…………..that I’m not going to be able to see “The Sarah Jane Adventures” until—well, until it’s online illegally. 🙂
I am real glad that “Doctor Who” is sticking around, whether I have to wait for Sci-Fi (or BBC America) or not. 🙂
…………..that I’m not going to be able to see “The Sarah Jane Adventures” until—well, until it’s online illegally. 🙂
I am real glad that “Doctor Who” is sticking around, whether I have to wait for Sci-Fi (or BBC America) or not. 🙂
……”Read A Book.”
Um……Damn. I don’t know whether I should congratulate it or attack it.
Here’s the story behind it.
 
Got this from my friend and mentor Don Rojas as we observe the Katrina anniversary.
NEW WEBSITE CALLS FOR EQUITY AND INCLUSION IN THE GULF COAST
On the occasion of the 2nd anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s devastation of communities in the Gulf Coast region, the Louisiana Disaster Recovery Foundation (LDRF) in collaboration with many partners has launched a new Web site ( www.equityandinclusion.org ) to focus regional and national attention on the continuing plight of grassroots organizations working on behalf of those displaced and impacted by hurricanes Katrina and Rita in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Texas.
With Gulf Coast community news, blogs, podcasts, commentaries and calendars of events, the site aims to be a focal point on the Web for community organizations and coalitions to engage each other and collaborate in an ongoing campaign to adequately inform the nation and lift the public’s awareness. Â
“Two years after Katrina, hundreds of thousands of poor and marginalized people are still shut out of the recovery and rebuilding of the region,” said Ashley Shelton, interim Chief Operating Officer at LDRF.
The site will also promote consistent advocacy at both the Federal and State levels and will demand of all the candidates who are seeking to be the next president of the United States to make an equitable, just and fair Gulf Coast recovery a top priority in their campaign planks.
As the Equity & Inclusion campaign site grows and expands, there are plans to publish Web content not only in English but in Spanish and Vietnamese as well, thus reflecting the three main languages spoken in the communities that were hardest hit by the storm.
The campaign’s Web site content will inform the general public about Gulf Coast realities with sound evidence, scientific data and credible research, all of which would come together to make the argument that the recovery, to date, has not been equitable, has not been balanced, has not been inclusive, has not been fair.
“The poor and the powerless have been left out of the recovery because racism and classism have been prevalent in the decision-making process”, said Don Rojas, creator of the E&I campaign’s site. “The job of this campaign is to expose these injustices and imbalances and to mobilize broad public pressure on the political leadership in Washington and also in the State capitols.”
Rojas added that close to a million people of good will from all across the United States and from as far away as Japan and Europe have traveled to Coastal communities over the last two years to volunteer selflessly their time, energy and money in the rebuilding process.
“We are all grateful and appreciative of their generosity. But when they return to their homes they go back to a reality of relative isolation, deprived of a steady flow of information about the ups and downs of Gulf Coast rebuilding. Their empathy for the plight of those in this region who are being shut out of the recovery process will wane and dissipate if we do not keep them engaged and informed, if we do not call on them to organize in their own communities and to pressure their Congressional representatives to deliver on their promises to make the Gulf Coast region whole again. This will be one of the main objectives of the campaign and the site.”
“And then, of course, there is the “Katrina Diaspora,” the tens of thousands of displaced Gulf Coast residents who are living across the 48 contiguous states of the US, most of whom want to return to their homes and communities and to a bright and secure future,” added Shelton.
“Their right to return is a basic human right, a basic constitutional right that this campaign must advocate for consistently and vigorously. Like the volunteers, people in the Katrina Diaspora are also starving for up-to-date information and analysis on the recovery. They have an invaluable role to play in mobilizing public support and this campaign should place a high priority on reaching out to them and keeping them engaged,” she said.
The new site ( www.equityandinclusion.org ) is powered by PromoSuite Interactive.
Contact: Don Rojas
Tel: 443-834-9693 Email: donrojas30@gmail.com

Just got the following email from Hans Bennett.
