the California prison system could use for reflection, study, and to think about how to strengthen their struggles,” said Rachel Herzing, an activist who advocates for the abolition of prisons, in a 2016 interview with True Leap Press.
“During the month, people wouldn’t use radios or television, would fast between sun up and sun down, and practice other measures of self-discipline. Eventually the commemorations during that month were taken up outside of prisons, too.”
Social justice organizers also point out that numerous other instances of Black resistance against systemic racism and state-sanctioned violence took place in August, including Nat Turner’s Rebellion, the March on Washington and the Watts Rebellion in Los Angeles.
August is also the birth month of Black nationalist leaders Marcus Garvey and Fred Hampton.
“Fifty years later, groups like Malcolm X Grassroots Movement and New Afrikan Independence Movement continue the Black August legacy of celebrations by amplifying our history of resistance and creating spaces for Black people to come together in community to recharge the revolution,” the Movement for Black Lives notes on its website.

One School of Thought

Summer is winding down, and the school season is upon us. If this was a normal year, we’d be talking about back to school sales and children enjoying the end of yet another innocent summer. Except this isn’t just any year. This is 2020, and nothing at all is normal about it.
Our children have been locked out of schools since March 16th 2020. Remote learning for the last three months of the school year was basically a failure, don’t let anyone else tell you differently. The very idea of remote learning is classist in nature, because it requires resources to meet the standard necessary for an adequate learning environment. My sister has two children and they both have access to iPads and laptops. They have the resources to meet the standards. I’ve spoken to parents that aren’t as lucky. One parent, in particular, has three children ages 10, 8 and 5. The parent has one laptop and one phone. All of the children cannot possibly meet the standards of an adequate learning environment. Not to mention the aforementioned parent works at Target, so she doesn’t have the leisure of working from home. The idea that remote learning works for everyone is classist in nature.


The biggest disappointment lies within the bureaucracy and the politics surrounding the decision on any school reopening plans. Last Friday, Mayor DeBlasio released his school reopening plan to mixed reviews. The plan calls for a blended approach of weekly remote learning and in-school learning. Most students would be in class two to three days a week and teachers would be tested regularly. DOE Chancellor Carranza also created this round-robin kind of guideline for schools where a student tests positive. This past Monday, teachers staged a protest against the reopening plan. Among their concerns is the fact that many classrooms simply do not have proper ventilation and the teachers don’t feel safe returning.
So, what is the right answer? And, if there are no right answers then what is a reasonable middle ground? The DOE recently created a portal for parents that would allow them to choose 100% remote learning for their children or the hybrid approach mentioned in DeBlasio’s reopening plan. As of today, roughly 25% of the families that have filled out the survey have chosen 100% remote learning. Parents have until this Friday to choose a plan for their children.


What baffles me is this, there are many variations of in school learning that could satisfy the arguments that both sides have with regards to kids returning to school. For example, teachers can still teach remotely if children are in school. Simply equip each classroom with a large screen and have teachers instruct from their homes. You can staff each classroom with a health professional, trained to triage students and certified in class management. You could shorten class sizes to less than 20, and provide plexiglass around the desks to mitigate contact. Or, you can expand upon the ventilation of each classroom and keep students in the same classroom all day to lessen person to person contact. The truth is that the Department of Education has had five months to create a strategy to confront the new concerns in a way that would be sufficient. Instead, they’ve done nothing and want us to send our children and our families back into the school system that in all honesty wasn’t the safest space health wise prior to Covid. You look around the globe and what you find is school systems that are using this pandemic as a challenge to make a new system of educating children. For example, in China children take their temperature before leaving home and upload the results to an app that logs their temperature into a school database. Their temperature is taken again when they arrive at school. In Amsterdam, schools are required to maintain the same social bubble all day every day – the same students and the same teacher, in the same rooms everyday. My point is that instead of using this obstacle as a way to erect new paradigms, it seems as if the DOE and the Mayor want to put children and teachers back into the same archaic one, albeit for only three days a week.


