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- UnSelling Mama Earth and Building A Homeless Peoples Solution to Homelessness in Tovaangar(LA)
For Immediate Release : Contact: Carla /Aetna Street Solidarity 818-481-0753 Tiny/poormagazine (510)-435-7500 What : Homefulness Tovaangar - Poetry, Prayer, Poverty Scholarship and Intention for Radical Interdependence & ComeUnity Reparations When: 7pm Sunday, Sept 29th Where: Church in Ocean Park - 235 Hill Street Santa Monica "They told me i had to move, but when I moved across the street, they said I couldn't be there either," Said Momma G, a houseless, disabled elder resident and RoofLess Radio Reporter of West LA, "They said I have to be gone by 6am," she concluded. Like so many houseless residents of LA, Momma G is disabled, neuro-divergent and an immune compromised elder. She needs healing and housing. She needs to be listened to and loved, not swept like she is trash. Since the Grants Pass Vs Johnson Supreme Court ruling was made and the subsequent order by Governor Newsom, the mayors of towns across so-called California like Karen Bass, Sheng Tao, London Breed and Karen Bass have been waging a war against our houseless bodies. Sweeping, disappearing and arresting us to nowhere. A Houseless/Indigenous/Disabled Comeunity from Oakland has created a viable and practicable solution to homelessness they call Homefulness- a homeless peoples solution to homelessness, and it currently houses 21 houseless elders and families in rent -free forever, healing housing Which they will be presenting and teaching on with houseless mamas, elders, youth and families from Reclaiming Our Homes and Aetna Street Solidarity at Church in Ocean Park in Santa Monica. "Both of these powerful LA based movements of houseless comeUnities are working to build real solutions to our problems as houseless people because we know that the City and State only present more sweeps, carceral systems and never affordable housing, " said tiny Gray-Garcia, formerly houseless co-founder, author and visionary of Homefulness who was houseless, criminalized and arrested in LA as a child with her disabled mother " Homefulness needs everyone to be involved, housed and Unhoused, privileged and poor, indigenous and settler, working together to implement radical sharing and a concept we call ComeUnity Reparations so we can together work to UnSell Mama Earth," concluded tiny Momma G,a houseless reporter for POOR Magazine, contributed to the 2024 RoofLessRadio WeSearch report which spoke to houseless victims of violent sweeps all across California from LA to Oakland to San Francisco focused on the increasingy violent sweeps being ordered by Governor Newsom and Mayors from Los Angeles to Oakland to San Francisco to disappear our houseless bodies and lives from the public streets following the Grants Pass Vs Johnson Court Case .(WeSearch report Sweeping us to Nowhere ) "Notwithstanding the Grants Pass Ruling of denial of protection under the 8th amendment, there is the 14th Amendment, which implies a "citizen's" right to life and the material resources that guarantee life, such as food, water, shelter, and essentially all of the things that are stolen from people in these violent sweeps, as such, sweeps are not just unethical but patently unconstitutional.," said Jeremy Miller, revolutionary legal advocate with Poor Peoples Law Clinic at Homefulness/POOR Magazine in his article POOR Magazine will also be offering a free Theatre of the POOR/Poverty Scholarship workshop with Reclaiming Our Homes and Aetna Street Solidarity for houseless poverty skolaz at El Sereno Community Garden on Saturday, Sept 28th- for more information on this please email poormag@gmail.com Land Liberation For Houseless Peoples Self-Determination in Tovaangar Sweeps deny Our Right to Live 1st RoofLessRadio WeSearch Release
- Sweeping us to Nowhere- While Silencing our Solutions
RoofLEss Radio WeSearch report 2024 Do you know where the bus station is?,” RoofLessRadioSOMA reporter Sr. Asuncion asked, who had just been swept from a little corner he was standing on by California Highway Patrol officers. He had a bus ticket he had received in his hand but had no idea where he was going, no money or resources or family in the town he was going to and not sure exactly why he even had the bus ticket. (His words are an excerpt from the 1st WeSearch report Sweeping us to Nowhere available on poormagazine.org ) Sr Asuncion is just one of the 31 houseless povertyskola reporters from both sides of the occupied Ohlone /Lisjan Bay- Yelamu and Huchiun aka so-called San Francisco, Los Angeles and Oakland who contributed to this first group of findings from the 2024 RoofLessRadio WeSearch report on these acts of violence and abuse being made by Governor Newsom and Mayors from San Francisco to Los Angeles to disappear our houseless bodies and lives from the public streets of so-called California. The vision of WeSearch is that we houseless and poor povertyskolaz who have been targeted for removal, arrest and harassment have our own experiences and don’t need more about us without us Akademiks and poltricksters to count, study, survey and report on us. We Have our own voices and our own solutions- and to ensure they are listened to and taken seriously we are releasing them in these series of reports. The FINDINGS From Grants Pass Vs Johnson to Governor Newsom and London Breed, Karen Bass, Sheng Tao and Eric Adams, all of these towns across occupied Turtle Island (United States) are waging a war against our houseless bodies. Sweeping, disappearing and arresting us to nowhere. Homelessness kills us. We are dying everyday from the sweeps and violent arrests and ongoing removal. Since the Grants Pass and Newsom’s order, more of us are dying and getting sick. We have nowhere to go. We have solutions that aren’t being listened to, solutions like Homefulness (East Oakland), Wood Street Commons (West Oakland), Aetna Street Solidarity (LA), Camp Resolution (Sacramento) and Nicklesville in Seattle.Instead, poltricksters are spending thousands of dollars on PoLice and Sheriffs to sweep, arrest, harass and remove us. WHO are the WeSearchers and Reporters: The ComeUnities of RoofLessRadio WeSearchers are us- houseless and formerly houseless youth, elders, mamas and uncles from all across the Bay from POOR MAgazine and fellow houseless povertyskola reporters residing in the Tenderloin, Mission, and South of Market districts of San Francisco as well as East Oakland and West Oakland; Five street reporters from day 1 (Yelamu) SF Nine street reporters from day 2 (Yelamu) SF Five street reporters from day 3 (Yelamu) SF 12 street reporters from Day 4 (Huichin) Oakland Twelve Street Reporters from (Tovaangar) West LA, North LA, Van Nuys, East LA and Skid Row on Day 5& 6 Findings and Demographics of WeSearchers 100% of RoofLess Radio reporters knew more than one fellow houseless povertyskola who had died, that was recently swept, removed and was trying to stay alive outside. 