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View From Here: Challenge Trump

When you have an illegitimate president, you get an abnormal time and that is the time we’re in.

This is Our Challenge

As the more and more popular President Barack Obama leaves office, we are left facing a future full of unknowns.  Illegitimate, not normal, erratic, strange, frightening, these are the words defining the Inauguration of Donald J. Trump as the 45th President of the United States tomorrow.  And based on what has come out of his mouth so far, we are at the beginning of a trauma that will reverberate in homes across the nation facing repeal of the Affordable Care Act extend to capitals around the world watching a belligerent leader come into power.

Resistance

“Be a part of the Resistance and Organize!” is the call that has gone out across the country.  At the celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr. at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the choir was preached to with words and song, the same as in Black churches generations ago.   If you missed the Civil Rights era, then this is your turn at the front lines.  To stand up for the future and seize the opportunity to be in the arena.  This is a privileged time for us, we have the opportunity to be present when new voices of change rise up as they must, because this cannot be happening but it is.

No More Rules

The fox is not just in the hen house, he’s running it with family and friends and the only thing that is right is what they say.  No ethics investigations for these billionaires.   How is Rex Tillerson, the former Exxon/Mobil CEO and the nominee for Secretary of State, able to refuse to answer repeated questions from U.S. senators about what Exxon knew about climate change and when they knew it, and regular folks can’t refuse to answer anything the lowest government clerk asks without paying a price?   And because Republicans in Congress care more about power than the nation, this is the kind of thing that will be going on at least for the next two years.  Mid-term elections have never seemed so far away.

World at Risk

When you have an illegitimate president, you get an abnormal time and that is the time we’re in.   His penchant to pick fights at home and around the world with China, NATO, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the intelligence community, the European Union, all targets of his meanness, he’s causing the world to become an even more unstable place.

The notable exception to the new president’s ire is Russia’s Vladimir Putin, with whom he exchanges words of kindness and mutual support.

Into the Breach

This is a battle for hearts, minds and votes.   As their seventeenth year begins, young people across the country should be getting their paper in order to ensure the ability to vote on their eighteenth birthday.

In her keynote address at BAM, Opal Tometi, co-founder of Black Lives Matter, repeatedly insisted, “We cannot be silent in the face of assaults against basic health care services, when so-called leaders threaten to rip apart families, when threatened with the normalization of intolerance, when women’s rights are being stripped away from us, when men no better than Klansmen dressed in suits are in the White House, we cannot be silent”.

In celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr., his compatriot and Civil Rights icon Congressman John Lewis gave this message: “Never give up.  Never give in. You have a moral obligation to say something, to do something and not be quiet.”

 

 

 

Sentence Commuted for Oscar Lopez-Rivera

Oscar Lopez-Rivera, a co-founder of the Puerto Rican independence group FALN (Fuerza Armadas de Liberacion Nacional, Spanish for Armed Forces of National Liberation), was among those whose sentence was commuted this week by President Barack Obama.

López-Rivera was arrested in May 1981 and sentenced to 55 years in prison. His release date is May 17.

Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, an outspoken campaigner for Lopez-Rivera , responded to the news:

“I’m so very excited and happy for Oscar. It’s been a long road and I’ve been very invested in this case personally and emotionally, so it’s overwhelming,” she said. “This was an unjust sentencing and it’s been 35 years of having been in jail for his political convictions.”

Obama’s legacy in the Puerto Rican community is strengthened, according to the Speaker.

“When people think of what did he do for Puerto Rico, it’s going to be that he freed Oscar,” she said.

Dave:
 Here’s story… Please add photos of Oscar and photo of Mark-Viverito for this item below.  And thank you gary for bringing it to our attention.
Oscar Lopez-Rivera, a co-founder of the Puerto Rican independence group FALN  (Fuerza Armadas de Liberacion Nacional, Spanish for Armed Forces of National Liberation), was among those whose sentence was commuted this week by President Barack Obama.

López Rivera was arrested in May 1981 and sentenced to 55 years in prison. His release date is May 17.

Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, an outspoken campaigner for Lopez-Rivera, responded to the news:

“I’m so very excited and happy for Oscar. It’s been a long road and I’ve been very invested in this case personally and emotionally, so it’s overwhelming,” she said. “This was an unjust sentencing and it’s been 35 years of having been in jail for his political convictions.”

Obama’s legacy in the Puerto Rican community is strengthened, according to the Speaker.

