Common Security Clubs Come to DC

Sarah Byrnes and Chuck Collins with the Institute for Policy Studies talk to Netfa Freeman about an alternative way of building resilient communities in DC during tough times. They invite the DC community to an interactive evening to find out how to start or join a small group approach to learning, mutual aid, and social action in your community. Take a listen.

Commom Security Club_MIX

January 18, 2011 and   January 29, 2011
7:00 pm to 8:30 pm         10:00 am to 4:00 pm

both at

Festival Center
1640 Columbia Road NW
Washington, DC

Divided Congress, Divided Nation

Joint Session of Congress

Joint Session of Congress

And so it begins.  It’s a new year and we have a new congress.  Unfortunately the 112th promises to be as divisive as any session before it.  Can we expect better?  Unlikely.  So far, House Republicans who align themselves with Tea Party activism have promised to either repeal Obama’s health insurance reform or refuse to fund it. They are also planning to cut $100 billion worth of domestic spending from the budget in an effort to bring down the deficit but have no intention of raising taxes, this despite the fact that tax rates for all income levels have reached lows that we haven’t seen since the 1950s.  My personal favorite is the promise to read the Constitution aloud on the House floor as a reminder to elected officials of the Founder’s rules regarding limited-government.  I’m not certain those rules are as explicit as conservatives think, what with a preamble that charges the government with such broad authority as promoting the general welfare and securing the blessings of liberty, but that may be a matter of interpretation.

Does a rejection of health care reform (well, health insurance reform) and deficit reduction without raising revenue represent a mandate that the electorate demanded when they voted the Democrats out of the majority last November?  Should we thank the Tea Party that isn’t really a party for this?  Will they be happy with the results?

I suspect that Tea Party activists may be no happier about the results of the 112th Congress as the New Left, energized by  Barack Obama’s presidential campaign, was with the 110th or even the 111th Congress.  I say this because all of the hip hip hoorays that are chanted when we’re in office and they are out (it doesn’t matter if the “we” here is the Left or the Right) inevitably turns into the same sorry refrain, a refrain that goes something like, “Hold the phone there partner, that’s not what we asked you to do.”

Two years ago, the Left made it clear that we wanted, among other things, health care reform and an end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  What we got was health insurance reform and although we’ve pulled back to a certain extent in Iraq, there can be no doubt that a US military presence will remain in both Iraq and Afghanistan for a long, long time.   Last year, when the Right demanded that elected officials stop spending beyond our means, as so many of us have been forced to do in these hard economic times, were they expecting cuts to unemployment and food stamps?  According to the latest 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll, 61 percent of Americans favor increasing taxes on the wealthy as a way to reduce the deficit while 20 percent prefer cuts to the Defense Department.  If we extrapolate those poll numbers, less than 20 percent of the American public has any interest in cutting entitlement programs or social services.  [It’s actually much less than that if you read the poll carefully.]   Given the choice to increase taxes on the wealthy or increase cuts to programs that benefit the poor and middle class, what do you think the 112th Congress will do?

Behind all of the complaints that we threw the bastards out and the new bastards aren’t any better is one inescapable reality.  The new bastards and the old bastards have more in common with each other than they do with any of us.

The nation is divided, perhaps as divided as the Congress.  We are divided by race; we are divided by political ideology; we pretend not to be divided by class, but in reality that is probably our most potent divide.  To the never ending advantage of the elites in power, the electorate will forever blow out of proportion all the little things that make us different and ignore the issues in which we should be able to find common ground.

Audio Archive from Rallies to Restore Honor and Reclaim the Dream

Riley Abbott’s report on Glenn Beck’s controversial Rally to Restore Honor and  Al Sharpton’s response The Rally to Reclaim the Dream makes it clear that in fact there are a number of things upon which the Right and the Left agree.  It also points out that neither side seems aware of this reality.

Audio Report from One Nation Rally

Alyssa Schimmel’s report on last October’s One Nation March highlights the demands the Left expected the Democratic Majority in the House and Senate to deliver now that they also had a Democratic president to back them up.  Liberals and progressives at that rally demanded that government focus on the need for more jobs, better education and universal access to health care. Were the Right not so focused on undoing any accomplishments that the nation’s first African-American president could claim as his own, they might be in favor of those things as well.  Oh, but that racial divide is ever so important.  After all, what would it mean to that perhaps small but vocal percentage of Americans who remain bigoted, if a black man were to turn out to be one of our best presidents or even, and perhaps more realistically, just moderately more impressive than say Ronald Reagan?

Although these reports were recorded in 2010, they are relevant now as the electorate once again passes the baton to their representatives in office.  Members of Congress both on the Left and the Right always claim to listen to the people but as we know they rarely hear (or accede to) our demands.  Perhaps we should be less quick to pass that baton on and continue to make the demands we made last fall loud and clear.  What might be even more impressive is, if we on the Left spent some of our energy helping our compatriots on the Right overcome their racism, their xenophobia, their sexism, their homophobia and perhaps most importantly their own self-loathing, so that we could find the common ground that the country desperately needs if we are ever to form anything close to a more perfect union.

Post Script,

The above was posted Thursday, January 6, 2011, two days before the attempted assassination of Representative Gabrielle Giffords, Democratic Congresswoman from Arizona.  No doubt, we will begin to hear many voices asking that heated political rhetoric be toned down, lest it continue to inflame the passions of the mentally unstable and potentially dangerous.  I suggest that if members of the press stopped treating that heated political rhetoric as if it were factual, in other words, if they would ask for proof when a politician claims that the US has the best health care system in the world or that undocumented workers are responsible for the unemployment rate, then fewer citizens, mentally stable or otherwise, would feel the urge to take up arms against foes that don’t really exist.  Just a thought.