100% of RoofLess Radio reporters stated clearly that they have “NOwhere Else to Go” and are just being violently pushed from one corner to another to who knows where. 100% of RoofLess Radio reporters reported multiple police, sheriff and CHP agencies were part of the sweeps, clearings and removal orders they have experienced since Grant Pass. 78% of RoofLess reporters lost housing because of eviction from homes and apartments they resided in the very town, location, and street they are now residing without a roof. 67% of RoofLess reporters from Huchiun, and Yelamu are of African Descent. 78% of RoofLess Radio reporters from Tovaangar are of African Descent 22% of RoofLess Reporters are of indigenous, Southern Turtle Island descent/immigrant/migrants(“undocumented” as described by the settler colonial notion of false border documentation). 98.5% of RoofLEss Huchiun reporters are Life-time Oakland Residents. 78% of RoofLess YElamu reporters are life-time San Francisco Residents. 82% of RoofLESS Tovaangar reporters are lifetime residents of Greater LA and the Valley 38% of RoofLess reporters are women. 78% of RoofLess reporters are over 62. 95% of Roofless reporters are physically disabled, medically fragile and/or living with mental illness. 52% of RoofLess reporters are currently working. 79% of RoofLess reporters have experienced, harassment, arrest and incarceration for the sole act of being unhoused. 100% of RoofLEss Reporters lost their belongings in poLice and “Cleaning” raids and sweeps on both sides of the bay. 100% of RoofLess Reporters have never gotten their belongings back after being swept. 52% of RoofLess reporters struggle with substance use and have no access to treatment. 92% of RoofLess reporters have their own solutions to homelessness which include access to vacant land, abandoned buildings, liberated Ohlone land (OakLAND), Tovaangar (LA) Land, Yelamu Land (SF) to build, sleep, rest, build ComeUnity. This report is available on www.poormagazine.org . RoofLess Radio *WeSearch are projects of POOR Magazine- POOR Magazine is a poor, houseless, indigenous peoples -led movement dedicated to providing, and visioning media, education, art and solutions by and for communities in poverty locally and globally. Homefulness is a homeless peoples solution to homelessness being MamaFested by poor and houseless people with permission and guidance by 1st Nations elders with two current sites in Huchiun and more planned for Tovaangar, Yelamu, and the PNW of Occupied Turtle Island (Oakland, SF, LA, Seattle/Bellingham, Olympia) *WeSearch, Krapitalism,MamaFest and PoLice are words created by tiny aka @povertyskola. Poverty Scholarship is a poor people led theory and practice created by Mama Dee, tiny and POOR Magazine family of poverty, disabled, indigenous skolaz
- A Houseless ComeUnity Disappeared to Nowhere- MLK & West Grand- Houseless People demand Hearing NOT clearing
For Immediate Release: Contact: Muteado or Tiny/poormagazine (510)-435-7500 A ComeUnity Disappeared - MLK & West Grand Land Liberation Not more Incarceration and LIEgislatons The city of Oakland and the State of California just violently destroyed a houseless comeUnity of over 100 people in Oakland while making false promises for housing and refusing to release hundreds of vacant and hoarded land so we could create our own solutions What : Land Liberation NOT More Incarceration and Sweeps A Houseless ComeUnity Disappeared to Nowhere- MLK & West Grand Press Conference, Speak Out and Prayer Ceremony When: 1:30pm Tuesday, Sept 23rd Where: 23rd St and Northgate "They came here and tore all of our tents down, threw all of our belongings and even a wheelchair into the trash bin and promised us services and housing but actually gave us no housing." Said Marty, a houseless resident of Martin Luther King Jr Way. The City of Oakland who received a 7.2 Million Dollars for this recent eradication of human beings and our homes, in tandem with the State of California just completed a devastating "sweep" of an interdependent houseless comeUnity at MLK and West Grand. This violent sweep led to the scattering of scores of people to nowhere which results in the increased danger for the majority of disabled, elder houseless women and men who resided there. In the grant application for the 7.2 Million dollars the city promised they would be relocating houseless residents of MLK and West Grand to temporary shelter at the Jack London Square Inn and then into permanent supportive housing. This was a blatant lie as the Jack London Square Inn is not even open yet. Marty, one of the WeSearch reporters that contributed to the 2024 RoofLessRadio WeSearch report which spoke to houseless victims of violent sweeps all across the Bay from Oakland to San Francsico was released in August and focused on the increasingy violent sweeps being ordered by Governor Newsom and Mayors from Oakland to San Francisco to Los Angeles to disappear our houseless bodies and lives from the public streets of so-called California following the Grants Pass Vs Johnson Court Case .