Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Nigguh family mess: Dr. King's children fight over his archives

You can't bury the N word when you still acting like nigguhs!--Dr. Cornel West

Dr. Bernice King’s Bombshell Charge: Brothers Want to Sell MLK’s Nobel Peace Prize

berniceking





Luther King Jr.’s sons now calling on their sister, Dr. Bernice King to hand over her father’s Nobel Peace Prize, as well as other prized possessions. In an open letter, Dr. Bernice King responded to her brother’s legal demand.
In the letter, Dr. Bernice King writes, “my brothers, Dexter Scott King andMartin Luther King, III, notified me that they want to sell to a private buyer our father’s most prized possessions, his Nobel Peace Prize Medal and his personal Bible which was used by President Barak Obama as he was sworn in for his second term in office and subsequently signed by him.”
Dr. Bernice King expressed her belief that her father’s belongings are too important to history to be sold to the highest bidder.
“I am absolutely opposed to the selling of these extremely sacred items and I expressed my opposition to my brothers,” she writes.
She then goes on to allege that her refusal to turn over these items is what led to the legal battle between she and her brothers.
“After I refused to immediately transfer these items to another location at their request, consequently on January 31 my brothers through The Estate of Martin L. King, Jr., Inc filed a lawsuit {Civil Action No. 2014cv241929} to force me to turn these items over for the express purpose of selling them. In my opinion, there is no justification for selling either of these sacred items.”
Dr. Bernice King admits that this public spectacle is “embarrassing,” adding that their father “must be turning over in his grave.”
The Georgia based minister also points to scripture to highlight why the “thought of profiting from the sale of the Peace Prize Medal is …..outright morally reprehensible.”

Poor offenders hounded over debts by private probation companies


Probation companies hound poor offenders over debts

by   February 5, 2014 12:15AM ET
Human Rights Watch says private contractors levy fees, threaten arrest for non-payment
Topics:
 
Human Rights
 
Prison
 
Poverty
prison
Private probation companies charge fees that can accumulate when poor offenders are unable to pay, meaning that the poorest offenders convicted of misdemeanors end up paying greater fines than those with some resources.
Andrew Lichtenstein for Al Jazeera America
Firms contracted by U.S. courts to handle probation for misdemeanors are saddling the poor with high fees and hounding them like debt collectors, even arresting them or threatening to until they pay, according to a damning report released Wednesday.
While private companies save the courts money by charging taxpayers nothing and have been used for decades, they can make it harder for poor offenders to get back on their feet, according to the Human Rights Watch (HRW) study. In one case, a man resorted to selling his own blood to pay off charges relating to a fine for stealing a solitary can of beer, according to the report.
The study found that many courts leave the assessment of whether an offender is able to pay up to the private probation company, some of which leverage the threat of jail time to extract fees.
This is despite a 1983 U.S. Supreme Court ruling which stated that offenders on probation cannot be jailed for failing to pay a criminal fine if they cannot afford to do so.
“Probation companies have a financial stake in every single one of the cases they supervise,” said Chris Albin-Lackey, senior researcher on business and human rights at HRW. “Their employees are the last people who should be entrusted with determining whether an offender can afford to pay company fees.”
Courts hire for-profit companies to supervise probation for low-level offenders because they do it at no cost to U.S. taxpayers. Rather than charge the courts, the probation companies make their money by asking the court to approve certain fees to be collected directly from the offenders, as a condition of probation.
Criminal courts are often under financial pressure to fund all their own operations with fees and fines from offenders.
Studying for-profit probation companies that work with more than 1,000 courts in Georgia, Mississippi, and Alabama – which together sentence several hundred thousand misdemeanor offenders to probation each year – the rights group observed a discriminatory trend that disproportionately impacts poorer offenders.
“Many of the people supervised by these companies wouldn’t be on probation to begin with if they had more money,” Albin-Lackey said.
“Often, the poorer people are, the more they ultimately pay in company fees and the more likely it is that they will wind up behind bars.”
The companies do not disclose the amount they collect in fees, but HRW estimates that in Georgia alone, the industry collects at least $40 million each year.
And the offender-funded profit model is often disproportionately burdensome to the poorest probates, who often resort to crime in the first place due to dire financial straits.
As with any condition of probation, a violation can also land the offender in jail. 
“Right now, I’m struggling. That little money I got, before I get it it’s gone,” one probationer with Sentinel Offender Services in Georgia told HRW.
Sentinel Offender Services is described in the HRW report as one of the “major players” in the private probation industry. 
The report also mentions that a number of former probationers have accused Sentinel, which has its headquarters in California and operates extensively in Georgia, of refusing to accommodate their inability to pay hundreds and in some cases thousands of dollars in company fees. 
In fact, the report states, “probationers allege that company employees instead squeezed them as hard as they could for as much as they could get before turning to the courts to secure their arrest when they stopped paying.”
For its part, Sentinel spokeswoman Ann Marie Dryden told Al Jazeera in a statement that “some of the circumstances highlighted (in the HRW report) focused solely on the financial aspect of probation and failed to recognize other non-financial conditions that were present,” without elaborating further.
Sentinel went on to say that it was committed to looking at ways to “professionalize the industry, create accountability, and focus on best practices promoting success of the offender and an overall reduction in recidivism.”
“We believe many of the recommended changes outlined in this report would be beneficial to the industry and supported by Sentinel,” the statement read.
A Harpersville, Alabama judge accused the municipal court system and the private probation company operating as its partner of running a “judicially sanctioned extortion racket,” HRW reported.
“They are misusing the court system to collect their fee. They are using us as judges. I think they are after a fee and that’s it,” Justice Court judge James Straight, of Cleveland Mississippi, told HRW.
One particularly egregious case cited in the HRW report involved a man who pled guilty to shoplifting a $2 can of beer and was fined $200 – initially. Fees and failures to make payments spiked the probation company’s charge to more than $1,000 over time. The man was destitute, and selling his own blood plasma twice a week to get by, according to the report.
A private probation officer in Georgia told HRW that she routinely had offenders arrested for failing to pay their fines so that she could extract money from their families.
“Everyone wants their fees waived but that’s what pays my bills. That’s what puts food on the table. That’s what keeps my light on,” she said.
Lisa Hancock of AD Probation Services told HRW that responsibility for payment of the criminal fine and all the extra fees added by her company falls squarely on the shoulders of the offender.
“It’s not our fault they’re indigent and owe hundreds of dollars due to court and probation fees. It’s not the court’s fault … It is the offender’s fault. I don’t care whether they’re rich or whether they’re poor, they have the right to decide whether to commit that crime or not,” she said.
AD Probation Services, which operates in Georgia, referred Al Jazeera’s request for further comment to a spokeswoman with the Private Probation Association of Georgia, who could not immediately be reached.
HRW’s Albin-Lackey told Al Jazeera that new probationers were instructed by several of these companies not to seek assistance from the courts themselves – they would not be able to help with probation-related questions.
When asked why the public were not more aware of the private probation industry, Albin-Lackey said it reflected “the fact that all this stuff takes place in the bottom rungs of the criminal justice system."
"There’s not a lot of public awareness about what goes on in that level of the system in general," he said.

