Category Archives: Uncategorized

Good article on the alphabet soup of Democratic Party organizations

It’s not unusual to see confusion about the roles that various Democratic Party campaign committees play, though it seems to have peaked recently following Democrat James Thompson’s unexpectedly close loss in the special House election in Kansas’ dark-red 4th Congressional District, based around Wichita. What I’m talking about, more than anything, is cries of “WHY DIDN’T THE DNC DO ANYTHING ABOUT THIS RACE?!?”

That’s kind of like coming across the scene of a bus accident, and asking “WHY ISN’T THE COAST GUARD COMING TO THE RESCUE?!?” There are certainly valid reasons to critique the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and the ways it does business, but the committee’s non-involvement in a House race isn’t one of them. It isn’t their jurisdiction—that’s simply something they don’t, by definition, do.

If you’re interested in having your comments about dysfunction by Democratic organizations taken seriously, it helps to at least have some knowledge of where to correctly point your finger. With that in mind, let’s take a few minutes to review the alphabet soup of organizations in Washington that raise money for, and spend money on, Democratic candidates.

via DNC, DCCC, DSCC: How to decipher the alphabet soup of Democratic Party organizations

A Forgotten Piece Of African-American History In The Former Town Of Dearfield On The Great Plains : The Salt : NPR

Movies could be made about this.

Abandoned towns from the early 20th century are far from unique on this stretch of the Great Plains. Withered storefronts and collapsed homes are common. Boom and bust economics and harsh weather made it tough for turn of the century settlers to succeed long-term.

Few ghost towns, however, have all the elements that make Dearfield’s story so compelling: larger than life characters, struggles to live off the land, tales of racial integration at the height of the Jim Crow era.

via A Forgotten Piece Of African-American History In The Former Town Of Dearfield On The Great Plains : The Salt : NPR

Mastodon

Reading on Mashable about a new free and open-source social networking platform called Mastodon.

There are quite a few platforms like this: Diaspora, Friendica, GNU social, Hubzilla. They are software which you can install to host your own social network server but also allow you to connect, share, mention and tag other users on other servers.

This would make social networking more like how email works: Gmail, AOL, OutlookDOTcom/Hotmail, and Yahoo users can all email each other without having to be on the same host.

This is the opposite of how Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn​ don’t connect to each other. I imagine federated social networks becoming much more used if the big proprietary networks bottom out.

Someone Wrote The Play ‘Hidden Fences’

The play we deserve!

I woke up one morning in late January and thought “I’m going to write a play about this.” I had seen and read “Fences” (the play, screenplay and movie) and had yet to see “Hidden Figures”. I wanted to reclaim that slip-up and felt like it was ripe for satire. As a kid, I watched some of the best black comedians and learned from the greats. Whether it was The Wayans with “Don’t Be A Menace To Society While Drinking Your Juice In The Hood” at the movies, “Chappelle’s Show” on TV, or my Grandmother saying “whitey” on the la-z-boy. I was born and raised in the projects in Queens, New York City, youngest of two, by a single mom, one project over from the infamous QueensBridge Housing projects. I’ve chipped my front tooth twice and clocked hours observing from my project window. I’m like the Nas of comedy.

via I Wrote The Play ‘Hidden Fences’ Because Someone F*ucking Had To | AFROPUNK

Equality and/or Diversity

Reading this article by David Frum (yes, THAT David Frum) which posited that diversity and equality haven’t gone together as equal goals for the political left until very recently. He argues that xenophobes have historically championed equality as a means of drawing citizens together to the exclusion of foreigners and foreign contributions, while cosmopolitan advocates of diversity and immigration have traditionally looked down upon equality.

This reminds me of how White suffragettes at the turn of the century found the means to advocate for women’s suffrage by way of subscribing to fears of domination by Black voters.

This reminds me of how so much digital ink was spilled in arguing that the White working class needs to be won back through social policies which center citizens over (undocumented) immigrants, rural dwellers over urbanites, “Middle America” over the overeducated “bicoastal elite”.