(WeSearch report Sweeping us to Nowhere ) “7.2 Million Dollars!!!!! - do you know how many Homefulness Projects we houseless peoples could build with that much money!!!” said tiny gray-garcia houseless co-founder of POOR Magazine/Homefulness Houseless/poor/disabled Comeunities have viable and practible solutions that they have offerred to the Cities of Oakland and San Francisco, projects like Homefulness- a homeless peoples solution to homelessness that currently houses 20 houseless residents in rent -free forever, healing housing and the proposal for surplus land redistribution to Wood Street Commons, another site of a violent sweep that led to the death of many of the residents, Since the Grants Pass Vs Johnson ruling was made and the subsequent order by Governor Newsom, the mayors of towns across so-called California like Sheng Tao, London Breed and Karen Bass, have been waging a war against our houseless bodies. Sweeping, disappearing and arresting us to nowhere. "Notwithstanding the Grants Pass Ruling of denial of protection under the 8th amendment, there is the 14th Amendment, which implies a "citizen's" right to life and the material resources that guarantee life, such as food, water, shelter, and essentially all of the things that are stolen from people in these violent sweeps, as such, sweeps are not just unethical but patently unconstitutional.," said Jeremy Miller, revolutionary legal advocate with Poor Peoples Law Clinic at Homefulness/POOR Magazine in his article “We are out here giving resources and support to our houseless community like we always do, said John Janasko, co-leader and organizer with Wood Street Commons,” Alternatively, a community of houseless/formerly houseless advocates, care-givers and housed allies were out everyday of the violent sweep providing urgently needed resource for the West Grand /MLK comeUnity to help them with housing, food, medicine, health care resources as well as legal advocacy to ensure their Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) rights are not being violated and they are legally protected in the face of this state sponsored violence. This Press Conference and Speakout is a collaboration between POOR Magazine and Wood Street Commons and is co-sponsored by Anti-PoLice Terror Project and Where Do We Go. The Resource Fair included advocates from Coffee Not Cops, Love and Justice in the Streets, POOR MAgazine, Wood Street Commons, Where Do We Go, APTP, Peoples Park Berkeley and many more Sweeps deny Our Right to Live Day 2 & 3 of the violent Sweeps 1st RoofLessRadio WeSearch Release
- Sweeps Deny our right to Live
T he Case made for our protection from these deadly sweeps under the 14th Amendment By Jeremy Miller/Poor Peoples Law Clinic at POOR Magazine/Homefulness The Supremacist Court’s recent decision to uphold the hateful will of those governing Grants Pass , Oregon in their systematic assault on homeless people has sent shockwaves through the nation as its impact is already being felt by people with inadequate or non-existent safe housing options currently residing in these United Capitalist Prison States of America. Specifically what it has done is overturn a 2019 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling ( Martin v. Boise ) proscribing (en)forced removal (including people and belongings) without there being an adequate shelter alternative available. This earlier decision grounded itself in an interpretation of the eighth amendment of the Constitution and its proscription of cruel and unusual punishment. One of the key reasons why Grant’s Pass has been so impactful is that Martin v. Boise had become such a popular shield against the regular assaults on dignity and humanity conducted by various law-enforcement agencies and their private sector collaborators against unhoused folks in the western part of the settler colony. To be clear this was a shot across the bow from the rarefied heights of the judiciary all but declaring war on homeless people. Also, relying on plain meaning of language (which is precisely what the Supremacist Court was supposed to do,) only someone who has never experienced homelessness or had intimate emotional relations (such as familial) with someone who has could possibly challenge the characterization of current anti-homeless ordinances/laws as being cruel. We will set aside the unusual aspect for the moment because it seems that regularity of oppression is a weak argument for justifying let alone enshrining atrocity in law. Fortunately, despite all the hand-wringing and jeremiads, not to mention the triumphalist poor-bashing laps being taken by such “liberal” oppressors as California Governor Gavin Newsom or San Francisco Mayor London Breed, the legality of homeless sweeps, property confiscations, camping bans, and unnecessary incarceration for “quality of life” crimes is not dependent on an affirmative definition as either cruel or unusual. There is an older and deeper constitutional provision which, if applied, would make all of these anti-homeless laws, ordinances, and tactics extremely difficult to legally defend. The Original Right to Life More than thirteen years before the Bill of Rights was composed (encompassing the first ten ratified amendments to the Constitution) the Declaration of Independence was written by Thomas Jefferson. Its preamble includes some of the most notorious of lofty (and largely unrealized) political sentiment in the entire history of the nation’s political philosophy and letters. Most “Americans” know the words by heart even if due to a dearth of civics education they cannot place where they are recorded. We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. Now of course we could allow ourselves to be derailed here by a digression into which men were actually envisioned by the slave-holding Jefferson, what the implications were for women’s enfranchisement etc. but, while politically suggestive especially from a liberationist frame, this elides a key point. All modern legal interpretations ascribe a race/sex/gender universality to the language. The emphasis on the legal is critical here. Despite the fact that most people think of this language as merely late eighteenth century ideological pontification, a large chunk of it has been introduced into positive law. The vehicle for this is the first section of the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution, rendered shorthand as the “Incorporation Doctrine.” In relevant part it states: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law ; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. [Emphasis author’s own.] While the right to “the pursuit of Happiness” is displaced by the more vulgar right to property, significantly the right to life is maintained and theoretically possessed by “any person.” The incorporation doctrine effectively was an answer to the question of “states’ rights” or its constitutional corollary in the tenth amendment to the Constitution. The tenth amendment was a concessionary measure (or to some a balancing measure) for those desiring a state level counterpoint to emerging federal power. It states: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. This effectively was the ultimate argument in Grants Pass v. Johnson. Justice Neil Gorsuch concludes the majority decision saying: The Constitution’s Eighth Amendment serves many important functions, but it does not authorize federal judges to wrest