School and learning are essential. The people charged with creating a safe way to continue the education process have to do a better job. While there are some children that can and will thrive under 100% remote learning, for most families such a thing would be a burden that wouldn’t work – not for the kids and not for the parents.

What’s Going On

America today is akin to being wide awake in an unending nightmare. There is a plague, coronavirus which has claimed the lives of more than 150,000 Americans. At least 41 million Americans are unemployed. The GOP US Senators are tone deaf to the nation’s myriad economic/public health realities. Headlines like “Families across the country cannot afford wipes, diapers and formula” are spot-on about the magnitude of our crisis, which could be manageable. NYU Economics Professor Nouriel Roubini, aka Dr. Doom, because of his accurate call of the 2008 economic crash, laments, “The government is playing with fire by not acting on an agreement on the fourth round of stimulus talks. Intransigence will lead to a recession.” Senate Republicans are impervious to numbers in the 3-month-old Democratic Stimulus plan. They see no room for negotiation. What happens if all the President’s men, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and Chief of Staff Mark Meadows come to an agreement with the Democrats? Will the GOP Senators fail to sign on or will the invisible hand of POTUS 45 scare them into an agreement midway between $1-3 trillion.

POLITICS 101
When Biden appeared on REIDOUT with Joy Reid, he said that there are four Black women on his VEEP short list. We know of Stacey Abrams, Georgia; Susan Rice; Rep.Val Demings, Florida; Rep. Cynthia Bass, California; US Senator Kamala Harris, California. What happened to Georgia Mayor Lance Bottoms? Abrams’ name has mysteriously disappeared from routine TV pundit talks. Biden continues to push back the VEEP announcement. To be sure, he will announce by August 17, the Democratic Convention opener.
President Barack Obama is aggressively engaged in the 2020 elections. He raised $24 million for the Biden candidacy and recently announced his endorsement of 118 candidates in 17 states, including candidates for state legislators and five Democratic US Senate challengers in Colorado, Iowa, Maine, NC and SC.
Maya Wiley begins a leave of absence from her MSNBC legal chores to explore opportunities for a 2021 NYC Mayoral run. New to elected politics, Ms Wiley was general counsel to Mayor de Blasio and chair of the NYC Civilian Complaint Review Board, an independent agency which monitors complaints about NYPD. A New School University Professor, she earned a BA at Dartmouth and a Juris Doctor from the Columbia University Law School.

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
INDEPENDENCE: LIBERIA celebrated its 173 year of Independence on July 26. The West African country declared its independence from the American Colonization Society on July 26, 1847. … JAMAICA, Caribbean nation, celebrates its independence from the United Kingdom which occurred on August 6, 1962….. The twin island Caribbean nation of TRINIDAD and TOBAGO celebrates its independence from the United Kingdom which occurred on August 31, 1962.
US based AFRICARE — a non-profit 50-year-old NGO committed to addressing African development and policy issue, working in concert with African people to build sustainable, healthy and productive communities — is going into retirement. A new Africa-based organization is born, this year; PANAFRICARE will replicate the Africare model, and be headquartered in Dakar, Senegal with six satellite offices from Nigeria, to Kenya, and Zimbabwe. The organization’s assets, including its building was sold and its art collection was donated to the Smithsonian Museum of African Art and to the University of Maryland, Eastern Shore campus. A Friends of PANAFRICARE office will open soon in the U.S.

ARTS/CULTURE
SOUL! — the PBS-TV news and entertainment show, which aired on Wednesdays, from 1968 to 1973 — is back. The brainchild of Black culture curator Ellis Haizlip, SOUL! was the only prime time TV platform for Black artists, entertainers and newsmakers, at that time. It was Black America’s “60 Minutes”. Haizlip was show’s host/producer who had his fingers on the pulse of Black Americana. SOUL! guests included Muhammad Ali, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Rev Jesse Jackson, Ruby and Ozzie, Lee Morgan, Miriam Makeba, Harry Belafonte, Sidney Poitier, Stevie Wonder, James Baldwin in France/Nikki Giovanni talk, and Alvin Ailey. SOUL! has been the subject of a book and a documentary. Amazon Prime has licensed the rights to 24 episodes of SOUL! which is a wonderful indulgence down memory lane and the origins of Black TV.


