Economic Aspects of "Love"

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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Mar 13, 2013 10:04 pm

fascism is in fashion
but we be style
dressed in sweat danced off taino and arawak bodies
we children of children exiled from homelands
descendants of immigrants denied jobs and toilets
carry continents in our eyes
survivors of the middle passage
we stand
and demand recognition of our humanity

starving for education
we feed on the love of our people
we flowers
the bloom on amsterdam ave
though pissed on by rich pink dogs
through concrete cracks

we passion kiss in the backs of police vans
recite poetry in prison cells
stained walls in blood tracing brutality
know the willow she weeps for
we her jazzy tears taste the fruit of brooklyn trees

fascism is in imperial fashion
but we be style
our tongues long slashed to keep silence
wear blood jewels
our heads sport civilizations
hips velvet wrapped in music
and you can see the earth running
right under our skin

in a state of police
cops act as pigs treat men as dogs
mothers as whores
the bold youth of a nation hungry and cold
an entire nation of youth behind bays grown old
the mace and blood did not blind we
witness and demand a return to humanity

we braid resistance through our hair
pierce justice through our ears
tattoo freedom onto our breasts

the bluesy souls of brown eyed girls
clash with blood on the pale hands of
governments of war
cops who think they’re
bluer than they are black
mercenaries sent on a mission to set back
our strength power love

we be eternal style
while evil wears itself down with
guns contracts laws cash
and rouges it’s think lips with human juice
strained off billy clubs
and tightens it’s power tie round necks that
just won’t bend
we see the price tag dangling out

the cost is our death and
we refuse to pay

we be political prisoners walking round semi-free
our very breath is a threat
to those who rather we not read
and think analyze watch out and fight back
and be human beings the way we need to be

we wear warrior marks well

fashion is passing
style is everlasting
we



suheir hammad



http://amiiira.tumblr.com/
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Fri Mar 15, 2013 10:54 pm

http://briarpatchmagazine.com/articles/ ... g-together

Decolonizing together
Moving beyond a politics of solidarity toward a practice of decolonization

BY HARSHA WALIA • JAN 1, 2012

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Canada’s state and corporate wealth is largely based on subsidies gained from the theft of Indigenous lands and resources. Conquest in Canada was designed to ensure forced displacement of Indigenous peoples from their territories, the destruction of autonomy and self-determination in Indigenous self-governance and the assimilation of Indigenous peoples’ cultures and traditions. Given the devastating cultural, spiritual, economic, linguistic and political impacts of colonialism on Indigenous people in Canada, any serious attempt by non-natives at allying with Indigenous struggles must entail solidarity in the fight against colonization.


Non-natives must be able to position ourselves as active and integral participants in a decolonization movement for political liberation, social transformation, renewed cultural kinships and the development of an economic system that serves rather than threatens our collective life on this planet. Decolonization is as much a process as a goal. It requires a profound recentring on Indigenous worldviews. Syed Hussan, a Toronto-based activist, states: “Decolonization is a dramatic reimagining of relationships with land, people and the state. Much of this requires study. It requires conversation. It is a practice; it is an unlearning.”

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Indigenous solidarity on its own terms

A growing number of social movements are recognizing that Indigenous self-determination must become the foundation for all our broader social justice mobilizing. Indigenous peoples in Canada are the most impacted by the pillage of lands, experience disproportionate poverty and homelessness, are overrepresented in statistics of missing and murdered women and are the primary targets of repressive policing and prosecutions in the criminal injustice system. Rather than being treated as a single issue within a laundry list of demands, Indigenous self-determination is increasingly understood as intertwined with struggles against racism, poverty, police violence, war and occupation, violence against women and environmental justice.

Incorporating Indigenous self-determination into these movements can, however, subordinate and compartmentalize Indigenous struggle within the machinery of existing Leftist narratives. Anarchists point to the antiauthoritarian tendencies within Indigenous communities, environmentalists highlight the connection to land that Indigenous communities have, anti-racists subsume Indigenous people into the broader discourse about systemic oppression in Canada, and women’s organizations point to the relentless violence inflicted on Indigenous women in discussions about patriarchy.

We have to be cautious not to replicate the Canadian state’s assimilationist model of liberal pluralism, forcing Indigenous identities to fit within our existing groups and narratives. The inherent right to traditional lands and to self-determination is expressed collectively and should not be subsumed within the discourse of individual or human rights. Furthermore, it is imperative to understand that being Indigenous is not just an identity but a way of life, which is intricately connected to Indigenous peoples’ relationship to the land and all its inhabitants. Indigenous struggle cannot simply be accommodated within other struggles; it demands solidarity on its own terms.