those rights and responsibilities from the American people and in their place dictate this Nation’s homelessness policy. It is precisely this type of abdication of responsibility that the incorporation doctrine was meant to preclude. Specifically, by articulating a right to life in the Constitution it denies the right to the states to create any law, ordinance, or engage in any act(s) that deprive people of life save within the narrow parameters of something like death penalty jurisprudence. In fact, spending a moment on the current Supremacist Court’s greatest hits, when dealing with abortion the only reason why the anti-abortion “right to life” could not be more successfully countered by the original right to life (with emphasis on the life of the mother) is because of the strange hermeneutics of competing claims as to when a fetus is endowed with this special attribute of life. This legal interpretation of the right to life is also codified in international law. In 1966 the United Nations adopted the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. This entered into force (making it obligatory for states parties) a decade later in 1976. Significantly for our purposes it was ratified by Congress in 1992 with certain “reservations, understandings, and declarations.” The RUDs are effectively amendments or provisos stipulating that a country will ratify the treaty making it positive national law so long as this, that, or the other interpretation or clause remain non-binding in particular domains or do not threaten jealously protected national interests or prerogatives. As a relevant example, Article 6, section 2 of the ICCPR sets out what to some may be construed as stringent requirements circumscribing the use of the death penalty as punishment for crimes. The United Capitalist Prison States of America did not want any supranational body to be able to dictate under what conditions it could sentence people to execution and thus entered a reservation to the limitation concerning the circumstances in which capital punishment is imposed. This same article of the ICCPR (Article 6) is relevant for our argument here. Specifically Article 6, section 1 reads: Every human being has the inherent right to life. This right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life. This right was further clarified in 2019 by the UN Human Rights Committee, the body of independent experts that monitors implementation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights by states parties. In General Comment 36, Section 3, Paragraph 26 it asserts in relevant part: The measures called for to address adequate conditions for protecting the right to life include, where necessary, measures designed to ensure access without delay by individuals to essential goods and services such as food, water, shelter , health care, electricity and sanitation, and other measures designed to promote and facilitate adequate general conditions, such as the bolstering of effective emergency health services, emergency response operations (including firefighters, ambulance services and police forces) and social housing programmes . [Emphasis author’s own.] Since none of the RUDs have any language that contradicts this definition of the responsibilities states parties have vis-à-vis the ICCPR, the nation is enjoined in upholding them. This should carry additional weight since unlike most other international instruments, the ICCPR has actually been ratified by Congress and signed into law by President George H.W. Bush hence theoretically depriving the country of an ability to hide behind national jurisdiction arguments to dodge international obligations. Contradiction Between Local Ordinances and Federal Law It is no secret that there have always been battles between federal and state or local authorities surrounding policy. From the Civil War up through to current battles surrounding energy regulation (Sen. Joe Manchin vs. President Joe Biden,) or how evil one can legally be to immigrants (Gov. Greg Abbott vs. President Joe Biden,) major life altering issues have been adjudicated in formal settings like the Supremacist Court or informal settings like the street. And while it would be a pipe-dream to expect this strife to completely disappear, from a legal standpoint there is a pecking order that can at least doctrinally be relied on to determine which view prevails. This is known as the Supremacy Clause. Article VI, Clause 2 of the Constitution states: This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding. Thus the Supremacy Clause on its face clearly establishes that in conflict of disposition the Constitution, and all treaties made carry the day. They cannot be overturned by petty despots such as London Breed, Eric Adams, Gavin Newsom, or the City Council of Grants Pass Oregon. Why Do We Bother with the Man’s Law? The question regarding how we treat the poorest among us is ultimately an ethical question and no written compact ought to be necessary to compel our compassion and camaraderie. But unfortunately the logics of capitalism have been so deeply ingrained in many people as to make this thought process not necessarily a foregone conclusion. Thus we see rampant cruelty in local policies around the nation enforced to maintain order, which for some appears to be a more precious value than humanity. Due to this we can not necessarily rely on ethical or moral appeals to prevent attacks on homeless people. This is specifically why Martin v. Boise was so significant for homeless folks. It not only named their oppression, but provided the law as an imperfect shield against its enforcement. People have not changed so much in the intervening years. The moral fight will continue ad nauseum. But, especially in light of grotesque escalations of anti-homeless abuse by municipal and state actors, since the Grant’s Pass decision broke the Martin shield a new one must be hoisted. Gratefully it already exists. On the fourfold legal foundation of the Declaration of Independence, the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, the ICCPR, and the Supremacy Clause all people, including homeless people, have a right to life that is clearly being abrogated by current policies. The sweeps are not only unethical, but illegal. So to hell with Martin! It was good while it lasted. We don’t have time to mourn it. The law is still squarely on the side of humble people fighting to live. We just have to remind the oppressors of this every damn time!
