Monday, January 22, 2018

Black gods of India like bleaching cream

Dark is divine: What colour are Indian gods and goddesses?

Goddess Sita with her sonsImage copyrightNARESH NIL
Image captionGoddess Sita is photographed with her twin sons Luv and Kush
In India where light skin is coveted, a new campaign is re-imagining popular Hindu gods and goddesses with a darker skin, writes the BBC's Geeta Pandey in Delhi.
The desire for fairer skin is not new in India and for centuries, fair complexion has been considered superior.
Fairness creams are among the highest selling cosmetic products in the country and top Bollywood actors and actresses regularly appear in commercials endorsing fairness products.
Goddess LakshmiImage copyrightNARESH NIL
Image captionModel Suruthi Periyasamy was "thrilled" when she was chosen to portray Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth
In recent years, creams and gels have been introduced which claim to lighten armpit hair and even female genitals, and advertisements encourage customers to believe that lighter skin tones would help them improve their lives by getting a better job or win them love.
In the past few years, there have been campaigns such as Dark is Beautiful and #unfairandlovely, calling on people to celebrate dark skin.
Yet, the unhealthy obsession with light skin has continued and, as ad filmmaker Bharadwaj Sundar says, it's not just limited to earthly beings, it includes the divine too.
A calendar image of Hindu god Krishna with his consort Radha
Image captionEven Krishna, who is described as a dark-skinned god in the scriptures, is often shown as fair-skinned
"All the images of the popular gods and goddesses that we see around us, photographs in our home shrines or prayer halls, online, on calendars, stickers and posters in shops and pasted behind auto-rickshaws, all show them to be light-skinned."
In a culture obsessed with fairness, Mr Sundar points out that even Krishna, who is described as a dark-skinned god in the scriptures, is often shown as fair. And so is the elephant-headed Ganesha, even though there are no white elephants in India.
"Everyone here prefers fair skin. But I am a dark-skinned person and all my friends are dark-skinned too. So how do I identify with fair-skinned gods and goddesses?"
To fight this disconnect, Mr Sundar, who is based in the southern city of Chennai, teamed up with photographer Naresh Nil and the two have come up with "Dark is Divine" - a project that portrays gods and goddesses with a darker skin colour.
Lord ShivaImage copyrightNARESH NIL
Image captionGod of destruction Shiva is part of the Hindu holy trinity
They recruited "dusky" male and female models, dressed them up as gods and goddesses and shot the campaign images over two days in December and the result is quite stunning.
Model Suruthi Periyasamy told the BBC that she had to face too many rejections in the past "because no-one wanted a dusky model" and that she was "thrilled" when she was chosen to portray Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth.
Goddess DurgaImage copyrightNARESH NIL
Image captionDurga is almost always portrayed as a fair-skinned goddess
"Lakshmi is the most popular goddess in India, everyone wants a daughter-in-law like her because she brings prosperity so I feel so blessed to be her."
Ms Periyasamy says everyone talks about working with dark-skinned models, but no-one really encourages them. She says she hopes that this campaign will "change the minds of some people to allow us to shine in life".
Since the campaign was launched last month, Mr Sundar says they have received lots of calls and the responses have been largely positive, though some people have accused them of unfair biases, pointing out that goddess Kali is always portrayed as black.
Baby KrishnaImage copyrightNARESH NIL
Image captionChild Krishna is one of Hinduism's most popular gods
Mr Sundar says he's a devout Hindu and does not mean disrespect to anyone but "if we look around, we find that 99.99% times, the divine is fair-skinned".
"Appearance plays a major role in how we perceive people, especially women, and we felt that this needed to be addressed," he says.
"And through the Dark is Divine project, we are trying to challenge the belief that fair skin is superior."

World's richest 1% get 82% of wealth

'World's richest 1% get 82% of the wealth', says Oxfam


Should we trick them to a meeting and force them to divest as the crown prince has done at the Ritz in Saudi Arabia?--Marvin X
man by a yachtImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
The gap between the super rich and the rest of the world widened last year as wealth continued to be owned by a small minority, Oxfam has claimed.
Some 82% of money generated last year went to the richest 1% of the global population while the poorest half saw no increase at all, the charity said.
Oxfam said its figures - which critics have queried - showed a failing system.
It blamed tax evasion, firms' influence on policy, erosion of workers' rights, and cost cutting for the widening gap.
Oxfam has produced similar reports for the past five years. In 2017 it calculated that the world's eight richest individuals had as much wealth as the poorest half of the world.
This year, it said 42 people now had as much wealth as the poorest half, but it revised last year's figure to 61. Oxfam said the revision was due to improved data and said the trend of "widening inequality" remained.
Number of Billionaires since 2000

'Unacceptable'

Oxfam chief executive Mark Goldring said its constant readjustment of the figures reflected the fact that the report was based "on the best data available at the time".
"However you look at it, this is an unacceptable level of inequality," he said.
Oxfam's report coincides with the start of the World Economic Forum in Davos, a Swiss ski resort. The annual conference attracts many of the world's top political and business leaders.
Inequality typically features high on the agenda, but Mr Goldring said that too often "tough talk fades away at the first resistance".

