“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Sunday, April 9, 2023

Needed now. DHS\FEMA Federal Coordinating Officers, Perm & Reservist. April 9, 2023

Step outside of your comfort zone.  Fear of any new position is not real.  You’ll have support across the board.  

Concerned with the number and communities affected by disasters and the impact of climate change? 

Consider a position as a DHS\FEMA Federal Coordinating Officer (FCO).  Black, Latino, Asian, and others are needed in these key positions when disasters strike and DHS\FEMA is involved…..an your local city, county, or even State HW\EM office\agency hasn’t planned accordingly for the threat to their constituents.

We have not reached the 2023 Hurricane Season for the Caribbean and continental U.S. and the number of disasters have increased almost ten-fold.  Take a look at the graphic below for April 8, 2023..  Interpret it as you will.  Notice the number and available of FCO’s in red.


CDS. 
BEMA International

 

Now Hiring Federal Coordinating Officers

Federal Coordinating Officer (FCOs) are the lead federal representatives during disasters. They coordinate the flow of disaster resources and information that bring together federal, state, tribal and territorial partners to help survivors recover from disasters.
Apply now at USAJobs.gov.

Listen to FCO Myra Shird describe her important work.
Requirements

You must be a U.S. citizen or national to apply for a position with FEMA. Applicants must also meet all eligibility requirements listed for the position, including age, medical, education and license/certification, and suitability requirements.

For more information, please email your inquiry.

 


Reservists (On-Call)

§ English

FEMA consistently seeks talented and hard-working people who are eager to assist disaster survivors and first responders on an on-call basis as Reservist employees. They are the main FEMA workforce during an emergency or disaster.  

Reservists travel, receive training, build professional networks and support those in need.

When you become a reservist, you should know:

§ The work is available intermittently

§ Applicants must commit to working on an on-call basis

§ Be available to travel within 24-48 hours

§ Be deployed for 30 or more days

Our cadres are teams organized by skill and experience. Learn about the 23 cadres that represent the work we do at FEMA.

Employment and Reemployment Protections for Reservists  

On Sept. 29, 2022, President Biden signed into law the Civilian Reservist Emergency Workforce Act.
This act amends the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act as well as the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA) to provide FEMA reservists the same protections that military reservists, national guard members, national disaster medical service, and urban search and rescue system members enjoy, including reemployment rights for their non-FEMA day job. 

Black Emergency Managers Association International


 

Washington, D.C.  20020


bEMA International

Cooperation, Collaboration, Communication, Coordination, Community engagement, and  Partnering (C5&P)


A 501 (c) 3 organization
Change without sacrifice is an illusion.

 

 

Opinion: The real message behind expelling the Black members of the ‘Tennessee Three’. 21st Century REDEEMERS. A Return to 1800's Reconstruction Era After Civil War. The Reality

Opinion by 
Updated 8:20 PM EDT, Sat April 8, 2023

Editor’s Note: Jemar Tisby, a professor of history at Simmons College of Kentucky, is the author of the books “The Color of Compromise” and “How to Fight Racism.” He writes frequently at JemarTisby.Substack.com. The views expressed here are his own. Read more opinion on CNN.

CNN — 

I teach African American history at Simmons College of Kentucky, a historically Black college (HBCU) in Louisville. This week, we’ve been studying the end of Reconstruction and the beginning of the Jim Crow period of US history.

Jemar Tisby

In the late 19th century, White, Southern Democrats (then the party of White supremacy and segregation) dubbed themselves the “Redeemers,” a group whose goal was to “save” the South from Northern carpetbaggers and newly freed Black people.

The so-called Redeemers took over state legislatures with the primary goals of disenfranchising Black voters, barring Black people from holding political office, and establishing a politics that would render the White power structure impervious to disruption.

When Republicans in the Tennessee House of Representatives voted this week to expel two Black members — Justin Jones and Justin Pearson — they revealed their resemblance to the anti-democratic, authoritarian Redeemers of more than a century ago.

A history of “Redemption”

In 1868, White legislators in Georgia voted to expel the 33 Black men elected to state government.

Henry McNeal Turner, a well-known leader in the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) denomination, was one of the men expelled from his position by the Georgia politicians.

