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Indybay Feature

Politicians Toying With Black History In Fresno

by Rev. Floyd D. Harris Jr
Mayor Alan Autry, Lt. Governor Cruz Bustamante, and City Council member Cynthia Sterling march in the 2003 MLK parade (photo below). Rev. Floyd D Harris Jr questions whether marching with these politicians is in the true spirit of the holiday.
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Politicians Toying With Black History In Fresno
By Rev. Floyd D. Harris Jr

As we come around to black history month again it's business as usual with the city and county of Fresno. The same old lying politicians from our local government playing with African American history. The government has done a wonderful job of manipulating people into believing that they care about oppressed people, but in fact the government receives more profits by making sure the American people are clueless as to what their social needs are.

We all know that Dr Martin Luther king Jr. was a man who gave his life to fight for justice for black people, following God's teachings. Dr. King gave his life like just as Jesus died on the cross, and he died for all people. Now every year you march in the streets of Fresno to celebrate the history of Dr. King and all the sacrifices he made, along with other civil rights leaders. There are tons of injustice taking place in the City of Fresno - from Police Brutality, Homelessness, Dismantling of the Human Relations Commission, Unemployment, AIDS, Inadequate Public Education, Environmental Racism, Bad Air Quality, Bad Water.

The City of Fresno received an All American City award in June 2000 but the problem with the award is it does not include poor people. Just this past year, 2006, the ACLU, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, and the Heller Ehrman law firm had to come into Fresno to File a temporary restraining order and a permanent injunction in order to stop the relentless attacks on Fresno homeless residents. Clothing, medication, tents, blankets, and personal possessions such as, family photographs and personal records have been destroyed. The California State Chapter of The National Action Network under the leadership of state President Rev. Floyd D. Harris Jr. brought youths from NAN to clean up the homeless area and set a precedent, to show the city of Fresno that they didn't have to destroy those belongings.

NAN organized a sleep-out on the steps of Fresno City Hall, along with other local and statewide organizations, to bring more attention to the problems we are having here in Fresno. We first formed a prayer chain in front of city hall to pray for our leaders. We gave out socks, coats, shoes, food etc. to replace things that had been destroyed by the Fresno Police and Sanitation Department. We sang songs to uplift the spirit of everyone to let them know that there is still hope and we will not let the flame of justice go out.

If Dr. King were alive today I know he would have been on the front lines with us in Fresno denouncing The Fresno Police Department, Mayor, City Manager, Sanitation Department and the representative from District #3 for violating the constitutional rights of poor people. You will see all of these people who say they believe in Dr. Martin Luther Kings Jr.'s life in the front of the march and the microphone every year speaking about how wonderful he was, while they act totally opposite of Dr. King's legacy. If we are going to march for the celebration of Dr. King, then let's march for something that will bring justice to the community. Stop letting the government dictate how we organize or celebrate anyone's birthday. We will not march to feel good or to get some exercise, but we will march to demand FREEDOM, JUSTICE, PEACE and EQUALITY for all people.

The people in power want to get close to you so you will not hold them to public accountability. I protest against Police Brutality 365 days a year but on Dr. King's birthday I'm expected to march hand in hand with the politicians who are making life hell for my people and who don't give a damn about God's people We Sing " WE SHALL OVER COME SOME DAY." The statement that Malcolm X said is very true - he said, there is too much singing going on in America and not enough “SWING.” I'm not a HYPOCRITE. I don't eat from the oppressor's table. He or she has nothing that I want but liberation for my people. When you have people in political office who cannot stand up for you when you are being abused then those representatives need to be recalled.

Nothing has changed in America but one thing, the Ku Klux Klan ( KKK ) have taken off their white sheets and put on blue suits and a necktie. White supremacy, Jim Crow, Willie Lynch are alive and flying around in America and Fresno California. These people now sit in a position of power in the government offices, Lawyers, Judges, Police Officers, Doctors, Congressman and Pastors. They will lead the way when you are marching down the street or participating in the City of Fresno 22nd Annual Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration 2007 Living the Dream: Let Freedom Ring for Peace, Justice and Healing for all.