- What is supposed to happen when people get arrested for being homeless
By Leajay Harper /POOR Magazine “What is supposed to happen when people get arrested for being homeless? Do you come out housed? Do you get out healed?” a woman (who did not state her name) asked the Berkeley mayor and other council members at last nights city council meeting. The meeting was for Berkeley city to now support the executive order placed by the governor last month. The executive order directs state agencies to move urgently to address dangerous encampments while supporting and assisting the individuals living in them, and provides guidance for cities and counties to do the same. Since the order was In Place, we’ve seen violent sweeps happening in San Francisco, where Mayor London Breed promises to make people camping outside uncomfortable. One of the strategies that many cities are using to respond to the order is to incarcerate people that refuse to cooperate with police. Vigilante crimes against homeless people have increased as more housed residents across Bay Area cities are reporting about the blight and public defecation. Because of the executive order put on by the governor, people in the community think they can take matters into their own hands in addressing the homeless because they feel law enforcement is behind them. The misappropriation of all the billions of dollars that CA says we have spent on housing and providing services to the unhoused have still failed to provide any reports showing how many people have actually been placed. “You’re not supposed to be texting during a council meeting,” demands Sheryl, another angry resident frustrated because the body language was a direct reflection of how much compassion the stakeholders hold for our unhoused relatives. The mayor was very adamant about people not disturbing the meeting, that if people speak out of turn they will be asked to leave, but my question is: How do they expect people to act when their freedom is a question on the table? In the last month we have seen cities moving very fast to implement policies that criminalize people living outside, while people have been trying to get housing and are being given the run-around from agencies that the county has put in control of this process. Another strategy that we see being used is to offer people bus tickets home… In Alameda County alone, a report on the unhoused states that 68% have lived here their whole lives. And so again we ask, “Where do we go?” There have been people placed into Tuff Shed communities with the promise from the city that people are temporarily put in tiny sheds for a max of 90 days. But the average time that it takes for a person to receive the housing through the coordinated entry system is a minimum of a year to actually get housed, and that is if you have a high enough score to get matched with a placement. There are less than 300 county beds in shelters and over 7000 people currently unhoused. I was unhoused on Wood Street and when the city relocated me to a city sanctioned RV lot, I was lost and disconnected from the community I felt safe in for 10 years. In December, I was blessed to be welcomed as the 16th resident in permanent healing housing model, rent-free for life, at POOR Magazine’s Homefulness, which operates fully on the radical redistribution of wealth hoarders’ money. I would like to add that I didn't have to go through any bullshit ass city-ran agency to move into this community. It was the genuine love of the community that understands how much a person can strive once given the opportunity to heal from trauma, a lot of mine came from being swept time and time again. I think the most fucked up part for me is that there are plenty of self-ran communities that have been around for years and that provide people with everything that they need to remained housed forever. It doesn't make sense that more communities (like Homefulness) aren’t being supported or even modeled after because these communities put the people first instead of feeding the lie of capitalism and colonization. Here’s how you can get involved with us: On October 4th 2024 Wood St Commons (west oakland unhoused community) and other supporting organizations and community allies will be riding our bikes from Oakland to Sacramento. We are hoping to meet with all of the Assembly and Senate Members that currently sit on the Housing committees and the Governor's office. For more information, see this Google form . You can also donate to the GoFundMe .
- RoofLess Radio Street Writing Workshop with Wood Street Commons
RoofLessRadio Reporters HerStories and HisStories, transcribed. Genie Sullivan My first memory as a child was sleeping on the floor at the place my dad was working. We weren’t supposed to be there so I just remember this feeling of needing to hide. This process continued every few years that my family was evicted and we spent nights in our vehicle, on couches, or with family. As a child, I thought my family was a failure and I blamed my parents. However, as a 27 year old going through the same experiences, I realized that a lot of people go through the same thing because of the system’s causes.. —------------ Daewon Aone 3 years ago, I found a gardener’s plot with a tiny house on it. And I’ve been there all on the grace of the Infinite. I use meth from a fail attempt at connecting writing ? as an slective for my PTSD Oakland traumatic J and I make continuous efforts to learn/teach all the Supreme wishes 4 me to HAVE YOU SEEN COPS Erday BRUH on motor bikes and always in a dam helicopter I came to a conclusion or epiphany: “A dude my age shouldn’t be still living with any ? so I made some happen —----------------- Amy After working really hard, being beaten/shamed to be what they wanted, I was told that I still wasn’t enough. So, at 14 I decided to follow my own path. Over the years, my struggle has been cultivated by/intertwined with depression, anxiety, neuro-divergence, domestic violence, addiction, art, travel, freedom, thriving through survivalism. —--------------- Dani Dani-mother to Deshae, Danau and Danyel, poverty skola, formerly houseless & now currently homeful at Homefulness. My auntie kicked me out because of a lie her daughter told her. I stopped smoking meth when I first moved to Oakland, but quickly got back into it. I got lost in the dope world, but I learned how to survive. I was abused mentally, physically and emotionally by my partners. I thought that was the way to be. Because of all of this I now suffer from depression But I am now currently in the process of healing at 33 year old. —------------------ Kharizma At 9 my mom got evicted from our apartment in West Grand so we lived homeless at Peoples Park for 3 months. —----------------- LeaJay My lst time being homeless I was 17. It was 2 months before my high school graduation- I stayed out all weekend & my mom was mad when I got home. She told me to stay wherever I had been at or leave, but I couldn’t stay anymore so I took my duffle bag to Peoples Park in Berkeley to try to fend for myself. —---------- Rozz Veloz Electrician by force not by choice. Pops owned the company. We build grocery stores and shit like that. ? the guy most f? Do not want to see on their jobsite. Because it means you’ve ? and you about to get the ? worked for Tesla, I ? LAX and ? $3,000 wk but all I really want to be is the best daddy I can be. I am story short hold my house in Laguna Beach?, moved up here, to be near my son, custody battle. I income is s75,000. Dogs were stolen, jeep was towed. Everything inside stolen, truck, tools stolen, couldn't ?, everything gone. Liberated.
- The Sweeps in San Francisco
By Jay Paulino The downfall of the city will occur if sweeps keep happening the way they are. There is harm, violent people, and danger out in the world everywhere, and police are ignoring the real Harm. Cops are supposed to be the ones protecting and serving, right? That’s not what it looks like now. There are many police in the system that have to be defunded because they are still killing and hurting us today. I see someone with a nosebleed and his head gushing blood; police just stay and ignore it. They call for unnecessary backup instead of an ambulance to address the real problem. This isn’t the only issue with police. It’s also the police brutality against Black/African American people, driven by racism. As I’m walking with Tiny and Poor Magazine downtown in the City of San Francisco doing roofless Radio, the more I see houseless folks hurt. I see police ignore and keep wiping homeless people off the street. Police sweep houseless folks every single day when there is no crime. Our Brothers and sisters are hurt every single day because they have to worry about where they rest their heads at night. Even if they do rest their heads, they have to worry about police taking their homes away at any time of day and throwing their belongings and life in the trash. In the Tenderloin, I have seen a lot and it showed me that there's more people out there looking for Poor Magazine to make this change a movement. Our Mayor London Breed has been following in the footsteps of the last mayor, and the more sweeps that occur, the more lives are lost to the violence of sweeps.