In remarks during the proceedings, he stated, “[White legislators] question my right to a seat in this body, to represent the people whose legal votes elected me. This objection, sir, is an unheard of monopoly of power. No analogy can be found for it, except it be the case of a man who should go into my house, take possession of my wife and children and then tell me to walk out.”

Even though the Black lawmakers were soon reinstated, the actions of the White lawmakers in Georgia were just a foretaste of the political machinations to come.

In 1890, the state of Mississippi called for a new convention to rewrite the state’s constitution. It had already adopted a new and relatively progressive constitution after the Civil War, but with the onset of Redemption, White lawmakers took control of the state government and began dismantling the rights Black people had only recently gained.

In the newer version of the constitution that was later ratified, White Mississippi lawmakers installed measures to prevent Black people from voting. But because of the Reconstruction amendments to the US Constitution that guaranteed equal protection under the law and the right of Black men to vote, White Redeemers had to find new ways to repress Black people without making laws explicitly about race.

So they used policies such as the poll tax, which most Black people could not afford to pay. They instituted the “understanding clause” — a selectively applied measure where potential voters had to interpret a passage from the state constitution to the satisfaction of a White registrar.

The “grandfather clause” stipulated that a person’s grandfather had to be eligible to vote in order for their descendants to exercise the franchise. Of course, this excluded most Black people whose grandparents had been enslaved and thus, ineligible to vote.

By the early 1900s, nearly all the former Confederate states had followed Mississippi’s example.

The New Redeemers

In class, my students listened with stunned incredulity as they learned about the cruel and ruthless politics of the Redeemers. Unfortunately, the historical parallels to present-day events are too obvious to ignore.

The actions of Republicans in the Tennessee legislature resemble the attempts of White Southern Redeemers to take back the South at the end of the 19th century.

These new Redeemers are using their power as a tool of intimidation. What other conclusion can be drawn from the inappropriate and disproportionate response to a decorum infraction?

Expulsion is the most severe consequence the legislature can enact against another member of that body. Since the Civil War, only three other members of the Tennessee state legislature have been expelled — and for much more serious offenses.

The new Redeemers are not confined to one state, either.

Attempts to strip local officials in the city of Jackson — where more than 80% of the population is Black — of their authority to monitor the city’s water system, police force and courts are underway in Mississippi.

In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the “Stop WOKE Act” into law, which was intended to prevent teachings or mandatory workplace activities that suggest a person is privileged or oppressed based necessarily on their race, color, sex or national origin. “In Florida, we will not let the far-left woke agenda take over our schools and workplaces. There is no place for indoctrination or discrimination in Florida,” DeSantis said.

And, of course, the attempted insurrection on January 6, 2021 by supporters of former President Donald Trump was the most egregious example of how far right-wing factions are willing to go to subvert the political process.

The Next Civil Rights Movement

The era of Redemption cemented decades of Jim Crow segregation. More than 4,000 “racial terror” lynchings occurred throughout that period, the Equal Justice Initiative has documented.

Substantial change only came with the onset of the Civil Rights movement. Years of nonviolent direct action protest, constant lobbying in state and political governments and the martyrdom of many activists including Martin Luther King, Jr., finally interrupted traditions of segregation and White supremacy.

It could be that a similar movement is necessary to disempower the Redeemers of today.

When all the standard means of change — namely the democratic process itself — have been co-opted and subverted by authoritarians, then the people are only left with protest.

If the goal of the Tennessee GOP was to intimidate people into acquiescence with their expulsion of Pearson and Jones, their tactic backfired in a spectacular way.

Far from instilling fear, their expulsions and their stirring words in response have raised them to national prominence.

Instead of dissuading Tennesseans from their calls for gun control, Republican legislators seem to have energized the people and motivated them to resist even more vigorously.

With the rise of social media and other digital forms of information sharing, movements can be mobilized in moments.

Although there were constant attempts throughout the years, it took decades for people to mount the resistance necessary to topple Jim Crow. In today’s environment, action might occur more swiftly.

The Meaning of Redemption

Those words, redemption and redeemer, are significant.

