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Boys & Girls Opens School Targeting Over-Aged & Under-Credited Students

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Research & Service High School offers opportunity for students with difficult life situations
By Stephen Witt

Students looking for another chance at graduating high school along with gaining job and career development skills are being invited to a new “transit” school located within Boys & Girls High School.
It’s called the Research & Service High School and it targets overaged and undercredited students 16 and over from throughout Brooklyn and Bedford-Stuyvesant that are sometimes deemed at risk.
Research & Service High School Principal Allison Farrington said many of the students come from difficult life situations such as teenage pregnancy, or incarceration or have problems with parents.
“A lot of these kids become disengaged and tend to drop out, but (Boys & Girls High School Principal) Bernard Gassaway wanted to make sure this is a community school where anyone can come and be educated,” said Farrington.
Farrington said besides formal education, the students are also provided with social services, academic counseling and a whole support network that includes career development and secure paid internships through a partnership with the community-based organization FEGS.
“All the classrooms are Common Core-driven and we accelerate the classes. Instead of having an eight-period day, we have less periods, but they are longer and more intense,” said Farrington.
The school started last year as a pilot program with about 40 students and it has grown to 110 students so far this year with enough space for 180 students – all of whom share common space resources with Boys & Girls such as the library.
Farrington called the idea of “transit” schools as only for at-risk kids a misnomer and that “sometimes life just interrupts their academics”.
“One student came to us with only eight credits last year and she outperformed everybody in the Regents tests,” Farrington said.
Farrington is also a big proponent of the controversial Common Core standards, in which students must focus on literacy in history, science and technical subjects.

October Is Bedford- Stuyvesant Month

October 17

BED-STUY ALIVE! – A TASTE OF SOUL

Support Participating Restaurants online. www.bed-stuyalive.org.

6:00p: Schomburg Center’s Ed Talks: The Misinformation of the Negro by Dr. Ivory A. Toldson. Ed Talks is a new forum for educational scholars and thought leaders whose work illuminates, challenges and transforms the pedagogy and practice of teaching historical and cultural literacy today.  Dr. Ivory Toldson, an Associate Professor in the Counseling Psychology Program at Howard University, will discuss How Bad Research on Race and Achievement is Duping Black Progressives and Liberal Americans into Accepting Black Inferiority.  Free! Schomburg Center in Harlem, 135th & Malcolm X. Blvd.

October 18

BED-STUY ALIVE!– A SIP OF SOUL

Support Participating Restaurants online. www.bed-stuyalive.org.

October 19

BED-STUY ALIVE! LIVE HEALTHY, LIVE WELL, LIVE GREEN – The House Tour

11a-4p: Bedford-Stuyvesant’s 35th Annual  House & Garden Tour, Sponsor: Brownstoners of Bedford-Stuyvesant /$20 advance sale; $25 day of tour/brownstonersof bedstuy@gmail.com/www.brownstonersofbedstuy.org/718-221-2213. Attendees will experience firsthand the luxury and sophistication embodied within these brownstones and limestones, many of which date back to the early 1800s,  www.bed-stuyalive.org. (Self-guided, rain or shine)

BED-STUY ALIVE! LIVE HEALTHY, LIVE WELL, LIVE GREEN – Art Studio Open House

BeSAA 7th Annual Studio Strut/www.bed-stuyalive.org

11a: WEEKSVILLE’s Fall Harvest Festival, 1698 Bergen Street, near Rochester. 718-756-5250

October 20

11a-5p: Gather Bed-Stuy and Breadlove are hosting their popular Great Pumpkin Fest.  Volunteers needed: info@gatherbrooklyn.org.  Vendors welcome, for fees and to register: www.gatherbrooklyn.org/vendor-application/.

 

11a-4p:  First Strivers’ Row Home Tour in Harlem. You can purchase advance tickets on the website: www.striversrowhometour.com.

October 22

Save the date! Macon Library|African-American Heritage Center to host 5th Anniversary celebration for the chartering of the African Atlantic Genealogical Society. At the branch, 361 Lewis Ave./Macon, BK.

