Posts Tagged: education


21
Jan 10

Home grown for the kids.

Open Minds Open Mouths cover

OMOM-sample pages

So I’ve gotten lazy with my bloggy lately cos I’ve been clicking, cropping, and Indesign-ing my evenings and weekends away.  Never mind my social life.

This is my baby of 3 weeks… it’s a booklet I designed for a film and webisode series called Open Minds Open Mouths.  The project documents the impact of Berkeley Unified School District’s Food Policy, which ensures that all BUSD students have daily access to organic, locally grown breakfasts and lunches.

In typical Berkeley fashion, the policy’s got its share of fans and haters. Which mostly makes me wonder what the people being most affected by the policy– kids of color and their families– have to say about all of this.  Anyway…  as someone who doesn’t know much about food policy, I ought to get schooled a bit, check out the doc when it becomes available, before adding yet another 2 cents to the chorus…


25
Nov 09

[Linkage] The weekend is here and its only Wednesday.

This video is TIGHT!  Makes me love Oakland (more than I already do, that is).  Lifted from Oakland Local, a community news source that is fast becoming one of my personal faves.

I HATE STUPID SHITS

As for the photo, I was coming across way too many of these to ignore it any longer!  See the ugly original (or don’t).  For more on dumb shits pretending to make art off of the backs tits of their superiors: here, here, and here.

The fight for public education in CA is heating up.  With strikes/occupations on campuses up and down the state– UCLA, CCSF, SF State, UCSC, UC Davis, CSU Fresno, Berkeley, and the UCOP office– plus a massive letter-writing campaign, statewide action planned for March 4, and a broad coalition of workers, students and faculty…. well, I’d be a little nervous if I was an administrator.  There is some hope in the world!

Did you know it could be easy (maybe even fun) to track policy and government spending? I sure didn’t, until I came across this listing of government transparency projects that work to make data accessible to us.

Radical queer activists team up to fight hate crime legislation. Yasmin Nair details the work against “enhanced sentencing” and asks: “Is jailing people for their prejudice really going to curtail bigotry and prejudice? Or will it just end up policing thought and filling the coffers of the prison industrial complex?”

There was an Asian American blogger convening in LA last weekend, and apparently it was packed with drama.  I feel sad that I missed out on the excitement… but in all seriousness, it sounds like a lot of good people interested in seeing change.  Gotta start somewhere.  Plus honesty goes a long way.

OH SHITS it’s a four-day weekend!!!!    For the occasion, words of wisdom shared by my sister-from-another-mother :)

“eta Thanksgiving nah, ora nesay” – it’s not Thanksgiving when they took everything.”


24
Nov 09

What’s nail polish got to do with climate change?

seed

Up until very recently, it’s unlikely that I would have put “reproductive justice,” “immigrant women,” and “climate change” in the same sentence.  I’m happy to report that this is no longer the case, thanks to the ladies at Asian Communities for Reproductive Justice (ACRJ) and cool folks at orgs. like Grind for the Green and the Ella Baker Center.

Last Saturday, I had the opportunity to attend the San Francisco Green Festival, a 3-day extravaganza of workshops, performances, and enough green products to make you shit green the rest of your life.  Not in a bad way.  Some notables include aquaponics (crazy urban gardening system) and granola bars made out of grass (uh… not so tasty).  I also met the venerable Amy Goodman for 5 seconds (an amazing 5 seconds it was!).  There we are below, gloating evilly while she’s looking a bit uncomfortable.

gloating with goodman

But back to the actual event.  Living in the Bay for almost 5 years now, I know I’m not the only one that can find the rhetoric typically surrounding the green movement to be really fucking obnoxious, hypocritical and snooty culturally alienating and economically unviable for most of the world not that convincing.  So it was great to hear from a perspective that connects the health of the environment with the dismantling of systemic inequality, specifically as it relates to nail salon workers in Oakland.

According to an ACRJ report, nail care is the fastest growing sector in the beauty industry.  It’s a critical job source for over 300,000 people in California, and approximately 80% of the nail salons here are owned and staffed by Vietnamese women.  Due to the largely unregulated chemicals in nail and cleaning products, manicurists and cosmetologists experience disproportionate rates of stomach cancer, spontaneous abortion, birth defects, reproductive problems, and asthma.  These same chemicals release greenhouse gases and contribute significantly to global warming.

Meanwhile, policy efforts often address climate change and worker health in isolation.  For example, the city of Santa Cruz recently adopted Green Business rules in order to regulate the types of products used in nail salons.  However, it set no minimum standards for working conditions or any regulations on the health and safety of workers.  This relates to growing stories about the shitty means and conditions under which we get our “green” products.   So the question becomes… will the green movement be a movement for equity and inclusion?  Or same old BS coming from an increasingly powerful, shrinking minority?