Hello Everyone,
I just got off the phone (this Wed. evening) with Walidah Imarisha, a
Philadelphia journalist/activist who is there in Texas where Kenneth Foster Jr. is set to be executed tomorrow. She told me that the Board of Pardons and Parole has put off the decision regarding Kenneth until tomorrow.It was set to respond to the appeal today, where 5 out of the 7 members have to recommend pardon, and then Governor Rick Perry has to approve it. If the
Board denies a pardon, Perry has the power to grant a 30-day stay.Imarisha reports that supporters of Kenneth in Texas are not quite “optimistic,” but are hoping for the best because this delay of decision means that they have been extensively talking about it and are therefore taking a long time to decide.
Imarisha will call me tomorow as soon as there is anything new, and I will keep you posted.
Hoping for the best,
Hans Bennett
Abu-Jamal-News.com
Call or fax:
Those who cannot attend these are encouraged to continue faxing and calling:
Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles:
Phone (512) 406-5852
Fax (512) 467-0945Gov. Rick Perry:
Phone (512) 463-1782
Fax (512) 463-1849Protests
Wednesday, August 29
1:00 pm to 4pm: Gather outside the Polunsky Unit in Livingston TX for a
demonstration against the deplorable, torturous conditions of the Polunsky Unit and against the double executions of John Amador, scheduled for August 29, and Kenneth Foster, set for August 30.
Polunsky Unit: 3825 FM 350 South, Livingston Texas 773514pm-7pm: Protest the execution of John Amador outside the Ellis Unit.
Huntsville Unit: 815 12th Street Huntsville Texas 77340Austin, Wednesday, August 29, 5:00 PM, Governor’s Mansion (Lavaca at 11th) RALLY AND PRESS CONFERENCE FOR KENNETH FOSTER, RESPONDING TO BOARD OF PARDONS AND PAROLES’ RECOMMENDATION TO GOVERNOR PERRY AND IN OPPOSITION TO
THE EXECUTION OF JOSEPH AMODOUR AT 6PM.Austin, Thursday, August 30, 5:00 PM, Governor’s Mansion (Lavaca at 11th) EXECUTION PROTEST AND VIGIL Even in the eleventh hour things could turn for Kenneth. If you can’t make it to Huntsville, come out to stand with others against the execution.
Thursday, August 30:
3pm-7pm: Protest the execution of Kenneth Foster Jr outside the Ellis Unit in Huntsville Texas. Groups from all over the state will converge to stand against this injustice and demand until the very end that the State of Texas do the right thing and stop this execution.THIS CAMPAIGN BADLY NEEDS DONATIONS: Send donations to:
Velocity Credit Union, P.O. Box 1089, Austin, Texas 78767
Account name: To Save Kenneth
FosterAccount number: 831766.1
 
The following hit all the marks.Â
I’m certain you know about Dr. Pipher’s public stand.
AMY GOODMAN: Mary Pipher, clinical psychologist and acclaimed author. I asked her to talk about her latest book, Writing to Change the World.
MARY PIPHER: You know, how Pete Seeger always said about music: it isn’t whether or not it’s good, it’s what it’s good for. And I didn’t come at writing as an academic or as a poet or a creative writer. I came at writing as a social activist, and I want every one of my books to have a very powerful effect in changing the culture. And so, I have spent a lot of time figuring out how to do it. And the way to do it is have a deeply personal voice, my own authentic voice that comes from deep within myself, and my writing and speaking voice are virtually identical. And then, the other way to do it is through stories, because you can’t argue with a story. You know, people can argue with you if you stand up and say what you believe or don’t believe, but if you tell them a story and tell them a story that opens their heart, they will change. So that’s what the book is about, is writing in a way that we can effect change.