The practice of solidarity

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One of the basic principles of Indigenous solidarity organizing is the notion of taking leadership. According to this principle, non-natives must be accountable and responsive to the experiences, voices, needs and political perspectives of Indigenous people themselves. From an anti-oppression perspective, meaningful support for Indigenous struggles cannot be directed by non-natives. Taking leadership means being humble and honouring front-line voices of resistance as well as offering tangible solidarity as needed and requested. Specifically, this translates to taking initiative for self-education about the specific histories of the lands we reside upon, organizing support with the clear consent and guidance of an Indigenous community or group, building long-term relationships of accountability and never assuming or taking for granted the personal and political trust that non-natives may earn from Indigenous peoples over time.

In offering support to a specific community in the defence of their land, non-natives should organize with a mandate from the community and an understanding of the parameters of the support being sought. Once these guidelines are established, non-natives should be proactive in offering logistical, fundraising and campaign support. Clear lines of communication must always be maintained, and a commitment should be made for long-term support. This means not just being present for blockades or in moments of crisis, but developing an ongoing commitment to the well-being of Indigenous peoples and communities.

Organizing in accordance with these principles is not always straightforward. Respecting Indigenous leadership is not the same as doing nothing while waiting around to be told what to do. “I am waiting to be told exactly what to do” should not be an excuse for inaction, and seeking guidance must be weighed against the possibility of further burdening Indigenous people with questions. A willingness to decentre oneself and to learn and act from a place of responsibility rather than guilt are helpful in determining the line between being too interventionist and being paralyzed.

Cultivating an ethic of responsibility within the Indigenous solidarity movement begins with non-natives understanding ourselves as beneficiaries of the illegal settlement of Indigenous peoples’ land and unjust appropriation of Indigenous peoples’ resources and jurisdiction. When faced with this truth, it is common for activists to get stuck in their feelings of guilt, which I would argue is a state of self-absorption that actually upholds privilege. While guilt is often a sign of a much-needed shift in consciousness, in itself it does nothing to motivate the responsibility necessary to actively dismantle entrenched systems of oppression. In a movement-building round table, long-time Montreal activist Jaggi Singh said: “The only way to escape complicity with settlement is active opposition to it. That only happens in the context of on-the-ground, day-to-day organizing, and creating and cultivating the spaces where we can begin dialogues and discussions as natives and non-natives.”

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Sustained alliance building

Sustaining a multiplicity of meaningful and diverse relationships with Indigenous peoples is critical in building a non-native movement for Indigenous self-determination. “Solidarity is not the same as support,” says feminist writer bell hooks. “To experience solidarity, we must have a community of interests, shared beliefs and goals around which to unite, to build Sisterhood. Support can be occasional. It can be given and just as easily withdrawn. Solidarity requires sustained, ongoing commitment.”

Who exactly one takes direction from while building networks of ongoing solidarity can be complicated. As in any community, a diversity of political opinions often exists within Indigenous communities. How do we determine whose leadership to follow and which alliances to build? I take leadership from and offer tangible support to grassroots Indigenous peoples who are exercising traditional governance and customs in the face of state control and bureaucratization, who are seeking redress and reparations for acts of genocide and assimilation, such as residential schools, who are opposing corporate development on their lands. I support those who are pushing back against the oppressions of hetero-patriarchy imposed by settler society, who are struggling against poverty and systemic marginalization in urban areas, who are criticizing unjust land claims and treaty processes and who are affirming their own languages, customs, traditions, creative expression and spiritual practices.

Alliances with Indigenous communities should be based on shared values, principles and analysis. For example, during the anti-Olympics campaign in 2010, activists chose not to align with the Four Host First Nations, a pro-corporate body created in conjunction with the Vancouver Olympics organizing committee. Instead, we took leadership from and strengthened alliances with land defenders in the Secwepemc and St’át’imc nations and Indigenous people being directly impacted by homelessness and poverty in the Downtown Eastside. In general, however, differences surrounding strategy within a community should be for community members to discuss and resolve. We should be cautious of a persistent dynamic where solidarity activists start to fixate on the internal politics of an oppressed community. Allies should avoid trying to intrude and interfere in struggles within and between communities, which perpetuates the civilizing ideology of the white man’s burden and violates the basic principles of self-determination.