Luckily, there are some dedicated people working hard to make sure its the first.  Thanks to mobilized community action, Oakland has emerged as a leader in setting climate change goals.  Oakland City Council has unanimously approved the reduction of emissions to 36% below 2005 levels by 2020 and to 85% below 2005 levels by 2050.  It’ll take a lot of hard work in the years to come to make these goals into reality– but for now, major props to the people who pushed it that far.


17
Nov 09

Richard Aoki: the man behind the myth

solidarity

Last Thursday, I managed to drag my lazy ass all the way to Oakland in time to see the premiere of the documentary AOKI– based on the life and times of the late, great Richard Aoki.  He was, among other things, a third-generation Japanese American, a founding member of the Black Panther Party and the UC Berkeley Asian American Political Alliance, and an all-around bad ass with a disarmingly squeaky voice.  From his rearing in the WWII internment camps and West Oakland to his involvement with the BPP, AAPA, and the Third World Liberation Front, the man continues to be an iconic leader for students and organizers today.   Below is an excerpt from an interview with Kathleen Cleaver, on Richard’s role in the early years of the BPP.

All in all, though, the man Richard Aoki– as opposed to the icon– remains a bit elusive.   My favorite parts of the film were the rare moments in which the sunglasses came off (literally and figuratively) and we got a glimpse of the man behind the myth: what compels him, what holds him back, what keeps him going.  The parts where he described his childhood in the camps and his more recent struggle to align his physical capacity and age with the tireless radical within.

Other favorites include: interviews with Harvey Dong (so huggable), Bryant Fong (he looks like my dad), and Richard’s assessment of reform, which goes something like this: “if you take shit and mold it into a square, its still shit!”


29
Oct 09

The ugly face of headline news

sentenced
Richmond High School student is gang-raped outside of her Homecoming Dance.  When I first learned about this, my immediate suggestion was that everyone who participated and watched should be locked up in the worst possible conditions, preferably castrated first.

But if only it could be so simple.  The national media, smelling blood, is rolling in to the drumbeat of its condescending, caffeinated finger-pointing frenzy.  Yea, they only come out in droves to communities like Richmond when something really, really bad (aka “headline material”) happens.

We all want to see justice for this poor girl and her family.  There’s no excuse for beating and raping a 15 year old girl.  The guys who partook and watched are some sick individuals.  But I can’t help but feel increasingly uneasy with the discussion, which is sure to get more bloodthirsty as the days go on.  Especially as the ages of the suspects start rolling in– 19, 15, 16, 17.  The minors will be tried as adults and face potential life sentences.  The media has begun pawing about, as they usually do, for people to blame– school officials?  The parents?  Hip hop?  Stricter “policing” is already being instituted around the school–as if treating children like they are already in prison is the solution–and then the media will dust off their hands, scurry out of town and promptly forget about Richmond until something horribly “newsworthy” happens.  Hit-and-run journalism, how I hate you so.

NBC Bay Area has triumphantly pointed out that on-campus cameras were not working and that security guards were told to leave early.  The solution?  “The school board is now replacing the security system with a $1 million digital security system.”  Meanwhile, ABC and CNN are channeling the (legitimate) rage of students and staff toward school officials.  But isn’t it a bit funny that the media is so quick to implicate the easiest targets and never themselves?   Did they all zone out when students and staff lashed out against the press for being such vultures (which SJ Mercury News covered, ABC handily dismissed in one line and I’ve yet to see reported on anywhere else)?  From SJMN, Richmond High senior Norma Bautista says:  “We are not criminals…we are going to make a change. Everything they say about us — that we’re animals, that we’re not a community — we are a community. Why are they focusing on the negativity?”

She’s got a point.  Where’s the coverage for the amazing work that people–youth programmers, students, teachers, gang interventionists, community organizers, parents and so on–are doing every day?  How come the long-term solutions worked toward by people who know and care about Richmond don’t get the national coverage and support they deserve (but the catchy quick-fixes hysterically prescribed by the press do?) As James Meeks writes in the Chicago Tribune concerning Derrion Albert’s murder (which only happened 1 month ago but has been effectively wiped off of the national radar), “We like to point to irresponsible kids and uncaring parents. But what about a society that won’t lift a finger to do anything about the crumbling, disastrous school system that all of these kids, victims and violators, come from? …No one wants to be held accountable, but the blood of every child is on our hands.”

That includes the media, which has a lot of say in defining what the frameworks, problems and solutions will be.  So can we please get a little more investigation into the context and not just the graphic aftermath of this horrible crime?  This includes but is not limited to: the condemnation of rape but not of rape culture, the proliferation of California’s youth prisons at the expense of rehabilitation centers and public education, etc etc.  The headlines aren’t as punchy, the solutions probably cannot be captured in soundbites or in less than 500 words, and the villains are not always so clear…but in the long term, this might be more conducive to ending the cycle of violence than installing higher fences and more security cameras ever could.

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