Tuesday, November 12, 2013

MOVED By Fire...



On last evening I went to see the film, Let The Fire Burn, a documentary about the events leading up to the May 13, 1985 city's bombing of one home and burning of an entire neighborhood in the heart of Philadelphia. All in an effort to evict MOVE a "Black liberation", back to nature group who had set up shop in a family oriented, Black middle class urban community.

I remember all too well the ultimate day, the inevitable show down between MOVE and the Philadelphia Police Department (PPD) following years of disputes and frustrations with the shenanigans of the group. It was interesting to watch the film and revisit my emotions which were all over the place; from being angry with MOVE and empathizing with their neighbors who were literally terrorized by the very presence of this group defacing and disrespecting their neighborhood, disturbing their peacefulness, to remembering just how racist former Mayor and Police Commissioner frank rizzo, his fire commissioner brother, their successors and the Philadelphia PD were believed to be and getting angry at the way they treated MOVE members, especially the babies and children, AND the community whose homes they sat by and let burn burn to the ground. UNbelievable...

I recall when leaving for work that morning to my social work job at a nearby state prison, that the cops and MOVE were at a standoff. An actual war was erupting on an urban street? Or was it? The movie reminded me that the cops exhausted 10,000 rounds of ammunition and confirmed that MOVE had only 6 inoperable guns... While outlandish and vulgar for sure, they tortured their neighbors spewing all kinds of vile rhetoric via loud speakers and bull horns at all times of the day and night, they rejected violence and claimed to only use force in defense of self...

By the time I got home that beautiful spring evening, my Mother who was working in the yard, her favorite past time, greeted me with news that the media had been covering the story all day and that the neighborhood was ablaze. By helicopter, the cops had dropped a bomb ON a row house IN the MIDDLE OF A CITY BLOCK!!! I could not believe that!!! All day they had used tear gas and fire hoses to evict these people and now that the block was on fire, they just sat there and watched??? As though the poor people who were cursed to be neighbors to these people had not been punished enough, now they were losing their homes and EVERYthing they owned... Did not seem fair and certainly, even at 25, made no sense! I knew that such would never have been the reaction given another neighborhood...

At 25, I remember thinking how foolish was Mayor Wilson Goode for taking "full responsibility" for a fire that was still burning. He could not have possibly had the facts. At 25 I wondered WHY would a Black Mayor take full responsibility for the actions of men everyone knew/thought to be racists and who certainly had an ax to grind with MOVE who had allegedly killed a "brother in blue" during another "shoot out" with the PPD. I may have my incidents confused but the movie pointed out that forensics following one of these major "shoot outs" determined that the MOVE group had only inoperable guns... It is a fact however that at no time were the two equally armed.

Let the Fire Burn was a good documentary comprised of film footage of media coverage and public hearings. It is well done and worth the watch, particularly if you lived in or near the city during that time. You will remember the cast of characters and the horrific events. It is showing around the country, check it out if you can...

  

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Lift EVERY Voice...

Yesterday as I was checking out of Barnes & Noble, the nice cashier asked if I was interested in supporting a book drive for the holiday season. Customers were being asked to purchase from an assortment of books that would be given in our name to local children through the local library in honor of the holiday season. As I advocate and encourage reading for everyone, certainly children, I was all ready to do it. She showed me the books that had been selected, a variety of topics were represented, some books were in Spanish but NONE, NOT ONE of them featured a Black author or entailed a Black story line. I explained to her that given the lack of diversity in the books being offered, that I was unable to support her book drive. She offered that I could choose a book of my liking to donate and she frantically showed me that one of the books had a Black person on the cover as she sheepishly conceded that the book did not have a Black story line... I told her that if I stopped in again and she had a more inclusive assortment of books, I would be happy to support the most worthy effort. She was just the messenger so I was careful not to beat her up, but I think she got the message. Hopefully she shared my concern with whoever coordinated the project...

I know some of you may think that I am too intense when it comes to issues of race but somebody had better be, particularly where Black Americans are concerned... Black Americans have been/are being effectively removed from the conversation on race in terms of diversity and/or inclusion. WHEN have you last heard us even mentioned in conversations of diversity?; the definition of which has been redefined seemingly to purposely exclude or certainly to de-emphasize attention given to members of the Black community.