Analysis by Anthony Reuben, BBC Reality Check

It's really hard working out how much wealth the super-rich and the very poor have.
The super-rich tend not to publicise their worth and many of the world's poorest countries keep poor statistics.
To illustrate that, this time last year, Oxfam told us that eight individuals have as much wealth as the poorest half of the world's population. Now it has revised that figure to 61 people for last year, falling to 42 people this year - that's a pretty big revision.
And there are other caveats around the data on which all this is based, such as that the people on the list with the lowest wealth are not necessarily poor at all - they may be highly qualified professionals with large amounts of student debt, for example, or people with high incomes but enormous mortgages.
But whether it's eight people, 42 people or 61 people who have the same wealth as half of the world, there is still great wealth inequality around the world, which is the message Oxfam is taking to Davos.

The charity is urging a rethink of business models, arguing their focus on maximising shareholder returns over broader social impact is wrong.
It said there was "huge support" for action with two thirds (72%) of 70,000 people it surveyed in ten countries saying they wanted their governments to "urgently address the income gap between rich and poor".
But Mark Littlewood, director general at free market think tank The Institute of Economic Affairs, said Oxfam was becoming "obsessed with the rich rather than the poor".
"Higher taxes and redistribution will do nothing to help the poor; wealth is not a fixed pie. Richer people are also highly taxed people - reducing their wealth won't lead to redistribution, it will destroy it to the benefit of no one," he added.
It was a criticism echoed by Sam Dumitriu, head of research at another free market think tank - the Adam Smith Institute - who said the charity's inequality stats "always paint the wrong picture".
"In reality, global inequality has fallen massively over the past few decades.
"As China, India and Vietnam embraced neoliberal reforms that enforce property rights, reduce regulations and increase competition, the world's poorest have received a massive pay rise leading to a more equal global income distribution."
gold barsImage copyrightAFP

How does Oxfam work out the figures?

Oxfam's report is based on data from Forbes and the annual Credit Suisse Global Wealth databook, which gives the distribution of global wealth going back to 2000.
The survey uses the value of an individual's assets, mainly property and land, minus debts, to determine what he or she "owns". The data excludes wages or income.
The methodology has been criticised as it means that a student with high debts, but with high future earning potential, for example, would be considered poor under the criteria used.
But Oxfam said even if the wealth of the poorest half of the world was recalculated to exclude people in net debt their combined wealth was still equal to that of just 128 billionaires.

Saturday, January 20, 2018

No Nigga Debate Oakland



No Nigga debate Oakland
nigga too busy being niggas
no time debate nigga
niggers sittin cross street
nigga debate
no nigga tell'em bout debate
excuse me
no conscious African tell them
sittin sidewalk doin' nothin'
Sun Ra say Space is the Place
Oakland nigga what ya doin'
nigga say I ain't doin nothin'
Sun Ra say you wanna job
nigga say doin' what
Sonny say doin' nothin
nigger say watcha pay
Sunny say nothin'
Oakland
city of resistance
now nothin'
broke down
pacified pasteurized
homogenized
lost multi-cultural chasm
diluted polluted
Oakland MLK, Jr March 2018
few blacks represent
Oakland Women's March 2018
few blacks represent
Mayor Jean Quan came by booth
City Councilwoman Rebecca Kaplan
Erica Huggins knew Mythology of Pussy was Marvin X
Paul and Gay Cobb came by from distance
West Oakland nigga let a b come b tween brothers
Oakland black girls/women say I hate a weak nigga
BAM patron Abdul Leroy JamesRIP
say friend friend to end
nigga b friend 2 end nigga
no nigga debate Oaktown
city of resistance
Fallujah
broke down
nigga wanna break free
black panther party
Pullman Porters Union
black arts movement
black studies
kwanza
oaktown
Afro American Association
Donald Warden
Khalid Abdullah Tariq Al Mansour
oaktown no nigga debate
nigga live tent town
west oakland gone
east oakland gone
north oakland gone
nigga gone Tracy Sac Stock Modesto Merced Madera Fresno
gone nigga gone
see nigger history oakland museum
Afro American Museum/Library
see nigga history archives objects
see nigga no more
nigga gone
women's march white woman say
I wanna help
let me help
appreciate what your doing
I'm banker come see me
Ain't got no credit
didn't ask you that
come see me!
No nigga debate
black is white
white black
beware day
beware night!
--Marvin X
1/20/18