This is Holy Week in the Christian religion. Events such as Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday culminate in the observance of the resurrection of Jesus Christ on Easter Sunday. These liturgies commemorate the redemption — Jesus paying the price for humanity’s sin.

In many Christian traditions, redemption is a sacred theological principle that undergirds the hope of salvation. It is likely that many of the Tennessee Republican lawmakers will attend church this Sunday to celebrate the redemption that Easter heralds.

Easter provides the perfect opportunity for these lawmakers to ponder the true meaning of redemption and which redeemer they are following.



Mission Aviation Fellowship has ceased ministry operations in Haiti April 7, 2023

 

Mission Aviation Fellowship has ceased ministry operations in Haiti
By April 7, 2023

In fact, Mission Aviation Fellowship just made the difficult decision to pull their pilots, mechanics, and staff out of Haiti. The decision went into effect on April 1st.

Haiti (MNN) — The pressure dial is still rising in Haiti as gang violence and kidnappings increase in a political vacuum. The country doesn’t have any more elected officials and unrest has complicated the appointment of new political leaders.
David Carwell, MAF’s Haiti country director explains why the current climate in Haiti has gotten so dangerous: “The political arena has deteriorated, and all elected positions, all the terms have expired. What I mean is there’s no elected President. The President was assassinated and has not been replaced. All of the legislators, the senators, deputies, mayors, all the elected positions are defunct at this point. In some cases, there’s somebody in the office that really doesn’t have the authority of the elected position.
“Meanwhile, the gangs have grown. With the lack of jobs, people are struggling to eat and to make ends meet, and they have turned to criminal activity in order to provide for their families.”

There was at least one kidnapping per day committed by Haitian gang members. But lately, Carwell says, “By this point, more than that…. Human rights group say that kidnappings now average more than four per day.”
Things have gotten increasingly challenging for Christian ministries. The roads are treacherous to travel — especially in or near Port-au-Prince — so transporting supplies is difficult.

MAF used to circumvent many of the gang threats since they fly and don’t rely as much on road travel. But there were still times they couldn’t use an airstrip due to unrest in area.

Carwell says the bigger concern for MAF was, “We were in a position where family units were not able to stay together. We were doing rotations. We have a number of families on our team with young children and it was just not a healthy situation at the time. So we needed to take care of those families.”


Although MAF is ceased operations in Haiti for now, the ministry is hopeful this is simply “see you later,” not truly “goodbye.”

Carwell says, “Many people are curious about our pause and we’ve been asked, do we want to sell airplanes? Do we want to sell equipment, our homes, or even offer us jobs? Our team is resolute in wanting to return to Haiti. No, we’re not selling our airplanes or anything like that. We really have every

intention of going back to Haiti if the Lord were to open that door, and that’s what we’re praying for.”
He asks, “Pray for the security situation to be adequate so that elections can be held and government positions can be filled once more.”
Pray ultimately for changed hearts to the Gospel in Haiti, that gang members would abandon acts of desperate violence to follow Jesus Christ. Ask the Lord to make Haiti a peaceful country so ministry may continue.

Saturday, April 8, 2023

At the table.

"Tis better to be at the table than on the menu."

Get involved locally.

BEMA International


"Seeds: Half the Nutrients & Double the Price? | Seeds of Profit: Food Investigation Documentary"

 

A globalized business where the seed sells for more than gold. Sixty years of producing standardized fruit and vegetables and creating industrial hybrids have had a dramatic impact on their nutritional content. In the past 50 years, vegetables have lost 27% of their vitamin C and nearly half of their iron. Take the tomato. Through multiple hybridizations, scientists are constantly producing redder, smoother, firmer fruit. But in the process, it has lost a quarter of its calcium and more than half of its vitamins. The seeds that produce the fruits and vegetables we consume are now the property of a handful of multinationals, like Bayer, and Dow-Dupont, who own them. These multinationals have their seeds produced predominantly in India, where workers are paid just a handful of rupees while the company has a turnover of more than 2 billion euros. According to FAO, worldwide, 75% of the cultivated varieties have disappeared in the past 100 years. Loss of nutrients, privatization of life, We reveal the industrialists’ great monopoly over our fruit and veg.

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