Solidarity from New York to California, our banner made it to Los Angeles!

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Solidarity from New York to California, our banner made it to Los Angeles!
JOIN THE CAMPAIGN FOR A DAY OF EDUCATION AND EXHIBIT EVENT AT RIVERSIDE … AUGUST 10TH 1 TO 4 PM
Milk Not Jails just got word from organizers in California that their loved ones in prison saw our posters on the Today Show last week!
On Friday July 19th, 2013 we set out to Union square with our banner "New York in Solidarity with the California Prison Hunger Strike." We hoped to reach out to people on the street so that they might be informed and write a message of support, or take a photo with the banner to share with their friends so our messages would spread further and further. We wanted this banner to be a visual representation of support from the other side of the country which we are physically delivering to California this week. This way, those on strike and their loved ones could know just how far support for their strike extended. Of course New York is made up of people from all over. We spoke to supporters from all over the world, as local as Flatbush and as a far away as France and Lebanon. People approached us to show their support and send words of love to the strikers.
While out on the street one passerby asked, "What does solidarity mean to you?"
We believe amidst so many walls that divide us, through acts of love and solidarity, brothers and sisters of the world can be united. We hope that this banner and the journey that it took from plain white sheet to love letter, from New York to Los Angeles serves in part as a symbol of unity despite the divisive tactics prisons use against us. We hope it reaches those on strike as well as their family, friends, and loved ones.
To show those who are separated by force, isolated from us by walls and cages, fences, police, yards, hours, miles that in spite of the borders placed between us we are still one in struggle. May the hunger strikers and their families feel the love and support sent from across the country and the world.
by Kevin Quirolo
On July 7th, an enormous mobilization began. 30,000 people initiated one of the most powerful means of non-violent action, a hunger strike. Across the face of California, these men and women of conscience are protesting the psychological torture of 12,000 people held in solitary confinement in that state. You may not have noticed. That is because this mass-movement is being waged by inmates themselves.
The daily refusal of food continues invisibly beneath the humdrum screech of popular news, as if Market St of San Francisco was carpeted in a silent sit-in while traffic exploded with car alarms. But today, the 11th day without food, is also a day of celebration for survivors of solitary confinement and opponents of all systems of racial injustice: Nelson Mandela’s birthday. This man, who survived 27 years of prison, repeated solitary confinement and multiple hunger strikes, was released in 1990 to become his country’s president. His obstacles, struggle, and victory can help link the silent refusal in California, with the righteousness already blaring in our cities.
The acquittal of George Zimmerman has reignited protest across the nation, and revived memories of past injustices, Oscar Grant, Rodney King, and in particular Emmet Tilland the twisted rationality of lynching. The comparison with lynching is compelling: Ida B. Wells’s famous anti-lynching work counted 159 lynchings in 1893, 241 in 1892. Lynching was defended by the infamous ‘myth of the black rapist,’ even though the majority of lynchings were not instigated by charges of rape.[1] For our own times, arecent study counted 313 extrajudicial shootings in 2012, 51% of which were justified because the officer felt threatened or the victim fled.
But another comparison is possible. In an interview yesterday, Michelle Alexander pointed out that “[...] what George Zimmerman did is no different than what police officers do everyday as a matter of standard operating procedure.” The procedure she refers to is a combination of policing tactics, legal police discretion, and latent racial bias which cause massive racial disproportions in stops, arrests and charges.[2] In combination with racial bias in the judiciary, profiling like Zimmerman’s leads the U.S. to imprison “a larger percentage of its black population than South Africa did at the height of apartheid.”[3] The current system of racial injustice is neither the Old Jim Crow nor South African apartheid, but both are fair comparisons.
South African police shot and killed 211 people in 1983, 199 in 1982. most of whom were black. Apartheid law gave broad discretion in the use of lethal force, sanctioning its use to stop a fleeing suspect, or on a reasonable suspicion of committing a crime. Unlike American lynch mobs, the South African police force was nearly half racial minorities, more diverse than the U.S. police force in 2007.[4] The U.S. in 2012 is not 1980s South Africa, nor 1890s U.S., nor even 1980s U.S. for that matter. But for everyone fighting yesterdays injustice for a just today, we cannot miss opportunities for comparison. Despite obvious differences these three systems are bound together by an indifferent acceptance of racial ideology: the black rapist, the threat to securing Apartheid, and the criminalblackman.
We cannot afford indifference to torture of people labeled gang members. We cannot afford to be blind to the hunger strike which continues as Gov. Jerry Brown goes on vacation. We must take action against the torture of solitary confinement locally to break through the national white-noise.
Thank you to everyone at Milk Not Jails for helping inspire this entry.
ICE CREAM FAIRY | 1922 Unidentified African American girl eating Ice cream in the Winter, 1922
Black History Album, The Way We Were Follow us on WEB TUMBLR PINTEREST FACEBOOK TWITTER.
Friday, July 12, 2013 Dear New York City, As pride month ends we want to remember and mourn the recent waves of hate violence and police violence across New York City, from the West Village to the 79th precinct in Bed Stuy, Brooklyn. With history as a guide, we expect hate violence against our...
endnewjimcrow:
Milk not jails & the campaign to end the new Jim Crow together !!!
Yesterday at solidarity rally in Times Square
classic
Meet Mooolissa! She's part of the Moovement and thinks you should join too!
Filmed June 30, 2013, 3pm. A Milk Not Jails ice cream social get together held at MoMA Studio in the educational and research building at 4 W. 54th St. Lauren Melodia gives a presentation on Milk Not Jails campaign to create economic, and political alternatives to mass incarceration hopefully leading to the end of new york state's prison industrial complex.
Milk Not Jails: An Introduction
This morning members of Milk Not Jails dressed in our Monday best and skipped down to the Today Show to publicize the hunger strike in California State Prisons and demonstrate our solidarity. So, like most Midwesterners, we brought in some signs. One read, "Solitary Confinement is Torture" and the other, pictured above, "Torture in California Prisons??? Support the Hunger Strikers!" Both signs successfully made it on to the show at some point. The 1st sign was shown during a panning of the audience and we haven't been able to find a screen shot of that one just yet. But shortly after the sign appeared a bald man and his security cop troop told us that the signs were not allowed, that they did not allow "political signs" on the show. Besides the fact that it's a "news" outlet where "politics" are often alleged to be discussed. Nevertheless, it was a great morning and we hope that the signs caught the eye of friends/family/loved ones of those involved in the strike or affected by this crooked prison system and they were able to smile to see even a split second of their reality validated today on the Today Show. Thanks to everyone who came out this morning and to all the people doing this very important work. We are endlessly inspired by the movement and hope that we can continue to do our part in bringing light to these issues and support for those impacted. Today is not the end, next stop, the Tomorrow Show!