posted by: seeta on November 21st, 2009 at 1:52 pm

From the Jacki Rand Choctaw at the Daily Iowan:

Native social values, based on an alternate calculation, have always been simply counterintuitive to a capitalist mind. The “kindness” of Native nations, sovereign then and sovereign today, not to mention their lands, rivers, minerals, timber, and other resources — for which they received virtually nothing — are the original source of United States “greatness.” Theft and exploitation of indigenous resources and labor, human-rights violations, and commodified African bodies, without which there would be no American ingenuity, created the big boost to U.S. world domination.

This Thanksgiving, I exhort Americans to honor their first president’s decree with petitions to the government of his and other founders’ creation “to protect and guide all Sovereigns and Nations (especially such as have shown kindness to us) and to bless them with good government, peace, and concord.” Recognize our treaties, humanity, and agency in your ancestors’ survival. Absent that, we will continue to meet you, treaties in hand, in the courts of the land.

Continue reading about On Thanksgiving, recognize the contributions of Native Americans

From Workplace Prof Blog:

No more jumps out of the page and slaps you in the face, but the Eleventh Circuit still does not think that a worker often called ‘boy’ established a racially hostile environment.

In Alexander v. Opelika Pub. Schs., No. 08-11014 (11th Cir. 11/10/09), a public school employee in Alabama who allegedly was called “boy” eight times over two years and heard a supervisor comment about a noose did not present sufficient evidence to survive summary judgment on his racial harassment claim.

If we’re lucky, the 11th Circuit’s miserly construction of Title VII will be slapped down again by the Supreme Court.

Continue reading about 11 Circuit: Public school employee repeatedly called “boy” does not establish a racially hostile work environment

posted by: seeta on November 16th, 2009 at 10:45 am

From the NYT:

The most important new antidiscrimination law in two decades — the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act — will take effect in the nation’s workplaces next weekend, prohibiting employers from requesting genetic testing or considering someone’s genetic background in hiring, firing or promotions.

[...]

The biggest change resulting from the law is that it will — except in a few circumstances — prohibit employers and health insurers from asking employees to give their family medical histories. The law also bans group health plans from the common practice of rewarding workers, often with lower premiums or one-time payments, if they give their family medical histories when completing health risk questionnaires.

Continue reading about Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act bans genetic testing in the workplace

posted by: seeta on November 13th, 2009 at 10:50 am

From the Sylvia Rivera Law Project:

In October 2009, President Obama signed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act into law. This law makes it a federal hate crime to assault people based on sexual orientation, gender and gender identity by expanding the scope of a 1968 law that applies to people attacked because of their race, religion or national origin. In support of this goal, it expands the authority of the U.S. Department of Justice to prosecute such crimes instead of or in collaboration with local authorities. The law also provides major increases in funding for the U.S. Department of Justice and local law enforcement to use in prosecuting these crimes – including special additional resources to go toward prosecution of youth for hate crimes.

Continue reading about SRLP opposes the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act

posted by: seeta on November 12th, 2009 at 10:59 am

From talkingpointsmemo.com:

ACORN is suing the U.S. government over a law passed recently by Congress that bars the controversial community group from receiving federal money.

In a complaint filed this morning in U.S. District Court in New York, ACORN charges that the law is unconstitutional, because it’s a bill of attainder — that is, it targets a specific individual or group for punishment.

The complaint, brought on behalf of ACORN by the Center for Constitutional Rights, also mounts a broader push-back against ACORN’s conservative critics. According to a draft version examined by TPMmuckraker, it claims that the law to defund ACORN was passed thanks to “a public relations campaign orchestrated by political forces” that are hostile to its work registering low-income voters. And it charges that ACORN “earned the animosity of political forces who are dedicated to the proposition that the fewer poor people who vote the better.”

Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief [PDF]
Bill of Attainder Fact Sheet [PDF]
ACORN v. USA Exhibits [PDF]
ACORN v. USA Memo of Law [PDF]

Continue reading about ACORN suing US government

posted by: seeta on November 11th, 2009 at 9:57 am

Surprise, surprise! What a joke NY politics has become. Ain’t nothing extraordinary about these “extraordinary” sessions.

From Gotham Gazette:

The Senate yesterday decided to table a vote on same-sex marriage during its extraordinary session. Supporters said they were worried they didn’t have enough votes for the bill to pass. Gov. David Paterson said he wanted the bill to come to a vote regardless of the head count. The Senate has also been locked in negotiations over a plan to reduce the deficit, but they failed to come to an agreement on this, too. Paterson scheduled two more extraordinary sessions for next week.

