* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the DOJ’s Violence Against Women programs.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the National Endowment for the Arts.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the National Endowment for the Humanities.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Minority Business Development Agency.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Economic Development Administration.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the International Trade Administration.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Manufacturing Extension Partnership.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Legal Services Corporation.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Civil Rights Division of the DOJ.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Environmental and Natural Resources Division of the DOJ.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Overseas Private Investment Corporation.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Office of Electricity Deliverability and Energy Reliability.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
* On January 19th, 2017, DT said that he would cut funding for the Office of Fossil Energy.
* On January 20th, 2017, DT ordered all regulatory powers of all federal agencies frozen.
* On January 20th, 2017, DT ordered the National Parks Service to stop
using social media after RTing factual, side by side photos of the
crowds for the 2009 and 2017 inaugurations.
* On January 20th, 2017,
roughly 230 protestors were arrested in DC and face unprecedented
felony riot charges. Among them were legal observers, journalists, and
medics.
* On January 20th, 2017, a member of the International
Workers of the World was shot in the stomach at an anti-fascist protest
in Seattle. He remains in critical condition.
* On January 21st,
2017, DT brought a group of 40 cheerleaders to a meeting with the CIA to
cheer for him during a speech that consisted almost entirely of framing
himself as the victim of dishonest press.
* On January 21st, 2017,
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer held a press conference largely
to attack the press for accurately reporting the size of attendance at
the inaugural festivities, saying that the inauguration had the largest
audience of any in history, “period.”
* On January 22nd, 2017, White
House advisor Kellyann Conway defended Spicer’s lies as “alternative
facts” on national television news.
* On January 22nd, 2017, DT
appeared to blow a kiss to director James Comey during a meeting with
the FBI, and then opened his arms in a gesture of strange, paternal
affection, before hugging him with a pat on the back.
* On January
23rd, 2017, DT reinstated the global gag order, which defunds
international organizations that even mention abortion as a medical
option.
* On January 23rd, 2017, Spicer said that the US will not
tolerate China’s expansion onto islands in the South China Sea,
essentially threatening war with China.
* On January 23rd, 2017, DT repeated the lie that 3-5 million people voted “illegally” thus costing him the popular vote.
* On January 23rd, 2017, it was announced that the man who shot the
anti-fascist protester in Seattle was released without charges, despite
turning himself in.
* On January 24th, 2017, Spicer reiterated the lie that 3-5 million people voted “illegally” thus costing DT the popular vote.
* On January 24th, 2017, DT tweeted a picture from his personal Twitter
account of a photo he says depicts the crowd at his inauguration and
will hang in the White House press room. The photo is curiously dated
January 21st, 2017, the day AFTER the inauguration and the day of the
Women’s March, the largest inauguration related protest in history.
*
On January 24th, 2017, the EPA was ordered to stop communicating with
the public through social media or the press and to freeze all grants
and contracts.
* On January 24th, 2017, the USDA was ordered to stop
communicating with the public through social media or the press and to
stop publishing any papers or research. All communication with the press
would also have to be authorized and vetted by the White House.
*
On January 24th, 2017, HR7, a bill that would prohibit federal funding
not only to abortion service providers, but to any insurance coverage,
including Medicaid, that provides abortion coverage, went to the floor
of the House for a vote.
* On January 24th, 2017, Director of the
Department of Health and Human Service nominee Tom Price characterized
federal guidelines on transgender equality as “absurd.”
* On January
24th, 2017, DT ordered the resumption of construction on the Dakota
Access Pipeline, while the North Dakota state congress considers a bill
that would legalize hitting and killing protestors with cars if they are
on roadways.
* On January 24th, 2017, it was discovered that police
officers had used confiscated cell phones to search the emails and
messages of the 230 demonstrators now facing felony riot charges for
protesting on January 20th, including lawyers and journalists whose
email accounts contain privileged information of clients and sources.
And yesterday: the wall and a ban on Muslims entering from a large number of countries and the end to accepting Syrian refugees.
Cheers Linda.
If you plan to share, please copy and paste rather than share. You'll reach more people.