Building intentional alliances should also avoid devolution into tokenization. Non-natives often choose which Indigenous voices to privilege by defaulting to Indigenous activists they determine to be better known, easier-to-contact or “less hostile.” This selectivity distorts the diversity present in Indigenous communities and can exacerbate tensions and colonially imposed divisions between Indigenous peoples. In opposing the colonialism of the state and settler society, non-natives must recognize our own role in perpetuating colonialism within our solidarity efforts. We can actively counter this by theorizing about and discussing the nuanced issues of solidarity, leadership, strategy and analysis – not in abstraction, but within our real and informed and sustained relationships with Indigenous peoples.


Decolonizing relationships

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While centring and honouring Indigenous voices and leadership, the obligation for decolonization rests on all of us. In “Building a ‘Canadian’ Decolonization Movement: Fighting the Occupation at ‘Home,’” Nora Burke says: “A decolonisation movement cannot be comprised solely of solidarity and support for Indigenous peoples’ sovereignty and self-determination. If we are in support of self-determination, we too need to be self-determining. It is time to cut the state out of this relationship, and to replace it with a new relationship, one which is mutually negotiated, and premised on a core respect for autonomy and freedom.”

Being responsible for decolonization can require us to locate ourselves within the context of colonization in complicated ways, often as simultaneously oppressed and complicit. This is true, for example, for racialized migrants in Canada. Within the anticolonial migrant justice movement of No One Is Illegal, we go beyond demanding citizenship rights for racialized migrants as that would lend false legitimacy to a settler state. We challenge the official state discourse of multiculturalism that undermines the autonomy of Indigenous communities by granting and mediating rights through the imposed structures of the state and that seeks to assimilate diversities into a singular Canadian identity. Andrea Smith, Indigenous feminist intellectual, says: “All non-Native peoples are promised the ability to join in the colonial project of settling indigenous lands. In all of these cases, we would check our aspirations against the aspirations of other communities to ensure that our model of liberation does not become the model of oppression for others.” In B.C., immigrants and refugees have participated in several delegations to Indigenous blockades, while Indigenous communities have offered protection and refuge for migrants facing deportation.

Decolonization is the process whereby we create the conditions in which we want to live and the social relations we wish to have. We have to commit ourselves to supplanting the colonial logic of the state itself. Almost a hundred years ago, German anarchist Gustav Landauer wrote: “The State is a condition, a certain relationship between human beings, a mode of behaviour; we destroy it by contracting other relationships.” Decolonization requires us to exercise our sovereignties differently and to reconfigure our communities based on shared experiences, ideals and visions. Almost all Indigenous formulations of sovereignty – such as the Two Row Wampum agreement of peace, friendship and respect between the Haudenosaunee nations and settlers – are premised on revolutionary notions of respectful coexistence and stewardship of the land, which goes far beyond any Western liberal democratic ideal.

I have been encouraged to think of human interconnectedness and kinship in building alliances with Indigenous communities. Black-Cherokee writer Zainab Amadahy uses the term “relationship framework” to describe how our activism should be grounded. “Understanding the world through a Relationship Framework … we don’t see ourselves, our communities, or our species as inherently superior to any other, but rather see our roles and responsibilities to each other as inherent to enjoying our life experiences,” says Amadahy. From Turtle Island to Palestine, striving toward decolonization and walking together toward transformation requires us to challenge a dehumanizing social organization that perpetuates our isolation from each other and normalizes a lack of responsibility to one another and the Earth.


This is an altered and condensed version of a chapter from the 2012 forthcoming book Organize! Building From the Local for Global Justice, edited by Aziz Choudry, Jill Hanley and Eric Shragge.

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Harsha Walia is a South Asian activist and writer based in Vancouver, Coast Salish Territories. She is active in a variety of social movements, particularly migrant justice, anti-racism, Indigenous solidarity, Palestine solidarity and anti-imperialist struggles. In her organizing over the past decade, she has prioritized support for Indigenous communities. Her writings have appeared in alternative and mainstream magazines, journals and newspapers.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Mon Mar 18, 2013 11:41 am

What Do We See In Steubenville? Imagining Justice Outside the Courts
MARCH 16, 2013

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In Steubenville Ohio, a juvenile court judge will decide the fate of two young men who allegedly participated in the rape of a 16-year-old girl. But it will be up to the supporters of Jane Doe — especially working-class fighters — to determine the path forward: toward true justice, toward a world free from sexual assault, toward a society ridding itself of the bastions of power that, like stagnant ponds where mosquitos multiply, support the proliferation of rape culture. Steubenville seems to have the passion, the courage, and the determination: but do they have a plan? And what will it be?