Continue reading about Lazy New York Legislature Accomplishes Nothing

From Gotham Gazette:

NY Governor David Paterson will address the State Legislature today to urge it to approve a round of state health and education cuts to close a $3.2 billion deficit. But Senate Finance Committee Chairman Carl Kruger came up with his own plan over the weekend, which calls for refinancing tobacco settlement bonds and extending hours for video slot machine parlors instead of many of the governor’s controversial cuts. The governor’s office said Kruger’s plan avoided the necessary proposals to deal with the state’s fiscal crisis. The legislature is scheduled to enter an extraordinary session tomorrow to consider the governor’s cuts and some other issues, including gay marriage.

Continue reading about NY Gov. Paterson to Address State Legislature on Health, Education Cuts Plus Gay Marriage

posted by: seeta on November 9th, 2009 at 10:39 am

From Americablog.com:

Last week, Maine’s Bishop, Richard Malone, gloated after his campaign to repeal Maine’s marriage equality took away the rights of same-sex couples in that state. In Maine, the Bishop turned his church into a political operation.

This weekend, the Catholic Bishops are getting credit for undermining women’s rights in the new health care bill through the Stupak amendment.

Read the rest here.

Continue reading about Catholic Bishops Against Social Justice

Here is the round up of today’s news on H.R.3962 – Affordable Health Care for America Act, which the House passed last night in a 220-215 vote (with only 1 Republican voting – Joseph Cao – R-La., calling it a “decision of conscience“). The bill contains a public option, however there is some debate over how “robust” the public option will be in practical terms (i.e., who will be eligible for the public option).

Democrats say the House measure — paid for through new fees and taxes, along with cuts in Medicare — would extend coverage to 36 million people now without insurance while creating a government health insurance program. It would end insurance company practices like not covering pre-existing conditions or dropping people when they become ill. [Source: Sweeping Health Care Plan Passes House]

The passage of the bill came at the expense of reproductive rights, with restrictions on abortion “barring any insurance plan that is purchased with government subsidies from covering abortions” by a vote of 290-194 (see NYT: Abortion Was Heart of Wrangling; see also Reproductive Rights Prof Blog). Follow the links below to see how members of the House voted on the bill and the controversial Stupak/abortion restrictions amendment. Next up: passage of the bill in the Senate (the chamber of congress that has the greatest and most special kind of prima donnas and attention whores (read: Jackass Lieberman) who will undoubtedly find a number of ways to play politics with human rights, i.e., since health care is a human right). The culmination of this epic melodrama/circus show is expected to happen before the end of the year when President Obama hopes to sign the bill into law. This is so fun that I can hardly wait until we get to immigration reform.

In other news, the U6 has unemployment figures at 17.5%, as mentioned here last month.

Affordable Healthcare for America Act Headlines

Roll Call on Affordable Health Care for America Act

Roll Call on Stupak/Abortion Restrictions Amendment

Sweeping Health Care Plan Passes House

Abortion Was at Heart of Wrangling

Gay Benefits in Health Bill (editorial comment: this NYT headline is so dumb — I didn’t know the “benefits” had a sexuality)

Continue reading about Most Sweeping Health Care Legislation since Medicare was Created 40 Years Ago Passes House

posted by: seeta on November 6th, 2009 at 10:39 am





President Obama Addresses Tribal Nations Conference

Continue reading about President Obama speaks to our Nation’s First Peoples

posted by: seeta on November 3rd, 2009 at 12:14 pm

For ONE YEAR I have been demanding a NATIONWIDE recount of the 2008 Presidential Election results…

…just so we can hear it ALL OVER AGAIN! Happy Election Day!

A Night to Remember

Obama Wins – World Reacts

Emotional Moment on BET as Obama is Elected

MSNBC Call Election for Barack Obama

Michelle Obama at the DNC Convention

Hillary Clinton at the DNC Convention

2008 DNC Roll Call Vote

A More Perfect Union

Continue reading about Demanding a Recount of the 2008 Presidential Election

posted by: seeta on October 28th, 2009 at 4:53 pm

Continue reading about President Obama signs Hate Crimes Bill into Law

posted by: seeta on October 26th, 2009 at 12:25 pm

A new report by the Center of New York City Affairs finds that half of the children housed in New York’s juvenile correctional facilities suffer from mental illness, yet there is not one psychiatrist or psychiatric nurse on staff at the state Office of Children and Family Services which runs the facilities.