- Wall of Separation
By Dee Allen Its name is displayed on petitions circulated online, in people’s fondest memories. Eight months passed and mourning persists over the loss of a great square of soil popular with locals housed and un-housed. Change came to sidestreets off Telegraph Avenue–Dwight Way, Haste Way, Bowditch Street—January 3, 2024. University of California Regents decided people should lose a piece of Berkeley. A piece of my Anarchist past I used to visit for events. Daily food servings from Food Not Bombs, always free and herbivorous. Mardi Gras celebrations—colourful costumes, beads, masques, gigantic green frog float on wheels—HOPPALEUIAH! Festive anniversary of blessed land’s liberation from the Regents’ greedy grip, hard-won on the streets, clashes with police at the university’s foot, Summer 1969. Native American drum circle, live bands on the painted wooden stage, dancing on open grass, poetry, gardening tutorials. From past revolt, these short blessings. Good times that were mine— Local legend says Julia Vinograd—late jester hat poet from the late, lamented Cafe Babar—was a regular visitor on the land. Often she blew soap bubble trails into an open void joyously— What stands in its place? Rusty Corten steel enclosure. Two levels of stacked shipping containers. Real-time Tetris structure 17 feet high. Flood lights, Apex security guards, metal NO TRESPASSING sign. The land sits idle, clear behind imposing new wall of separation, alien to Berkeley’s no-nukes, anti-war, eco-sustainable, peace-loving bohemian character. Wall of separation in the Middle East—splitting Israel from what’s left of historic Palestine—may not share those traits. Al-jidar goes against the 1967 “Green Line” surrounding Israel and international law. Built at the height of Al-Aqsa Intifada . Approximately 34,000 miles. 435 miles long, 26 feet high—Israel’s expression of hate. No guards, flood lights or prohibition signs. What the other wall of separation shares are these: Assimilation of the blessed land into the system’s framework, humanity and land forced apart. Both discourage people’s right to return. On an unseasonably warm afternoon in late February, my friend and fellow writer Debby Segal and I took a brisk walk through Berkeley, from U.C. Berkeley’s Art Museum and campus of different, transplanted trees, straight on through Telegraph Avenue. As always, Telegraph bustled with college students and older locals that hit up its convenient shops and restaurants. A race of willing consumers. On our way past Mars Vintage Clothing and Rasputin’s Music, in the direction of Amoeba Music, my eyes bulged in utter shock at the gross steel monstrosity where the blessed land used to be. It’s reported that the walled-off land awaits construction offor 1100 beds. Debby and I walked far away from the ugly thing that played a prison wall part so well and secured a glorious future for someone—unlike me. I long for the day that wall of separation sees dismantlement and removal. Container by container. Regents of U.C. Berkeley Have chalked up a victory Keeping all the People’s Out of their own Park . _________________________ W: Hiroshima Anniversary 2024 [ For Whitney Sparks. ]
- The City Plans a Massive Eviction- the People Plan a Resource Fair
For Immediate Release: Contact: Jaz colibrí (413) 522-3116 / Tiny garcia (510) 435-7500 In the ongoing and violent war on houseless peoples bodies and lives The city of Oakland schedules a dangerous "Sweep" of a large houseless comeunity on West Grand and MLK. What : Resource Fair for the Houseless ComeUnity of West Grand and MLK When: 8am Monday, Sept 16th Where: On the Block of West Grand and Martin Luther King Jr Way "We are not sure where we can go now," JohnX, a disabled elder resident of West Grand and MLK shakes his head while trying to balance on his crutches and drag a hefty bag of his clothes away. John X was one of the WeSearch reporters that contributed to the 2024 RoofLessRadio WeSearch report released in August on the increasingy violent sweeps being ordered by Governor Newsom and Mayors from Oakland to San Francisco to Los Angeles to disappear our houseless bodies and lives from the public streets of so-called California.(WeSearch report Sweeping us to Nowhere ) One of the findings of the WeSearch report is the majority of the residents of the MLK /West Grand Comeunity are gravely disabled elders. Additionally, the City has limited to no housing resources to refer people to that are ADA accessible. Alternatively, a community of houseless/formerly houseless advocates, care-givers and housed allies are planning an urgently needed resource fair for the West Grand /MLK comeUnity to help residents in crisis with housing, food, medicine, health care resources as well as legal advocacy to ensure their Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) rights are not being violated and they are legally protected in the face of this state sponsored violence. Since the Grants Pass Vs Johnson ruling was made and the subsequent order by Governor Newsom, the mayors of towns across so-called California like Sheng Tao, London Breed and Karen Bass, have been waging a war against our houseless bodies. Sweeping, disappearing and arresting us to nowhere. Resource Fair organizing committee includes Wood Street Commons, POOR Magazine/Homefulness, Coffee Not Cops, Lesgetit Networks, Anti-PoLice Terror Project, Love and Justice in the Streets, Where Do We Go, EBLC, Punks With Lunch, East Oakland Collective. The Resource Fair will offer resources to actual solutions like the work being done by fellow houseless people at Wood Street Commons and Homefulness and ways that housed people can actively get involved in houseless peoples-led solutions, as well RoofLESS radio story-telling workshop, poetry, produce and healthy food distribution. 1st RoofLessRadio WeSearch Release
- Federal Government on Trial: COVER UP INJUSTICE WITH A COVERUP