From an outsider’s perspective, I see three key assets enriching the Steubenville rape-culture resistance.

A critical eye toward court-determined “justice”

A horizontal network of bold, moral people eager to get involved

An orientation toward media and education by the people, for the people


Rape culture is about power, and the Steubenville case has opened up serious questions about how people in a community can take back the power to safeguard their own well-being — free from the small-scale despotism of patriarchal cops, coaches, or classmates.


Continues at: http://kloncke.com/2013/03/16/what-do-w ... he-courts/
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Mar 19, 2013 9:35 am

Communism of the Senses

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Dancing in Lost River Cave, Bowling Green,Kentucky in the late 1940s


'shared conviviality could be seen as a kind of communistic base on top of which everything else is constructed. It also helps to emphasize that sharing is not simply about morality, but also about pleasure. Solitary pleasures will always exist, but for most human beings, the most pleasurable activities almost always involve sharing something: music, food, liquor, drugs, gossip, drama, beds. There is a certain communism of the senses at the root of most things we consider fun'

(David Graeber, Debt: the first 5000 years, 2011)
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Mar 19, 2013 8:18 pm

Globalization, shaped by a very patriarchal mindset, a capitalist, patriarchal mindset, has actually aggravated the violence against women, that we are living in a very violent economic order to which war has become essential—war against the earth, war against women’s bodies, war against local economies and war against democracy. And I think we need to see the connections between all these forms of violence, which impact women most. Whether it’s climate change or biodiversity erosion or seed monopolies, all of it is connected. It’s one piece.

This violent economic order can only function as a war against people and against the earth, and in that war, the rape against women is a very, very large instrument of war. We see that everywhere. And therefore, we have to have an end to the violence against women. If we have to have the dignity of women protected, then the multiple wars against the earth, through the economy, through greed, through capitalist, patriarchal domination, must end, and we have to recognize we are part of the earth. The liberation of the earth, the liberation of women, the liberation of all humanity is the next step of freedom we need to work for, and it’s the next step of peace that we need to create.


Indian environmental leader, feminist and scientist Vandana Shiva.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Mar 20, 2013 8:56 am

http://www.justseeds.org/santiago_armen ... bejas.html

Santiago Armengod

Acteal: Sembrando Semillas de Memoria para Cosechar Justicia.
Santiago Armengod

$30

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20 años de resistencia y lucha, 15 años desde la masacre de Acteal y todavía no hay justicia, los paramilitares están libres y los políticos detrás de todo impunes. Queremos Justicia!

Acteal es una pequeña comunidad Tzotzil en el municipio de Chenalhó en el estado de Chiapas, Mexico. Esta comunidad principalmente compuesta por miembros de la organización Las Abejas fueron víctimas de una masacre a manos del la organización paramilitar Mascaras Rojas financiada por el Partido Político PRI. Las Abejas es una organización pacifica que ha expresado su apoyo hacia el EZLN y sus demandas. Es este vinculo con los Zapatistas que llevo a la masacre donde 45 miembros (4 mujeres embarazadas) de las Abejas. Los miembros fueron asesinados dentro de una pequeña iglesia mientras rezaban, en un ambiente de temor a que el EZLN continuara fortaleciendose.

Las Abejas han hecho todo lo posible en su lucha por la Justicia. En el 2009, veinte de los paramilitares responsables de la masacre que se encontraban encarcelados fueron puestos en libertad a pesar de la gran oposición de las Abejas y organizaciones de derechos humanos.

Actualmente, los miembros de la comunidad de Acteal tienen que compartir el pueblo con los perpetradores de la masacre: gente que físicamente asesino a sus familiares, amigos y seres queridos.

El hecho de que miembros de la Mascaras Rojas estén en libertad y de regreso en Chenalhó no es una casualidad. Es una parte indispensable de las tácticas de contrainsurgencia del estado, donde no importa si eres pacifista, siempre y cuando estés organizandote y denunciando, te conviertes en un blanco para la “neutralización”.

Cada 22 del mes, las Abejas conmemoran a los caídos; revitalizan su lucha a través de ceremonias y creencias que incorporan la cosmovision Maya Tzotzil y creencias católicas Cada Año en el 22 de Diciembre, hay una gran conmemoración donde gente de todo Mexico y el mundo llegan a Acteal a solidarizarse y recordarles a Las Abejas que no hemos olvidado la sangre indígena de niños, mujeres y hombre que se ha derramado. Mas que nada es un gesto para mostrarles que no están solos en su búsqueda de Justicia y Libertad.