Read the full report here [PDF]

Continue reading about Reforming New York’s Juvenile Justice System

posted by: seeta on October 26th, 2009 at 12:07 pm

Donna Smith from commondreams.org writes:

Why does H1N1 call for a Presidential designation as a national emergency while the preventable deaths of 45,000 Americans every year (122 every day) is not?

Swine flu leads the news. You can die from swine flu, or should we say H1N1, even if you have no underlying health conditions. Young people have died, and pregnant women are at risk. People are lining up to be vaccinated. Health professionals are at risk due to poor preparations at some health facilities. As many as 1,000 deaths have occurred due to this flu outbreak. It’s scary out there.

But the swine flu is no match for the killing going on at the hands of the for-profit healthcare system in these United States. We bury kids, pregnant moms, babies, teens, young fathers, mid-lifers and older folks too without even batting an eye in the chambers of power in this nation.

Read the rest of this piece here.

Continue reading about Why Isn’t 122 Dead Americans Every Day a National Health Emergency?

posted by: seeta on October 20th, 2009 at 10:57 am

Being a woman is NOT a pre-existing condition.

From Robin at the National Women’s Law Center:

Written by Judy Waxman, Vice President for Health and Reproductive Rights,
National Women’s Law Center

I don’t deserve health care that meets my needs.
I shouldn’t demand fairness in my health care coverage.
I can’t do anything about it anyway.

That’s what the health insurance profiteers want you to think.

They aren’t thinking about the mother who is struggling to find insurance because she had a Caesarean section. Not the woman who survived domestic violence and now must face rejection by an insurance company for having a so-called “pre-existing condition.” Not the woman who pays more than a man for the same health coverage, even when maternity care isn’t covered.

Being a woman is NOT a pre-existing condition.

Being a woman is NOT a pre-existing condition.

Continue reading about A woman is not a pre-existing condition

posted by: seeta on October 19th, 2009 at 12:27 pm

From the Albany Times Union:

As the fate of state Sen. Hiram Monserrate moved from the courtroom toward the Senate chamber, Friday brought a flurry of news releases from his Democratic colleagues. Most of them called for him to resign or — if he refused — for the chamber to boot him from his seat.

The Queens Democrat was found guilty Thursday of misdemeanor assault despite being acquitted of much more serious felony charges stemming from a December 2008 incident in which his girlfriend’s face was slashed by a broken glass.

After the verdict in the non-jury trial, Senate Democratic Conference Leader John Sampson released a statement saying that the majority Democrats were exploring their options for taking action against Monserrate.

On Friday, a half-dozen members of Sampson’s conference became much more vocal about what that action ought to be.

“Being an elected official is an honor and a privilege, not a right,” said Sen. Liz Krueger of Manhattan in a statement. “As a state legislator, the voters give you the power to decide what laws all 19 million of us live under. And as such we are obligated to hold ourselves to the highest standards of our laws.

” … The Senate is exploring our institutional legal options now that the courts have ruled, but haven’t yet issued a sentence,” Krueger continued. “For me, the length of the sentence does not matter – domestic violence is domestic violence, guilt is guilt.”

“We, the Senate, have been through so much this past year,” said Sen. Neil Breslin of Bethlehem. “It is time for us to take the steps necessary to earn back the public’s trust. Hiram Monserrate remaining a member of the Senate contradicts this effort.”

“I have followed the developments in the domestic violence abuse case … and been disgusted by what I have seen and heard,” wrote Sen. David Valesky of Oneida. “Domestic violence is a serious matter and a violent crime that cannot be ignored or dismissed.”

Read the rest of the article here.

Continue reading about Democrats: Monserrate must go

posted by: seeta on October 19th, 2009 at 11:35 am

From nojojojo over at Angry Black Woman:

“…25 million Americans are underinsured and I know full well I’m not the only brown one of those. Consider the number of us who are disproportionately affected by poverty, and compare that against the fact that health insurance premiums keep rising by as much as 150% per decade while wages remain essentially flat (note: PDF). Consider how little media attention, medical research, and government funding is accorded to health issues that primarily or disproportionately affect people of color, like sickle cell anemia. Consider also how the intersection of race with gender or other factors, and the lingering effects of colonialism, cause literal epidemics of poor health care, addiction and/or violence in some PoC communities, like ongoing rape and involuntary sterilization among American Indian women. (See also unusualmusic’s insightful linkspams on women in prison, intersexed women of color, and more.)