We hear talk of Latino concerns, Gay concerns, issues regarding women but hardly a peep where Black Americans are concerned, as though our community is all healed??? This is especially disturbing because But For/Without the struggles and tenacity of Black Americans, most others who enjoy "rights" in this country would have no rights to speak of... We laid the ground work, got a few bones and now we are complacent? That scares me... Champion for others, yes but God helps those who help themselves. IJS...
 
Get with the program people, Lift EVERY Voice (ours included) as we sing!!!

Monday, October 7, 2013

The State of "United" America...

While I disagree with Mr. King's conclusion that the common denominator between the modern day dixiecrats and the dixiecrats of old is "government" [the destruction of] and not race", I am otherwise impressed and mostly agree with what he has penned here.

I am wondering when the rest of us are going to take our heads out of the sand, or unspeakable body parts, and begin to vociferously condemn what we know is really happening here? There is an angry WHITE fringe, sure to become a mob, and they will stop at nothing to get that BLACK guy out of THEIR WHITE house and do whatever is necessary to take THEIR country back, even if that means destroying OUR nation! I am guessing that the shut down is just child's play in their grand scheme of mass destruction... What is their ultimate goal, to honor the will of their warped and defeated  ancestors and secede the south or is it more bodacious this time and they now wish to "take back" the entire country? These folks are crazy and scary...

No thinking and intuitive person can deny that the teabaggers are fueled by a common denominator of hate and some longing for a return to the past. What does that mean? Should I start collecting an assortment of bandannas and learn to wear them on my head, start learning to deny my education and therefore my worldliness, and where should I sign up to take lessons to learn how to "shuck and jive" and be humble to White folks? And does that include my White Friends? I'm Just Wonderin'...

I am being facetious but facetiously serious...  Where does this all end and WHEN does the SANE MAJORITY in America; my good White Friends and yours, politically correct and polite politicians of every hue and certainly decent republicans who should cringe at even the suggestion of alignment with this crazed fringe, get angry too and start calling this nonsense out for what it is?

There is a cancer amongst us and we seem to think it will magically run its course or simply go away if we just ignore it. Newsflash! That is not how it works. These fools will stop at nothing! Shutting down the government is only the first of celebrations for this little engine that thinks it can. I am sure that this fait accompli, shutting down the US government, is only the first sip of tea to fuel their engine and thrust them into overdrive "we know we can" mode as the rest of us sit silently by to afraid, or perhaps to embarrassed, to acknowledge that our ills of the past are far from cured. uncle jim [crow] is alive and thriving as we, the SANE MAJORITY, sit idly by allowing an identified cancer in our society to metastasize and infect other parts of our population. Who does that?

And what of the foolish non-White cheerleaders who lead the charge for this group, the ted cruz', the marco rubios, the michelle malkins and of course the uncle clarence thomases and aunt condi's? Where do they think they fit in the master plan of these angry destructionists? I think Derek Bell in his book, Faces at the Bottom of the Well, has already answered this question for us, read the book if you are unfamiliar with his work. And getting back to  the non-White teabaggers, WHO, just WHO, said education makes us smarter?

So really folks, what are we waiting for? Another Martin Luther King or Harriet Beecher Stowe to shame our nation into confronting our ills? I'm Just Wonderin'...  Certainly our collective silence serves only to make us at least complicit in, if not supportive of, our own demise as a nation, as a people...  What did Gandhi and now President Obama say? We are the change we are waiting for...

Read Colbert King's article, The rise of the New Confederacy, and pass it on within your circles...



Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Rants on the Shut Down

Sharing Facebook Posts on the Shut Down...

October 1, 2013 (first day of the shut down)

Sad State of America... Racism is so deep and discussing it is so taboo that not even decent people will step up and stop the train seeking to wreck America ONLY because there is a Black guy in THEIR WHITE house! That is the truth and EVERYbody knows it!!! YET we boast that America is a "leader", an example of civility and democracy to all other nations... Yeah, OK...

The reality is that America has FAILED MISERABLY in advancing/addressing race relations and is a role model to NO ONE!!!

