Author Archives: mbgomez

Stopping the Plague of Violence: Anti-Blackness

It’s been more than 5 years, since Baltimore’s Uprisings in April 2015 following the death of the young Black 25-year old Freddie Gray while in police custody, after being given a ‘rough ride’ by the arresting officers. There has been other deaths and injuries following excessive use of force during police engagement with Black bodies since. George Floyd, whose neck was knelt on by a white police officer in Minneapolis for 9 minutes, is the recent victim of this history of anti-Blackness-this plague of violence.

Like a plague, anti-Black violence is caused by many and affects many. It is a scourge, a disease, an infliction, an infestation, a swarm, a blight, a curse, a persecution. It is perpetuated through contact, between people. The structures in place which make sanity of this violence and make meaning for the people carrying out their ideologies, polices, and dictates have been entrenched for some 400 years in the United States of America. The violence against Blackness lives in the history and legacy of enslavement, land stealing, displacement, segregation, uneven development, under-resourced school, housing, health, transportation, recreation and employment structures and systems. The system of law enforcement, where weapons are used to enforce these ideologies, policies, and dictates takes an especially outward display of violence; like the video image of a white police officer with his knee on the neck of Mr. Floyd even after he gasped he couldn’t breathe and stopped moving.

To stop the persecution we require systems and structures to change so that the people who uphold and enforce them are not infected with anti-Blackness and racism. The police officers who perpetuate violence must be quarantined. This includes methods to stop and rehabilitate them and so as to not continue the pattern of ignoring and accepting of this curse of anti-Black violence that have been encouraged generationally over the years. This process must occur not just in Law Enforcement; it must occur in every system that upholds the structures and directs the behaviors of the people who take meaning and shape their lives and legacies from them.  

The nation is experiencing uprisings across the cities since Mr. Floyd’s death. Lawful citizens are demanding justice. Lawful citizens are responding to generational and historic trauma. We know that this recent killing of a Black man in custody of the police has dropped deep into our minds and bodies: our hearts are broken open. Love is demanded in these times, to heal and make upright what has been upside down. Love in action is needed that is bold enough to address the history and evidence of wrong, and make it right publicly: justice.

This is an opportunity for this nation to respond with compassion and power. Our compassion must acknowledge this history of violence against Black people as an infestation coming from the foundation of the country. Our compassion must be powerful enough to silence and remove the current president of this country who continues to uphold the system and structure of racial and social violence. This president’s behavior is not loving and continues to break open our hearts. His demonization of Black protestors after the murder of Mr. Floyd and embrace of white protestors storming a state house with assault weapons -to demand reopening of the economy during a viral pandemic-  cannot be ignored and accepted. These outright examples of racial violence cannot be tolerated because it stokes the beliefs, perceptions, and actions of people: like the white police officers in Minneapolis who collectively murdered Mr. Floyd; the police officers in Louisville who collectively murdered Breonna Jones; the white woman in New York who called the police because a Black man told her to leash her dog; the white father and son in Glynn Country, Georgia who felt it was okay to kill a young Black man-Aubrey Ahman– jogging in their neighborhood. All this anti-Black violence occurred in the last 3 months. We need a leader of the United States who does not breed white supremacist hatred through his pores with every breath and stoke an already burning fire of violence against marginalized groups.

The systems and structures must change, at all levels of government, nationally and locally, propped up by all rich and powerful private interests, enforced by all people who participate in carrying out their dictates, simply by accepting and not questioning. We cannot individually and collectively turn our heads and look the other way anymore. We cannot wait until we buy the house, send the kids to college, get that right job, before we act.

We do not need heroes. We need collectives of people from all locations, coming together, affirming the truth, acting from understanding, organizing and demanding justice, now.  Out of this, a more honest nation that acknowledges its racist history and legacy and plans, implements, and evaluates changes can emerge.

It seems we have been waiting with patience. We can’t wait anymore. We must courageously act with love to stop this foundational affliction of violence and anti-Blackness, so we can all be safe.