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Marvin X: the Human Earthquake rocks NYU tribute to poets Jayne Cortez and Amiri Baraka



 New Yorkers turned out tonight at the NYU tribute to ancestor poets Jayne Cortez and Amiri Baraka. A second room was opened after the first filled to capacity to hear poetic tributes to fire spitter Jayne Cortez and the legendary chief architect of the Black Arts Movement, Amiri Baraka, aka LeRoi Jones. They were praised as poets and revolutionary activists.

Askia Toure

Poets who read included Sandra Maria Esteves, Askia Toure, Felipe Luciano, Haki R. Madhubuti, Arthur Pfister, Quincy Troupe, Ted Wilson, Ras Baraka, Linton Kwesi Johnson (all the way from London) and Marvin X. Marvin X, accompanied by bassist Henry Grimes, read poems praising both Amiri and Amina Baraka. The audience was shocked to hear his rendition of Mrs. Baraka's speech rhythms and acid truths. Many in the audience were shocked simply because they had  read the poet's works over the decades but never heard him in a live reading. Felipe Luciano was amazed to hear him accompanied by bassist Henry Grimes who performed with Amiri Baraka since the 60s.


Marvin X and bassist Henry Grimes
photo Joyce Jones


Amiri Baraka and Henry Grimes

Marvin X
photo Joyce Jones

Marvin X
photo Joyce Jones

 Front row seated: Quincy Troupe, Ted Wilson, Rashidah Ismaili, Sandra Esteves
Standing: Arthur Pfister, Haki Madhubuti, Askia Toure, Marvin X, Henry Grimes
photo Joyce Jones

Askia Toure and Marvin X
photo Joyce Jones

Amina and Amiri Baraka



Poet/educator/city councilman Ras Baraka, next Mayor of Newark, NJ

Ras Baraka rocked the house reading a poem by his mother and one of his own. Other outstanding poets included Felipe Luciano who claimed Amiri Baraka as his father, as did Arthur Pfister and Marvin X. The audience praised him for the eulogy he delivered at his father's last rites.

Third World Press publisher Haki Madhubuti called for writers to submit material for his anthology dedicated to Amiri Baraka, poetry, prose, drama, fiction and non-fiction is acceptable.

The tribute was sponsored by the Institute of African American Affairs. Originally organized by Amiri Baraka, poet/author Rashidah Ismaili completed the project.

This Saturday, February 8, 7:30, Harlem's Schomburg Library will host a tribute to Amiri Baraka, moderated by producer Woody King and organizer Ted Wilson. The event is a benefit for the Baraka family. Marvin X will perform, again accompanied by bassist Henry Grimes who was outstanding at NYU.