We are in a Sad and Dangerous State in America!!! These assholes will stop at NOTHING! We should all be concerned. Over the weekend in Richmond they raised their defeated flag. One has to wonder, in their warped minds, do they desire a civil war so that they can "take their country back"? Do they think that by their defiance, they are somehow vindicating their imagined "honor" of their defeated ancestors? What in the hell is their motive and where will they stop?

Might sound extreme but at what point do we acknowledge that we are dealing with some extreme crazies? If they were Arab or big Black guys toting guns and wearing berets we would have ASSumed such by now... I sincerely hope that someone in DOJ, the FBI, the CIA or whoever else is charged with protecting America is doing their job and is VERY closely monitoring these degenerates! Take Your Head OUT of the sand America! These assholes mean business and we will ALL pay for their hatefulness and their longings for the past...

Decent republicans, good White people and all others who know this to be true and sit idly or helplessly by discussing this matter only in their closed circles have dirty hands and bear some responsibility for letting this matter get as out of control as it has... The elephant in the room is stark raving mad and completely out of control! Ultimately he will trample us all as we pretend to not notice that he is there...

"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy", Martin Luther King, 1963.

Forgive my morning rant but my "tea" this morning is rancid and it is making me sick!!!




September 30, 2013 (shut down pending)

I find it fascinating that the "Hee Haws" have shed their bib overalls, replaced them with suits, come to Washington and actually take themselves seriously! They feel empowered because they have taken over the republican party and now the morons actually believe they can run the government!!! If not so scary, it might be funny... The "Bow ties", who fed this uncontrollable beast, are now scared shitless of it and don't know what to do! And while I don't want to see a shutdown, I'm gonna' be pissed as hell if the Dems give in to their lunacy as well!

Listening to these pundits predict what might happen based on history is funny. There is no benchmark, no frame of reference. These folks are loose cannons and totally unpredictable!!! There is no negotiating or compromising with hate filled illiterates! They have no appreciation for decorum nor is there a focal point upon which to rely or predict what they might do next. They have no sense of right from wrong, cannot distinguish logical from stupid as hell nor any of the other professionalisms that REAL politicians bring to the table... All bets are off!

They stir tea for a mere 22% of the crazies in the US, so why are we giving them so much authority? Come on "Bow ties", loosen your knot and use your tie to hang those bastards! You can't all be crazy so stand up for the credibility of the sane segment of your party. STOP being feeding the angry beast with your complicity!!! Ooh, I know, pretend they are Blacks, women or minorities and do what you do best! Disenfranchise them! Do whatever but get your crazies' under control!!!

The price for having a system that is so broken that a domestic coupe of this sort can take place is that there is hell to pay!!! May this be a wake up call that drives sane folks to the polls in droves in 2014 focused on throwing the pot out with the tea! Good Riddance!!! Hang in there folks, this too shall pass...








Friday, August 23, 2013

March On Washington 2013; Dream Fulfilled?

As I prepare for my journey to Washington, DC to participate in the 50 year commemoration of the 1963 March on Washington, I travel with mixed emotions and a heavy heart. How I wish I was preparing to travel for a Victory March celebrating the realization of 50 years of undeniable accomplishments of improved race relations in the US, of  undeniable and proportionate Black American achievement in the US, of undeniable peace,harmony, fair play and equal opportunity in the US...  

50 Years later and still we march. See ya' in DC....   

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Just Wasn't Gonna' Happen...

The prosecutors in the zimmerman trial threw the case from the moment they empanelled the jury to the end when they were scrambling for suitable charges. There is NO way they expected that a jury composed of 5 White women, from the south no less, who stereotypically are most fearful of young Black men, were ever going to find empathy for Trayvon nor share some maternal bond with his grieving Mother. Fair trial? Fair verdict? Just wasn't gonna' happen...

Moreover, the prosecutor who steered clear of, but who should have argued, racial profiling was not about to do so when daily he defends the ideology of racial profiling. To do so would have put him in a position of vulnerability, that surely would have come back to bite him. His own words would have set precedent and would have been used against him in his defense of racist cops and others in future cases. He was not about to zealously defend the honor of Trayvon at the expense of losing his legal footing in other cases. Just wasn't gonna' happen...

And let us not forget that judge's children DON'T go to prison! zimmerman, the jerk that he is, has a father who IS the good ole' boy network, old, white and male. It was undoubtedly his father's meddling that manipulated this "justice" from beginning to end. His son was not about to go to prison. Just wasn't gonna' happen...