“When people think of what did he do for Puerto Rico, it’s going to be that he freed Oscar,” she said.
In 1999, President Bill Clinton offered Lopez-Rivera clemency, but he refused because it would have required him to renounce terrorism.

 

Robert Reich: 15 warning signs of impending Trump tyranny

As tyrants take control of democracies, they typically do these 15 things

As tyrants take control of democracies, they typically:

  1. Exaggerate their mandate to govern — claiming, for example, that they won an election by a landslideeven after losing the popular vote.
  2. Repeatedly claim massive voterfraud in the absence of any evidence in order to restrict voting in subsequent elections.
  3. Calls anyone who opposes them “enemies”.
  4. Turn the public against journalists or media outlets that criticize them, calling them “deceitful” and “scum”.
  5. Hold few if any press conferences, preferring to communicate with the public directly through mass rallies and unfiltered statements.
  6. Tell the public big lies, causing them to doubt the truth and to believe fictions that support the tyrants’ goals.    READ MORE:  ROBERT REICH BLOG

Bedford Armory will be a Win for Crown Heights

By Geoffrey Davis, Frank Johnson, Carlton Screen, Ty Grant and Dario Trujillo

The Crown Heights community is in desperate need of quality recreational facilities for youth sports leagues, senior activities and other neighborhood-based programming. While other more affluent communities have had access to many of these facilities for decades, we have been struggling to find adequate recreational space for far too long.

That is why we and so many other Crown Heights residents and stakeholders strongly support the city’s plan to provide new recreational facilities as part of the redevelopment of the Bedford-Union Armory. While we greatly respect the local elected officials who recently weighed in on the project, we disagree with their claim that this planned rec center is a “Trojan horse” and we hope these elected officials will take the time to gather more community feedback regarding our support for this development.

The recreational facility proposed for the armory will include three multisport courts, three hardwood basketball courts, an indoor athletic field and a 25-meter competitive swimming pool. These are exactly the kind of resources needed for young people in Crown Heights – especially youth basketball and soccer leagues who simply cannot find the same kind of quality practice space enjoyed by the counterparts in other parts of Brooklyn and the city at large. Seniors in our community will also greatly benefit from quality athletic space for exercise and other wellness programs.

We also know that, unfortunately, many of Crown Heights’ local public schools in District 17 have had no choice but to use cafeterias, auditoriums and other inadequate spaces for school athletic programs. Providing real sports facilities at the armory would be a game-changer for these schools, especially because the planned pool is the proper size for athletic competition.

Additionally, we cannot overstate the value of these resources in efforts to decrease violence in Crown Heights. It is a sad reality that too many young people in our community fall victim to violence because they do not have a safe place to gather and play sports, especially with regard to after-school programming. By bringing these facilities to the armory, we can provide Crown Heights with a powerful new tool for keeping young people safe and empowering them to succeed in athletics and education.

Most importantly, the city has committed to ensuring that community members are able to utilize these recreational facilities at discounted rates at any time. The operator of the space will be required to partner local organizations and nonprofit groups that provide the kind of sports and community programming that will take place there.

While we understand the concerns raised by some of our local elected officials, it is our sincere hope that they will consider meeting with us and others in our community who support new recreational facilities at the armory because of the powerfully positive impact they will have. When our community voices are heard, we are confident that we will succeed in bringing this much-needed resource to Crown Heights and strengthening our community for generations to come.

Geoffrey Davis represents the James E. Davis Stop The Violence Foundation; Frank Johnson represents the Ice Tea Youth Development Program; Carlton Screen represents The Flatbush Youth Association, Inc.; Ty Grant represents Team First, Inc.; and Dario Trujillo represents the Central Brooklyn Soccer Club.

Grassroots to Global, Global to Grassroots: Black Words Matter, Too

Perhaps the most misunderstood words of 2016 were: Black Lives Matter.

But thankfully one leading cultural institution and one major corporation got it right in their timely salutes to the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the observance of his birthday, Monday, January 16, 2017.

The Brooklyn Academy of Music tribute came in the form of presenting Opal Tometi, the Brooklyn-based co-founder of the nationally controversial Black Lives Matter Movement, as keynote speaker at their annual event — New York City’s largest tribute to King.

In response to grassroots community urging — led by community leaders Taharka Robinson, a pastor, and Bruce P. Green of the Brooklyn Anti-Violence Movement–TD Bank closed its branches on the federal holiday.  The popular financial institution previously had announced its branches would be open.

“Truth, uncorrupted and on its own terms, empowers all,” Rev. Robinson told Our Time Press.  (BG)