Marvin X returns to the west coast next week to finish organizing the Black Arts Movement Conference at the University of California, Merced, Feb. 28 thru March 2. Participants include Askia Toure, Ras Baraka, Pam Africa, Ishmael Reed, Al Young, Dr. Nathan Hare, Sonia Sanchez, Umar bin Hasan and Abiodun of the Last Poets, Judy Juanita, Belva Davis, James Smethurst, et al.
Co-producer is Kim McMillan.

Marvin X Speaks in Fresno, Ca. at the Hinton Community Center and Fresno City College



Marvin X speaks at Fresno City College, Tuesday, February 24, 11am 













Book Marvin X: 510-200-4164

Afghanistan's Karzai in talks with Taliban, to hell with US!

Afghanistan's Karzai in secret talks with Taliban

Afghan President Hamid Karzai speaks during a press conference at the presidential palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. Karzai said he will not sign a security pact with the United States unless Washington and Pakistan launch a peace process with Taliban insurgents. (AP Photo/Massoud Hossaini).View gallery
  • .By Hamid Shalizi
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghan President Hamid Karzai has been holding secret talks with Taliban officials in the hope of persuading them to make peace with his government, his spokesman told Reuters on Tuesday, confirming a New York Times report.
"I can confirm that ... Taliban are willing more than ever to join the peace process," Aimal Faizi said. "Contacts have been made and we are also in touch with them."
A member of Afghanistan's High Peace Council also confirmed that talks had taken place, but was measured in his assessment of their success.
"Talks took place in Dubai three weeks ago between government officials and Taliban who flew from Doha, but we are still waiting to see the result," he told Reuters.
Western and Afghan officials speaking to the Times also said the talks had borne little fruit so far, although they may help explain Karzai's mounting public hostility to Washington.
The relationship has come under increasing pressure since November, when he announced his intention to avoid signing a bilateral security deal with the United States until after a presidential election on April 5.
His decision to drop a deal that had taken about a year to hammer out shocked Western diplomats. The uncertainty about Afghanistan's fate after U.S. troops pull out has also weighed on the economy.
Faizi did not directly link Karzai's surprise move to the start of talks with the Taliban, but said relations had improved since then.
Relations with the United States have been on a downward spiral, however, and Karzai's refusal to sign is sapping already scant support for the war in Washington, which has halved aid for civilian assistance in the fiscal year 2014.
President Barack Obama, frustrated by Karzai's refusal to sign the accord, was due to meet top commanders at the White House on Tuesday to discuss the future of the U.S. mission in Afghanistan.
Washington has signaled it could pull all troops out after 2014 unless a deal is signed soon. This would leave Afghanistan's fledgling security forces to fight the Taliban insurgency alone, without U.S. financial and military support.
The Taliban have vowed to derail the election, and have stepped up attacks in Kabul despite the peace talks.
January's tally of attacks was the highest since 2008, according to security officials, and the trend has continued into February, with two bombs going off in Kabul on Monday.

Black Bird Press News & Review: Please Pray for Poet Jayne Cortez

Black Bird Press News & Review: About  Poet Jayne Cortez

Monday, February 3, 2014

Press Release: Fresno native, poet-playwright Marvin X will speak at the Hinton Center


For immediate release
Contact: Pamela Young King,
President, Fresno Chapter, NAACP
559-824-3661

Press Release

The Fresno Chapter of the NAACP is proud to present an afternoon with poet-playwright, activist, educator, free thinker, archivist, healer, Marvin X, a Fresno native who graduated with honors from Edison High School, 1962. Marvin X was hired by the Black Studies Department at Fresno State University, 1969, but was removed on orders of then Governor Ronald Reagan. Since then, Marvin X has lectured at UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, San Francisco State University, University of Nevada, Reno, Mills College, Kings River College and elsewhere.

The author of 30 books, he is one of the most prolific writers in the world. The Last Poets say he writes a book per month. He penned his memoir of Eldridge Cleaver in three weeks. A few of his titles include Love and War, poems, 1995, Somethin' Proper, autobiography, 1998, In the Crazy House Called America, essays, 2002, How to Recover from the Addiction to White Supremacy, 2006, Beyond Religion, toward Spirituality, 2007, My friend the Devil, a memoir of Eldridge Cleaver, 2009.

His projects include Academy of da Corner, 14th and Broadway, downtown Oakland, and the Community Archives Project that organizes archives and educates common people on the importance of preserving their family archives.

Marvin X is co-producer (with Kim McMillan) of the upcoming Black Arts Movement Conference at the University of California, Merced, Feb 28 thru March 2, 2014. He recently spoke at the funeral of his long time friend, poet/activist Amiri Baraka.

On Saturday, February 22, 3pm, Marvin X will speak, read and dialogue with FCC professor emeritus Kehindi Solwazi at the Hinton Center, 2385 S. Fairview Ave. Fresno CA. This is a free event. For more information, please call 559- 263-1367.

Sponsors include NAACP, Salaam Seafoods, Black Chamber of Commerce, Black Bird Press Books,
Fresno Advocate Newspaper, Feed My Sheep Ministries, Community Archives Project, Paradigm Printers, Black Arts Movement Conference, UC Merced.