Close NSA and Save America

On Friday December 6, 2013 activists from Washington, DC, Maryland, and Virginia gathered near the headquarters to make a statement to passerbys about the National Security Agency, the US’s principal spy agency conducting warrantless, unconstitutional dragnet surveillance on all Americans and much of the world: CLOSE THE NSA. and SAVE AMERICA.

It isn’t enough to be outraged. Times like this require concerted, committed, and focused grassroots [creative] action. With Bill of Rights Day approaching on December 15 speak out, and for millions of others whose rights are being trampled by the emerging surveillance state. There has never been a better time to raise your voice!

Organizations represented during the banner drop include:
Bill of Rights Defense Committee
CODEPINK: Women for Peace
Montgomery County Civil Rights Coalition
Restore the Fourth
We Act Radio

Filmed by Robin Bell
Edited by Adwoa Masozi
Music by Petteri Sainio

Why We Need to Save Public Housing in Barry Farm

Will McKinley III is a videographer/editor based out of Washington, D.C.  He attended Morgan State University in Baltimore, MD with a concentration in TV Production.  Below is a link to the first segment that he and his peeps put together for a new current affairs magazine television show about Washington, DC, called Metropolis:  The District.  Don’t be thrown by the message that says you can’t view the video here.  Click on the box and it will take you straight to Vimeo.

http://vimeo.com/83507664

The video features the famous Goodman League and the current redevelopment plans for the neighborhood of Barry Farm. Learn who is responsible for the Goodman League’s rise to prominence.  Affordable housing organizer Schyla Pondexter-Moore explains why traditional public housing is important to the fabric of Washington,DC.  This is the kind of in-depth journalism that I’d love to see on DC’s local television stations.  Too often the only reason television news producers head out to Barry Farms is for crime.  Here’s hoping McKinley and his crew get funding for more of this excellent work!

 

Creating Social Change Through Media at the Allied Media Conference

This post is part of a series of report-back posts from the 15th annual Allied Media Conference held in Detroit in June.  Besides being a regular contributor to Grassroots DC, Judith Hawkins is a Client and Community Organizer at Bread for the City.  The following article is also posted on their BFC’s blog.

This year, 6 Bread for the City clients and 2 staff members went to the Allied Media Conference (AMC). As I blogged about before we went, my first time at the AMC changed my life. This is the response that many first time participants give when asked how they feel about the AMC. Participants attended sessions on media making, networking, and urban farming and many more. View a complete listing of the 2013 sessions here.

So what’s so life changing about the AMC?

lightningThe energy charged atmosphere is like being hit by lightning. People are excited about learning, exchanging information and sharing their experiences. I found it quite refreshing to witness different generations, races, genders, and people whose “issues” may be different working together to solve problems, not just talking about the history of the problems and how we got here.

“The AMC is stimulating and informative,” according to Dusti Ridge, CAB Member.

I attended a session on cross-issue organizing, which explored strategies for organizers who are working on different issues or campaigns to identify the intersections or similarities and to use those similarities as a bridge to bring people together and work collaboratively. The discussion was led by a panel of people from several groups:  The Teachers Action Group (TAG), the Youth Art and Self-Empowerment Project, the One-Love Movement, Decarcerate PA, Fierce New York, and the Alliance for Educational Justice. We talked about identifying the gaps in service and activism and making combined efforts to fill them.

The conference sessions use a popular education style. Attendees are encouraged to participate, and there are plenty opportunities for hands-on learning. For example, at the Discotech (Discovering Technology) Lab, young people explained the basics of electronics by showing participants to use electrodes to make jewelry.

A recurring theme at the AMC this year was learning how to support each other in helping others.

Joni Podschun, our Advocacy and Community Engagement Manager at Bread for the City, really enjoyed The Biology of Burnout session and would love to see some of the strategies she learned applied at BFC. Stay tuned for a blog post on that session!

Beat Club at Potomac Gardens

Young residents of Potomac Gardens teamed up with Beat Club founder Barrett Jones for a beat-making session at Potomac Gardens. The Beat Club is part of Grassroots DC’s efforts to teach radio and audio production skills. Video shot and edited by Carlton Moxley.

Photos by Ben Dorger and Ben King

Another Cloud Is Possible

cloudsystemsThis post is part of a series of report-back posts from the 15th annual Allied Media Conference held in Detroit in June.

The title of this post is borrowed from a session at this year’s Allied Media Conference. The workshop was timely when it was conducted on June 21 because Google had just been implicated in the NSA’s spying scandal, known as the PRISM Program. Apparently, Google could not live up to its mandate, “Don’t be evil.” Also taking place that weekend in Detroit was a commemoration of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream Speech.” (MLK gave a version of that speech in Detroit in the summer of 1963 before bringing it to DC for the March on Washington in August.) One wonders what Dr. King would have said about our information freedom fighters today, like Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden.

So what is the cloud and why should we care?

According to the workshop presenters, the “cloud” simply means your software or data living on another machine. A great example of a cloud service is Gmail. Google keeps your emails on its own machines. That means you can access these files from any computer. Additionally, Gmail is convenient because it gives you a web-based interface (software) that allows you to view, sort, or search your emails.

For activists in the information age, trusting Google to keep our information 100% secure is delusional at best. The company is ultimately accountable to its shareholders and its advertisers, and it does not have the best interests of people (i.e. human beings) in mind. There are already a few alternatives to the services you get through Google (see below), although they might not be as convenient at the moment. However, if we want to envision a future where people are free from information tyrrany, we have to imagine a future where we don’t keep everything on Google Drive or the iCloud. We have to start coming up with our own, more complex networks that will strengthen our internet backbone as a whole, rather than forcing a centralized system.

Freedom in the 21st century means freedom of information. For our information to be free, it must be decentralized, copied, and reproduced from a variety of locations, available for a variety of uses, at a variety of times. Small cloud networks can start with wireless mesh networking. Communities could build their own servers, hosting data for neighbors and friends. A co-operative model might be used to administrate such a cloud. Community cloud computing isn’t really that crazy an idea.

What is crazy is that Verizon, Comcast and a variety of other companies, want to charge us for accessing the internet as individuals. The private sector is poised to make billions off of expanding cloud services. Our collective energy is what makes the web awe-inspiring. Though we might not all be connected directly, our participation in networks, social and technological, makes us part of something bigger than ourselves. Hence, we cannot resist the flow of truth, freedom of information, and transparency. With Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and other digital service providers (i.e. Google) as the gatekeepers, it is our responsibility to make sure that we develop alternatives that can keep the web free. As businesses continue to colonize online space, we have to think even more about what freedom really means when so much of our lives are online.

Alternatives to Google

May First/People Link –  “May First/People Link is a politically progressive member-run and controlled organization that redefines the concept of “Internet Service Provider” in a collective and collaborative way.”

Electric Embers – “EE is a worker cooperative providing Internet hosting services and support to nonprofits, cooperatives, artists, and others contributing to the common good. We’re here to help you create a more just, sustainable, and beautiful world.”

RiseUp.net – “Riseup provides online communication tools for people and groups working on liberatory social change. We are a project to create democratic alternatives and practice self-determination by controlling our own secure means of communications.”