It gives us a dichotomy: either equality (of citizens) or diversity (of resident labor), one of which we can esteem over the other.

But I think separating the two is unwise. The men who separated the two lived in a time when colonialism, racism and imperialism were rampant. They lived in a time when people had much less connection and access to each other.

While we live in a world where the United Nations, the Internet, automobiles and jet planes exist, along with many more nation-states diplomatically recognizing each other in areas once under colonial or imperial rule, we’re still not much more tied to each other or aware of what bridges us beyond these borders. As our species’ population and diversity has grown, our equality has no kept apace. Our lack of equality has resulted in a resurgent xenophobia seeking to reclaim the equality of a bygone era against the diversity of the present.

An equality which is compatible with the diversity of the present, or even with our awareness of diversity in the world around our countries, is struggling to be birthed. We still fear foreign or immigrant competition for jobs, factories, trade, unemployment benefits, taxpayer-funded resources and votes.

Labor unions, shying away from organizing internationally in developing countries, exemplify an anti-diverse equality, while multinational corporations, shying away from paying living wages and corporate taxes in favor of cheaper labor in developing countries, exemplify an unequal diversity.

We can, like the short story by Larry Niven, invent displacement booths which allow for instantaneous teleportation across the world for the masses, exposing people even more to the affairs of other countries than we are exposed right now, but what about an international universal basic income to allow refugees from impoverished, war-torn countries to escape more easily (through these booths) to more well-off countries and afford standard amenities to help themselves and others bring peace and prosperity to their native and adoptive countries?

Technological bridges will continue to further our awareness of diversity, but socio-economic equality must also follow along those bridges.

We need diversity and equality to keep apace together, and we can dare to make equality as real and available as the diversity we see in the world right now. It takes a reassessment of how we view ourselves in relation to this planet.

This is why I don’t think xenophobia, a sibling of racism, works as an equalizer of “citizens”. Xenophobia is easy and regressive. The equality of the 21st century is difficult but liberating.

Military Budget/Size and the Likelyhood of a Coup on U.S. Soil

Brazil, with the 5th largest country in area size and the 5th largest population, has the 14th largest military and 11th largest military budget. Practicing conscription, this military has not been in conflict with its neighbors since 1870, nor has it been in conflict with any other country since 1945. It has had four coups d’etat and accompanying military dictatorships, the last of which ended in 1985.

United States, with the 4th largest area and the 3rd largest population, has the second largest military and the largest military budget. A volunteer military since the 1970s, this military has been in conflict with or in other countries for 224 of it’s 241 years of independence, including up to the present. It has never had a coup.

North Korea, with the 97th largest area and the 48th largest population, has the 4th largest military and is rumored to spend up to a third of its total income on defense expenses. A conscript military, this country has been in a formal, tightly-held state of war with South Korea since 1950. It has long been ruled by its military through the Kim family.

Comparing between these countries, I’m wondering what sort of role these militaries play in relation to their national populations. Are disproportionately-large militaries and larger military budgets a way to mollify and pacify the public? Are military adventures a way to distract us, as the Argentine military tried to do by invading the Falkland Islands (much to their failure at British hands) while Argentina was under a brutal military dictatorship?

If a military has no conflict abroad or natives to pacify, does that military become restless and more likely to lash out at its civilian government through a coup?

What if we in the U.S. pulled back all of our overseas military installations and detachments, ended the international War on Terror and Drugs, scaled down our military budget from its massive $597B to something like India’s $56B, move more active duty folks to reserve duty, recycled our excess of F-16s and other wasted weaponry, closed some of our excess of domestic bases?

If we did all of that and shifted all of that expenditure to other areas, that might benefit more of our working class, although we’d still have to weather the blowback from the craters we’ve made internationally.

But I fear that our military leaders, if reduced in power, scope and range of conflict, will turn against our civilian government. I fear that a reduced, internationally-neutral military will initiate a coup d’etat in the name of correcting the course of civilian government.

This happens way too much in other countries which have not seen conflict between sovereign countries for an extended time.

And this is ironic for me to say since I live on a military base, lol!