American billionaire MacKenzie Scott, former Mrs. Jeff Bezos, was generous to a fault recently. She cut $1.7 billion checks for 116 organizations. Six historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), were key beneficiaries. They, each, will receive checks between $20 to $40 million. The schools are Howard University; Morehouse College; Spelman College; Hampton University, Xavier University and Tuskegee University. Howard’s President calls the gift “transformative.” Other recipients of the MacKenzie Scott cash gifts include the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, the UNCF, the National Urban League and Harlem’s Children’s Zone.
After 20 years, Oprah Winfrey and Hearst, the O Magazine publisher, will retire the O Magazine print edition effective with the December issue. Oprah has been the exclusive O cover girl. The September O issue dons the image of Breonna Taylor, 26, the Black EMT technician, fatally shot in her home by Louisville, Kentucky police on March 13.

NEWSMAKERS
RIP: Annette Averette, 75, died in NYC on July 26. The veteran community servant who was always busy founded the Organic Soul Café. She was an outspoken political and community advocate for civil and housing justice, who joined Community Board 7 and the Bellevue Hospital Community Advisory Board. Her work experience ran the gamut from leader at the Six Street Community Center to Director of the LES Anti-Displacement Project. She will be buried in Columbus, Georgia. Annette is survived by two children, Liza Averette and Katwy Heru, a granddaughter Anakhu Heru, and daughter in-law Athena Moore.
RIP: GOP Presidential 2012 contender, Herman Cain, 74, died on July 31 after a month-long hospitalization battling COVID19, which was diagnosed a few days after his return from the Trump campaign rally in Tulsa Oklahoma, an indoor event. Born in Jim Crow Georgia, Cain was a Morehouse man, a business executive, former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza, Board Chair of the Federal Reserve Bank in Kansas City, a syndicated columnist, talk radio host and frequent contributor to Fox News.

AUGUST CALENDAR
August 15 is National Reparations Day in the United States. In New York the December 12th Movement hosts a National Reparations Day rally in NYC, assembling at 2 pm, at Trump International Hotel at Columbus Circle at 59th Street, Manhattan. Event commemorates the first NRD rally in the USA on August 17, 2002. The flyer reads. “They Stole Us, They Sold Us, They Owe Us.” Visit D12m.com or call 718.398.1766

A Harlem –based media/branding specialist, Victoria is contacted at Victoria.horsford@gmail.com

NYC CENSUS 2020: Community Residents, City Agencies, Volunteers Hitting Our Streets to Raise Our Numbers in Response to Trump Action

With the Potential of NYC losing billions for COVID-19 Relief and Govt Representation
Central Brooklyn’s Kathleen Daniel is a leader in the effort to up the Census count
New York City has more than a “lot” to lose, if it can’t hit the numbers. What’s at stake? Billions in federal aid for the critical programs we need, and two congressional seats in the midst of arguably the worst economic and health crises in a century.
With the 2020 Census count skewing low for myriad reasons, including COVID 19, it’s all hands — and feet — on deck. And the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) and NYC Census 2020 are leading the way.
Last week, the City launched the #GetCountedNYC Census Week of Action (July 27-August2) to mobilize all households to respond to the census in New York City, with events across the five boroughs.
Yesterday, the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs and NYC Census 2020 held an emergency public session with ethnic media in response to President Trump’s “cutting of the door-knocking period and the self-response period of the 2020 Census by one month”. Top city officials see it “as a move designed to depress responses and rob New York City of billions for critical programs, as well as congressional representation, for the next 10 years.” The census determines the equitable distribution of $1.5 trillion in federal funds annually for education, healthcare, housing, transportation, infrastructure, and more, in addition to determining the number of seats each state is allotted in the House of Representatives, as well as the shape and size of local and state legislative districts. This means door knocking by census takers would end on September 30, not October 31, despite the Census Bureau’s earlier commitment to continue door knocking through October 31, which was set in response to COVID-19.
The session was led by MOIA Commissioner Bitta Mostofi and NYC Census 2020 Deputy Director Amit Singh Bagga with NYC Census 2020 Field Director Kathleen Daniel, New York Immigration Coalition 2020 Census Senior Fellow Meeta Anand, and representatives from Make the Road New York and Chhaya CDC.
Ethnic media — considered the community-based messengers — engaged in conversations with City officials, coalition leaders, and community-based organizations about the latest developments involving the 2020 Census. And the latest developments, with the Trump announcement, certainly don’t look pretty.
Specifically, the session covered information about:

–the U.S. Census Bureau’s door-to-door enumeration operation, commonly known as “NRFU” (non-response follow-up).
–addressed misconceptions about the 2020 Census and New York City’s response to President Trump’s unconstitutional attempt to exclude undocumented immigrants from congressional apportionment;
–discussed NYC Census 2020’s priorities and what areas of the city are lagging, in terms of self-response;
–outlined the barriers to self-response participation and how their organizations are working to ensure that their constituents can get the money, power, and respect that is rightfully theirs by participating in the census.
— briefed the press on the major breaking news development: The Bureau’s door-knocking operation (whereby the Bureau sends staff to knock on doors of those that have not completed the Census) is now going to end on September 30 – a full month before it was slated to end.

What you should know:
· NYC has been outperforming itself compared to 2010, but our work is not done. Currently, NYC›s self-response rate is 54.8% and the national total is currently 63%.
· The census is easy, safe, confidential, and important, and New Yorkers should be familiar with census takers’ role in the census count.
· It is not too late to self-respond to the 2020 Census. While the Trump administration continues to attempt to interfere with the census, the best way to respond is to complete the census right now. There are no questions about citizenship or immigration on the census.
· COVID-19 is a stark reminder of the importance of the census, including federal funding for health care. Census data is used to measure the spread of diseases, order vaccines & plan for contact tracing. And the census determines the size of our political voice in Washington D.C., Albany, and local district lines.
NYC Census 2020 is a first-of-its-kind organizing initiative established by the Mayor in January 2019 to ensure a complete and accurate count of all New Yorkers in the 2020 Census. Of particular interest to Our Time Press is the Mayor’s in-house “Get Out the Count” field campaign supported by a volunteer organizing program to promote a complete count in each of the city’s 245 neighborhoods.
While a major engine in any modern-day campaign is the smart use of cutting-edge data and organizing technology, we are happy that the Mayor and City leaders understand the importance of direct contact. A great example of how that’s being done and who’s doing it here can be seen in the efforts of the city’s Kathleen Daniel, who has walked the “beat” in the neighborhood she calls home.
During Census Week, Ms. Daniel led teams of volunteers in the distribution of Census educational materials to her neighbors and commuters in the area where she lives.
Sponsored by the NYC Census 2020 and its partners, 150 volunteers held in-person census outreach events across the five boroughs in transit hubs, parks, playgrounds, small business corridors, and other key public areas in areas with historically low self-response rates. Teams were equipped with PPE. There was another “P”. For Passion.
Which is what Daniel brought with her at every stop along her special delivery of a message designed to save the life and livelihood of her community: Stand up! Be counted.
Daniel was raised and still lives in Central Brooklyn. Her — and her volunteers’ — efforts helped kick-off the ambitious #GetCountedNYC Census Week of Action.
“The campaign mobilized households to respond to the census in New York City, but there’s so much more to be done,” said Daniel said at a socially-distanced press gathering last week. “Without a complete count, New York will lose billions in Federal aid for schools, hospitals, and transit, as well as key Congressional representation.” (Sona Rai and Bernice Elizabeth Green)