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GO FUND ME campaigns:

Aubrey Ahmad

https://www.gofundme.com/f/ahmad-aubrey039s-new-autopsy?utm_source=customer&utm_medium=copy_link&utm_campaign=m_pd+share-sheet

George Floyd

https://www.gofundme.com/f/georgefloyd

https://www.thecut.com/2020/05/george-floyd-protests-how-to-help-where-to-donate.html

RESOURCES:

COVID19- A path to Basic Guaranteed Income

The United States of America needs a Basic Income Guaranteed, not just now during the pandemic, but moving forward. It’s been time.

https://therealnews.com/stories/reverse-shock-doctrine-spain-moves-towards-permanent-basic-income?fbclid=IwAR0jC8QIPHT55HYcm2YgzwFCzQLPoPCJL97bk4QZ6vIffOuI9zZtIpXO_W4

Judgement-free Basic Income Guaranteed: The facts

How would a guaranteed annual income work?

“It would work the same way the Guaranteed Income Supplement works for seniors. Now, it’s based on your income. If you’re beneath a certain level you get topped up automatically. People would get a cheque or an automatic deposit to their account on a monthly basis if they’re beneath the poverty line and need to be topped up.

It means you get topped up between what your income may be now — could be zero, could be $600 a month — to about $1,300 or $1,400 a month which would get you to about 75 per cent of the poverty rate. But unlike welfare it would encourage people to work. And if you did work, you could keep a large part of what you earned. It wouldn’t be clawed back, as it is in all of the provincial welfare systems across the country now. 

Let’s be clear — provincial welfare systems, however well-intentioned and supported by good-hearted and committed public servants, don’t pay more than 40 or 50 per cent of the poverty rate anywhere in Canada. So it doesn’t lift anybody out of poverty. It actually traps people in poverty because if they try to work — or earn a couple of hundred bucks a month — that all gets clawed back, dollar for dollar. Conrad Black doesn’t pay dollar for dollar on his highest level of income. Why would we ask our lowest income Canadians to be paying tax at that level?”*

*Excerpt from talk about Canadian’s struggle for Basic Income Guaranteed

https://www.cbc.ca/radio/thesundayedition/the-sunday-edition-for-march-29-2020-1.5509908/amidst-a-global-pandemic-hugh-segal-s-call-for-a-guaranteed-annual-income-is-even-more-timely-1.5509938

The pandemic: a path toward rebuilding our communities through heart opening action

The collective consciousness of the world is focused in one direction: the pandemic. In and out of the mind thoughts of its effect haunt us: what personal consequences? what systematic consequences? how long? they all roll around vying for our attention and trying to emotionally control our mind. Once we manage these looping thoughts, with awareness that we still have control of this mind, where do we focus our mind?

On a walk outside yesterday I noticed the birds coming closer. I wondered why? Could it be that nature senses our collective fear of the the pandemic, and moves in to comfort us? Or perhaps us US Americans are actually releasing some of the space we take up, developing some humility away from our collective imperialism and exceptionalism? Animals sense our humility. Perhaps this is the first time where the United States acknowledges it has no control. During the past devastating pandemic in the 1800s, the power of the US was not as large and global as it is today. Today, with all the power it wields across the globe, it is and was unprepared for the wrought of a pandemic: an inadequate administration, insufficient public health infrastructure due to individualistic health values and profit over people, a historic underprivileged population of Black, Indigenous and people of color with health disparities more vulnerable to illness and death, low income workers with no collective benefits of health care, paid time off, or vacation time, and a racial capitalist economy that systematically places profit over people: people with white-skinned privilege and power.

Maybe we reflect on how we rebuild today and tomorrow? Are we going to continue along this same path that brought us to this catastrophic place today: a pandemic fueled by big corporations’ greed to destroy our delicate ecosystem and the poor who become caught up in making ends meet in an unjust system; the corrupt governments that are controlled by greed and individualism.