 

Working Families Party

You know what’s interesting about the Working Families Party? They’re a national party without a formal national structure beyond a national staff and an advisory board.

No national convention, no campaign fundraising committees, no national committee of state delegates.

Their primary focus, in the 10 states where they operate, is working on state politics. Their endorsements of Bernie Sanders in the Dem primary and Hillary Clinton in the general were their first presidential endorsements​, and presidential endorsements may be a rarity for the WFP.

But I like that. The WFP doesn’t need a major party-like structure when it is mostly focused on state politics. We need that sort of focus here in GA, a focus on building power for our 99%.

The Dems can worry about national politics. But maybe the WFP can help fix our state politics.

When Will it Be Safe for Black LGBT Folk to Travel to Africa or the Caribbean?

Sometime back I remember a Twitter post asking “why is it that only countries with White people are passing same-sex marriage into law?” That question was from a gay racist.

That question has bothered me ever since.

If one were to think of homo sapiens along skin color lines, most of the progress we’ve seen on LGBT rights have taken place in countries which are predominately White and Christian, with the two exceptions of South Africa (predominately Black and Christian) and Israel (predominately White and Jewish).

It is rather difficult to live as an openly-LGBT person in most of Africa or in the Caribbean. Sodomy laws abound in these parts, as do highly-patriarchal Abrahamic religions and superstitious beliefs about sex and STDs.

Someday, I’d like to go to a Barbados which doesn’t have sodomy laws and welcomes LGBT African-American tourists to their annual Season of Emancipation. Someday I’d like to go as an openly-gay man to Trinidad and Tobago for Carnival. Someday I’d like to go to the Bahamas without fear for Junkanoo.

Someday, if I am married, I’d like to visit Elmina Castle with my husband and look out of the “door of no return” without fear of violence from folks nearby, but with tears in our eyes. I’d like for us to experience the sights and sounds of Lagos together without homophobic mob violence lurking around us. I’d like for us to go to Kuchu Pride in Kampala in a time when none of the attendees need to wear rainbow masks.

Id like to visit a Mr. Gay Africa contest in Windhoek or a drag show in Harare. I’d go to Soweto Pride in a time when Black lesbians feel much more safe and are not being targeted for corrective rape and murder by cishet men.

This vision of a more queer-welcoming African civilization is something I hope will become a reality in my lifetime.

 

Racism Against African Immigrants in Australia

Good morning.

I’m reading about another African diaspora community in Australia which is being jolted by news of a store sign in Melbourne saying “no 14-18yo blacks or dogs allowed”. Most of the comments under articles about this sign either excuse the sign or shift the blame on Black teens.

The African-descended communities in Australia are entirely voluntary immigrants, mostly from Africa and some from the Americas. Generational slavery’s traumas (as manifested in the Americas) play far less of a role here in the lower economic strata of Afro-Australians, since chattel slavery in Australia did not involve Africans.

But these “black teens” who are turning to gangs like Apex in Melbourne are mostly of Somali and South Sudanese descent – two nationalities deeply impacted by decades of war, poverty and illiteracy in their homelands. Those factors are often a major predictor for the lack of financial or educational empowerment among many immigrant communities.

A leader of the Apex gang – interviewed here by the Daily Mail Australia – mentions some of the additional misfortunes which drive these teens to seek the comfort of drugs and gang relationships. Chief among them are family breakups, school bullying and chronic joblessness.

A similar cyclical recipe for a rise in gang affiliation can be found in any other immigrant community under similar circumstances anywhere in the world, whether it’s Chicago, Paris, Toronto or Miami.

Unfortunately, its a lot more difficult for Black mediocrity to get a pass in a predominately White European-descended, high-income developed society like Australia, even if chattel slavery is not a factor in how any living Australian citizen gained that nationality. Nothing less than “model minority behavior” is expected of non-White, non-Christian immigrants: skilled, educated, white-collar professional.

And it’s hard to exemplify that behavior when you’re a young person from a war-torn, impoverished, malnourished country like South Sudan.