The Struggle Continues in Black August

View From Here
By David Mark Greaves

Black August is more than a second Black History Month. It commemorates and celebrates the freedom-fighting spirit of those who were, and are, at the tip of the spear in the struggle for liberation. Whether it was Gabriel Prosser’s Rebellion, August 30, 1800, Nat Turner’s Rebellion, August 21, 1831, or those Black Panthers and others killed by government agents or incarcerated in the‘60’s and ‘70’s, victims of the FBI’s Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO).
That spirit of working toward liberation is expressed in many ways and using many tactics. We’ve seen it as recently as Tuesday, with the victory of on-the-street activist Cori Bush in the Missouri Democratic primary for congress. “The people want a fighter,” said Ms. Bush, an African-American, working class, single mother, after defeating 10-term incumbent Congressman William Lacy Clay Jr. (D-MO) and, pending her election in the heavily Democratic district, will be joining the growing number of progressives in congress.
Whether it is Black Lives Matter in the streets, or legislation in state capitals and Washington, DC, the struggle for liberation is a constant, because the enemy is ever-present and we see it now in actions around the Census and in voter-suppression.

CENSUS / Voting
Donald Trump doesn’t want you counted. He has removed October from the schedule. The Census count now ends a month early, September 30. This means the door-to-door campaign will end and the hardest to count, the poor, the Black the Brown will be left out. Go to www.census.gov and fill out the form. It take less than 10 minutes and it determines political representation and money for health care, education, Medicare, infrastructure and a myriad of government programs.
The Republicans want to lock-in White advantages for the next 10 years, same as they’ve already locked in 200 young federal judges with lifetime appointments. Don’t help them further with the Census, get counted.
Donald Trump doesn’t want you to vote. He continues to rant against mail-in ballots, and attempts to destroy the postal service to ensure votes are not counted in a timely way. Then he will cry “Foul!,” and locked in his self-delusion, cause a lot of chaos an angst by refusing to leave office. I’m of two minds about that. On the one hand, we would breath a collective sigh of relief at the regular transition of power, on the other hand, on January 20th at noon, we’ll have not only the pleasure of seeing Joe Biden inaugurated, but the split screen of Trump being escorted from the White House, off on his journey to a New York State lockup for bank and insurance fraud, tax evasion and God knows what else.
Send the word across the country, everyone must vote.

Aberrant
We’ve called him many things over the last three-and-a-half-years, and after reading Ms. Trump’s dissection of her uncle Donald Trump. “Too Much and Never Enough: How my family created the world’s most dangerous man,” we have to add “aberrant” to that list.
She explains where his lack of empathy comes from and how deep it is. Her work is frightening because we see her words come to life every day in Trump’s self-delusions and inability to care that has already cost over 157,000 lives. He continues to insist schools reopen regardless of health outcomes, simply because he doesn’t care at all about lives lost or rules broken.
This was made clear in a recent interview for Axios by Johnathan Swan. Responding to a question regarding the 1,000-a-day death rate, he says, “It is what it is.” Asked about Congressman John Lewis, then lying-in-state in the capital building, he cannot bring himself to say anything good about him but does note several times, “He didn’t come to my inauguration.”
Congressman Jim Clyburn compared Trump’s to Mussolini and Adolf Hitler and he could have included Idi Amin as well. These people are outside the normal range of humanity and one of them is President of the United States and we see the resulting death, hate and fear beginning to consume the nation.
The damage he is doing now will continue for another generation, in the failure to nurture the core asset of the nation, the collective intelligence of the young people. They will suffer and Black, Brown and poor Whites will suffer most. In this highly competitive world, our children will have three strikes against them before they even get up to the plate.
The good news
If we vote and support anti-voter suppression efforts, Joe Biden will be President and there could be a change in local legislatures as well as in congress.
How different this country will be if in the next four years, voter suppression is stopped and voting districts are independently redrawn to reflect geographic proximity and not the needs of the people doing the drawing. When both have taken place, then not only the voices of the majority of people be heard, but political appeals will have to be moderated and the screams of the rightwing mob will be relegated to their rightful minority status.

Vice President?
Joe Biden has such a talent pool for his own VP, that it must be why he’s taking his time. We’ve liked them all, but for me, Congresswoman, and former Chief of Police in Orlando, Florida, Val Demings for VP and former National Security Advisor and Ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice as Secretary of State. Anyway, that’s my dream team. Again, with the group he has to choose from, he can’t go wrong with whoever he picks.