Thursday, 26 January 2017
Tuesday, 24 January 2017
Paul Robeson ( 9/4/1898 - 23/1/1976) - A hero excluded
Robeson was born in Princeton, New Jersey, on the 9th of April 1898. His father started life as a plantation slave in North Carolina, but escaped in 1860 and eventually become a pastor. Robeson recalls, in his book Here I Stand (1958), his father’s determination and loyalty to his convictions: “From my youngest days I was imbued with that concept,” he writes. His family’s longer history of activism is noteworthy, too; his maternal great-great-grandfather, Cyrus Bustill, became in 1787 a founder of the Free African Society, the first mutual aid organisation of African Americans.
Robeson was only the third black student to be accepted by Rutgers College, winning a scholarship in 1915. He was a fine athlete and joined the football team; but on Saturday the 14th of October 1916 he was excluded from the Rutgers football team. He was one of their best players but Washington and Lee University refused to play against a black player. Preceding this event at his first football training , he was savagely attacked by his own team mates unwilling to accept a Black man in their midst. Leaving him with cuts and bruises, a broken nose, a sprained shoulder and a damaged hand.Did this deter him, hell no, his coach named Sandford refused to comply when the demands were made again and Robeson went on to to be named a football all American twice.
He would also become the class valedictoriam, a lawyer, and one of the best 20th Century , actors, singers and advocate for justice the world has ever known.He opularized Black spirituals, and became a golcal hero when he learned over twenty languges to sing internationaal folk songs in their original tonque. At the height of his fame when he was likely the most famous African-American in the world he made the bold decision too become a political artist, getting involved in trying to stop the threat of fascism in the Spanish Civil War, as well as fighting other social injustices, Robeson , was outspoken in the Black freedom movement, the labour movement in support of the Soviet Union and the socialist countries and anti-colonial movements around the world, and other progressive political movements, using his great voice to spread his message of equality peace and freedom. On his firt visit to the Soviet Union, he said, "Here, I am not a Nero but a human being for the first time in my life I walk in full human dignity", Because of his political views he was blacklisted during McCarthyism and the American government tried to hide and suppress his voice from history.They took away his passport in 1950, banned him from international platforms and audiences, and restricted him from TV appearances at home. He had done nothing illegal; he was never arrested, or put on trial; yet the powers that be were determined to destroy him nonetheless for his political beliefs. He was to be harassed by zealots of the House of Un-American Activities, to whom he gave no quarter.
“I care nothing – less than nothing – about what the
lords of the land, the Big White Folks, think of me and my ideas,”
Robeson later wrote, in Here I Stand. “For more than 10 years
they have persecuted me in every way they could – by slander and mob
violence, by denying me the right to practice my profession as an
artist, by withholding my right to travel abroad. To these, the real
Un-Americans, I merely say: ‘All right – I don’t like you either!’”
On Saturday 5 October 1957, Paul Robeson sang to Wales for the first time since 1949, to 5000 people crammed into the Porthcawl Pavillion for the Tenth Annual Miners Eisteddfod, due to the new technology of a trans-Atlantic telephone which triumphed over the passport ban and their families. They had not forgotten his sympathy for the plight of the miners who he had lived among in the 1930's. In 1938 he had also paid a visit to Mountain Ash for a ceremony attend by 7,000 people to commemorate 33 Welshmen who had died fighting in the Spanish Civil War.
But even the great Robeson was not strong enough to withstand the psychological effects of blacklisting and the persecution he had endured over the years. After his passport was restored in 1958, he attempted comeback tours, but severe depressions gripped him; in 1961, he tried to take his own life after a party and was subsequently treated with ECT in London. Much later, his son considered whether the “attempted suicide” might perhaps have been a drug-induced incident in which the CIA could be implicated.
Unable to attend Carnegie Hall’s tribute concert on his 75th birthday, he sent a recorded message, declaring: “I want you to know that I am the same Paul, dedicated as ever to the worldwide cause of humanity for freedom, peace and brotherhood.”.
To the end he remained unapologetic for the political stances that he took, He lived the final years of his life in seclusion in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and died there yesterday on January 23rd, 1976. He is fondly remembered because he not only stood up for the injustices that African-Americans faced, but also was able to empathize and connect with other people’s struggles,a man who knew the meaning and power of working class solidarity, he funded Jews escaping Nazi Germany, spoke out against the fascists in Spanish Civil War, campaigned against colonialism in African countries and stood with laborers in the United States and proudly with the people of Wales, an internationalist who identified with the most important issues of freedom and social justice of his time, and practiced what he preached. His courageous proud message lives on, and he remains forever immortal in my heart.Rest in power.
Paul Robeson - Old Man River
On Saturday 5 October 1957, Paul Robeson sang to Wales for the first time since 1949, to 5000 people crammed into the Porthcawl Pavillion for the Tenth Annual Miners Eisteddfod, due to the new technology of a trans-Atlantic telephone which triumphed over the passport ban and their families. They had not forgotten his sympathy for the plight of the miners who he had lived among in the 1930's. In 1938 he had also paid a visit to Mountain Ash for a ceremony attend by 7,000 people to commemorate 33 Welshmen who had died fighting in the Spanish Civil War.
But even the great Robeson was not strong enough to withstand the psychological effects of blacklisting and the persecution he had endured over the years. After his passport was restored in 1958, he attempted comeback tours, but severe depressions gripped him; in 1961, he tried to take his own life after a party and was subsequently treated with ECT in London. Much later, his son considered whether the “attempted suicide” might perhaps have been a drug-induced incident in which the CIA could be implicated.
Unable to attend Carnegie Hall’s tribute concert on his 75th birthday, he sent a recorded message, declaring: “I want you to know that I am the same Paul, dedicated as ever to the worldwide cause of humanity for freedom, peace and brotherhood.”.
To the end he remained unapologetic for the political stances that he took, He lived the final years of his life in seclusion in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and died there yesterday on January 23rd, 1976. He is fondly remembered because he not only stood up for the injustices that African-Americans faced, but also was able to empathize and connect with other people’s struggles,a man who knew the meaning and power of working class solidarity, he funded Jews escaping Nazi Germany, spoke out against the fascists in Spanish Civil War, campaigned against colonialism in African countries and stood with laborers in the United States and proudly with the people of Wales, an internationalist who identified with the most important issues of freedom and social justice of his time, and practiced what he preached. His courageous proud message lives on, and he remains forever immortal in my heart.Rest in power.
Paul Robeson - Old Man River
Paul Robeson Sings to Scottish Miners (1949)
Paul Robeson - Here I stand documentary
Sunday, 22 January 2017
Is it OK to punch Nazis?
“Only one thing could have stopped us – if our adversaries had understood its principle and from the first day smashed with the utmost brutality the nucleus of our new movement.” – Adolf Hitler
"Punching Nazi's" has been trending across social media, here's a little disclaimer from me, it really is a tried and tested method, a simple act of resistance that has been proven to work let's continue it until a whole generation has learnt it's the thing to do. Punch Nazi's and organise!
There should be no tolerance for intolerance. Those who preach racial hatred and instigate racism, from Hitler, Mussolini to white nationalist Richard Spenser above ( who is well known for his promotion of white supremacist views, at the time of the incident in video, Mr. Spencer was explaining the meaning of Pepe the Frog, a cartoon figure adopted as a mascot by the alt-right, a racist, far-right fringe movement that is anti-immigrant, anti-Semitic and anti-feminist. ) deserve all that's coming to them.
Remember there is nothing civil about fascists in the first place.We must be ready to meet their intimidation with greater intimidation.Mr. Spencer said he was worried about being attacked again.“I don’t think I could go out to an inauguration event without bodyguards or a protest or a conference,” he said. “I am more worried about going out to dinner on an average Tuesday because these kind of people are roaming around.”On Periscope, Mr. Spencer also expressed concern about the spread of the footage of the attack online.“I’m afraid this is going to become the meme to end all memes,” he said. “That I’m going to hate watching this.” So from the horses mouth, punching a nazi works. And if you fail to get your message across you need to punch harder.
Labels:
#FightAndWrite
Friday, 20 January 2017
Donald Trump: the world is watching
Currently in light of the Trump presidency, and following yesterdays post am feeling quite numb. But I also realise that we are all now living in days of anxiety, fear and confusion and a period of deep transition. We must continue to bear witness and try to keep hope alive, let love triumph not the forces of racism and hate, standing up against the forces of the far right and the politics of hate by continuing to build Bridges Not Walls, refusing to accept a world where bigotry and extreme right wing views and language are accepted.
Donald Trump now the leader of the most powerful countries in the world for at least four years wants you to give up and let him shape the world in his backward vision.For anyone concerned about human rights, the inauguration of Donald Trump as President of the United States, be under no illusion, poses an acute threat to the global human rights movement. He’s threatened our planet and he’s threatened Muslims, women and countless others with his hate filled rhetoric with echos of the 1930's ,and it should be noted that currently the White House has removed its climate change web page, and the healthcare, civil rights and LGBT sections. The election of Donald Trump makes our world an incredibly dangerous place. If you believe another world is possible,now is not the time to simply sit back and watch the Donald Trump show from the sidelines, we must continue to resist Trumpism, and combat the conditions that allowed its emergence.
As Donald J. Trump starts his term as 45th President of the United States, tell him to abandon the hateful rhetoric and promise to stand up for human rights for everyone in America and around the world.
Take action :
Will you stand up for human rights , President Trump?
https://www.amnesty.org.uk/actions/will-you-stand-human-rights-president-trump?utm_source=Paid+Facebook&utm_medium=Targeted&utm_campaign=Human+Rights&utm_content=TRUMPINAUG_KW1
Another world is possible.
an earlier poem:-
https://teifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.co.uk/2016/07/intolerantina-poem-for-donald-trump.html
Labels:
#FightAndWrite
Thursday, 19 January 2017
Apologies some Sally Oldfield , for the mighty furbster Jane Elizabeth Husband ( (9/5/60 - 8/1/17) cheers - Love is everywhere
as fires flicker
and tears are shed
in numbness
my own eyes dripping wet
charged now
with everlasting love
gliding and glittering
in a thousand different ways
trusting and always knowing
when dreams overflow
love is everywhere.
Wednesday, 18 January 2017
Linton Kwesi Johnson - New Crass Massahkah
On 18 January 1981, a fire at a house party in New Cross, South-East
London, led to the deaths of 13 young Black people including Yvonne
Ruddock, who was celebrating her 16th birthday. One of the survivors
later took their own life.
Police declared the fire to be an accident, but to this day many
suspect it was a racist arson attack. The authorities failed to
seriously investigate these claims, despite the fact that racially
abusive letters had been sent to the homeowner, and an incendiary device
found outside the house. The police treated the families of the dead
like suspects, rather than victims, and the Daily Mail falsely
suggested several Black people had been arrested in connection with the
fire.
In the days that followed there was little coverage of the terrible
loss of young life in the newspapers.,The cold silence of the white establishment
conveyed a brutally simple message that the loss of young black lives
was simply unimportant. As Johnny Osbourne sang pointedly ’13 Dead (and Nothing Said)’.
In the aftermath, the community felt a devastating sense of loss.
Sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, nephews, nieces, cousins, friends,
classmates – all taken away long before their time.
But what compounded the pain was the sense that the community had and
was continuing to be ignored. It is customary for Prime Ministers and
the Crown to acknowledge a mass loss of life by the way of sending a
message of condolence. Yet Margaret Thatcher, after nearly two years in
office at that time, failed to reach out to the community.
Thatcher fostered a hostile environment for the black and minority
ethnic community, and was widely considered to be courting supporters of
the far-right National Front group through the use of anti-immigrant
rhetoric. This was taken further by her minister Jill Knight, who
appeared to condone direct action against parties with sound systems, a
staple of the Black British culture at the time.
The suspicions of foul play were well founded – New Cross was known to many as the race hate capital of Britain.Many other Black homes in the area had been attacked
by supporters of the fascist National Front, and a Black community
centre was burnt down. Almost exactly a decade earlier, white racists
had petrol bombed a Black people’s party in Lewisham, injuring 22
people.
Ever since the ‘Windrush generation’ had been brought to
the country to help rebuild Britain’s post-war economy, they were met
with hostility and violence. The police regularly raided Black meeting
places such as the Mangrove Restauarant,
as well as the annual Notting Hill Carnival. The same year as the New
Cross fire also saw the passing of the British Nationality Act, the last
of a series of immigration laws explicitly targeting people of colour;
tearing apart countless families in the process.
The Prime Minister’s silence propelled the wave of black activism
that had been sparked by the fire, as protestors rallied to the words
'thirteen dead and nothing said' and ‘Here to Stay, Here to Fight’.
The New Cross community demanded answers and, in light of perceived
inaction by the police, hundreds attended a meeting a week after the
fire. There was a strong feeling that the fire had been an attack,
started by a petrol bomb.
Out of the ashes of this terrible tragedy came an unprecedented
political mobilisation led by the families, the New Cross Massacre
Action Committee and the wider black community.
It resulted in the historic ‘Black People’s Day of Action’ on Monday 2
March, 1981, where 15,000 people from all over the country filed by 439
New Cross Road bound for the Houses of Parliament and Fleet Street in peaceful protest, but their march was
disrupted by harsh police tactics and faced relentless attacks from the
right-wing media.Tension between the community and the police remained high,
particularly amongst young people who felt they were being unfairly
targeted by the police.In April that year, an incident involving a stabbed youth sparked a
riot in Brixton that lasted a weekend and brought the issue of race
relations to the top of the agenda.
To date, no-one has ever been charged with starting the New Cross fire. The police bungled the investigation and no one was arrested or prosecuted which summed up the racist indifference of the state to black communities and sickeningly racist abuse was sent to victims families. The racism behind the tragedy politicised a generation, and continues to shape modern Britain.
Thinking back now perhaps the most appropriate way to remember those
lives cut short so cruelly is to renew a commitment and vigilance to
challenging contemporary racism in all its forms.
Linton Kwesi Johnson’s ‘New Crass Massahkah ’ conveyed in dub poetry perhaps the most enduring and powerful form of historical witness.
New Crass Massahkah - by Linton Kwesi Johnson
first di comin
an di goin
in an out af di pawty
di dubbin
an di rubbin
and di rackin to di riddim
di dancin
and di scankin
an di pawty really swingin
den di crash
an di bang
an di flames staat fit rang
di heat
an di smoke
an di people staat fi choke
di screamin
and di cryin
and di diein in di fyah.
Wonderful news: Chelsea Manning's Sentence Commutted
Chelsea Elizabeth Manning, the US army soldier,,one of the most prominent whistleblowers in modern times who with immense bravery exposed the nature of modern warfare in Iraq and Afghanistan, and who then went on to pay the price with a 35-year military prison sentence,will now be released on May 17, instead of remaining in military custody until 2045 as originally sentenced,as a gift from outgoing President Barack Obama.
This momentous announcement of a commutation that can not be reversed by a future president, that I didn't think was actually going to happen.does not compensate in any way though, for the brutal treatment Chelsea was illegally subjected to while awaiting trial at the Quantico Marine Brig , having to spend 7-years imprisoned for releasing documents that should never have been classified in the first place, that were clearly in the public interest, that helped shed light on human rights abuses, war crimes, corruption, and government deception. Manning twice attempted suicide last year,also going on a hunger strike which only ended after the military agreed to provide her with gender transition treatment. at the male military prison where she was being held at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, as a result of the terrible ordeal that she was forced to endure.
Chelsea lived for four years as a teenager here in Wales. Her Welsh family have said in a statement that they were "overjoyed", adding that there would "always be a welcome for her here in Wales".
Congratulations Chelsea, and thank you to the to all the people across the country and the world who stood by her in their unrelenting support for her cause. Without them, this day would not have been possible, this victory is a victory for all who continued to stand with her.For once justice has prevailed. Let us hope that Chelsea, this deeply sensitive intelligent heroic woman, who has inspired millions around the world, now gets the life that she has been denied for years. I cannot wait for the day that she actually walks free.
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