"Post Racial" is a joke! Racism is alive, well and thriving in America and this case is a reflection of such in the mirror in which we don't want to see ourselves. Those women, nor the prosecution, saw Trayvon as a young innocent Black boy. They saw a young Black "gonna' be" thug who if not causing trouble on that night would have caused trouble in the future. They saw not grieving parents but instead parents who, by virtue of their skin color, should have expected such fate for their son. As Black parents, as a Black community, they/we should be immune to the reality of their/our Black sons being shackled and cuffed, landing in prison and certainly lying dead following some senseless crime. What other future did the Martins expect for Trayvon? A bright future with college degree, 2 children, a big house with the white picket fence in our "post racial" society? A pipedream! Just wasn't gonna' happen...

While I am disappointed in the verdict and would like to have seen a fair, just and colorblind outcome, I am not surprised by the verdict. I never thought zimmerman would be convicted, nor did he. Not in this society, not in this racially biased judicial system that dehumanizes young Black men daily as it takes delight in stripping them of their manhood, parading them in courts clad in ridiculously bright orange jumpsuits, pimping them for free labor in prisons filled to the rim with them, returning them to bondage so to keep other folks employed and to make corporations very rich! zimmerman, a racist and a judge's kid, in the very hell hole the system his father served and likely helped to create incarcerated with the men that very system takes delight in condemning? A fair trial for a young Black boy in America, no matter his innocence? Sorry Folks, but it just wasn't gonna' happen... 

Saturday, June 15, 2013

The Long Arm of Discrimination...

As many of you know, I strongly advocate the message in Michelle Alexander's book, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. The Washington Post article posted below, Two Companies Accused of Discrimination in Hiring, is a prime example of exactly what she writes about. Mass incarceration of Black Americans is equivalent to re-implementation of Jim Crow. It is undeniable that Blacks, who are often railroaded in the criminal justice system and who are therefore disproportionately burdened with criminal conviction records, are most excluded from the workforce and most adversely affected by enforcement of employer's blanket "no hire ex-offenders" policies. 

WHEN does an American stop paying for a crime? WHEN are such persons allowed full re-entry into society? I often wonder if since such persons are summarily excluded from society, denied basic rights and privileges of citizenship in every way that is meaningful, then why should such persons be made to pay taxes? For what benefit do they pay? Certainly not their own. Most cannot vote, can't find work, are denied housing, college grants, certain professional licenses, food stamps and so much more after being forced into a free labor system, because mass incarceration is also tantamount to re-implementation of slavery. Inmates are forced to barter the prospect of freedom (better referred to as early release because once branded a criminal, freedom escapes you) for so few pennies for the hour, that essentially they work for free. Don't believe me? Read Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II by Doug Blackmon, the title sums up the message. Is it expected that when persons with convictions are fortunate enough to find or create work, that they should then work and pay to support the comforts of America for everyone but themselves? Seems rather unfair, seems unjust... 

In the Washington Post article, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) charges that two employers, BMW and Dollar General, are discriminating in their hiring practices, refusing to hire or blatantly firing those persons with criminal convictions. How dare both companies, who undeniably make a ton of money in the Black community which is unduly burdened with the stigma of criminal convictions, enforce such practices, particularly where long term and otherwise good employees were terminated for matters that seem minor in nature and that occurred in the distant past.    

This is where we need to be reminded of the power of a boycott. We have forgotten the effect of collectively refusing to buy a product or use a particular service. Our history has proved that launching a mass boycott of these type employers, would force them to revisit their discriminatory policies. In this instance, where would Dollar General be without Black and/or poor patrons, both of whom are disproportionately burdened with criminal convictions, both of whom largely constitute Dollar General's customer base? I think we know. Here I must plug and encourage you to read Our Black Year: One Family's Quest to Buy Black in America's Racially Divided Economy by Maggie Anderson. She passionately and convincingly details for the Black community the power of our dollar and encourages that we make demands in return for our patronage, that we exercise our muscle in terms of our significant spending power.  

If companies can set up shop and sell their goods and services to persons with criminal convictions, certainly they can be more lenient and reasonable in terms hiring such persons therefore rewarding the "hand that feeds them". The crime prompting exclusion from employment should be directly related to the work to be performed and even then, there should be a consideration of relevant circumstances; further involvement in criminal activity and certainly how long ago the crime was committed. 

