Saturday, July 23, 2016

Anti-Black or White Supremacy:the archeology behind all this. An essay

Do not bother dismantling anti-Black or white supremacy. Rather establish opportunities for general human supremacy. Black and white color markers for right and wrong or fair and ugly is part of a heritage carried over from Europe. Powerful far impacting infrastructure, has been in place for many years to elevate white and burnish black. Don't waste time in "fighting" differentness. Rather embrace it. Embrace diversity.

Black and white is a dichotomy so steeped into the deliberations that took place at Nicene a long time ago or to a time before that. It will be like asking a repainting of God Almighty (White) and the Lucifer (Black) into other colors. 

Queen Elizabeth (I) presided over a long, relatively stable and prosperous reign for 44 years. The Elizabethan era is named for her (Woody Harrelson). She expelled ‘negars and blackamoors' from Britain in 1601. Color plays an important part in the book The White Devil (Color Symbolism). Towards the end of the play, when the action moves towards the final murders, black is used more frequently to accentuate the atmosphere of evil and despair:
Francisco talks of Brachiano’s imminent death:
‘Now to the barriers.
This shall his passage to the black lake further,'
(Act 5 scene 2)
The words of a very old nursery rhyme extracted from colorism by Nadra Kareen Nittle, go as follows:
“if you’re black, stay black;
If you are brown, stick around;
If you’re yellow, you’re mellow;
If you’re white, you’re all right.

The impact of religious beliefs upon the reading of colors cannot be separated from historical influences, as world events like the crusades and colonization went hand in hand with the spread of missionaries. Symbolism associated with light and darkness was probably derived from esoteric tradition—astrology, alchemy, Gnosticism and forms of Manichaeism. In the fifth century C.E., black became the color of the devil and demons (Nederveen Pieterse, 1992).

There is a tendency of patronizing instead of actually taking time to hear other people's stories.  A side (courts and police) dismisses the complaints of mistreatment of another as if the complaints never occurred.  Police, government, media and schools – all with histories of overt racism, brutality, and segregation – continue to operate behind mythologies of urban danger and destruction that lead to veiled policies of discrimination locally (Robert E. Gutsche, 2012). One side preaches religions whose theology continues to paint black as fallen and white as angelic. People still think the mark of sophistication is to be street-wise or driving a car and primitivity is to be laughed at. We miss the story of the one who is said to be "primitive." One may not be street-wise but that does not mean they lack a certain sophistication which enables them to actualize in a familiar environment.

I would encourage an alternative called human supremacy for those who genuinely want to build firm bridges. It delineates its objectives and does not encourage ambivalence.  This is no smiling discrimination or 'now you see it, now you don't' aspect. Exclusionary discrimination written in a code only white people know is meant to perpetuate classicism and racism (Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, 2006). The examples of coded language embodied in the World Bank and IMF deliberately keeps say, African countries subscribing to what are termed development programs. Africa up to now only has one kind of Cape Town or Johannesburg and those cities cannot be replicated in 10's or 20’s. White people talk of their European heritage with pride. Many US-born Black Americans can not counter misinformation about Africa (sensationalized by mainstream media). The news about Africa goes on and on about how it is riddled with wars, a desolate place with poverty every where. Many do not question whatsitsname media house’s legitimacy of such news.  Chained by fear and lack of economic wherewithal to travel keeps blacks in their small communities. Worse, Diaspora black African-born immigrants who would have demystified given angles of the news are busy earning what they need to use to pay for subsistence. No room for conversation. Meanwhile. white people can afford to visit Oslo, Copenhagen, Athens, Rome, Florence, Stuttgart, Moscow and Edinburgh or wherever they feel they have roots frequently.

Human supremacy addresses economic, social, intellectual, cultural and technological empowerment. These are the true tools used to break barriers that stoke wistfulness and inequality. All races have places they call holiday destinations or ancestral destinations. Arabs have many places in Africa and Arabian peninsula. Asians have many in the different Asian countries. South America has very beautiful well maintained destinations. To change the image of who a black human being is will require making alliances. Likely alliances will be made with cultures that are emerging from countries such as the BRICS to bring about this. Perhaps instead of racism we proactively engage in developmentism, empowerment and emancipation. We need to start narratives where support, empowerment, building thriving communities and things that work are chronicled.

We should teach people to chronicle the things they do better, inventorying reward systems and celebrating accomplishments are aspects that need to be introduced to all communities. Mental/intellectual, social, physical and cultural preparation builds a critical mass of people who can be trained to be self sufficient. Skills are a leveler as far as race relations go. Skills promote interpersonal relations at intra and inter race levels.

To lead a quality life, we need to have good roads, good doctors, good police, job security for all employed people, good schools and we have to be able to treat our mother Earth with conscientious regard. We need to maintain the schools, our communities and empower as many people to do so. Knowing this and preparing as many black, whites, Asians, Latinos and Native Americans as possible is what matters. We need to have ladders put into wells to get those at bottom to the top. We need each other but we need to be well prepared and skilled to be marketable as well.

Free speech allows derogative language to sip through well censored platforms. Privacy too allows bigotry and subtle separatism to continue. But, we cherish free speech, privacy and sustainable communities.  If we are to uphold privacy, we need to empower as many people to enjoy their private homes. Free speech, privacy have a third sister who is sustainable communities. People who are empowered will be able to live in sustainable and thriving communities. 

After 5, 10, 70, 80, 90, 100 years we shall be dead. We need to lead productive lives and not be bogged down by a naughtiness to always load it over those who are different from us.



References:

                  Color symbolism. Retrieved from: http://crossref-it.info/textguide/the-white-devil/32/2243. Retrieved on July 2016.

Eduardo Bonilla-Silva. 2006. Racism without Racists. Rowman  & Littlefield Publishers Inc.

Nadra Kareem Nittle. Race Relations Expert. Retrieved from: http://racerelations.about.com/bio/Nadra-Kareem-Nittle-60956.htm. Retrieved on July 20th 2016.

Nederveen Pieterse 1992 Jan Nederveen Pieterse. White on Black: Images of Africa and Blacks in Western Popular Culture. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Woody Harrelson. Queen Elizabeth I: Biography. Retrieved from: http://www.biography.com/people/queen-elizabeth-i-9286133. Retrieved on July 22nd 2016.


Robert E. Gutsche. 2012. “This Ain’t the Ghetto”: Diaspora, Discourse, and Dealing with “Iowa Nice.” Retrieved from: http://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1140&context=poroi. Retrieved on July 20th 2016.

Immigrant trivia for you brought by BayHeal

Office of Minority Health is under the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) of health and human services


In 1985, the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a landmark report, the Secretary's Task Force Report on Black and Minority Health (Heckler Report). 

It documented the existence of health disparities among racial and ethnic minorities in the United States. The Office of Minority Health (OMH) was created in 1986 as one of the most significant outcomes of the Heckler Report and was reauthorized by the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in 2010. 

The mission of OMH is to improve the health of racial and ethnic minority populations through the development of health policies and programs that will eliminate health disparities. In addition to the great work being done at OMH to address disease prevention, health promotion, risk reduction, healthier lifestyle choices, the use of health care services, and barriers to health care for racial and ethnic minorities, they also provide access to a wealth of resources for the public.

References:

http://www.cdc.gov/minorityhealth/OMHHE.html.

http://www.minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.aspx?lvl=1&lvlid=3.



Please feel free to call Tom on +14152990297 for more information on how we can work with you.

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Health Screening and Holistic Health Conscientization by 2017

We shall engage all the African Immigrant/Refugee groups, association and entities in owning skills to demand for health screening and information for:

1. Hearing and Vision Screenings


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco with hearing and vision screening information (e.g., balance and vestibular evaluation, comprehensive hearing tests). Anticipated reach using peer driven messaging (PDM) by second wave: 3,000 persons.

2. Health Risk Assessments


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco with health risk assessments information (e.g. cardiac and cholesterol, male health, male wellness, female health, female wellness).

3. Health Education



Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco with messages on nutrition, physical activity and advantages of regular medical check ups. We shall generate action plans using the 'NASH' modelling. This framework mainstreams nutrition, activity, sanitation and health goals as part of planning and outcomes. 


4. BMI and Blood Pressure Determination


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco with messages and action plans on weight watching.

5. Blood Glucose and Pre-Diabetes Assessments


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco with messages on watching glucose intake and calorie burning techniques as Diabetes prevention practices at community level


6. Age-related Counselling and Support


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco on age-related health, needs and referral opportunities.

7. Mother and Child Health Counselling and Support


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco on practices promoting family health, well mother and child needs and support.

8. Men, health and wellbeing counselling and Support


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco to specifically empower men/males to own health improving skills.

9. Referrals and Support based on your needs


Output by 2017:

We shall have empowered individuals to make self-assesment and generated  positive living action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco.

10. Avoiding accidents and hazards


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco on understanding accidents and hazards in USA.

11. Civic Duty and community Policing


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco on how to increase participation in community events using localized social calendars.

12. Sexual Assault, HIV transmission and the Law


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco and empowered them with peer to peer information sharing skills to improve informed decisions and awareness around Sexual assault and grounds for criminal sexual offenses in USA.


13. Musculoskeletal and physiotherapy needs assessment


Output by 2017:

We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco on body changes as people grow or engage in physically strenuous activities and how to still remain healthy.

13. HIV-related skills:


We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco; developed and shared social decision support tools* reinforcing their Knowledge of services and Prevention Resources: e.g.; 


http://hivcare.org/
http://www.socio.com/happa.php.
https://www.facebook.com/HivPrevJustice/?fref=nf.
https://start.truvada.com/.
New Prevention Technologies (microbicides, diaphragm, female condom)

HIV-related medical check ups:


Positive living care
Positive living literature
HIV testing
STD check ups

* The Social Decision Support Tools (SDST) include: Diaries, calendars, directional locations of social/health/Human Services points and Community organizations that provide services including places of worship.

© Tom RMM

Contact telephone: 415-299-0297 (Pacific Standard Time)

Anti-HIV Movement Building For Immigrants and Refugees in USA

We shall engage all the African-born Immigrant/Refugee groups, association and entities in owning skills to demand for health screening and information in the following thematic areas:


1. Health Education


Output by 2017-2027:
We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco with messages on nutrition, physical activity and advantages of regular medical check ups. We shall generate action plans using the 'NASH' modelling. This framework mainstreams nutrition, activity, sanitation and health goals as part of planning and outcomes.


2. Age-related Counselling and Support

Output by 2017-2027:
We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco on age-related health, needs and referral opportunities.

3. Mother and Child Health Counselling and Support

Output by 2017-2027:
We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco on practices promoting family health, well mother and child needs and support.

4. Men, health and wellbeing counselling and Support

Output by 2017-2027:
We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco to specifically empower men/males to own health improving skills.


5. Sexual Assault, HIV transmission and the Law

Output by 2017-2027:
We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco and empowered them with peer to peer information sharing skills to improve informed decisions and awareness around Sexual assault and grounds for criminal sexual offenses in USA.

6. HIV-related skills:

Output by 2017-2027:
We shall have identified community leaders and engaged in dialogue and generated action at 60 venues from Berkeley, San Diego, Los Angeles, Seattle, Omaha, Fayetteville, Anchorage, Chicago Lexington, Boston, Waltham, Atlanta, Worcester, New York, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Huntsville, Montgomery and San Francisco; developed and shared social decision support tools* reinforcing their Knowledge of services and Prevention Resources: e.g.; 


http://hivcare.org/
http://www.socio.com/happa.php.
https://www.facebook.com/HivPrevJustice/?fref=nf.
https://start.truvada.com/.
New Prevention Technologies (microbicides, diaphragm, female condom)

Integrated HIV-related medical check ups:

Positive living care
Positive living literature
HIV testing and complementary services
ARV initiation
STD check ups


We shall eventually develop a network to collaborate, share experiences as well as act as a link with each other.

© Tom RMM
Contact telephone: 415-299-0297 (Pacific Standard Time)

More than five years of community organizing becomes a basis of a "paying it forward" principle

The Africa Leaders Summit. Source: The White House

President Barack Obama. Source: The White House

President Barack Obama. Source: The White House
The American education system empowers its pupils and students to think while on their feet. As an African immigrant having benefitted from a first class education here in USA, I got this idea and wanted to share it with other friends. When we met it amazed me that they too had ideas about community organizing but they required someone skilled in building translatory frameworks, defining goals, subjecting the people and organization to tests of worthiness. Thus began the African Empowered Communities-USA (AEC-USA). An institution whose goal is to act as a bridge for African communities to smoothly mesh with the American way of life. Yes, I am a co-founder of AEC-USA.

Immigrants or children of immigrants have made this a great country. There are examples in the tens of thousands. But, I want to just list five. One from Austria, the second from India and all the other three from Africa: Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Satya Nadella the 3rd CEO of Microsoft, Dr. Bennet Omalu the one who named a brain debilitation called Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE), the gold award figure skating Kristine Musademba and renowned policy analyst and activist Nii Akuetteh.  Let us not look upwards to the presidency of the USA. No, let us not go there. But, I am sure you get my point.

It is high time immigrants from Africa copied or xeroxed (no apologies here) what the Jewish Diaspora, the Indian Diaspora, the Filipino Diaspora, Japanese Diaspora or Chinese Diaspora are doing. We need to be part of the grand projects that define the built and technological environment of USA. Let us have the spirit of organizing to have great institutions that provide opportunities for enriched scholarship for our children. Do not get me wrong, the USA has facilitation for education that is superb. What I meant by enriched scholarship is as follows:

1. Our communities must be aligned with the rules and regulations of the larger communities. Our homes must be spaces of nurturing our children as well as spaces where the parents are not absent or harassed by over working. We must be able to socialize or even take the day off when that opportunity is available.

2. Our health comes first. We need to be extra serious about our lives as far as: nutrition, physical activity, dental/medical check ups and mental health go. I have met with community groups and introduced such topics like: anger management, understanding health risks or encouraging people to enrol in self help organizations that hold regular re-education meetings.

3. We should be seen in large numbers during the community clean ups, the call for community meetings should an opportunity for attendance, and joining the volunteer teams that help clean your town or city is not a bad idea at all.

4.  Our civil societies should be empowered to see the bigger picture. Many of us came to stay in USA for good. But, we also have ties back in Africa. We have grand schemes to help make that continent a dependable bed of contentment. We want to have a bigger say in the regularity of politics, smooth power transfer, an investment climate that is not encased in brutal tactics and most of all we want mobility that is unfettered. 

All this can be possible. We can be part of the NASA engineering teams or HIV Vaccine team. This will be when our community groups are dependable spaces of nurturing and education.

The author has been in several community events, gatherings and campaigns. From cleaning the city campaigns to labor parades.  Joining community meetings helps one get the pulse of what matters in USA. Source: African Empowered Communities-USA (AEC-USA)

Cultural events by immigrants. Source: AEC-USA

Face to Face meetings help smooth our talking points. A form of speed bonding. Source: AEC-USA

Chinese Cultural events in San Francisco. Source: AEC-USA

Engaging African American Chamber of Commerce. Source: AEC-USA

MarketPlace events. Source: AEC-USA

Engaging the Filipino Community. Source: AEC-USA

Meeting the communities in USA. Source: AEC-USA

First hand information on what works. Source: AEC-USA

The African Immigrants forum. Source: AEC-USA

Power of meeting together. Source:AEC-USA

Exhibition Event. Source: AEC-USA

The forum. AEC-USA

The forum. Source: AEC-USA

Opportunities for socializing. Source: Uganda Community Organization in California

Socializing events. Source: UCOC

Africa Leaders Summit, Washington DC: Source Al Jazeera

African Leaders meet President of USA.







Monday, June 20, 2016

HIV Prevention Platform For Immigrants in USA (IM PREVENTION USA)

We call this program the HIV PREVENTION PLATFORM FOR IMMIGRANTS IN USA (IM PREVENTION USA)


According to AHF, 37 million people living with HIV worldwide. 240 people being infected with HIV every hour. Less than 50% of all people living with HIV on life saving antiretroviral treatment. 

According to http://www.actforyouth.net/, Globally, over 100 million STIs occur each year in people under the age of 25 years, and an estimated 11.8 million people aged 15-24 were living with HIV by mid-2002. Further, about half of all new HIV infections worldwide, or nearly 6,000 cases per day, occur in young people.
In the United States alone, approximately one-quarter of new STI infections, almost four million, are diagnosed among teens. Moreover, approximately 1,700 newly diagnosed cases of AIDS were reported in people between the ages of 13 and 24 in 2003. However, the risk of STI/HIV infection is not uniform among adolescents. Females, men who have sex with men, injection drug users, people who have exchange sex (i.e., sex for money or goods), and racial minorities have markedly higher rates of STI/HIV during adolescence. 

Prevention among immigrants must look into the intersectionality aspect of: need for acculturation; practices that make one vulnerable; prevention practices; health seeking practices; economic sustainability practices; the justice, law and documentation issues of an immigrant; understanding of HIV-related laws; networks within which one survives; peer pressures; and resilience practices. All these impact on the way an immigrant is engaged in HIV prevention.


There are two HIV-related skills we encourage immigrants to embrace such as:


Know where to seek services and Prevention Resources:
  1. http://hivcare.org/
  2. http://www.socio.com/happa.php.
  3. https://www.facebook.com/HivPrevJustice/?fref=nf.
  4. https://start.truvada.com/
  5. New Prevention Technologies (microbicides, diaphragm, female condom)


Know HIV-related medical check ups:

  1. Positive living care
  2. Positive living literature
  3. HIV testing
  4. STD check ups

  • NB. Subscribe to our dedicated HIV Prevention blog: http://impreventionusa.blogspot.com/

All pictures here are used for education purposes. Courtesy of wikimedia commons.


















© By: Tom R. M.M. Executive Director