Sudan Flogging Video Sparks Outrage (GRAPHIC VIDEO)
Posted: December 15, 2010 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a comment »
Day 3 of Historic Prison Strike in Georgia-Blacked out By Media-Guards committing Violence (via Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner-(The Blog))
Posted: December 14, 2010 Filed under: Prison System, Protest Leave a comment »via Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner-(The Blog)
Tell ‘Em Why You Mad Ep 007: Bringing Work Home
Posted: December 14, 2010 Filed under: Jobs Leave a comment »Tell ‘Em Why You Mad Ep 006: Go Back To Puerto Rico!
Posted: December 7, 2010 Filed under: Race 2 Comments »Supreme Court to consider throwing out Wal-Mart sex-discrimination lawsuit
Posted: December 6, 2010 Filed under: Articles, Gender Leave a comment »The Supreme Court said Monday it will consider whether to keep alive the largest employment discrimination lawsuit in U.S. history.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40530474/ns/business-us_business/from/toolbar
Murder Defendant’s Tattoos Covered for Trial
Posted: December 6, 2010 Filed under: Articles, Class, Race Leave a comment »A judge agreed to have a suspect’s tattoos, which include a swastika, covered up so they cannot influence the jury.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/06/us/06tattoo.html?_r=1
Not Mad: Group of Bed-Stuy men, We Make Us Better, escort pedestrians in the wake of robberies
Posted: December 1, 2010 Filed under: Articles, Gender, Not Mad Leave a comment »They’re not part of a political club, they don’t come from any one church and they’ve never been particularly active in the community – until now.
After a spate of recent muggings and robberies, a group of 20 Bedford-Stuyvesant men started escorting people home as they got off the train and are walking through the neighborhood reaching out to young men.
“We’re not the Guardian Angels, we’re not armed,” said Kareem Varlack, 35, a field technician for Verizon and a founding member of the group We Make Us Better.
“We’re about encouraging males to be involved, because you don’t see men in their 20s, 30s and 40s involved in the community anymore, so we’re trying to bridge that gap.”
Once a week – on random evenings – the men walk subway riders home from the Utica Ave. train station. They also sponsored a neighborhood outreach walk earlier this month, stopping to talk to young men hanging out on the corners.
“I’ve been here now 15 years, and I never walk around,” said co-founder Thomas Simms, 41, who works in finance.
“I’ve never done any kind of marching or activism. I deal with the swim team parents at the Bed-Stuy YMCA, that’s as far as I go