I want you to look back on the past year and ask yourself these questions:

Living What Dream?
Living What Freedom?
Living What Peace?
Living What Justice?
Living What Healing for all?

We as people of color have not receive a Dream, Freedom, Peace, Justice, or Healing for over 400 years in America!
§Who Leads the March?
by Rev. Floyd D. Harris Jr
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Conservative pastor Jim Franklin and Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer marched in the 2003 parade.
§Who is in the March?
by Rev. Floyd D. Harris Jr
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Lots of groups participate in the MLK march and other activities each year.
§NAN
by Rev. Floyd D. Harris Jr
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The National Action Network was in the 2004 MLK march. All photos by Mike Rhodes
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by David Weikel
I completely agree with this article. If people are going to be supportive and empower groups that have been and are oppressed in this country, it is essential for their action to occur on a daily basis. Without a person’s daily activities being supportive and empowering, token efforts such as marching in an event that highlights great people, such as Dr. King, is actually disempowering, as they appear to be more self-serving than an effort to raise awareness or be empowering.
by john crockford
it is sad that the legacy of dr. king has been compromised by the likes of people and politicians who act in a manner contrary to the ideals of fairness and justice that he fought and died for. if the love that the reverend king held in his heart was in the hearts of our politicians, then there would not have been - and nevermore will be - attacks on working and poor people in this city and county.

“Cowardice asks the question: is it safe? Expediency asks the question: is it politic? Vanity asks the question: is it popular? But conscience asks the question: is it right? And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular - but one must take it simply because it is right.” - Martin Luther King Jr. 1929-1968
by Rev Alan Laird (expressionsart [at] aol.com)
Walls of the dam holding back yesterday's tear drops are trembling from the strain, there is an urgent call for humankind to respond as healing agents, change agents, restorative agents, compassionate agents, visionary agents, fearless agents, all united in action to redeem one another. Directed by unconditional love, motivated by the hunger for peace and prosperity for mother earth and all humankind. We must celebrate each step we take as we march forward to action in solidarity, avoiding the snares of those things which separate us, endearing those things which unite us.
by Bryan Apper, Catholic Worker
You are right, Rev. Harris. Some politicians, particularly those representing the city of Fresno, appear to be more interested in a photo opportunity than justice. The mayor's conduct has been particularly egregious.

We have additional information on the raids on the homeless (including a link to Mike Rhodes' comprehensive coverage) at the St. Benedict Catholic Worker web site, at <a href="url">http://www.sbcw.org
by Williams
The Rev. Martin Luther King, in his Letter from Birmingham Jail, points out the need for direct action: You may well ask: "Why direct action? Why sit-ins, marches and so forth? Isn't negotiation a better path?" You are quite right in calling, for negotiation. Indeed, this is the very purpose of direct action. Nonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and foster such a tension that a community which has constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue. It seeks so to dramatize the issue that it can no longer be ignored. This is not the time to walk hand in hand with those who continue to oppress so many in Fresno--people of color, the poor, the homeless. It is time to force our politicians, our police chief, and our mayor to confront these issues. We must continue the work you have begun, Rev. Harris.
Es verdad, y por esta razon personalmente no me siento motivado para marchar, celebremos la vida y la lucha Dr. King de manera independiente, es frustrante ver que los represores y politicos oportunistas encabecen esta celebracion tan importante para la vida de los oprimidos y explotados, nuestra marcha va por otros caminos, ya basta de seguirle el juego a los que medran con los deseos de libertad y justicia y que dieron su vida por tener una vida digna y mejor para todos
by Pat
": AIDS in Black America,"



Aug. 23, 2006— As the world marked the 25th anniversary of the first reported cases of AIDS this summer, one important story was mostly ignored: AIDS is an epidemic in the African American community and it's spreading fast.