Esta pieza esta dedicada a Manuel Vazquez Luna sobreviviente de la masacre de Acteal y amigo. (1984-2012)


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Acteal: Sowing Seeds of Memory to Harvest Justice.

20 years of Resistance and Struggle, 15 years since the Acteal massacre and there is still no justice, the paramilitaries are free and the politicians who gave the orders are unpunished. We Demand Justice!

Acteal is a small Tzotzil community in the municipality of Chenalhó part of the Mexican state of Chiapas. This community mainly formed by members of the organization Las Abejas (The Bees) were victims of a massacre the 22nd of December 1997 by a PRI party sponsored Mascaras Rojas paramilitary group. Las Abejas is a peaceful organization who have vocally expressed their support for the EZLN and their demands. It was this link with the Zapatistas which led to the massacre of 45 members (4 of them pregnant) of Las Abejas. The members were murdered inside a small church praying, in an environment filled with fear of the EZLN growing stronger.

Las Abejas have done everything possible in their search for Justice. In 2009, twenty of the incarcerated members of the paramilitary group were released despite the strong opposition of Las Abejas and human rights groups.

Presently, Acteal community members have to share the same village with the perpetrators of the massacre: people who physically killed their relatives, friends and loved ones.

The fact that members of Mascaras Rojas are free and back in Chenalho is not a coincidence. It’s an integral part of the state’s counterinsurgency tactics, where it doesn’t matter if you are a pacifist. As long as you are speaking out and organizing, you become a threat to the state and a potential target for “neutralization”.

On the 22nd of each month, Las Abejas commemorate their dead; they revitalize their struggle mixing Tzotzil Mayan and Roman Catholic beliefs and ceremonies. Each year, on the ominous 22nd of December, there is a huge commemoration where people from all over Mexico and the world come to support and remind Las Abejas that we haven’t forgotten the spilt blood of indigenous children, women and men. Most importantly, is a gesture to show them that they are not alone in their search for Justice and Freedom.

This piece is dedicated to Manuel Vazquez Luna survivor of the Acteal massacre and friend. (1984-2012)

Two color Silkscreen print
27" x 16"
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Mar 20, 2013 5:10 pm

"We must shift from a politic of desirability and beauty to a politic of ugly and magnificence. That moves us closer to bodies and movements that disrupt, dismantle, disturb. Bodies and movements ready to throw down and create a different way for all of us, not just some of us. The magnificence of a body that shakes, spills out, takes up space, needs help, moseys, slinks, limps, drools, rocks, curls over on itself. The magnificence of a body that doesn’t get to choose when to go to the bathroom, let alone which bathroom to use. A body that doesn’t get to choose what to wear in the morning, what hairstyle to sport, how they’re going to move or stand, or what time they’re going to bed. The magnificence of bodies that have been coded, not just undesirable and ugly, but un-human. The magnificence of bodies that are understanding gender in far more complex ways than I could explain in an hour. Moving beyond a politic of desirability to loving the ugly. Respecting Ugly for how it has shaped us and been exiled. Seeing its power and magic, seeing the reasons it has been feared. Seeing it for what it is: some of our greatest strength."

-Mia Mingus Femmes of Color Symposium: Keynote Speech
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Mar 20, 2013 5:23 pm

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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Mar 21, 2013 12:02 am

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Day 19 of White History Month: Medical Racism

The United States (along with other countries in the Western world) has a history of medical racism. The general population is unaware of the history of medical racism, and white health professionals are as well. John M. Hoberman of UT-Austin says that medical schools do not teach students about the history of medical racism, nor do they give them proper diversity training. Many Americans of color have grown to distrust medical professionals, and many white Americans attribute this to paranoia rather than their knowledge of historical and contemporary medical mistreatment.

Medical racism has often benefitted white Americans disproportionately while simultaneously harming Americans of color, as well as people of color outside of the United States. White Americans benefit from medical advances, while individual people of color were harmed, and in some cases, large groups of people of color have been harmed. From trying to “better” the race, to making scientific advances, white people have used and disregarded the rights people of color for their own benefit. Medical racism shows the lack of value ascribed to the bodies and lives of people of color.