Ancestors one year later

Still grieving oldest brother sister
Granny said brother go end up in pen
Granny true
no brother whole life miss love

Marvin X siblings: Ollie(RIP), Debbie and Judy at poet's 65 birthday party, Berkeley CA. They say Judy is Marvin X in drag!


me and bro in juvenile hall same time
he go CYA
judge say yo grades
cost must to send college or CYA
brother CYA
outside court I say Mama
why you ain't cryin'?
Son
No cry outside
cry inside
ok Mama
understand
no big brother no cry
six sisters
yap yap yap
retire to room with grandpa
drunk on gin
me drunk on green death
Rainer Ale
kick a nigga's ass
green death
country girl too ass
Roberta gotta pee on road
cotton patch road
Fresno
cotton patch raisin patch
tent city Thorne Ave.
niggas come up
time after time
work hard own property
marian m. jackmon realty
mom
oh mom
sell every nigga a home first home
greatest mom ever
work hard
nine kids no man
two grand
eleven raised Mom
business woman
spiritual woman
disciple Mary Baker Eddy
know truth
set you free
mind ova matter
mind ova matter
no dis ease
negative attraction
negative attraction.
Mom no medicine cabinet no pills
no the truth heal dis ease
one year later
Donna Ollie gone
Ollie one year older
Donna under me
oldest six sisters
Donna gone Ollie gone
Me middle man when
everyday holy day
live no stress zone
everyday holy dayla
no stress zone
work hard party hard
revolution party
red black green
Marcus Garvey flag
Where Coon flag
KKK say
Where Coon flag
everybody got a flag
cept Coon
where Coon flag
Garvey say red black green
black supreme
red blood
black peoplee
green land
Africa for Africans
home abroad
One aim God destiny
Africa for Africans
home abroad.
see the Black Star
let black star light shine
Ollie say burn me
ashes Lake Merritt
no words memorial
don't say shit bout me
a motherfuckin thang
Donna story teller
greater than brother
telling lies
brother defer in lie contest
Donna master lie teller
sell Brooklyn Bridge to Nigga
Donna cold
girl vivid imagination
miss my peoples
some kinna hole in heart
miss my peoples
brother gave me funiture
Invictus watch collection
time time
Timer watch time
consumed time
sitting rotting studying time
after time
Miles Davis Time After Time
year later Donna Ollie
no closure
silent grief
wish it had been better
older brother love
manhood training love
Donna sister love
oldest sister love
my motherfucking ass!
Thank you Allah
near his end
lived round corner from me
by Lake Merritt
where his ashes flow
maybe mine as well
Oaktown child man
Long live West Oakland
Harlem of West!
--Marvin X
1/20/18

Friday, January 19, 2018

Mayor Libby Schaaf must stand against racism at Oakland Whole Foods

Rally to end racism and white supremacy at Oakland Whole Foods
When: Tuesday, January 23rd
Time: 3:30-5:30PM




The Movement Newspaper
















WHERE: WHOLE FOODS MARKET 230 BAY PL, OAKLAND, CA 94612





















JAN 18, 2018 — Madam Mayor Libby Schaaf should have DA Nancy O'Malley bring criminal charges against Oakland Whole Foods for physical, verbal and emotional abuse of North American African workers and customers. We want compensation for damages done to North American Africans at Oakland Whole Foods.




















Whole Foods has been attacking folks of color within the past two years—going as far as attacking and racially profiling two black men, and a young, black teenager in recent reports. Their gentrifying organization must be held accountable for the threat they have posed to our community and it’s time that we make some noise to show resistance and intolerance to racial terror on any and all fronts.

Join us, next Tuesday (1/23) from 3:30-5:30 PM as we hold a noise demo in front of the store to demonstrate our intolerance for racism in our communities. Please bring any safe objects you have to make noise, signs, and bright spirits as we show up for the folks who were affected and targeted by this racist institution. It is imperative that we address racism on all fronts in our communities—especially in recent light of honoring King’s legacy and the path he has helped to pave with his work. We have to continue to take to the streets EVERY day, and address issues as we see them rather than depending on others to do the work first.

When: Tuesday, January 23rd
Time: 3:30-5:30PM
Where: Whole Foods Market 230 Bay Pl, Oakland, CA 94612

Direct all questions, comments, or concerns to:

wassgoodlucy@gmail.com

Hope to see you all there! Love & Solidarity!

Boycott Whole Foods Oakland and its racism!!