A Final Swing @ Fenty & Rhee

After completing a two week outreach tour with DC Hip Hop sensation Head-Roc, Empower DC celebrated at the Potter’s House. Members had the opportunity to take a last swing at recently deposed mayor Adrian Fenty and school’s chancellor Michelle Rhee. Not literally of course, we used a pinata with Fenty & Rhee’s picture attached. But the whole experience was pretty cathartic. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRu3OBvkcyg

Post Election Accountability and The Empower DC Outreach Tour

Often times I feel that the progressive movement in DC is getting nowhere.  I’ll make the mistake of reading the comments following some article that actually pertains to community organizing on DCist or the City Paper site and I am sickened by the classism and thinly veiled racism there.  Spend too much time wading through DC’s blogosphere and one can start to believe that the gentrifiers are the only people whose opinions matter in this town.  By contrast, last night’s Organizing for Post Election Accountability Empowerment Circle was heartening.

DC Rapper Head-Roc performs Change In America.

We discussed the record of the soon to be previous mayor Adrian Fenty.  He and the city council did many things that the community didn’t appreciate in the last four years.  In many ways, the city is not better off.  We are not better off without Franklin Shelter, or the 23 neighborhood schools that were closed down, or the 13 early childhood and out of school time programs that were shuttered at Parks and Recreation Centers in wards 6, 7 and 8.  But none of those things were taken away without a fight.

Hundreds of homeless and homeless advocates protested in Franklin Square, testified before the city council and won emergency legislation to keep the shelter open.  Mayor Fenty ignored the emergency legislation, and the city council that enacted it did not sue the Fenty Administration for flouting the law, but the activists did.  The fight to reopen Franklin Shelter continues.  On Friday, October 8, the federal courts will hear the case.  Go to Reopen Franklin Shelter Now for the latest updates.

Under Mayor Fenty, schools chancellor Michelle Rhee managed to close down 23 neighborhood schools that were supposedly under-enrolled and/or under-performing.  As it turns out, some were and some weren’t.  She fired 266 teachers and support staff due to a shortfall in the budget that turned out to be some kind of accounting error.  And she fired or forced to retire dozens of beloved and committed school principals.  But none of this came without a price.

After rallies, demonstrations, school walkouts and many, many lawsuits over illegal terminations, alleged warrior woman Michelle Rhee’s days are numbered.  Parents from Bruce Monroe Elementary School, which was closed with the promise that a new school would be rebuilt on the site, have continued to pressure the Fenty Administration, the city council and even the developers who’ve shown an interest in building commercial property on the site.  So far as the parents are concerned, the school will be rebuilt as promised.  The plan to turn Hardy Elementary School in Georgetown, a high performing feeder school that caters to children from every ward in the District, into a neighborhood school that serves only the wealthy and mostly white students from Georgetown, has also met stiff opposition.  For developments on opposition to school reform without community input, check out long time DCPS advocate Candi Peterson’s blog The Washington Teacher.

While we are still waiting to hear the outcomes of the lawsuits on behalf of those Park and Recreation employees who staffed the early childhood programs in Wards 6, 7 & 8, before they were closed down, another lawsuit was won outright.

Remember the checkpoints in Trinidad?  In the summer of 2008, the Northeast DC neighborhood began to take on the feeling of a police state, as motorists were stopped and asked to provide ID and prove that they had a “legitimate” reason to be in the neighborhood.  Those checkpoints are gone now.  Why?  That would be because the Partnership for Civil Justice sued the District on behalf of four activists who simply refused to accept the infringements on their rights.  You can read the details in the Washington Post article Federal Court Says D.C. Police Checkpoints Were Unconstitutional.

The point of all this and the Empowerment Circle that reminded me of these events is that organizing works.  We have held Mayor Fenty accountable by firing him.  Although the city council, complicit in the above crimes against the community, has not been held accountable, half of them will be up for re-election again in 2012.  We’ve all agreed that we can expect little better treatment from presumptive mayor Vincent Gray, but we’re not going to wait for him and the council to disappoint us as many did with Mayor Fenty.  Holding our elected official accountable is a process that must be consistent and ongoing.

To that end, Empower DC has planned a series of events designed to bring more DC residents into the progressive movement.  We’re calling it the Empower DC Outreach Tour, during which we will hit the streets with DC rapper Head-Roc who has produced a CD of music focusing on the Empower DC campaigns—education, housing, public property and childcare.  We’re going to hit almost every ward in the city and hope to sign up as many folks for the various campaigns as we can.  It takes place during the last two weeks of October and will coincide with many of presumptive mayor Vincent Gray’s town hall meetings.  Please join us.  The schedule follows:

Tuesday, October 19, 2010 – Columbia Heights Metro Station
5:30 – 6:30 PM, the Ward 1 town hall meeting will follow this event.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010 – Alabama Avenue & Good Hope Rd., SE
5:30 – 6:30 PM

Thursday, October 21, 2010 – Anacostia Metro Station
5:30 – 6:30 PM, the Ward 8 town hall meeting will follow this event.

Saturday, October 23, 2010 – The Funky Flea Market, 6th Street & Florida Ave. NE
Noon – 2:00 PM

Monday, October 25, 2010 – Petworth Metro Station
5:30 – 6:30 PM

Tuesday, October 26, 2010 – Waterfront Metro Station
5:30 – 6:30 PM, the Ward 4 town hall meeting will follow this event.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010 – Georgia & Florida Avenues, NW
5:30 – 6:30 PM, the Ward 6 town hall meeting will follow this event.

Thursday, October 28, 2010 – 3900 Block of Minnesota Ave., NE
5:30 – 6:30 PM

A concert series closing party and fundraiser will be held at the Potter’s House, 1658 Columbia Road, NW on Saturday October 30, 2010 from 6:30-9 PM.