Eugenics

The eugenics movement in the United States became very popular and manifested itself in many different ways. Anti-miscegenation laws, birth control, sterilization, forced abortions, forced pregnancies (of white women), and the promotion of higher birth rates for neurotypical white women. Eugenics policies were first instituted in the United States. Laws that advocated the sterilization of those with mental illnesses were in effect in the early 1900s, and soon spread to other countries.

Eugenics movements advocated for the eradication of those with mental illness, those who were homosexual, “promiscuous”, and most of all, those who were outside of the “Nordic” or “Aryan” race. Eugenics was advocated for by many famous white Westerners, including world leaders such as Winston Churchill, Theodore Roosevelt, and Calvin Coolidge.

While eugenics was highly unpopular after the Holocaust, the eugenics tradition of the United States actually provided the background for Nazi Medicine. While most people are aware to some extent what the horrors of Nazi medicine entailed, few people are aware of the American eugenics tradition that inspired it. Eugenics societies promoted “fit families” and “better babies” through awards at contests, but they also promoted harmful legislation barring immigrants and sterilizing “undesirable” people.

Controlling Reproductive Rights of Women of Color

Black Women

Due to the eugenics movement, thousands of Black women were sterilized. In North Carolina, 7600 people were sterilized between 1929 and 1974, 85% of them women and girls, and a disproportionate number of them people of color (39% in the 1940s, 60% in the 1960s while making up only 25% of the population). The program that allowed for their sterilization was not eliminated fully until 2003. Black women were also sterilized without their consent in other states.

Puerto Rican Women

The United States has held Puerto Rico as a territory since 1898. As a solution to Puerto Rican economic problems, the US government felt that reducing the population of the Puerto Rican government would help. The US sterilized over one-third of Puerto Rican women, many uneducated and working class, between the 1930s and 1970s. Most of these women did not understand the procedure and did not know that it would render them sterile.

Additionally, the US used Puerto Rican women to test out birth control pills in the 1950s. These women were not informed that the pills were experimental - only that they would prevent pregnancy. They were not informed of the possible side effects ranging from nausea to possible death - three women died during the birth control pill trials. Women who reported side effects had their concerns dismissed by researchers.

Native American Women

Native American women who used the Indian Health Services were subject to numerous violations of their rights, particularly their reproductive rights. Some women who underwent procedures such as appendectomies would also have hysterectomies performed on them without their consent. At least 25 percent (and as high as 50 percent) of Native American women of reproductive age who used Indian Health Services were sterilized without their consent or after coercion. Largely white male doctors would use Native American women as “practice” for performing gynecological procedures on white women.

Tuskegee Experiment and Guatemala STD Experiment

In 1932, the Tuskegee Institute worked with the United States government to perform a study on a group of Black men with syphillis. The men were recruited to the study with promises of free meals, transportation to the clinic, medical exams and even treatment for minor medical concerns. The study lasted 40 years and involved the participation of over 600 Black men. This sounded like a good arrangement in theory, but researchers did not hold up their end of the bargain. By 1947, penicillin was widely used as treatment for syphillis. The researchers neglected to inform the men involved in the study in addition to refusing to treat the men.

As a result of the Tuskegee Experiment, nearly a hundred men died, and hundreds of partners and children were infected with the disease as well. Not only was this a breach of research ethics, as the participants did not give informed consent and were not treated for their ailment. The men and their families won a $9 million class action lawsuit in 1973, but this of course was not enough to make up for the damage that was done.

Similarly, the same researcher who uncovered the Tuskegee Syphillis experiment, Susan Reverby, discovered that a similar situation occured in Guatemala. The US Public Health Service and Pan American Sanitary Bureau worked with the Guatemalan government to do research on 1300 Guatemalans that involved intentionally exposing them to STDs.

The experiment involved many who are considered disposable in society - sex workers, mental patients, prisoners, and soldiers. Only 700 of these people were treated, and during the study 83 people died. Some of the most disturbing incidents during the study involved injecting epilepsy patients in the back of the head with syphillis, as well as the infection of a terminal illness patient with gonnorhea (she died six months later). The Guatemalans in the study also did not give informed consent.

Henrietta Lacks

Henrietta Lacks (1920 - 1951) was a Black woman who went to Johns Hopkins Hospital to be examined for serious medical concerns. After a biopsy was performed, she was diagnosed with and subsequently treated for cancer. While she was being treated, healthy and cancerous cells were removed from her cervix without her consent. She died in 1951, but the cells stolen from her body continued to be used. Though she died poor and was buried without a gravestone, her cells were used for many medical tests. From routine tests for human sensitivity to substances to the development of the Polio vaccine, her cells were used for medical advances. Her family only learned about the removal of her cells in the 1970s, and she is largely unknown despite the contributions to science she had made.