Yet another case of blatant racism and racial profiling at another new Oakland establishment has occurred! I’ve witnessed this multiple times at different stores in Oakland, we all know we have and too often I’ve just grit my teeth and accepted that as way it has to be. But this most recent incindent involving a  13 year old child buying gifts for his mother and him being racially profiled twice in the same store over a year apart!!??
http://fiveo.us/?p=334
That means there’s an issue. I want to force Whole Foods Oakland and board members of Oakland’s developers committee  to sit and have a discussion and be held accountable for this grievance against the black community. Please sign and help move this along, share it wide , give suggestions, I’ve never done something like this before but I couldn’t stay silent any longer , any help from established activists would be appreciated. We need change , I don’t know if it will happen in our lifetime but we have to try.




Africans Rally against Trump shithole remarks

Public statement of concern about President Trump’s vulgar statement about Africa
By the African community in Sacramento

January 19, 2018                               

This week, we celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., a great man whose message of peace, justice and courage changed the course of history. A man whose proud and deep ancestral roots spring from the fertile shores of the Nile, Niger, Congo and Zambezi rivers of Africa.  
However, it is unfortunate that in this very week when people of goodwill all over the world pause to reflect and celebrate the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the United States of America President Donald J. Trump chose to debase our humanity as Africans, including Haitians, with the vulgarity as attributed to him that is not worthy of a repeat in this document. We stand today, and with respect to the office of the presidency, to reject and condemn without reservation the president’s characterization of African nations, as widely condemned by African governments and many others in the Americas and around the world. It is our conviction that his choice of words amounts to hate speech and has no place in any civil discourse. History reminds us that the world’s most horrific crimes always start with weaponized words and statements like these have no place in a civilized world or just leadership. When people are characterized as sub-human, it becomes too easy and inciting to subject them to sub-human treatment.
The African continent has withstood untold challenges through the course of human history, and remains the cradle of humanity. Our people were extracted against their will and enslaved for centuries in far regions of the world where they built today’s flourishing economies from the bend of their backs and the sweat of their brows, including the USA. We stand today to declare to all who care to listen that Africa and her more than a billion people and over 20 % of the world’s population will not be characterized as sub-human; this is very offensive. Our ancestors built the ancient pyramids of Egypt and the Sankore University in Timbuktu, built over 400 years before the American independence, and produced ancient texts that became roadmaps to science, mathematics and astronomy. Indeed, the history of the American greatness will be incomplete without Africa and her resilient peoples.
Our sons and daughters across the world continue to distinguish themselves in all fields of human endeavor. African immigrants contribute to the development of the country economically. Among the African immigrants in the United States are men and women of the Military, Medical Doctors, Pharmacists, First Responders, Lawyers, Judges, Legislators, Engineers, Business owners, Entrepreneurs, Innovators Investors, College/University Professors, Nurses, Teachers, and other careered persons who work hard and pay their taxes as well as support their families and obey the law. Failure to acknowledge these facts is unfortunate and sad. With 22 Nobel Laureates, 7 female presidents, several female Chief Justices, 4 of the 10 fastest growing economies in the world, a young and vibrant population; Africa’s time has come. We stand today to claim and affirm our rightful place of pride in this long journey of human existence and the promise of a greater future.
This most recent vulgar characterization of Africa(including her Diaspora) by the president, coupled with previous adverse or pejorative pronouncements against other immigrants  has the real potential to incite verbal or physical violence against African immigrants in the USA by persons who may act on the troubling remark or harbor racial animus.
Accordingly, we call on our elected officials, peace officers, educators, employers, and community leaders to ensure the protection of the human and civil rights of our people, especially from any form of hate crime that may result from the president’s hurtful speech. Further, we ask people in our communities to go about their daily lives without fear but remain vigilant, and to immediately report any incidents to the law enforcement authorities.
We thank all people of conscience who have spoken publicly against this hate speech. Your courage to stand with us and humanity puts you on the right side of history and restores our faith in human decency. As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., said at a 1965 public address at Hunter College in New York City on Human Rights Day, "The brotherhood of man is not confined within a narrow, limited circle of select people. It is felt everywhere in the world; it is an international sentiment of surpassing strength. Because this is true, when men of good will finally unite, they will be invincible.”

We affirm our belief in the great African tradition of Ubuntu. We remain committed to the use of dialogue in the quest for mutual understanding and respect in our diverse society.   

In Peace and Solidarity!

Sacramento Africa Peace Committee
Friends of Rwanda Association
Sacramento Association of Nigerians
Association of Citizens and Friends of Liberia
Sierra Leone Humanitarian Project
Ushirika Kenya Association
Sacramento- Uganda Community
Angolan community of Sacramento