October 23

6p-10p: Bedford-Stuyvesant YMCA’s Brooklyn Honors – Celebrating Our Best fundraising event for its Strong Kids Campaign. Stage 6 at Steiner Studios, Brooklyn Navy Yard. the Strong Kids Campaign ensures that no child or family is turned away from life-enhancing YMCA programs because of the inability to pay. Each year, the YMCA provides financial assistance to thousands of local youth and families in need. •Chef Roblè Ali – Chef Roblè & Co/ Bravo Network •Andrew Kimball – Director of Innovation Economy Initiatives, Jamestown Properties, and CEO, Industry City •Reverend Clinton Miller – Brown Memorial Baptist Church •Danny Simmons – co-Founder and Chairman of Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation •Brandon Stanton – Founder/Photographer of Humans of New York• Gale Stevens Haynes – Long Island University Vice President and Chief Operating Officer *Kay Wilson Stallings – Senior Vice President of Production and Development for Nickelodeon Preschool Television. • Special Tribute to Councilman Albert Vann. www.ymcanyc.org/bedstuy (718) 622-9422

October 26

11:00am – 1:00pm: Pratt to host Tree Giveaway at Mt. Sinai Baptist Church (Parking Lot), 241-45 Gates Ave., BK.

Wednesdays through October 30

9am-1pm: The Restoration Plaza Community Market, a farmers’ market, will allow residents to purchase fresh local produce at Marcy Plaza. The market is operated by the Brooklyn Rescue Mission, in partnership with the NYC Food and Fitness Partnership and the Partnership for a Healthier Brooklyn at Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation. Brooklyn Rescue Mission is a community-based organization in Bedford-Stuyvesant focusing on emergency food provision, food justice issues and community-grown food. The organization owns and operates an urban farm in Bedford-Stuyvesant and works with youth, adults and seniors. For more information on the Brooklyn Rescue Mission please visit www.brooklynrescuemission.org.

October 27

3:00p:  BEPAA’s Master Class series:  “GENTRIFICATION AND HISTORY OF HARLEM” – An Afternoon with A. Peter Bailey. John Henrik Clarke House, 286 Convent Avenue, Harlem, NY. Admission is Free. Call 347-907-0629 to RSVP

October 29

9:30-11a: Emily Dorcely and the Bridge Street Development Corporation with Building on Faith, a faith-based affordable housing seminar for clergy. Provided:  a comprehensive overview of affordable housing development strategies of faith-based institutions; learning about the benefits of development and how to create a successful project from predevelopment and financing to construction and occupancy. David Goldstein of Goldstein Hall LLC, Attorneys at Law, and architect Michael McCaw and Pierre Downing of Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC), a national affordable housing lender, are co-sponsors. The 90-minute seminar includes breakfast and a question-and-answer session. Location: Quincy Senior Residences, 625 Quincy Street. RSVP by October 22 by calling 718-636-7596 x214 or emailing info@bsdcorp.org.

November 2

6:00-9:00p: Opening reception for HOUSE OF ART gallery’s much-anticipated The Games We Played exhibition. HOA owner and exhibition curator Richard Beavers will highlight the inspiration behind this exhibition.  RSVP mandatory!

November 3

3:00p-5:00p: HOUSE of ART GALLERY: The Games We Played  Artists + Curator Talk. This event will be curated by the gallery’s director Richard Beavers as he provides an opportunity for the community to connect with the exhibition’s artists. All are welcomed to join the discussion.  Exhibition artists (attendance not confirmed) include: Guy Stanley Philoche, Jamel Shabazz, Dan Ericson, Charlotta Janssen, Leroy Campbell.  RSVP mandatory. To request an individual showing please contact Kai Lawson at kai@hoagallery.com. 347 663-8195.

November 5 – GENERAL ELECTION DAY!!!

November 7

Save-the-Date for The 2013 Stars of New York Dance Honoring Danny Simmons!

November 8-10,

2013 Black Farmers and Urban Gardeners Conference

“Power and Sovereignty,” Boys & Girls High School, 1700 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY.  The Black Farmers and Urban Gardeners Conference connects growers, eaters and organizations across the country to nurture the health and well-being of Black America and the environment as a whole. Attendees explore issues of race, class, health and food through panel discussions, workshops, films and conversations.  Resources are exchanged. Keynoters are:  Monica White, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Environmental Justice in the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies and the Department of Community and Environmental Sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison & President of the Board of Directors of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network; and Ben Burkett, President, National Family Farm Coalition. www.blackfarmersconf.org/

November 3

2:00p: Pre-Black Solidarity Day  Celebration: Speakers Michael Hooper,  Inez Barron, Bob Law, Salim Adofo, Cultural Presentations, Martial Arts  & Performances by Capoeira Angola,  Harlem Poet Laureate,Geoge Edward Tait, The Afrikan Community Drummers, Children of the International Sankofa Academy, Empress Idama, Brother Wakili, Afrikan Vendors Market. Ft. Green Senior Citizens Center, 966 Fulton St.. For Information contact  Michael Hooper 718-773-0246.

Admission: Free

November 17

BEPAA  Presents a Master Class: An Afternoon with Tom Burrell, Author of “Brainwashed: Challenging the Myth of Black Inferiority,” John Henrik Clarke House, 286 Convent Avenue, New York, NY. Admission is Free. Call 347-907-0629

Ongoing:

Thru December 15: Housewarming: Notions of Home from the Center of the Universe at  BRIC Arts | Media House. This inaugural exhibition will act as a celebratory “housewarming” of  BRIC’s new 40,000-square-foot multidisciplinary arts and media complex located at 647 Fulton Street in the Downtown Brooklyn Cultural District. The exhibition explores the concept of “home” from a number of broad vantage points. Eight of the 12 artists featured in the exhibition will present works commissioned by BRIC. Njideka Akunyili, Esperanza Mayobre, Keisha Scarville and Rafael Vargas Suarez are among the featured artists in the exhibition curated by Elizabeth Ferrer, curator and BRIC’s Director of Contemporary Art. Call for hours. Admission to BRIC’s gallery is free.  Call for hours (718) 855-7882

Thru January 11 (OPENS NOV. 2) : The Games We Played, a nostalgic revisit through art to the street and board games played by young people and families back in the day,  is an art exhibition at House of Art. While some games occupied the entire sidewalk, other neighborhood games took up the whole street. There were also the classic games played indoors when households still had family game night. This exhibition will showcase a diverse group of emerging-to-established artists, with a multitude of genres featuring Guy Stanley Philoche, Jamel Shabazz, Dan Ericson, Charlotta Janssen, Leroy Campbell and others. 408 Marcus Garvey Blvd.

 

Thru January 14: Schomburg Collects WPA Artists 1935 – 1943. The exhibition highlights the work of visual, literary and performing black artists. It presents founder Arturo Schomburg’s commitment to establish and preserve a black art collection as well as the artists’ responses to America’s racial climate.  Schomburg Collects will feature works by Hale Woodruff, Augusta Savage, Beauford Delaney, James Van Der Zee, Richard Wright, Bob Blackburn, Addison Scurlock, Zora Neale Hurston. Call for hours. 515 Malcolm X. Blvd. @ 135th St. (212) 491-2200

Thru March 9, 2014: Wangechi Mutu: A Fantastic Journey, Brooklyn Museum’s first museum survey of more than fifty works of the internationally renowned Nairobi-born, Brooklyn-based artist. Her first-ever animated video is shown as part of the artwork of collages, sketchbook samples, sculpture, a site-specific wall piece and immersive installations. 200 Eastern Parkway. Call for hours and entry fees:718-638-5000.

The White Man’s Last Tantrum?

Exclusive: With the U.S. government shutdown and a threatened credit default, Tea Party Republicans are testing out a new system of national governance in which they get their way – or else. But is this the beginning of a new Jim Crow era of imposed white supremacy or just the white man’s last tantrum, asks Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
www.consortiumnews.com

American pundits are missing the bigger point about the Republican shutdown of the U.S. government and the GOP’s threatened default on America’s credit. The real question is not what policy concessions the Tea Partiers may extract, but rather can a determined right-wing white minority ensure continuation of white supremacy in the United States?
For years, political scientists have been talking about how the demographic changes in the United States are inexorably leading to a Democratic majority, with Hispanics and Asian-Americans joining African-Americans and liberal urban whites to erode the political domains of white conservatives and white racists.
But those predictions have always assumed a consistent commitment to the democratic principle of one person, one vote – and a readiness of Republicans to operate within the traditional standards of democratic governance. But what should now be crystal clear is that those assumptions are faulty.
Instead of accepting the emergence of this more diverse and multi-cultural America, the Right – through the Tea Party-controlled Republicans – has decided to alter the constitutional framework of the United States to guarantee the perpetuation of white supremacy and the acceptance of right-wing policies.
In effect, we are seeing the implementation of a principle enunciated by conservative thinker William F. Buckley in 1957: “The white community in the South is entitled to take such measures as are necessary to prevail, politically and culturally, in areas in which it does not predominate numerically.” Except now the Buckley rule is being applied nationally.

A Nationwide Strategy
This reality is hard to deny even though much of the U.S. political elite remains in denial. But the truth is apparent in a host of anti-democratic moves that have emanated from the lily-white Tea Party and that have been implemented by the predominantly white Republican Party at both the state and federal levels.
It’s there in the nationwide campaign to impose “ballot security” by requiring photo IDs for voting to cure the virtually non-existent problem of in-person voting fraud. The well-documented result of requiring photo IDs will be to reduce the number of urban minority voters who are less likely to have driver’s licenses and other approved identification.
It’s there in the reduction of voting hours, which — when combined with disproportionately fewer (and less efficient) voting booths in poor and minority areas — guarantees long lines and further skews the political power to wealthier white areas. In the pivotal election of 2000, we saw how this combination of factors in Florida suppressed the vote for Al Gore and handed the White House to the national vote loser George W. Bush.
It’s there in the sophisticated gerrymandering that Republican statehouses have applied to congressional districts around the country by lumping minorities and other Democratic voters together in one deformed district so other districts have comfortable Republican majorities.
This gerrymandering – now aided by computer models to remove any guesswork – played an important role in maintaining the current Republican “majority” in the House of Representatives even though congressional Republicans lost the national popular vote in 2012 by about 1½ million votes.

Congressional Tactics
The Right’s anti-democratic strategy is there, too, in the endless use of Republican filibusters in the U.S. Senate. Because of compromises made at the Constitutional Convention in 1787, some of this anti-democratic bias was built into the system (from a deal to assure the small states that they would not be overwhelmed by the large states under the Constitution, which concentrated power in the federal government).
Except for that long-ago compromise, there is no logical reason why the 240,000 registered voters in Wyoming should have the same number of senators as the 18 million registered voters in California. (Or why the 400,000 registered voters in the District of Columbia should have none.)
However, this violation of democracy’s one-person, one-vote principle is exacerbated in the U.S. Senate when Republicans filibuster even minor bills and demand that Democrats muster 60 votes in the 100-seat Senate to proceed. That means that a handful of lightly populated states can block legislative action favored by large majorities of the American people, such as requiring background checks on gun-show purchasers.
Republicans also have found endless excuses to deny congressional voting rights to Washington DC residents. You can probably guess what color skin many DC citizens have and what political party they favor.

The New Jim Crow
If you step back and take a look at this ugly landscape, what you will see is something akin to a new Jim Crow system, a sickening reprise of what happened the last time white supremacists saw their political and cultural dominance threatened in the years after the Civil War.
In the late 1860s and 1870s, the two parties were on the opposite sides of the racial-equality issue. Then, the Republicans pressed for a reconstruction of the South to assure civil rights for blacks. However, the Democrats, the old party of slavery, acted to frustrate, sabotage and ultimately defeat those efforts.
What the United States then got was nearly a century of racial segregation across large swaths of the country although most egregious in the South. It was not until the 1960s when the Democratic Party of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson broke with the old traditions of collaborating with the Old Confederacy. These new Democrats instead supported civil rights legislation pushed by Martin Luther King Jr. and other advocates for racial equality.
However, opportunistic Republicans, such as Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, saw an opening to flip the electoral map by snaking away the South’s resentful white racists from the Democrats and locking them into the Republican Party. The maneuver – cloaked in coded messages about states’ rights and hostility toward the federal government – proved astoundingly successful.
Still, the white supremacists faced a politically existential problem. They were demographically fading from their historic dominance, steadily replaced in numbers by Hispanics, Asian-Americans and blacks as well as by younger whites who viewed racial bigotry as a disgusting residue from the age-old crimes of slavery and segregation.

Countering Demographics
So what to do? Right-wing billionaires helped by pouring in vast sums to create a powerful right-wing propaganda machine, an ideological media unparalleled in American history.  The loud voices and angry words from the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck and Rupert Murdoch whipped up white grievances, but – as the election and reelection of African-American Barack Obama showed – more was needed.
The votes of non-whites and the young needed to be suppressed via manipulated election rules; the use of scientific gerrymandering had to be expanded to further devalue Democratic votes; obstructionism in Congress had to become the rule, not the exception.
Finally, it became clear that a de facto transformation of the constitutional system was needed to prevent the rule of this emerging – and “undeserving” – majority. Thus, government by extortion became the ultimate solution.
By using the Republican House and its gerrymandered “majority” to prevent votes on straightforward bills to pay for the government and raise the debt ceiling, the Tea Party is now testing whether the majority of the nation can be coerced into accepting the demands of a right-wing minority through threats of economic calamity.
Even some Republicans seem confused about their short-term goals. Rep. Marlin Stutzman, R-Indiana, declared, “we’re not going to be disrespected. We have to get something out of this. And I don’t know what that even is.”
But the message that the Tea Party Republicans are delivering to the nation is that if the American people insist on electing Democratic presidents or enacting federal legislation to “promote the general Welfare,” the Tea Party will respond by making the economy scream. The economic dislocations from a credit default alone could be so severe that millions of people will be thrown out of work and out of their homes.
The implicit warning is that you will suffer that fate — you may be driven into poverty — if you don’t let whites continue to rule. Or as the urbane William Buckley put it, you must let whites “prevail, politically and culturally.”

An Unthinkable Idea?
For those Americans who recoil at this scenario – and think it must be unthinkable in the Twenty-First Century – they should remember their history. In the 1870s, racist whites – especially in the South but also in many parts of the North – refused to accept post-Civil War amendments that guaranteed equal rights and voting rights for blacks.
Through connivance and violence, the racist whites prevailed and it took nearly a century – and much more bloodshed – to reverse their victories. What America is witnessing today is the next phase of that war for white supremacy. Well-meaning people should not be too cavalier about the outcome.
The Tea Party-induced government shutdown and the upcoming extortion demands over the debt ceiling may indeed turn out to be the white man’s last tantrum – but this extremist strategy of mayhem and extortion could also be the inauguration of a grim new era of Jim Crow.
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his new book, America’s Stolen Narrative, either in print here or as an e-book (from Amazon and barnesandnoble.com). For a limited time, you also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on the Bush Family and its connections to various right-wing operatives for only $34. The trilogy includes America’s Stolen Narrative.

View From Here

By David Mark Greaves

The Plight of the Right

As we go to press, the 16-day government shutdown is ending and the threat of default on government debt is over.   What remains is a clearer picture of the Tea Party Caucus that has been created by a gerrymandering process that was meant to carve out districts that could be depended upon to vote Republican.  This was achieved, but now the country is confronted with the unintended consequence of   the concentration of the darker side of the Republican spectrum, the white supremacists and those without empathy but with lots of anger at the loss of the Confederacy and the changes in the America they thought was always theirs.  They are fiercely righteous and easily roused, ripe targets for the multitude of PACs, radio hosts, TV networks and other revenue machines that rile them up with  long missives about saving America with the subliminal and sometimes not so, message that theirs is an effort to save the white race.  And they take PayPal.

That President Obama has to deal with crazies in congress rather than work on solving problems must be a source of great frustration for him.

I Couldn’t Believe It

There is coming to television a series only a white supremacist could love.  It takes the hundreds of years of the trauma of slavery and raping of Black women and updates it to 2048 in a show called Almost Human.  The concept is of a Black man, a “synthetic” (a term used in the show as “ni–er” would be) who is an Almost Human creation of white scientists to be the neutered assistant to the white guy who is in bed with a Black woman.  We mention the name of the show only to advise you don’t watch it.  It has guns, explosions and good-looking stars, but it is such a racist concept that African-Americans should certainly not allow children to be exposed to it.  This is the kind of messaging that is injurious to the mental health of developing minds, suggesting as it does that 200 years after slavery, the relationship between the races will not have changed.

 

Upstate Roundtable

Is America coming apart at the seams?

By Kimberlee Leto

Is America coming apart at the seams? If I sat down to write a list of questions, looked on Facebook to see what people were posting about the Government Shutdown, Obamacare, Immigration and Welfare, that one question pops out at me. Is America coming apart at the seams? Out of all the issues that remain unanswered and underserved, what really remains clear in the chaos; have we lost sight of what America stands for? Have we lost our way only to have everything unfurl and collapse at our feet?

Coming apart at the seams means there is a lack of control, weakness and accountability missing. Not just financially but the government being closed means a lack of leadership and a threat to our personal security. Am I the only one worried that with so many government employees furloughed at half-wage, yet expected to protect and defend our nation, that maybe we will get what we paid for? Would not our enemies see this as weakness and a way to infiltrate our borders, take down our way of life? Yes, why not, we have already invited them here for a better life? Many of the businesses that grace 2nd Avenue in Troy are not owned by Americans. Put the melting pot ideology aside, there is something wrong here and a deep-seated resentment exists.

While we wait to see if politicians can reach a compromise before America defaults on Thursday, there is tension and ignorance. Many Americans, at least in Troy and the Capital Region, are dissatisfied with the performance of our politicians. Many people I have spoken with are very disappointed in President Obama and his health care reform, mainly because they feel they are being forced into something they don’t want and don’t understand. Many people who are struggling to make ends meet are appalled and bewildered that we live in a “welfare state of decline”, where many people get paid more to be on assistance programs and much prefer that way of life than to work hard at a job that pays $8 an hour. But still, who can blame them, where are the jobs? In upstate New York, where the economy is just now bouncing back from the Great Recession and jobs remain more prevalent for the blue collar, working class and service industry, where are the well-paying professional jobs for the educated? They simply do not exist because the market can only tolerate what it can sustain. Professional jobs means working in the medical field or becoming a sales rep. The upstate way of life is changing slowly to take on new avenues that mean growth but this is very slow to transition. So many want to hold onto the upstate charm but also know that upstate life may come to an end as they know it without embracing change, innovative spirit and looking to the small businessperson as a catalyst.  We’ve seen this in Troy, but don’t tell anyone. There is a cultural renaissance taking place here. Once again, slow waves of change are hitting us but it feels like there are so many obstacles. We see big problems in government hindering these waves of change. Unless we take the country back, stand up by our bootstraps, we are only following a losing battle.

Many people are fed up with the process and feel their views, values and rights are not being addressed by those we have elected to represent us. Many people question the agenda taking place in Washington, the desire to see change but to the same token, also fear change. The Government Shutdown is a sure sign of weakness. Where is our leadership? Where is the passion that our Founding Fathers represented? Where is leadership, sulking in the corner like a five-year-old  because they didn’t get their way? Is it completely unreliable because they did not address the issues with better solutions? And yet, they still get paid. I know for certain, if I didn’t do my job right, I would be fired. So why aren’t more dissatisfied Americans marching on the Capitol to remind the men and women of Congress that we are pissed off and not going to take it anymore? Granted, so many of us are overwhelmed by survival, by just trying to fix the problems at home but what is not seen is how problems in Washington impact New York and upstate which, in turn, also impacts 2nd Avenue in Troy.

And by the way, you’re fired! Empty your desk! Maybe the government should stay closed and put the power back in the hands of people. After all, it was a great president, Abraham Lincoln, who once said at his first inaugural speech in 1861, “This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they can exercise their constitutional right of amending it, or exercise their revolutionary right to overthrow it”.

But this begs a bigger question. Who are Americans? Who is entitled to the pursuit of happiness? Many people I have spoken with would say that the pursuit of happiness is dead. Many of our inalienable rights are dead, gone because we are being overpowered by big business, internationalization, corruption and fraud. So much is wrong in America right now, it is sickening. Most of our rights, rights many have made the ultimate sacrifice to protect, like my nephew and brothers(all military), have been simply given away.  Given away to people who are not from this country but come here to make a better life for themselves and people who need to go home. After all, we are closed for business, right?

This issue of rights and the American Melting Pot, as it stands, is in need of further review, as I think about the issues Congress must somehow come to resolve. What does it mean to be an American in 2013? These are real issues, “can’t sleep at night” issues. So many people I have talked with want change, want to say more  than what they believe politicians can give them. I say government is too broken to be fixed, but it needs to be reinvented. So instead of remaining complacent and unaware, it is time to speak up, stand up and fight.

Clearly, at this moment in time, America is at a standstill, its people are overwhelmed by the broken record. They are confused about Obamacare; they are worried about the fairness of welfare and immigration. These are subjects I will be exploring in the coming weeks. To examine what makes us American, hopefully not trapped in a broken dream.

Still, many remain blissful in the knowledge of just simply going about their day. Wake up America! Wake up New Yorkers! Wake up Upstaters! While we agree to disagree, maybe the fault is not in the politicians but ourselves! To create awareness may start at Facebook or any social media but to take back the country, to set it on the right course, means taking Lincoln’s words to heart and remembering freedom is not free. It is paid for in blood, sweat and tears.  The revolution starts today.