And I talk about this idea that the point of my kind of writing is to empower the powerless, to give voice to people who have no voice, but also to educate readers in what I call the moral imagination. And that is the ability to understand the world from other people’s points of view. And that’s an extremely big problem in America right now, is people don’t have much moral imagination, so that when they talk about, say, “illegal aliens,” they don’t have a story, they don’t have a face, they don’t have a picture of a real person. They have almost no empathy with the person they’re talking about.
I remember when Sensenbrenner was talking about gaming the asylum system and how we had to go after those terrorists gaming the asylum system. At that point I had just happened to have been back to Bellevue in New York City to visit their unit for victims of torture. The people on that unit that were seeking asylum were Buddhist monks from Tibet. And I just thought, “Man, Sensenbrenner hasn’t been here. You know, he hasn’t been to Center for Victims of Torture in Minneapolis.”
And so, the job of the change writer, from my point of view, is to say I respect you as a reader, and I know if I tell you the truth, as I see it, having spent some time listening to people and asking them — you know, Simone Weil had that question, “What is your experience?”– asking people, “What is your experience?” which I did when I wrote Middle of Everywhere, my book on refugees. I spent three years asking people that. And it greatly enhanced my own moral imagination to listen to all those stories. You also have a good job for enhancing your moral imagination. But that’s the job of the writer: to help other people’s moral imagination grow, basically.

The above—a Fantastic Four briefly led by T’Challa, with significant backup from Storm—was probably the only good thing to come out of Marvel Comics’ Civil War.
***
BLACK PANTHER 24-29
WRITER: Reginald Hudlin
PENCILLERS: Marcus To and Koi Turbull (24); To (25); Francis Portela (26-27; pencils and inks on 28-29);
INKERS: Don Ho, Jeff de los Santos (24-25), Sal Regla and Nick Nix (24); Victor Olazaba (26-27)
PLOT: The Civil War continues in 24 and 25. In the aftermath, King T’Challa and Queen Storm find a special crib in which to crash, and an important task. Then a refurbished Foursome meet the Marvel Zombies…….
FANTASTIC FOUR 544-548
WRITER: Dwayne McDuffie
PENCILLER: Paul Pelletier
INKER: Rick Magyar
PLOT: The “new” Fantastic Four go up against The Silver Surfer and The Frightful Four.
VERDICTS: As far as Hudlin’s BLACK PANTHER goes, I eagerly await his NEXT storyline—which, hopefully, will be in Wakanda. The Civil War crossover issues try their best to solidify the Panther-Storm relationship, but nothing else happens, except a couple of sub-plots. Continuity again takes a walk, even from less than five years ago: Panther and Falcon talk about upgrading Falcon’s wings, when Panther ALREADY DID THAT in the pages of CAPTAIN AMERICA AND THE FALCON. The Marvel Zombie storyline is not even worth discussing.
McDuffie had me cheering through his episodes of “Justice League Unlimited,” so I’m happy to report that his Fantastic Four is quite solid, albeit surface-level. Add Pelletier’s lovely art, and you’ve got a more-than-decent read.
Fanboys pitched a fit when T’Challa—who, in McDuffie’s book, at least, was a little more like the character Priest envisioned—was able to arm-lock Ol’ Chrome Dome. I guess they forgot when Stan Lee had Spider-Man do pretty much the same thing back in the day. Meanwhile, I got a little tired of seeing Sue captured for the 400th time and watching The Frightful Four try to get it together yet AGAIN, but the stories were entertaining, and I guess that’s the (only) point in 2007, right?
AUGUST 29th UPDATE (BLACK PANTHER 30 and FANTASTIC FOUR 549): Hudlin’s dialogue is still uneven, 30 issues into his BP run. *SIGH*.
McDuffie putting in Sue’s mouth the words “I. AM NOT. A HOSTAGE,” and her subsequent taking DOWN of three of the Frightful Four/Five by her damn self, was worth the price of the mag alone. 🙂 Again, if the goal is fun, the brothers are trying their best.
…………….that EVERYBODY has, or have had, crises of faith.
