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Ready For Some Football

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This Sunday, the NFL returns as both the Jets and Giants gear up for bigger and better 2013 campaigns.  The two New York teams both missed the playoffs last year and with the Super Bowl being played at their home stadium this coming February, both will scratch and crawl their way to punch in their tickets to get there.

The Jets had a lot of question marks going into this season. The most talked about miscue they got in their laps is their quarterback situation. All preseason long, coach Rex Ryan has not been informative in naming his starting quarterback for this Sunday’s season opener. However, Mark Sanchez injured his shoulder in a preseason game versus the Giants and may miss some additional time. This ultimately means that rookie quarterback Geno Smith wins the QB job by default. The team cut backup QB Greg McElroy, which means Smith will be the man until he struggles or Ryan feels it’s time to go back to Sanchez whenever he gets healthy. The team is in a division where every team has gotten better. It will not be easy to fight for a playoff spot in the same division as the New England Patriots and Miami Dolphins. Top receiver Santonio Holmes is expected to be ready for Week 1 after breaking his foot last year and the team also has a new group of running backs led by Chris Ivory and Mike Goodson, just to name a few.

As for “Big Blue”, they are thinking Super Bowl all the way. On paper, their offense has the capability of being the best offensive team coach Tom Coughlin has ever put on a football field since becoming head coach nearly 10 years ago. Eli Manning looks to capture his 3rd championship title and what better way to do that in their home stadium. He (Manning) will also have new running backs to work with. David Wilson will now be the feature running back with Ahmad Bradshaw signing with the Colts. If the “ Salsa man” Victor Cruz and Hakeem Nicks can stay healthy, it could be good times for Giants fans this year despite RG3, Michael Vick and Tony Romo amongst the quarterbacks who are in the same division for their respective teams. All and all, it will be another exciting season of football for both Jets and Giants fans.

Sports Notes: (Football) The Jets host the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on Sunday afternoon. This will also mark the return of Darrelle Revis to Met Life Stadium . He  is expected to play for the Bucs against his former team. The Giants are in Dallas for a Sunday night showdown rivalry game against Tony Romo and the revamped Dallas Cowboys.( Baseball) The Yankees continue their push for an American League wild card berth as they wrap up a 3-game set versus the Chicago White Sox. After taking 2 out of 3 games against the Washington Nationals, the Mets look to take another series as they head to Atlanta to play the Upton Brothers and the Atlanta Braves.

The Race for City Council Kinard says, "Mealy Must Go!"

“Darlene Mealy must go,” says longtime community member and education activist Stan Kinard, who is running for City Council in District 41. Kinard was recently  endorsed by Brooklyn’s preeminent activist Councilman Charles Barron, the Amsterdam News and Our Time Press. “Mealy supported the overturning of term limits, a move that allowed Mayor Bloomberg an additional four years in office, with devastating impact on our community. The divide between the rich and poor has increased. Hundreds of thousands of our young people have been victimized by Bloomberg’s unconstitutional tactic of stop-and-frisk. The public schools are an abysmal failure. And gentrification has driven too many residents and businesses out of our community. It’s time for a change,” Kinard says.

“We need real, activist leadership, something that has been missing these past eight years with Mealy. We need someone who is not afraid to raise their voice and make noise to defend our community,” he says. “We need a representative who will walk the streets day and night, who is not afraid to listen to our young people or to confront the powerful.”

“The recent murder of one-year-old Antiq Hennis has caused us all to stop and reflect about the rampant violence in our community. We cannot afford to have our babies killed by gun violence, nor can we afford to have our young people terrorized by violence from the police or their peers,” says Kinard who has spent his career working with young people, both at Boys and Girls High School and in the Brownsville community, where he was born and raised. “I  grew up on the streets of Brownsville, and understand the anger and pain of so many young brothers and sisters. I have made working with these young people to expand their possibilities and opportunities my life’s work. If elected, I commit to listening to the community, articulating those needs in the City Council, bringing resources to the 41st Council District and empowering young people to become successful activists in their communities. This will stop the violence.”