Watch Primetime's special report "Out of Control: AIDS in Black America," Thursday, Aug. 24, at 10 p.m.

Shortly before his cancer diagnosis, Peter Jennings started work on a one-hour documentary devoted solely to the issue of AIDS in Black America. ABC News has now finished his work in a one-hour Special Edition of "Primetime," reported by Terry Moran, airing Thursday, Aug. 24, at 10 PM.

"In America today, AIDS is virtually a black disease, by any measure," says Phill Wilson, executive director of The Black AIDS Institute in Los Angeles. Wilson also points out that while many black American leaders and celebrities have embraced the cause of the epidemic's toll in Africa, few have devoted similar energy to the crisis here at home.

Jennings's contribution to the hour is a candid group discussion he conducted with HIV-positive African American men in Atlanta about the harsh realities of dealing with AIDS in Black America.

Black Americans make up 13 percent of the U.S. population but account for over 50 percent of all new cases of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. That infection rate is eight times the rate of whites. Among women, the numbers are even more shocking—- almost 70 percent of all newly diagnosed HIV-positive women in the United States are black women. Black women are 23 times more likely to be diagnosed with AIDS than white women, with heterosexual contact being the overwhelming method of infection in black America.

Terry Moran talks to experts in several key areas that contribute to the spread of AIDS in black America, including the disproportionate number of black men in prison. Prisons have AIDS infection rates five times higher than outside the walls, and many men go into prison HIV negative and come out infected, often without knowing it, since there is no comprehensive national testing, prevention, or treatment program for prison and jail inmates.

The failure of efforts in the 1990s to get federal support for needle exchange programs, which have proven successful in other countries in slowing the spread of AIDS among drug addicts, is also examined. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, remembers the struggle to get the Clinton administration to support such programs in the United States, knowing that without them the epidemic would continue to spread unchecked. "You could see it coming," says Fauci. "The handwriting was on the wall for a long time."



"Out of Control" also reports the results of studies from the Universities of Chicago and North Carolina which shed light on a complex reality that helps explain why heterosexual transmission among African Americans is so common. Black men are more than twice as likely as white men to have multiple female partners at the same time, these studies show. Rates of all sexually transmitted diseases are higher among African Americans than other groups, and once those rates start to rise, says Dr. Jim Thomas of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, "It starts a cycle. Because now when a person goes to have sex with someone, the chances that the new partner is already infected are relatively high."



And because homosexuality and bisexuality carry such a strong stigma in black America, African American men may choose to hide their sexual orientation. Men who have sex with men, and then also have sex with women without necessarily telling their female partners about their male encounters, are one of the topics covered in back to back roundtable discussions led by Jennings and Moran. Black men and women talk openly about sexual patterns in black America, denial, secrecy, and shame. "I know of few communities as conservative as the African American community, especially about sex," says Debra Fraser-Howze, CEO of the National Black Leadership Commission on AIDS in New York. "And when it comes to homosexuality, it's a real problem. Nobody wants to talk about it."

Moran also reports on the role of the churches, traditionally the most powerful source of political and social activism in black America. Black churches have been silent on AIDS, says The Rev. Calvin Butts Jr., Rector of Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem. "When you see the numbers going up, you know you have not done enough," he says. Adds The Rev. Eugene Rivers of Boston: "I see the black church being challenged as never before. There are going to have to be some tough conversations within the black church, because the black church is the only thing that black people have left. And too many young people are dying because Black leaders have failed their children."



"Out of Control: AIDS in Black America" was produced by Elizabeth Arledge; Senior Producer is Kayce Freed Jennings. The Executive Producer is Tom Yellin.
by kelly
solidarity for parity must no longer be a rarity
Little Floyed I'm so proud of you. But what can we do? Who can we go to for help for the poor and homeless? Where do we start? I love you.

Aunt Mary
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