My hat is off to the EEOC for investigating, exposing and hopefully enforcing strong penalties for such blatant discrimination. These are but two of MANY employers who are equally guilty of  enforcing similar exclusionary policies. Join me and support that the EEOC sends a very strong message of zero tolerance and puts an end to even to this long arm extension of discrimination!  


Check out the article: 

Two Companies Accused of Discrimination in Hiring



Saturday, June 8, 2013

Today I Celebrate Me...

WOW! Another year has gone by. Hard to believe. Where does the time go? At this time last year I was in Los Angeles hanging out with a variety of Friends, some of whom I had not seen in a very long time. I went seeking sun and beach only to learn about "June Gloom". Apparently some parts of LA are void of sun for the most part of June. Because I was staying at Redondo Beach and was so close to the water, some days were damn near cold and some others were overcast with the gloom of June... Who knew? LOL! It was a fabulous time nonetheless! I enjoyed my time with Friends and Family. It was great...

As I prepare for what will be a subdued birthday this year, I am reminded of birthdays past. Without exception, my birthday is my special time to celebrate me! I have celebrated birthdays by doing something as simple as spending a day being pampered at a local spa, as I will today, to spending the entire month of June in Egypt marveling at the wonders of my history and dining on the Nile.

Milestone birthdays have been purposeful and extra special. The big 4-0 was celebrated on a cruise with 25 dear Friends. 35 was celebrated partying harder than I have ever partied in life. I reconnected with an old Friend from my college days and went to St. Maarten for the very first and the very best of the Sinbad Soul Festivals, 1995. Chartered planes filled with a few hundred mature and spirited Black folks from around the country descended on the island for a week of nothing but pure fun! Parties were held on a different beach every day. Concerts were held nightly with the best of performers from the 70's; Earth, Wind & Fire, The O'Jays, Gladys Knight, Frankie Beverly, Teena Marie, Ohio Players, Natalie Cole, Al Green and more. Celebrities, to include Angela Bassett, Isaac Hayes and Tom Joyner mingled, partied and took photos with us regular folks. HBO taped the event, segments of which aired later that summer. Night clubs stayed open and filled with partygoers, including myself, til' 5am! The weather was perfect and everyone was in good spirits. I had so much fun that I had to remind myself to stop and eat. Sleep was almost unheard of until we boarded our flight for home. It was such a grand time that one of the DC ladies had a party at her house later that summer for all to gather, share photos, swap tales and reminisce about our trip. It was the best time ever!!!

Miss Higgi & Frankie Beverly


Thirty was celebrated by having a party at "The Club" in Washington, DC. I remember that it was on a Friday night and I danced all night long! One of my Friends described that I partied like an over aged teenager! This too is a good memory. The Club became on of my favorite DC hang outs. It was at located above the Days Inn Hotel at 12th & K Streets, NW. Ah, the good ole' days!!!

Fifty was fab too! I celebrated in Punta Cana & Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic with two very dear and long time Friends. In between I have celebrated birthdays in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Bermuda, Costa Rica, Florida, Jamaica, San Francisco, Arizona, Las Vegas, Sydney, Australia and more.

Today I turn 53! Today I am truly grateful! Grateful that despite a few bumps along the way, this ride of life has been mostly good. I fully recognize and appreciate that I have been blessed in that I have been afforded some truly wonderful experiences and met some truly fantastic people! 

Thank You God for Your many blessings and for another year to inspire others and to Celebrate Me... 

Today I Celebrate Me, Happy Birthday Miss Higgi...

Thursday, June 6, 2013

JUST LIVE FOLKS!!!

Last week a bridge collapsed in Seattle... Yesterday a building in downtown Philly collapsed. How does that happen? Last count 13 injured and 6 people dead, one of whom was only 35 years young and on her first day of work at the Salvation Army store, the building upon which the neighboring edifice fell.

So often my Friends tell me they live vicariously through me, my free spirit & my zest for life. I love sharing my tales hoping to spark a little spontaneity and thirst for adventure in them as well. I caution them however, not to be as carefree as me because, unlike me, most have children or other responsibilities. But by all means I encourage them to LIVE! Follow your passion! Stop dreaming for retirement or waiting for the time, money or circumstances to be right to start seeing the big beautiful world! I have visited 6 of the 7 continents and plan too see so much more!