Current medical racism

Distrust of medical health professionals, along with racist attitudes probably contribute to medical health disparities. Racially linked anxiety disorders have been linked to racism at the hands of white people. A significant number of Black women report racism and sexism contributing to their stress and to stress-linked overeating.

Stressful life circumstances are reasons for hypertension and many mental health ailments. Working and middle class Black women who report multiple forms of discrimination are more likely to have high blood pressure than those who report fewer incidents. Black Americans who are more confrontational about racism are less likely to have elevated blood pressure than those who stay silent, which can be attributed to the effects of suppressed hostility.

Today, doctors still exhibit subconscious racist attitudes. A study in the American Journal of Public Health (March 2012) showed that a full two-thirds of the doctors in the sample were racially biased. White and Asian health professionals showed anti-Black bias, but Black health professionals showed no bias.

Doctors are more likely to speak more slowly to Black patients, extend their visits, and to lecture and talk down to them. This shows that the doctors are paternalistic and don’t care about respecting their patients or asking for their input

Additionally, white doctors are prone to giving worse care to patients of color, regardless of their income. People of color are less likely to get the diagnoses and treatment that they need, for everything ranging from heart disease medication, HIV treatment, and dialysis. Black women are the least likely to receive the pain medication that they need. Mental health professionals are less likely to diagnose people of color with an appropriate diagnosis because of their race.



http://thisiswhitehistory.tumblr.com/po ... racism-the
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Mar 21, 2013 11:25 am

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“Aurat Ka Gana” //February 2013//by Khushboo Gulati

This is the internal process of a daughter born in the Desi diaspora re-imagining new visions for herself and for her community. She is a complex, multi-layered daughter, friend, sister, & female who carries her trauma with her but translates that ancestral fervor into reclaiming her roots, in a way that is fashioned to her diasporic experience. She is a foreigner in the East and a foreigner in the West. She looks for where her hybrid identity stands, how she expresses it, and here she pulls pieces of her Desi heritage onto her physical canvas— her body. She wears the flowers in her hair, a bindi, braids, her deep brown skin, jewelry from her land—the place her parents called home, and the colors she feels. Her body is a decolonial act of defiance to Western culture that seeks to assimilate her. This vision and act is for all, she wants her community to feel the same need to deconstruct self-hate that we have internalized growing up in the West.


http://kalisherni.tumblr.com/post/45883 ... y-khushboo
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Mar 21, 2013 5:18 pm



Solo le Pido a Dios

I only beg God
Not to make me indifferent to pain
May Death never find me
Empty and alone without having done enough.
I only beg God
Not to make me indifferent to injustice
That I may not have to turn the other cheek
When a claw has already scratched my fate
I only beg God
Not to make me indifferent to war
It's a giant monster which treads upon
All the poor innocence of the people
I only beg God
Not to make me indifferent to deceit
If one traitor is stronger than the rest of us
May the rest of us not take it lightly
I only beg God
Not to make me indifferent to the future
Helpless are the ones who are forced to leave
And live in a foreign land


SOLO LE PIDO A DIOS
words and music by Leon Gieco

(This song simply says)
I only ask of God He not let me be indifferent to the suffering

Solo le pido a Dios
Que el dolor no me sea indiferente
Que la reseca muerte no me encuentre
Vacio y solo sin haber echo lo suficiente

Solo le pido a Dios
Que lo injusto no me sea indiferente
Que no me abofeteen la otra mejia
Despues que una garra me arane esta frente

Chorus:
Solo le pido a Dios
Que la guerra no me sea indiferente
Es un monstro grande y pisa fuerte
Toda la pobre inocencia de la gente
Es un monstro grande y pisa fuerte
Toda la pobre inocencia de la gente

Solo le pido a Dios
Que el engano no me sea indiferente
Si un traidor puede mas que unos quantos
Que esos quantos no lo olviden facilmente

Solo le pido a Dios
Que el futuro no me sea indiferente
Deshauciado esta el que tiene que marchar
A vivir una cultura diferente
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Mar 21, 2013 11:34 pm

http://monthlyreview.org/2013/03/01/ghosts

POETRY

Ghosts

Marge Piercy


How often we navigate by what is no
longer there. Turn right where the post
office used to be. She lives in a condo
above where the bakery blew sweet
yeasty smells into the street. A nail
salon now.