“Fifty years after the 1963 March on Washington, the most important march we can make right now is to the polls on September 10,” says Kinard. “Vote to reclaim the activist legacy of Ocean Hill – Brownsville in the spirit of Jitu Weusi. Vote to stop the violence so that no more of our children – neither Trayvon Martin or Antiq Hennis –

will needlessly die. Use your ballot to stop the bullets.” The polls are open from 6AM to 9PM. For information on finding your polling place, go to www.vote.nyc.ny.us/  or call 866 VOTE-NYC or 311.  If you would like to get involved in the campaign, contact www.electstankinard.com or call 347 451-0802

The Dream at 50 Three Presidents Speak at Anniversary of 1963 March

Aug. 28, 2013 - Washington, DC  - President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle Obama, former President Jimmy Carter and former President Bill Clinton attend the Let Freedom Ring ceremony to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., Wednesday, August 28, 2013. (Credit Image: © Andre Chung/MCT/ZUMAPRESS.com)
-medium wp-image-10386″ alt=”Aug. 28, 2013 – Washington, DC – President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle Obama, former President Jimmy Carter and former President Bill Clinton attend the Let Freedom Ring ceremony to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., Wednesday, August 28, 2013. (Credit Image: © Andre Chung/MCT/ZUMAPRESS.com) ” src=”http://ourtimeathome.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/41-208×300.jpg” width=”208″ height=”300″ /> Aug. 28, 2013 – Washington, DC – President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle Obama, former President Jimmy Carter and former President Bill Clinton attend the Let Freedom Ring ceremony to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., Wednesday, August 28, 2013. (Credit Image: © Andre Chung/MCT/ZUMAPRESS.com)

In a moment rich with history and symbolism, tens of thousands of Americans of all backgrounds and colors thronged to the National Mall to join the nation’s first black president and civil rights pioneers in marking the 50th anniversary of King’s “I Have a Dream” speech.  President Barack Obama urged each of them to become a modern-day marcher for economic justice and racial harmony.

“The arc of the moral universe may bend toward justice but it doesn’t bend on its own,” President Obama said, in an allusion to King’s own message.

His speech was the culmination of daylong celebration of King’s legacy that began with marchers walking the streets of Washington behind a replica of the transit bus that Rosa Parks once rode when she refused to give up her seat to a white man.

At precisely 3 p.m., members of the King family tolled a bell to echo King’s call 50 years earlier to “let freedom ring.” It was the same bell that once hung in the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., where four black girls were killed when a bomb planted by a white supremacist exploded in 1963.

Georgia Rep. John Lewis, a former freedom rider and the sole survivor of the main organizers of the 1963 march, recounted the civil rights struggles of his youth and exhorted American to “keep the faith and keep our eyes on the prize.”

The throngs assembled in soggy weather at the Lincoln Memorial, where King, with soaring, rhythmic oratory and a steely countenance, had pleaded with Americans to come together to stomp out racism and create a land of opportunity for all.

The Rev. Bernice King, daughter of The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., opened the celebration of her father's famous "I Have a Dream" speech Wednesday at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. with an interfaith service. It included Jewish, Muslim, Catholic, Sikh, and other Christian faith leaders celebrating King's legacy and the 50th anniversary of the historic March on Washington.
The Rev. Bernice King, daughter of The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., opened the celebration of her father’s famous “I Have a Dream” speech Wednesday at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. with an interfaith service. It included Jewish, Muslim, Catholic, Sikh, and other Christian faith leaders celebrating King’s legacy and the 50th anniversary of the historic March on Washington.

Two former presidents, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, spoke of King’s legacy – and of problems still to overcome.

“This march, and that speech, changed America,” Clinton declared, remembering the impact on the world and himself as a young man. “They opened minds, they melted hearts and they moved millions – including a 17-year-old boy watching alone in his home in Arkansas.”

Carter said King’s efforts had helped not just black Americans, but “In truth, he helped to free all people.”

