Your Hue

Month

September 2011

67 posts

Sep 29, 201147 notes
#obama #president #2012
Sep 29, 201156 notes
#obama #michelle obama #president #black and white #photography #love
Sep 28, 20114 notes
#Black unemployment #Highest in 27 years
Sep 28, 201120,640 notes
#dadt #important things #barack obama #lgbt
Play
Sep 28, 20113 notes
#wangari maathai #hummingbird #chicago #kenya #Environment
Sep 27, 201199 notes
#RIP #musaomusidigitalart #wangari maathai #art #portrait #kenya #africa
Sep 27, 20118 notes
#Maathai #RIP #environmental activism #civil rights #women's rights #Kenya #Nobel Prize
“[Being mandated to speak English] contributes to the trivialization of anything African and lays the foundation for a deeper sense of self-doubt and an inferiority complex…It instilled in us a sense that out local languages were inferior and insignificant. The reality is that mother tongues are extremely important as vehicles o communication and carriers of culture, knowledge, wisdom, and history. When they are maligned, and educated people are encouraged to look down on them, people are robbed of a vital part of their heritage.” —

Wangari Maathai, Unbowed. (via withendlesslove)
Sep 27, 2011150 notes
#maathai #unbowed #wangari #linguistic relativity #ethnocentrism #imperialism #racism #colonization #africa #Sapir–Whorf hypothesis #superiority complex
Sep 26, 20112,811 notes
#protest #Israel #Palestine #zionism
Sep 26, 2011
#Palestine #Children #Peace
Sep 26, 201187 notes
#Palestine #United Nations #Statehood
Sep 26, 20115 notes
#Mahmoud Abbas #Palestine #UN
Sep 26, 2011890 notes
#africa #african woman #kenya #nobel prize #wangari maathai #portrait
“To take a life when a life has been lost is revenge, not justice.” —Desmond Tutu (via beepbopboop)
Sep 25, 2011247 notes
Visionary Organizing and the MLK Memorial By Grace Lee Boggs → boggscenter.org

amakacamille:

“How do we honor dead heroes in a way that helps us build a new world?”

Sep 24, 20112 notes
#Grace Lee Boggs #Detroit #DC #MLK #Memorial #MLK Memorial #martin luther king
Play
Sep 23, 201144 notes
#African Union #Afro-descendants #Africa #Americas #Africans #Afro-Latinos #Caribbean
Sep 23, 201118 notes
#Afro Latinos
Sep 23, 201116 notes
#Garifuna #Nicaragua #Baile #Afro Latinas #Latinegra
Sep 23, 201159 notes
#tumblrize #latinas #mun2
10 Things Anyone Can Do To Help Exonerate Innocent People and Prevent Wrongful Convictions → innocenceproject.org

1. Get connected to stay informed and take action
Join the Innocence Project’s online community to receive regular updates, action alerts, in-depth news and analysis, and other information. Registration is free. Click here to join. Once you register, you can e-mail your friends, family and colleagues to ask them to sign up, too.

2. Donate to the Innocence Project
The Innocence Project is a nonprofit organization that relies on financial support from individuals and foundations. Your donation will help pay for DNA tests, provide staffing for case intake and litigation, support our reform initiatives nationwide, and help educate the public. Click to donate online or by mail.

3. Build relationships with elected representatives 
Call or meet with your state and federal representatives well before the legislative session starts and discuss your concerns. By simply introducing yourself to your legislators and their staff before the session starts and providing a brief overview of innocence-related policy concerns, you can establish useful relationships with them and help them see the value of supporting legislation that would protect the innocent. When the session starts, they may reach out to you or take your call because they know you’re actively involved in these issues. For more information and practical tips, see “How to Talk About Innocence-Related Issues with Elected Officials, Organizations, Media, and Others.”

4. Connect with a local Innocence Network organization
Three dozen organizations around the country belong to the Innocence Network, and many of them work on these issues at the state and local levels. You may be able to help with their policy reform efforts, their community outreach, or other aspects of their work – in a professional capacity or as a volunteer. To find a local Innocence Network contact, go to www.innocencenetwork.org.

5. Reach out to the media 
When a local or national media outlet runs a story about an exoneration or the causes of wrongful convictions, call or write to the reporter to say you are pleased to see the coverage and interested in seeing additional stories on these issues. Share your perspective and thoughts about why wrongful convictions must be discussed and addressed. Write letters to the editor in response to articles or editorials so that the media – and policymakers who are in a position to help prevent wrongful convictions — know that the public is concerned about these issues. For more information and practical tips, see “How to Talk About Innocence-Related Issues with Elected Officials, Organizations, Media, and Others.”

6. Become more knowledgeable about wrongful convictions – and spread the word
There are scores of books, films, television specials and other resources that can deepen people’s understanding of the causes of wrongful convictions, the need for reform, the challenges people face after exoneration and other issues. Spend some time learning more about the issues, and then share books or films with your friends, coworkers or community members (some of them are great gifts!).View a list of list of films and TV specials on the issues surrounding wrongful convictions and view our recommended reading list.

7. Engage allies in addressing wrongful convictions

Everyone is impacted by wrongful convictions, but some individuals and groups aren’t yet involved in preventing injustice. Ask your friends, colleagues and community organizations to get involved when policy reforms are being discussed; encourage them to join the Innocence Project’s online community. Offer to speak about wrongful convictions at a local Rotary, Kiwanis, or similar civic groups’ meeting. You can address the group yourself, or you can ask a local Innocence Network representative or professor to speak. During the speech, encourage people to become more actively involved in these issues.

8. Work with prisoners and their families in your community

Many exonerees and their families talk about how isolated and ignored prisoners feel. Find a local group that works with prisoners and volunteer to get involved however you’re needed – whether it’s helping in a prison organization’s office or providing support to prisoners and their families. For links to organizations providing a range of services, go to http://prisonactivist.org/links/. For information to share with prisoners (or their families) seeking to contact the Innocence Project about a case, click here.

9. Learn about local procedures and help improve them

Many of the causes of wrongful convictions are decided locally. For example, policies and procedures about conducting lineups and recording interrogations are often set by city and county agencies. As a concerned community member, you have the right to know what the local practices are. Contact the city police, county sheriff and/or other local agencies to find out what they’re currently doing and what the process is for evaluating and revising their policies. If their procedures and policies are not adequate for preventing wrongful convictions, urge decision-makers to change them and reach out to Innocence Network groups to let them know what you’ve learned. For more information and practical tips, see “How to Learn About Local Law Enforcement Procedures and Help Improve Them.”

10. Host a local fundraising and educational event

You, your friends or a group you belong to can organize an event to raise money for the Innocence Project and educate people about wrongful convictions. Some people hold small house parties for six people, while others organize events for 100. Whatever you can do will help spread the word and support our work. Click here to get started on holding an event.

Sep 22, 2011736 notes
#note to self
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