Momii Palapaz Poverty Scholar, reporter, radio programmer PoorNewsNetwork “You are not to talk about the Hunger Strike,” said Oakland Federal Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers to defense lawyers. "And if you bring it up again, I will put you in contempt.” On Monday, June 24, 2024, the first day of trial against James Perez, David Cervantes, George Franco and Guillermo Solorio, Judge Rogers attempted to squash and discredit the 2011 prisoner led movement against solitary confinement. In 2015, the four men were charged with gang conspiracy, gang enhancement, and gang racketeering. Federal prosecutors hoped to make a slam dunk with a wealth of federal witnesses and thousands of pages of “evidence” against the hunger strikers. All the defendants lived in solitary confinement of the Security Housing Unit at Pelican Bay for decades. It’s a cover up of injustice with a coverup of claiming gang related crimes. Suppressing the truth about the protest wasn’t the case yesterday, July 29, 2024. Into the second month of the trial, no objection was made to questions for the FBI witness regarding the “hunger strike." It was a surprise to myself and the few spectators, including Lydia, sister of one of the defendants. “Yeah, I thought that it was not allowed to be brought up in court,” she said. But we agreed that it was a good thing. Ceremony for brothers of Pelican Bay State Prison presented by POOR MAGAZINE HOMEFULNESS at the Oakland Federal Building SOLITARY CONFINEMENT IGNITES SOLIDARITY AGAINST TORTURE In 2011, between July 1 and September 26th, James Perez, David Cervantes, George Franco and Guillermo Solorio were part of a hunger strike protesting solitary confinement. Organized by The Short Corridor Collective, the residents sent messages that spread Statewide and throughout prisons and jails on turtle island. Languishing for years, without daily sunshine, forced into a loner life, fellow prison residents and guards are the only physical contacts. Those living in the SHU, receive only non-touch visits, denied the right to free movement beyond a cage, denied the right to quality nutrition and the right to touch earth. Prison hunger strikes, for decades, in such places as San Quentin, California, and Red Onion State Prison in Virginia have repeatedly protested years of cruelty and inhumanity. For example, it is known that “the only way to get out of solitary confinement was to tell on another,” called debriefing. Temptations to lie to free yourself of the torture was testing all the men. In 2012, The Short Order Collective at Pelican Bay constructed “An Agreement to End Hostilities” in the continued ongoing struggle for unity amongst the imprisoned. Both the hunger strike and the “amendment” simultaneously targeted the federal government and the US industrial prison complex. Much to the prison authorities' surprise, they immediately tried to suppress and cover up the uprising. When I say cover up, I mean the feds have pulled every stupid idea out of their supremacist head to claim the reason for the hunger strike was to get in gen pop and sell dope. This is the thinking of the Bureau of Prisons. The practitioners of this corrupt system cannot believe there is intelligence, even genius amongst the thousands of men behind bars. Now the hunger strikers are on trial. POVERTY TO PRISON PIPELINE It’s the 13th anniversary of the Hunger strike by residents of the Pelican Bay State Prison in California. This is so significant that the US government with its gang of FBI is now attempting to railroad 4 men in Federal court. Supporters gather at the Federal Building in Oakland before the trial denouncing the inhumanity of solitary confinement Short Corridor Collective co-organizer of the hunger strike and Amendment to End Hostilities, Todd Ashker, said “Alleged gang-affiliation was sufficient cause for the CDCR to consign prisoners to SHU for the remainder of their lives, unless they were willing to snitch on other prisoners (the “debriefing” process), reach the end of their prison sentence (parole), or die. Prisoners described their choices as ‘snitch, parole or die.’ The Ashker settlement supposedly ended the practice of sending prisoners to SHU for alleged gang-affiliation alone.” Mr. Ashker is in his 27th year of solitary confinement. Another member of the Short Corridor Collective, Paul Redd, was incarcerated for 44 years, 30 of them in the Special Housing Unit of Pelican Bay. He was the go-to lawyer for residents inside. From Critical Resistance, "he was one of the most skilled and well known jailhouse lawyers in the US prison system. A leader amongst not only blacks but all colors seeking his advice. He was instrumental in building a unified force against the system of SHU and confronted divided and conquer tactics amongst inmates." Said warden, “The only way Redd will leave Pelican Bay is in a pine box. " In May, 2020, with the support of legal advocates and then SF DA Chesa Boudin, Mr. Redd was released standing and walking, not in a pine box. He left Pelican Bay with Terminal Stage 4 lung cancer. He passed 2 years later on June 19, 2022. PRISON TO REVOLUTIONARY PIPELINE In US prisons, Over 80,000 men are doubly imprisoned, BEING separated from the general population and THEN in solitary confinement. The revolutionary power of incarcerated men and women, child and elder, is their strengthened mind, feared by corrupt power. “Pelican Bay Art” “SHU Syndrome” Michael D Russell In 2015, a landmark decision “intended to end indefinite solitary confinement throughout California prisons” was not implemented. No surprise. Over 1000 residents of California prisons participated in a 60 day no eating protest. It continued in stages first on July 1, to September 26, 2011 and then on July 8, 2013. It grew to over 6,000 men and women in the State. On August 12, coinciding with the hunger strike was a written statement called “An Agreement To End Hostilities." This was organized by those held at Pelican Bay. The message spread in California and rippled through other penal institutions across the US. The following are demands created by the residents and issued throughout the system. Eliminate group punishments for individual rules violations; Abolish the debriefing policy and modify active/inactive gang status criteria; Comply with the recommendations of the U.S. Commission on Safety and Abuse in Prisons (2006) regarding an end to long-term solitary confinement; Provide adequate food; Expand and provide constructive programs and privileges for those indefinitely sentenced to the SHU. All prisons in the US must be abolished. Millions of boys and young men, like Husband, entered the penalistic system when they were teens or in their early twenties. So now you see that many men still incarcerated are in their 70’s, and 80’s. The C # will indicate the year, which is about the 1970's. The US prison machine is the machine of fascism. Many of it’s projects, plans and policies have escalated over centuries and instituted and streamlined into outside institutions. The police, military and imperialist wars are in our everyday life. The inside is trying to tell us on the outside. We are all connected. THANKS TO SPIRIT OF MANDELA, PRISON RADIO, Critical Resistance, Center for Constitutional Rights, Solitary Watch, Todd Ashker website and mainstream press for information, stories, opinions and art from inside by Michael D Russell. Article by Dorsey from all of us or none “Settle your quarrels, come together, understand the reality of our situation, understand that fascism is already here, that people are dying who could be saved, that generations more will die or live poor butchered half-lives if you fail to act. Do what must be done, discover your humanity and your love in revolution. Pass on the torch. Join us, give up your life for the people.” George Jackson
- London Breed is a Fraud
London Breed is a fraud. When she won her first full term as Mayor in 2018, she spoke of addressing the issues that plague San Francisco . I’d say that she hasn’t done much if anything to help the people of the city. In fact rthese past couple years have shown us that she’s begun to roll back on those promises and goals to try and get more votes, as she’s pushed most of her voter base away. When Breed first became Mayor in 2017 after the death of Ed Lee, she was replaced not even two months into office. In a speech made while figuring out her replacement, Supervisor Hillary Ronan said that Breed was supported by “white, rich men” like the billionaire Ron Conway. Not even two months in office and the cracks start to show. She later joined a GOP led effort to overturn or reform Prop 47, originally passed to combat overcrowding in prisons and save the state money. Her goals were to make it easier to imprison drug dealers, users, and petty thieves. Also happening around the same time was the major street sweeps of the homeless ahead of the APEC conference held downtown. Feels very connected to me! I get what you’re thinking, “it’s politics” right? You can’t accomplish every single thing you want to even if you promise your electorate but it isn’t that simple. She has barely addressed the core issues in San Francisco, she just moves them from neighborhood to neighborhood giving the whole city a facade just like she had been doing for years at that point. Homelessness has actually increased according to HER OWN GOVERNMENT’S SITE from her entering office to this year. I was born and raised in San Francisco, i’ve seen the good, and the bad and I can most definitely say that the only times i’ve ever been afraid in the city have been while London Breed was mayor. I’ve seen more suffering, less services, and the crime is through the roof. I was literally robbed in broad daylight on Christmas of 2023! I don’t know what will work but I know that what we have now, ain’t it
- Reporters Document Recent SF Sweeps and the Meaning of WeSearch
Mayor London Breed has been following in Governor Newsom's footsteps by continuing the aggression against houseless people. She has ordered more sweeps, more incarceration, and more discomfort for houseless people. Last week, she said she will make it so uncomfortable that "they [houseless people] will have to accept our offer and will have to leave." I went along with Tiny, Momii, Leajay, and two youth scholars to San Francisco last Thursday and Friday to document how houseless people have been dealing with the recent sweeps. By 1pm in the Tenderloin, the Department of Public Works (DPW) and Urban Alchemy were already tossing people's belongings into large trash bins. Surrounding them was a throng of police cars and an absurd number of armed officers ready to carry out Breed's order to arrest or disappear as many houseless people as possible. We were armed with nothing but our phone cameras and breakfast pastries to stand in solidarity with our unhoused neighbors, who all of us at POOR Magazine once were. POOR Magazine defines WeSearch as poor people-led research. I watched as the mainstream media camera crew in the Tenderloin turned tail and ran when they saw us recording. Corporate media like CNN and local FOX news stations have never been interested in writing stories that feature our voices. They talk around us, turning us into data points and flattening us into "the homeless" with one story, one viewpoint, one experience, without bothering to ask us how we got to where we're at. After the report, Tiny outlined the point of WeSearch to me, saying, "We quantify data because politricksters like numbers. Crapitalism cares more about numbers than they do about people.” According to Tiny, WeSearch is “a very revolutionary aspect to this kind of community collectivity [compared] to ‘data collection’. Data collection is turning people into data. Community collectivity gives people back their sovereignty.” Part of giving people back their sovereignty is flipping the script on subject and interviewer. When we ask people to share their stories with us, they craft their own narratives, and in so doing, become reporters of their own stories. We met many people affected by Breed's new policies, all of whom spoke of harassment by cops and dehumanization at the hands of city workers tasked with "keeping the streets safe." One ROOFless Radio reporter said, “I got a seller’s permit, that means you can sell anywhere in California. Anywhere! And they still took my shit and impounded it and took everything from me last night with no remorse.” On Friday, we saw the effects of Mayor Breed’s relocation venture to offer free bus tickets to houseless people regardless of if they are even from outside San Francisco. We met an older houseless reporter in SoMa who had just been given a bus ticket. He said he had chosen Salinas as his destination and they gave him a ticket on the spot. According to him, he has no friends or family in Salinas and needed directions to the bus station. This is elder abuse, plain and simple. The government has forced older adults to leave their homes to go to a random city simply to move the “nasty homeless” out of San Francisco. Displacement is not a solution to homelessness. In this writer's opinion, poor people are as tired as they are angry. Tired because they have to cope with the daily struggles of being poor and homeless, and angry because they are becoming increasingly isolated as they attempt to carve out a life from the edges of society. Newsflash: we are society. We have our own communities where we live lives of joy and mirth and laughter and loss just like everyone else. We create our own solutions to the problems the government throws our way. We cleverly and skillfully navigate a world that has been set up to deny us basic human rights, and we do so with great success. Homefulness 2, POOR Magazine’s sophomore housing solution built by and for houseless people, is a success that proves every negative stereotype said about poor people wrong.





