This is killing us. It is killing us. The current health care system of the US kills people across the board, yes. But it’s killing more of us. And it’s leaving a greater proportion of us in abject poverty or lifelong trauma if we survive.

So we, especially, need to fight back.”

Read the rest of the piece here.

Continue reading about Health care IS an anti-racist issue

posted by: seeta on October 18th, 2009 at 12:42 pm

Continue reading about Righting Wrongful Convictions of Youth: What You Can Do

posted by: seeta on October 17th, 2009 at 1:55 pm

Vita Brevis at DailyKos writes:

Being half of an interracial couple, news items related to this subject tend to catch my eye. I had to do a double take on this one as well as check my calendar to make sure that some rip in the time space continuum hadn’t taken place and we weren’t somehow whisked back to June 11, 1967.

Why that date? For those who may not be aware (although I know a good many on this site are) that was the day before the Supreme Court ruled on the case of Loving v Virginia, striking down Virginia’s anti-miscegenation laws and also overturning Pace v Alabama and ultimately ending restrictions on interracial marriage in the United States. Had it not been for the Lovings, I wonder how much longer it would have taken for laws to be struck down that could have made my own marriage illegal in some states.

Read the rest of the piece here.

Continue reading about Louisiana Judge (Justice of the Peace) Denies Marriage License to Interracial Couple

posted by: seeta on October 15th, 2009 at 4:21 pm

From Kenyon Farrow at Grio:

When Obama delivered his “gay agenda” speech to the well-fed, well-scrubbed mostly white crowd of gays and lesbians at the Human Rights Campaign’s Annual Dinner on Saturday night, anyone outside of the LGBT community would have assumed by the applause that the entire “gay community” is in agreement that access to serve in the military, gay marriage, and hate crimes legislation are our primary issues. But in reality, HRC’s political agenda is not what I want. It does not speak for me, nor for the lives of many other black, poor and working class LGBT people.

Given the fact that we’re in a long recession where hundreds of thousands of jobs have been lost in almost every month of 2009, and national unemployment numbers are at nearly 10 percent, why are we not talking about the issues that most people are concerned about – health care and the economy – and their impact on the LGBT community? The truth is, for many people at that dinner who could afford the cheapest ticket at $250 a plate, jobs and wages are of little concern.

It’s not as though there is a lack of evidence that supports the idea that LGBT folks are impacted by poverty. A report on lesbian and gay poverty in the US by the Williams Institute this spring showed that lesbian and gay couples were as likely to be poor as straight couples, mostly due to the impact of race and gender.

Read the rest of the piece here.

Continue reading about Black working class gays left out of national gay rights agenda

posted by: seeta on October 13th, 2009 at 10:25 am

From Guy Adams of the Independent (UK):

[caption id="attachment_231" align="alignright" width="300" caption="FIONA WATSON/SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL Ururu, front left, with the last members of the Akuntsu, in a picture taken before she died this month. Most of the tribe was massacred by loggers in about 1990"]FIONA WATSON/SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL  Ururu, front left, with the last members of the Akuntsu, in a picture taken before she died this month. Most of the tribe was massacred by loggers in about 1990[/caption]The last surviving members of an ancient Amazonian tribe are a tragic testament to greed and genocide

They are the last survivors: all that’s left of a once-vibrant civilisation which created its own religion and language, and gave special names to everything from the creatures of the rainforest to the stars of the night sky.

Just five people represent the entire remaining population of the Akuntsu, an ancient Amazonian tribe which a generation ago boasted several hundred members, but has been destroyed by a tragic mixture of hostility and neglect.

The indigenous community, which spent thousands of years in uncontacted seclusion, recently took an unwelcome step closer to extinction, with the death of its sixth last member, an elderly woman called Ururú.

Please read this excellent article in its entirety here.

Continue reading about Decline of Amazonian tribe; dwindles to just 5 members

posted by: seeta on October 13th, 2009 at 10:24 am

From Queer Kids of Queer Parents Against Gay Marriage:

It’s hard for us to believe what we’re hearing these days. Thousands are losing their homes, and gays want a day named after Harvey Milk. The U.S. military is continuing its path of destruction, and gays want to be allowed to fight. Cops are still killing unarmed black men and bashing queers, and gays want more policing. More and more Americans are suffering and dying because they can’t get decent health care, and gays want weddings. What happened to us? Where have our communities gone? Did gays really sell out that easily?