While life WILL happen, rarely will it happen that the stars align and everything is perfectly in place for you to follow your dream, travel or whatever it is, so JUST LIVE Folks! Live without regrets! Don't wait for a building or other burdens of life to fall on you to get your wake up call. NOW IS YOUR TIME! Build YOUR bridge and start making IT Happen! You'll be alright! Really you will...


This picture, taken by a dear Friend and mailed to many as a postcard a few years back, captures the spirit and essence of life I strive to maintain... JUST LIVE FOLKS!!!

 
 
 
Miss Higgi reminding you to live passionately, be kind to others and to always Celebrate YOU! 
 
 

Friday, May 31, 2013

Spark the Change YOU Want to See...

If the video below does not motivate you to get involved and make a difference in your community or in someone else's life, then nothing will. Strawberry Mansion, the Philadelphia High School featured in the broadcast, looks more like a prison than a school. So when our youth behave accordingly, why are we surprised? It is up to us to break the cycle, to show them something different...  
 
Hats off to Principal Linda Cliatt-Wayman, the teachers and other school personnel who support her daily. She is a hero in the true sense of the word. What is more commendable however, is that she has not run away from her roots. She is back in her community, fully vested in her legacy and determined to make a difference. I have already reached out to see how I can help. Will you? Trust me, there is a "Strawberry Mansion" in a neighborhood close to you... 
 
Come on Folks. WE CAN make a difference!!!

Strawberry Mansion High School
3133 Ridge Ave.
Philadelphia, PA 19132
Phone: 215-852-2636
Email: strawberrymansionhighschool@gmail.com

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

There is Untapped Power in the Community...


Last night I drove more than 120 miles round trip to attend a fundraiser for Sheena Johnson, a Mother of two, who resorted to living in a NJ storage unit with her sons because she felt they had no where else to go. Ironically I was 27 years old, the same age as Ms Johnson, when I was disenchanted and spent less than one year working in the very system that should provide a safety net for Moms like Ms. Johnson. Even then I was disturbed to be part of a system that seemed more concerned with destroying families rather than helping them…  

Ms Johnson left an abusive relationship and did what she had to do to keep her Family together. Did she make a few missteps? Yes, desperate people often do. She left her boys at the storage unit while she was across town slashing her boyfriend's tires. Not good judgment. When she got arrested and realized that she was not going to be released, she immediately told the cops where her sons were. Why? Because she loves and cares for her 5 and 10 year old children and because she was obviously concerned for their safety, that’s what Mothers do…  

Ms. Johnson has reportedly been drug tested twice since her arrest. She is NOT a drug user. She works with temporary agencies and despite living in a storage unit, her boys were not abused or malnourished and they attended private school. Ms. Johnson is articulate, employable, obviously resourceful and like many others in this horrible economy, down on her luck. So what does a system that should be willing to help a young Mother in her condition do? They arrest her and charge her with a felony punishable by 5 - 10 years imprisonment, strap her with a $50,000 bail that she cannot afford and take her children away refusing to let her see them. Her case will be heard in family court in Mercer County on May 31. Don’t get excited, you cannot go to show support of her because in NJ, as in most other states, family court proceedings are closed to the public, NY and FL are the exceptions. At best, you can rally in her defense on the courthouse steps. I cautioned Ms Johnson to hope for the best but to prepare for the worse. She wants her children back.

How sad is it that in times of crisis, Mothers like Sheena Johnson are so very afraid to turn to social services for help? That is the purpose of the agency, is it not? I have a Friend whose teenage daughter was giving her hell, as teenagers do. Fortunately she called me before calling her local social service agency to ask for a local reference to secure psychological assistance to help solve her Family problems. She had no idea of the potential for harm to which she would have subjected the sanctity of her Family had she made that call. Once the courts and social services become involved in your family life, they dig for dirt and they are there to stay. Certainly, I would never advise handing them the invitation and I am an attorney and a former social worker. How sad is that?