The pandemic broke open the existing cracks, exposing what many of us have been historically experiencing: a racial capitalist system that exploits the vulnerable with no checks and balances. The data showing African Americans and people of color disproportionately being affected by the virus, service workers being kept on the job even if they report symptoms, inadequate protective equipment for all essential workers, incarcerated populations inadequately attended to, etc, etc can wake up the political powerful to act. The action toward change will require not just a verbal acknowledgment of the existing injustices, it will require a heart opening that is prolonged, hurts like it’s our loved ones on all the front lines and dying from this system of inequity and exploitation. Something similar to the heart opening that occurred when US Americans viewed Black children being hosed by firefighters and attacked by police dogs. The white population moved the political leadership into action; some were moved by the heart knowing that the degraded humanity they saw on television was not the humanity they could claim for themselves and their children.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggUt0gJh9U8

This led to action by the political elite that could be implemented only because there was an ongoing Civil Rights Movement enduring the ravages-death- of / by / for a racist America. Today, as we reel from the horror of the inequity in the way this pandemic is disproportionately affecting our most vulnerable and under-resourced populations again, are we waking up? And what will we do now, now that we are woke? Can the image of mass graves being dug in New York break our hearts open again and lean us into questioning how our humanity contributed to this type of massive death of people with no one to claim their bodies?

During these times we cannot physically mobilize. We can virtually organize and mobilize, through webinars and phone calls and petitions, and commentary, op eds and social media. These remain powerful tools…will they be sufficient to affect the heart consciousness of US Americans? Sufficient so that political leadership is moved to act to dismantle the inequitable economic system that consistently under-resources communities of Black and of color, service workers, low income and homeless, and wrongfully arrests Black and brown bodies to warehouse away from the fear of white Americans?

We can live in faith that justice will reign down. And while we breathe and stay grounded so we see clearly and make wise choices, we can roll up our sleeves and collect names to send to our local, state, and federal political representatives, with specific ways we want them to shift systems of economic, social, spiritual, and emotional oppression. We can organize and organize. We can call and send emails; we can share on social media. We can start a petition or donate to the many funds that are serving those impacted by COVID19-and those who have been serving our vulnerable communities before COVID19. Every state and local jurisdiction can be demanding compassionate care for the incarcerated, for the homeless, appropriate protective equipment for essential workers and other frontline workers, that a basic minimum income should continue forward, not only during the pandemic. Living wages in every state should be passed, tuition forgiveness for college debt more than 10 years, health care for all, funding for an effective public health infrastructure, immigrant camps dismantled, more affordable and less luxury housing development, low-income landownership, participatory democracy, resourced public education. This list is not comprehensive. Find something that you can stand up for, let the energy of renewal fuel you into action, and keep standing after the pandemic has passed.

This is the time for each of us to take responsibility for how we come out on the other side of the pandemic. Will we continue on as before? Or will we rise up together and act collectively for justice. To do nothing is to show no respect for the thousands of people who have lost their lives to this man-made pandemic, fueled by greed and corruption, and consumption. How will you act in your sister’s and brother’s name?

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Ways to support those impacted by COVID19

Petition to keep workers with symptoms safe at home, sign by April 13 2020:

Donate to residents in Public housing in Baltimore City:

Funds for supporting Incarcerated impacted by COVID19

Baltimore Black-led Solidarity Fund

To be part of rebuilding our neighborhoods tomorrow: We must stay at home today [if we can]

4 out of 5 people who get the COVID19 virus are infected by someone who do not have symptoms.

How many lives are you saving by staying at home?
https://bniajfi.org/2020/04/06/you-saved-378-lives-last-week/

Practice physical distancing,

Wash your hands for 20 seconds with soap,

Don’t touch your face, nose, mouth,

Wear a mask outside.

Be patient with yourself and others.

Support allies across the country engaged in organizing for equity: before, during, and after the pandemic.

Agricultural workers are suffering disproportionately with little protections.

Restaurant workers, tip and service workers have been laid off and not receiving adequate protections for their work.

Participate in how inclusive the bail out will be. Join the discussion to ensure health benefits and investment in a more equitable now and future.

Join the movement to assure everyone has a right to housing, locally and globally.

Help support ACLU protect the health of those detained.

If you can afford it, donate!