As young queer people raised in queer families and communities, we reject the liberal gay agenda that gives top priority to the fight for marriage equality. The queer families and communities we are proud to have been raised in are nothing like the ones transformed by marriage equality. This agenda fractures our communities, pits us against natural allies, supports unequal power structures, obscures urgent queer concerns, abandons struggle for mutual sustainability inside queer communities and disregards our awesomely fabulous queer history.

Read the rest of this piece here.

Continue reading about Resist gay marriage agenda

posted by: seeta on October 11th, 2009 at 2:15 pm

From the Pachamama Alliance:

Continue reading about The Eagle and the Condor, Wisdom of the Indigenous Voice

posted by: seeta on October 11th, 2009 at 2:08 pm

From Renaissance Universal:

A look at how social ecologists picture the ideal society.

by Kenn Kassman

Social Ecologist theory maintains that only through the creation of a just and participatory society can a healthy and benign relationship to the natural world be developed. Presupposing that the domination of humans by humans preceded the domination of nature by humans, the Social Ecologist future is structured to eliminate all hierarchy and delegitimate all forms of discrimination. Every person is viewed as valuable to the community and worthy of community respect and mutual support. Social Ecologists argue that harmony can then be applied to ecological relationships.


Read the rest of the piece here.

Continue reading about Envisioning Ectopia

posted by: seeta on October 11th, 2009 at 1:52 pm

NYT’s Kristof writes:

IN THE 19TH CENTURY, the paramount moral challenge was slavery. In the 20th century, it was totalitarianism. In this century, it is the brutality inflicted on so many women and girls around the globe: sex trafficking, acid attacks, bride burnings and mass rape.

Yet if the injustices that women in poor countries suffer are of paramount importance, in an economic and geopolitical sense the opportunity they represent is even greater. “Women hold up half the sky,” in the words of a Chinese saying, yet that’s mostly an aspiration: in a large slice of the world, girls are uneducated and women marginalized, and it’s not an accident that those same countries are disproportionately mired in poverty and riven by fundamentalism and chaos. There’s a growing recognition among everyone from the World Bank to the U.S. military’s Joint Chiefs of Staff to aid organizations like CARE that focusing on women and girls is the most effective way to fight global poverty and extremism. That’s why foreign aid is increasingly directed to women. The world is awakening to a powerful truth: Women and girls aren’t the problem; they’re the solution.

Read the rest of the piece here.

Continue reading about The Women’s Crusade and Economic Inequities

posted by: seeta on October 11th, 2009 at 1:14 pm

From SusanG at DailyKos:

Searching for Whitopia: An Improbable Journey to the Heart of White America
By Rich Benjamin
Hardcover, 368 pages, $24.99
Hyperion: New York
October 2009


… race, by itself, is no longer a basis for housing discrimination. Perhaps. The problem is, race never coms “by itself.” It comes with a voice, an appearance, a social manner, a profession, a marital status, a family background, a financial portfolio, and on. A “blemish” in any such category can then magnify a minority’s skin color, transforming his race from innocuous to ominous. This neighborhood’s liberal self-image notwithstanding, racial minorities are sized up by how closely we assimilate to the dominant white ethos; those whose speech, dress, or demeanor don’t conform to its discriminating taste are subject to negative assumptions.



Continue reading about Book review: Rich Benjamin’s “Searching for Whitopia”

posted by: seeta on October 11th, 2009 at 12:20 pm

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

Continue reading about President Obama addresses Human Rights Campaign

posted by: seeta on October 6th, 2009 at 4:40 pm

Continue reading about Angela Davis and Community Mobilization

posted by: seeta on October 5th, 2009 at 10:44 am

Laura Clawson over at DailyKos has an excellent round-up on the impact VAWA (championed by our own VP Biden) has had on reducing intimate partner violence. While the numbers never tell the whole story, since there is a significant amount of underreporting of DV crimes, especially in communities of color where women of color are loath to report men of color to the historically and institutionally racist law enforcement and criminal justice systems, the numbers are at least encouraging news.

Continue reading about Violence Against Women Act Turns 15

posted by: seeta on October 2nd, 2009 at 12:55 pm

Sistah Robinswing of Black Kos has a beautifully written, inspiring diary up and running this morning, hitting on a very fundamental, essential, foundational theme about innate power and personhood. She takes the time to remind us all that, no matter what, we must persevere with a smile, never give our innate power away, [...]

Continue reading about This morning at Black Kos