Hats off to The Big Easy Restaurant for coming to the aid of Ms Johnson. The owner, Olugbala Sababu and his friend Dan Toto, heard her story and sprang into action to get her out of jail and then educated and galvanized the community to also support her. I was pleased to see so many who attended the fundraiser, designed to create a trust fund for Ms. Johnson’s sons, show genuine concern and support for the mother of these children. She was visibly appreciative and still overwhelmed with joy when I spoke with her later in the evening. A local church came forward and volunteered use of a home for Ms. Johnson and the boys for at least the next year. 
tn0519johnson2.JPG
Olugbala Sababu, owner of the Big Easy restaurant, Sheena Johnson and Dan Toto. (Photo Source: The Times) 

There is untapped power in the community. Our apathy is overwhelming and relied on by public agencies like the courts, social service providers, the police and others who we empower with our silence. It is our apathy that licenses such authorities to be reckless and to do what they will. I am convinced however, as was evidenced last night, that when we know better, we do better. It is not that the community does not care, it is more that the community does not know. When someone has compassion, takes the time to let us know and provides a means to get involved, the community will show up…

Again, family courts in NJ and most other states are closed to the public. Although access to courts is a state issue, opening family courts is a matter that must be addressed nationally. Stipulations on federal dollars can serve as incentive for states to consider any such revisions. In the interest of “protecting privacy”, closed courts have created a shield that instead protects bad lawyering, abhorable social work and all too often a miscarriage of justice. Because Mothers so desperately want their children returned and don’t want to get on the wrong side of the courts or the social workers who hold ALL of the cards, they silently endure what ever happens to them in a closed court setting. The courts are in full control of the image and impressions projected to the public. The Family is effectively silenced through hopelessness, despair and a lack of power. And we wonder where our children learn to bully...

All too often, Families in need of help are further victimized behind the closed doors of the court. It will be interesting to see how the courts and social services react to Ms. Johnson’s story going public. Will they concede and do what is right and what they are empowered to do, help her to find suitable housing and offer life skills training and other IN HOME services to help improve her situation or will they push back, go into greater attack mode and further punish this family by keeping them separated? It is noteworthy that states get Title IV federal funding when children are placed in court ordered, OUT OF HOME placement. This money is not available for services provided while the child remains in the home. This too, needs to be addressed. It offers the wrong incentive and is not in concert with family reunification. Our silence around the country validates a failed and broken system that has no accountability...   

Based on my professional experiences enhanced by an occasional stint as an adjunct professor teaching a class on child welfare policy, I can tell you that Ms Johnson’s circumstance is not an exception but rather the rule. But for the compassion of Mr. Sababu and Mr. Toto, she would have languished in an overcrowded jail, unable to pay an excessive bail, all the while being estranged from her children. By the time she got out of jail, if she got out of jail, the state would have argued that it would be disruptive and harmful for the children to be removed from a “stable and loving” foster home at which they would have “bonded” after being there for a good part of a year. Moreover, by time of release from jail, Ms Johnson would have new hurdles to jump, hurdles she did not have before the awful ordeal began. While I don’t profess to know all the facts in Ms Johnson’s case, I do profess to know that hers is a Family that, given proper and unbiased professional attention, is salvageable…

It is a vicious cycle and there are far too many Sheena Johnson's harshly or wrongfully punished by a broken and ineffective system that is too overwhelmed, too insensitive and too rarely challenged or held accountable to stop and heal itself. Ms Johnson and Mothers like her are the victims of bureaucracy. They are victims of a system that knows no boundaries when it comes to justifying its existence and upholding its obviously flawed methods... It is no coincidence that the children who populate the child welfare systems are often the same children who eventually populate the adult prison system. Nor is it a coincidence that both are filled with Black and Brown faces, that is a story to be told on another day…  This national pathology however, endorsed by our collective silence, is called the cradle to prison pipeline.

WHERE does it end?

WHEN do we start to care enough to challenge the gross abuses of a very broken system?

WHY do we typically wait until tragedy knocks at our door to be inspired to get involved? By then it is often too late and our silence has allowed that precedent be set. 

WHAT will you do now that you know?

WHO will step up and take the lead to challenge your local systems?


There IS Untapped Power In the Community!!!


Again, hats off to the Big Easy Restaurant located at 120 S Warren Street in Trenton, NJ.




Here is the link to the news coverage: