Friday, June 5, 2020

Tear gas falls in the realm of a chemical weapon. When YOU allow a system to go unchecked. June 2020


 Like a child given the gift of a chemistry set.  The child if not guided responsibly will tend to create and use to its' full capability.

Tear gas falls in the realm of a chemical weapon.

BEMA International

Councilmember Nadeau Introduces Bill 

Banning Use of Tear Gas bDistrict Police

Washington, DC – In response to the recent reporting of the use of tear gas to disperse peaceful protesters in the District of Columbia and cities across the country, Councilmember Brianne K. Nadeau has introduced the Internationally Banned Chemical Weapon Prohibition Amendment Act of 2020, which prohibits the use of chemical irritants like tear gas by MPD in the dispersal of first amendment assembliesWhile the District cannot make the same mandate of federal agencies, the bill directs the Mayor to communicate this policy to any agency operating in the District of Columbia.
 
Tear gas and similar substances have been banned by international treaty for use in warfare since the Geneva Protocol of 1925, but the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1992 includes a carve-out for domestic use.
 
“We have a responsibility to protect our residents from unnecessary and inhumane riot tactics from law enforcement officials while they are peacefully carrying out their First Amendment rights. We want to make it very clear that is unacceptable to use tear gas or any chemical weapon that is banned iinternational warfare on our residents, said Councilmember Nadeau.
 
Nadeau adds, “The District of Columbia is home to an engaged constituency whorightfully and frequently attend First Amendment demonstrations. If our residents do not feel safe peacefully protesting, we are silencing them. There are more steps that we need to take, but it is critical that we take this first step immediately”.
 
The bill is being co-introduced by Councilmembers David Grosso, Elissa Silverman, Robert White, Brandon Todd, and Trayon White
 
 
 
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Office of Brianne K. Nadeau
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Suite 102
Washington, DC 20004
Phone: (202) 724-8181

The Stories We Tell. Change the paradigm. June 2020

This was shared by Lori Peek, Ph.D., Director, Natural Hazards Center, University of Colorado Boulder via the Risk and Disasters Topical Interest Group (TIG) at the Society for Applied Anthropology

The Stories We Tell

When the stories a society shares are out of tune with its circumstances, they can become self-limiting, even a threat to survival. That is our current situation.
David Korten, The Great Turning
Stories are the threads that weave together the wisdom of the past. They give form to present values and shape future possibilities. The best stories can open our minds and hearts so that we build empathy and collectively experience moments that we might otherwise miss. A story can change the entire trajectory of a person’s life. That means stories can change the world.
For this reason, we must pay attention to the stories we tell, as well as to those that are told to us. But doing so can be uncomfortable among professionals, in part because it is sometimes difficult to judge their legitimacy. We all tell stories, though. We tell them to ourselves, we tell them to those whom we care for and love, and we tell them through our work. Stories are what connect us as humans. They have helped us to survive and evolve, so we need them like a thirsty person needs water.
Stories are often contested, though, and they can even become deadly when the powerful use them as weapons of oppression. That is why throughout history we see the dispossessed fighting for their own narratives, often placing their lives in peril for a higher purpose—from the secret folk tales shared among enslaved African Americans to the testimonials of tribal elders. All struggles for liberation and justice are, at their root, about people trying to tell their own versions of the past, present, and future.
Right now, we are at a turning point. The COVID-19 pandemic has claimed almost 400,000 lives globally. In the United States, higher fatalities have been recorded among older adults, the medically fragile, and Black, Latino, and Indigenous populations—proving yet again that those who are marginalized often suffer first and worst in disasters. The devastating effects of climate change continue unabated as glaciers shrink, sea levels rise, and temperatures climb. Hundreds of mass protests calling for an end to police brutality and systemic racism have sprung up across the United States following the tragic and unconscionable killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. State-sanctioned violence, civil unrest, rioting, and looting have ensued.
How will historians and future generations look back on this time? 
How will they judge us for what we did—or did not do—in the face of mounting incivility, inequality, and injustice? 
What stories will they tell about us?
In their book Active Hope, Joanna Macy and Chris Johnstone assert that there are three stories of our time. 
The first story, which they refer to as Business as Usual, assumes that things are on the right track and we should carry on with our current patterns of consumption and economic growth. 
The second storythe Great Unraveling, focuses on the collapse of our ecological and social systems, the depletion of resources, the mass extinction of species, and other disastrous consequences of our current way of being.
Right now, the Business as Usual story seems something akin to willful ignorance in the face of the clear and present dangers that surround us. On the other hand, viewing current events through the lens of the Great Unraveling is so nightmarish that it can become psychologically paralyzing.
But there is a third story, the Great Turning, and it is one of possibility. The Great Turning requires a shift in our personal consciousness and a change in our behaviors in order to counter the unraveling of our social fabric. It requires collective action to help reconfigure our economic and cultural systems. “In the story of the Great Turning,” Macy and Johnstone write, “what’s catching on is commitment to act for the sake of life on Earth as well as the vision, courage, and solidarity to do so.”
This third story requires a turning away from old practices and systems that no longer work—and which never worked for the poor, for women, or for racial minorities. In the process, we have an opportunity to begin turning toward a more just and sustainable future.
In the hazards and disasters field, we have been turning toward a new story for a good while. The notion that natural hazards losses are inextricably linked to racism, poverty, pollution, and other slow-motion disasters is now widely accepted. The recognition that the disproportionate damage from natural hazards often deepens already existing inequalities has been met by bold calls for embedding justice in our disaster mitigation and recovery policies.
This growing body of work—disaster studies rooted in a vision of justice and equity—acknowledges that our environmental suffering is connected to and worsened by our social suffering. It recognizes that because risk and vulnerability are the outcomes of unequal power relations, that confronting risk will necessarily require confronting power. The logical extension of these insights is that if we want to reduce natural hazards losses we must work just as fervently to reduce economic and social inequality and injustice in all its forms.
These issues, centuries in the making, might seem overwhelming now. 
But each one of us has a role to play in creating a more just world that we want to live in. Start by asking yourself what you are most concerned about, and then consider how you can bring your skills, talents, and strengths to bear on the problem at hand. Then take the first step forward with the humble recognition that while none of us know how this story will end, this is the way change always begins.


Thursday, June 4, 2020

Emergency and Disaster Response Resources. June 2020






Emergency and Disaster Response Resources


This year has brought devastating floods, a pandemic, and continued conflicts that are impacting communities all over the world. We created a new page in DisasterReady with key resources to help you and your team prepare for disaster response and humanitarian emergencies.

This collection of free resources includes online courses, interactive guides, and videos on these topics:
  • Emergency Preparedness
  • Flood Safety
  • Public Health Emergencies
  • Personal Safety and Security
  • Staff Care and Wellbeing
  • Refugees and Displaced Communities
  • Keeping Informed on Global Emergencies
Log in to see the collection and click each topic to browse the resources.







Why Black People Continue To Remain Behind. 2016 to 2020 and Beyond.

Black EOE Journal

Chess Pieces photo

by Santura Pegram
One of the most difficult things for most people to accept in any form is the truth. Although as bitterly distasteful as it usually is, truth is liberating and life-changing. Unfortunately, for change and growth to occur people must be receptive to it and willing to implement it in their daily lives.

Never has such a message been more applicable than to the lack of progressive thinking involving economic conditions facing urban and rural communities of people of color throughout the globe
For far too long, generations of African-Americans have used the excuse of racism primarily as their lone justification for the masses of them not achieving higher levels of success. And, while it embarrassingly has been, and continues to be, a legitimate problem even in the 21st century, the fact remains racism alone is not the sole reason for holding most people of minority backgrounds back in life. Such groups of people on both sides of the equation should not continue to ignore how their own ongoing refusal to adapt to cohesive, forward-thinking is causing current and future generations great harm.
According to research, African-Americans as a group are collectively spending an eye-bulging estimated $1.3 TRILLION (with a “T”) dollars annually on everything from food/alcohol at restaurants, nightclubs and bars, clothes/shoes, automobiles, jewelry, cell phones/I-Pads/computers, haircare products and miscellaneous services like hotel/resort/spa visits or flight/travel excursions from companies which are often owned and operated by people who look nothing like them. On top of that, consider the fact that most urban and rural communities are doing worse today in many ways than they were 30-plus years ago (despite having a far greater number of black elected officials and senior executives in place who have seats at major ‘tables of discussion’), many enlightened thinkers continue to wonder when are black people going to wake up from falling asleep at the wheel of reality?
Think about it, the only tangible institutions and sectors of business black people can be considered “majority stakeholders” in today are churches, jails/prisons and cemeteries, where such entities are over-populated, especially the churches with their easy-to-manipulate people who will not think twice about giving their last dollar to a so-called “faith-based organization”(whom most have done very little or nothing impactful whatsoever for the black community). And, if not a faith-based organization, then it’s usually another sad ‘We Are The World’ quasi-humanitarian purpose, but yet those same donors are struggling with how to figure out ways to keep a roof over their head, food in their refrigerator, and cover other basic financial-related necessities from day to day, week to week.
Dr. Jawanza Kunjufu, the brilliant and noted scholar, illustrated that there are three (3) types of churches: ENTERTAINMENT, CONTAINMENT and LIBERATION. According to Dr. Kunjufu, “the entertainment church is known for singing and dancing, singing and dancing all day long throughout their services; they love to holler and shout, but they actually do very little work, if any, in the larger community outside of the church.”
The second type of church is the containment church, which are known “to open basically only on Sundays from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 pm. (and maybe for an hour or two during each week for a mid-week service) and take the millions of dollars raised collectively from each weekly service with them; at times, willing to help only a small percentage of their members. Yet, unwilling to invest anything back into their own local communities. They function, almost obliviously, to the problems of the greater community around them outside of the church and prefer to abstain far away from political, economic and/or social justice issues taking place outside of the doors or walls of their environment.”
And the third are liberation churches, which “not only have a liberation theology modeled out of Luke 4:18-19 and the 58th chapter of Isaiah, but they also attract larger numbers of men and women and whose members most often better understand, among all types of faith-based congregations, the SERIOUS need for economic empowerment.”
Keep in mind that according to researchers, black-owned companies received just 1.7% of the overall loans distributed by the U.S. Small Business Administration in 2013. (A stark difference from the 8.2% black businesses received in 2008 from SBA loan dollars). And, those statistics have not improved much since then. In knowing that, Dr. Kunjufu has proposed some very thought-provoking, although disturbing, questions in his assessment. Among them, most disturbing is his question of “WHY is the black community in its present condition with our roughly $1.3 TRILLION DOLLARS in collective economic spending potential, five million college graduates, 9,000-plus elected officials, and 85,000 churches nationwide?”
If other ethnic groups of people (who often may be unrelated) can invest together in projects and initiatives, pooling a percentage of their weekly/bi-weekly finances together to send something back to their family members in their native country on a regular basis each month, and/or use their collective resources to launch small businesses, then black people who are U.S.-born citizens should surely be doing similar acts of “pooling their resources” to start a business or invest in the stock market. * ( Read “Pooling Our Resources to Foster Black Progress: An Entrepreneurship and Impact Investing Framework” by Michael J. Isimbabi).
African-Americans cannot continue to blame the lack of togetherness, like everything else, on the “lingering effects of slavery” or other foolish cop-out excuses that hold us back. Every ethnic group of people help their own except African-Americans. Therefore, progressive-thinking faith-based congregations should be including frequent financial literacy and investment education workshops, conferences with licensed financial advisors, as well as entrepreneurial and community empowerment initiatives in their ministries if they ever expect to truly uplift generations of suffering people here in this lifetime.
Racism and classism may still be relevant obstacles today, but Starbucks Inc., Waffle House restaurants, Walt Disney World theme park, luxury clothing brands, upscale eateries, automobile brands and other establishments cannot enrich themselves while treating African-Americans less than human beings if people of color begin patronizing businesses and brands that reciprocate their financial support or opening businesses that produce the same product(s) or service(s). The future of black people depends on such concepts and churches play a critical role in our survival besides merely attempting to sell the message as being the “place to be to save our souls.”
Which leads to proposing two more closing questions: What type of church do you represent or do you attend: entertainment, containment or liberation? And, what impactful things is your church doing to make everyday conditions better for ordinary people of color outside of your church?
About the Author:
* Santura Pegram is a freelance writer and business professional. A former protégé-aide to the “Political Matriarch of the State of Florida” – M. Athalie Range – Santura often writes on topics ranging from socially relevant issues to international business to politics. He can be reached at: santura.pegram@yahoo.com

https://www.blackeoejournal.com/2018/06/black-people-continue-remain-behind/













Wednesday, June 3, 2020

June 2020 Upcoming Funding Opportunity Announcement


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Updates

Upcoming Funding Opportunity Announcement: Community Interventions to Address the Consequences of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Health Disparity and Vulnerable Populations (R01 - Clinical Trial Optional)

NIMHD is partnering with other Institutes and Centers at the National Institute of Health to support an upcoming funding opportunity announcement (FOA): NOT-MD-20-023 Community Interventions to Address the Consequences of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Health Disparity and Vulnerable Populations (R01 - Clinical Trial Optional).
The FOA solicits research to evaluate community interventions testing:
  1. The impacts of mitigation strategies to prevent COVID-19 transmission in NIH-designated health disparity populations and other vulnerable groups
  2. Already implemented, new, or adapted interventions to address the adverse psychosocial, sociocultural, behavioral and socioeconomic consequences of COVID-19 on the health of these groups
Researchers are encouraged to partner with community organizations, health service providers, public health agencies, policymakers, and other stakeholders to prepare and submit applications.
Expected application due date: July 2020
For inquiries related to NIMHD’s scientific and research involvement concerning this FOA, contact Dr. Jennifer Alvidrez, at jennifer.alvidrez@nih.gov.

Learn More