Kelsey Hayes had a factory there
on Livernois where our neighbors
worked. A foundry spat out metal
where the strip club spits neon
now and loud skanky music
into the night.

Rows of little cheap houses replaced
by a few McMansions. Where did
all those people go? The workers
in factories, in tool and dye shops,
the shoemakers and tailors, mom
and pop eateries?

You can be plunked down in Anywhere
U.S.A. and see the same row of stores
Target, Walmart, Gap, Toys-R-Us.
Exit the superhighway: McDonalds,

Taco Bell, Burger King, Hardees,
you haven’t moved.

That’s where the school was: see,
it’s condos now. That’s the church
the parish closed to pay for priests’
sex. China got the shoe factory.
Urban renewal turned the old neighbor-
hood to dust.

Some things we make better and some
are destroyed by greed and bad
politics. We live in the wake
of decisions we didn’t share in,
survivors of a vast lethal typhoon
of power.



Marge Piercy is the author of eighteen poetry books, most recently The Hunger Moon: New & Selected Poems, 1980–2010 from Knopf. Her most recent novel is Sex Wars (Harper Perennial) and PM Press has republished Vida and Dance the Eagle to Sleep with new introductions.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Fri Mar 22, 2013 7:16 am

Def Poetry - Poetri - Money
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Fri Mar 22, 2013 10:43 am

"Unequal wages were justified by beliefs about virtue and entitlement. A living wage or a just wage for white men was higher than a living wage or a just wage for white women or for women and men from minority racial and ethnic groups. African-American women were at the bottom of the wage hierarchy.

The earnings advantage that white men have had throughout the history of modern capitalism was created partly by their organization to increase their wages and improve their working conditions. They also sought to protect their wages against the competition of others, women and men from subordinate groups. This advantage also suggests a white male coalition across class lines, based at least partly in beliefs about gender and race differences and beliefs about the superior skills of white men.

White masculine identity and self-respect were complexly involved in these divisions of labor between those groups, contributed to profit and flexibility, by helping to maintain growing occupational areas, such as clerical work, as segregated and low paid. Where women worked in manufacturing or food processing, gender visions of labor kept the often larger female work force in low-wage routine jobs, while males worked in other more highly paid, less routine positions. While white men might be paid more, capitalist organizations could benefit from this “gender/racial dividend.” This, by maintaining divisions, employers could pay less for certain levels of skill, responsibility, and experience when the worker was not a white male."


"Women from different racial and ethnic groups were incorporated differently than men and differently than each other into developing capitalism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

White Euro-American men moved from farms into factories or commercial, business, and administrative jobs. Women aspired to be housewives as the male breadwinner family became the ideal. Married white women, working class and middle class were housewives unless unemployment, low wages, or death of their husbands made their paid work necessary. Young white women with some secondary education moved into the expanding clerical jobs and into elementary school teaching when white men with sufficient education were unavailable.

African Americans, both women and men, continued to be confined to menial work, although some were becoming factory workers, and even teachers and professionals as Black schools and colleges were formed. Young women from first-and-second generation European immigrant families worked in factories and offices.

This is a very sketchy outline of a complex process, but the overall point is that the capitalist labor force in the United States emerged as deeply segregated horizontally by occupation and stratified vertically by positions of power and control on the basis of both gender and race."


"Masculinities are essential components of the ongoing male project, capitalism. While white men were and are the main publicly recognized actors in the history of capitalism, these are not just any white men. They have been, for example, aggressive entrepreneurs or strong leaders of industry and finance. Some have been oppositional actors, such as self-respecting and tough workers earning a family wage, and militant labor leaders. They have been particular men whose locations within gendered and racialized social relations and practices can be partially captured by the concept of masculinity.

‘Masculinity’ is a contested term. As Connell, Hearn, and others have pointed out, it should be pluralized as ‘masculinities’ because in any society at any one time there are several ways of being a man. ‘Being a man’ involves cultural images and practices. It always implies a contrast to an unidentified femininity.

Hegemonic masculinity can be defined as the taken-for-granted, generally accepted form, attributed to leader and other influential figures at particular historical times. Hegemonic masculinity may exist simultaneously, although they may share characteristics, as do the business leader and the sports star at the present time."


—Joan Acker, “Is Capitalism Gendered and Racialized?”
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sat Mar 23, 2013 9:35 am

Image
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