Still, Carter listed a string of current events that he said would have spurred King to action in this day, including the proliferation of guns and stand-your-ground laws, a Supreme Court ruling striking down parts of the Voting Rights Act, and high rates of joblessness among blacks.

Obama used his address to pay tribute to the marchers of 1963 and that era – the maids, laborers, students and more who came from ordinary ranks to engage “on the battlefield of justice” – and he implored Americans not to dismiss what they accomplished.  (Huffington Post)

View From Here

By David Mark Greaves

As we mark the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington for voting rights and jobs we see voter suppression laws going into place across the country and the unemployment rate for African-Americans remaining at twice that of whites.   After slavery, Reconstruction, Jim Crow and the Civil Rights struggles, it is a duty to vote.  To stay at home and not vote is a mortal sin.   Medgar Evers, Andrew Goodman, James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, did not give their lives just so that we can walk around with cell phones and watch politics as though it only takes place on a screen.

Congressman John Lewis of Ga., who had his head bloodied on March 7, 1965 while marching for voting rights across the Edmond Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, spoke of the current assault on voting rights at the Lincoln Memorial marking the anniversary.  He said “I come back here again to say, for the most part, those days are gone but we have another fight. We must stand up and fight the good fight as we march today for there are forces, people trying to take us back. No one’s gonna take us back. We cannot go back. I am not going to stand by and let the Supreme Court take the right to vote away from us. You cannot stand by. You cannot sit down. You got to stand up. Speak up. Speak out, and get in the way. Make some noise!”

And the best way to make some noise in Brooklyn, to demonstrate that you will not be a part of the self-suppression of the black vote, is for registered Democrats to come out and cast a ballot on Tuesday, September 10th.

American revolutionary Thomas Paine wrote “What Archimedes said of the mechanical powers, may be applied to Reason and Liberty: ‘Had we,’ said he, ‘a place to stand upon, we might raise the world.’ The revolution of America presented in politics what was only theory in mechanics”.  And following that same theme, Thomas Jefferson wrote “The good opinion of mankind, like the lever of Archimedes, with the given fulcrum, moves the world”.

The 89% of eligible voters who did not vote in the last primary, those “unlikely” voters, are potentially the most, With the electoral process as the place to stand, the candidacy of John Liu as the fulcrum and the “good opinion” of these voters as the lever, it is possible to change New York City, a world they thought had been fixed in concrete.

Some look at the rising and ever-evolving skyline and say the Bloomberg years have been the best of times.  Others, and please count us among them, look at the closing of day care centers, the failing education system, the wholesale stop-and-frisk of young people, the closing of afterschool programs, the welfare programs in the form of special tax consideration for hedge funds, financial institutions and insurance companies, the privatization and outsourcing of work that can be done by local companies and city workers, the hobbling of a generation of young people, the trampling of the poor and say these are the worst of times and they have to come to a close.

We support John Liu for mayor for only one reason, he’s the best person for the job.  He understands that the core job of a mayor is to care for the human capital and physical infrastructure of the city and to do this by making investments in each that promote resiliency and preparedness for the future.  In his People’s Budget John Liu demonstrates how that is to be done and how it is to be paid for.   Other candidates will try to adopt bits and pieces, but only Liu has the whole package and the ability to carry it out.   And that is why the financial elite are pushing him aside, he’s laid out a plan of how he’s coming to retrieve our money from their pockets and since he’s done it before as comptroller, they know he means it.   This is the guy we need in office.

The good part of about being one of the 89% who did not vote in the last election, is that there are no worries about polls or “wasting” a vote, as it was just thrown away last time.   But now it can be used to make a statement about the city you want to see in the future.  The kind of people who murdered Evers, Goodman, Chaney and Schwerner and the kind of folks pushing through the voter suppression laws, would all be among those hoping African-Americans do not come out and vote.

This is an opportunity to talk back to the screen and make the ancestors proud.   On Tuesday, September 10th, come out and vote for the candidate of your choice.   And if you want your vote to voice your feelings about the direction of the city, then vote for John C. Liu for Mayor.

 

Virginia Judge Dismisses Pagones’ Garnishment of Tawana Brawley's Wages

By Mary Alice Miller

With little fanfare, on July 23, 2013 a Surry County, Virginia court judge dismissed former Dutchess County assistant district attorney Steven Pagones’ “bogus” garnishment of Tawana Brawley’s wages. Since Feb. 8, 2013 more than $300 had been withheld from Tawana’s wages pending transfer to Pagones. A July 23 hearing date was set after the garnishment began. Attorneys Michael Lloyd and Fred Dean appeared before the court on the hearing date to submit documents to the court challenging the garnishment. Tawana refused to appear. Pagones’ counsel did not appear. Tawana’s counsel had to travel from Surry County to Norfolk, Virginia to present Pagones’ counsel with their response.

“It took over 25 years for Tawana to finally get her day in court. When she received it, it was not in New York but in Virginia,” said Attorney-at-War Alton Maddox. “It only took a judge in Virginia five minutes to decide the case.”

Maddox said Tawana’s legal team did not know what the Surry County, Virginia judge would decide when they entered the Surry Courthouse building. “The only thing we knew when we went in the building was that we should provide the records and proceedings in New York that had not been provided by Pagones who had deferred to do so,” said Maddox. “He had not done it. We knew that Pagones had not complied with the law by providing all the records and proceedings in New York as is required under the Full Faith and Credit clause of the U.S. Constitution.”

Tawana’s legal team prepared all of the records. It took some time for the team to obtain those records from Dutchess County, but they did. They then wrote a substantial brief to point out everything the judge would need to know.

“It was curious that Virginia would even begin to take money from Tawana’s paycheck without first having some evidence that she had defaulted in New York and the circumstances of that default,” said Maddox. “Rather than wait for injustice to repeat itself, we decided to correct that by getting all the records and proceedings and filing the legal papers in Surry to explain her plight.”

Pagones had presented the default judgment of Tawana in a defamation case against Al Sharpton, C. Vernon Mason and Alton Maddox to the Virginia court. The judgment was filed without any supporting documents which would have revealed that Tawana was never served to appear in a defamation lawsuit related to her rape and kidnapping in 1988. Tawana was a minor at the time and no law guardian was appointed to represent her legal interests. Pagones never sued her. In addition, there is a question as to whether the statute of limitations had expired on the “bogus” default.

Maddox won in the defamation lawsuit. Sharpton and Mason lost and were ordered to pay damages.

Pagones allegedly communicated that he would drop the garnishment if Tawana would publicly apologize for his name being connected to her rape, kidnapping  and physical abuse. Tawana refused to apologize. Tawana did not publicly name Pagones as one of her attackers, but separately a New York judge and jury did.

In response to local and national media that continue to engage in sloppy journalism by continuing to proclaim that Tawana engaged in a hoax Maddox said, “I would ask them to end their assignment and start complying with the free press provision of the U.S. Constitution and print the truth.”

During the weekend of Thanksgiving in 1987, Tawana got off the bus in Wappingers Falls and began walking home. She was forced into a car and over the course of four days she was raped and physically abused. She was found naked and unconscious. She was taken to a Poughkeepsie, NY hospital where a rape kit was performed. The rape kit was transferred to the custody of a local police officer and was never seen again. Hours after Tawana was taken to the hospital, police officer Harry Crist – who Tawana had identified as one of her attackers — was found dead of a gunshot wound. No gun was ever found. Local prosecutors recused themselves.  Robert Abrams was appointed special prosecutor then promptly declared Crist’s death a suicide and Tawana’s rape a hoax. Ten years later at the defamation lawsuit, the medical examiner who had conducted Crist’s autopsy publicly declared his death a homicide. Crist’s murder has never been thoroughly investigated and his murderer never found. No one has been prosecuted for Tawana’s rape and kidnapping.