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    encampment

    Explore "encampment" with insightful episodes like "#9 Housing, Charity, and Justice. With Lorraine Lam", "Cold weather, full shelters. Where can those facing homelessness go?", ""The Only Way We Win Is With Each Other" - The Struggle to Defend the UC Townhomes with Rasheda Alexander and Sterling Johnson", "How We Stay Free - Philadelphia Housing Action featuring Christopher Rogers, Fajr Muhammad, Sterling Johnson, and Wiley Cunningham" and "Data shows an increase in street fires, but that’s not the whole story" from podcasts like ""Deathnography Podcast", "This Matters", "Millennials Are Killing Capitalism", "Millennials Are Killing Capitalism" and "Civic"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    #9 Housing, Charity, and Justice. With Lorraine Lam

    #9 Housing, Charity, and Justice. With Lorraine Lam

    Toronto's police budget has increased by nearly 50 million dollars, while shelters and warming centres remain critically underfunded. I speak with Lorraine Lam, from the Shelter and Housing Justice Network about the current housing crisis, and together we tackle some myths about homelessness and encampments.

     

    LINK FOR LORRAINE AND EVY’S LNY DRIVE:

    linktr.ee/lnygiveback

    LINK TO UNITY KITCHEN:

    https://holytrinity.to/2021/04/toronto-kitchen-provides-fresh-meals-for-homeless-in-the-city/

    LINK TO ALL SAINTS TORONTO:

    https://allsaintstoronto.com/

    LINK TO DISPLACEMENT CITY (BOOK):

    https://utorontopress.com/9781487546496/displacement-city/

    LINK TO SHELTER AND HOUSING JUSTICE NETWORK:

    http://www.shjn.ca/

    Contact Lorraine Lam @lorrainelamchops on instagram, @lorrainelamchop on twitter

    Cold weather, full shelters. Where can those facing homelessness go?

    Cold weather, full shelters. Where can those facing homelessness go?

    Guest: Victoria Gibson, affordable housing reporter

    Hundreds of people looking for a place to stay are being turned away from Toronto’s shelter system every night. As winter arrives and the weather gets colder, encampments are being cleared, temporary shelters in hotels are closing and the shelter system is operating at or near full capacity. It is a cold, desperate situation for many. Affordable housing reporter Victoria Gibson joins “This Matters” to talk about the many issues those facing homelessness face right now.

    This episode was produced by Brian Bradley, Paulo Marques and Raju Mudhar.

    "The Only Way We Win Is With Each Other" - The Struggle to Defend the UC Townhomes with Rasheda Alexander and Sterling Johnson

    "The Only Way We Win Is With Each Other" - The Struggle to Defend the UC Townhomes with Rasheda Alexander and Sterling Johnson

    In this episode we interview Rasheda Alexander and Sterling Johnson. They are both participants in the struggle to defend the UC Townhomes, which residents have renamed the People’s Townhomes in Philadelphia. This one of the most recent flashpoint struggles in Philadelphia in a long struggle to defend the neighborhoods Black Philadelphians were originally segregated into from the forces of gentrification and displacement. Sterling who is an organizer with Philadelphia Housing Action joined us previously in part 1 of our conversation on the book How We Stay Free to talk about the massive housing struggles for homeless people in Philadelphia in 2020.

    In this episode both Rasheda and Sterling offer personal context, overarching analysis, and talk about the issue of housing among other things as a racial justice issue, as a disability justice issue, and as an issue of justice for the elderly.  

    Rasheda provides listeners with a concrete understanding of the liberatory potential of struggles like this, how they can transform relations among participants and be an example of abolition in practice. Sterling provides a great deal of analysis and context around the forces housing organizers have to fight, and advocates for a proliferation of encampments as a tactic in that struggle. 

    It is important context to know that the protest camp, by which I mean basically the pallets and the tents, was removed by the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office this past Monday. When we had spoken on July 27th it was supposed to originally have been removed on that day. It was through organizing, resistance, and support from other groups in Philly including organized labor that the encampment lasted as long as it did. I’m going to play a quick clip of audio of Philadelphia’s Sheriff who brands herself as a “social justice warrior” as she is removing the encampment. In the background you can hear residents and protesters chanting “we ain’t goin’ nowhere,” which has been a clarion call of the Save UC Townhomes movement. 

    Even with the encampment’s tents and barriers removed, the protest and the fight to Save UC Townhomes will continue. Please connect with them by following them on social media for more updates on how to support their struggle. And get involved in housing struggles in your own community. Even if it is not your home being impacted, these fights affect all of us.

    We’ll include more links in the show notes, including an Opinion piece that came out in the Philly Inquirer after the demolition of the encampment:

    “We are still waiting for the Mayor’s Office to respond to our demands. However, I am grateful for all of the support that our protest camp has received, and look forward to continuing our fight regardless of the court or the sheriff’s decision to dismantle it. I cherish this community and I will continue to fight for it until I can’t anymore.”

    That quote by Maria Lyles, who is a resident of UC Townhomes, sums up the perspectives from residents who have been struggling to defend their community in this fight. It also echoes much of Rasheda’s sentiment in this conversation.

    An editors note, this episode was a live conversation much of which the interviewees were outside, or at UC Townhomes. So there were a couple parts that had to be clipped, and there are still some issues that remain in the audio, in all cases they are brief and clear up quickly.

    At Millennials Are Killing Capitalism we had an initial goal of adding 25 patrons this month to keep up with attrition. We’re only 6 patrons away from hitting that goal as we publish this on August 11th, so hopefully we can exceed that goal this month. Thank you to all the folks who support us on patreon, and if you would like to join them you can do so for as little as $1 a month on patreon.com/millennialsarekillingcapitalism.

    Our music is provided by Televangel.

    Now here is our conversation with Rasheda Alexander and Sterling Johnson.

    https://savetheuctownhomes.com

    https://www.instagram.com/saveuctownhomes/

    https://twitter.com/saveuctownhomes

    Frank Rizzo, the UC Townhomes, and the fight to save Black Philadeplhia by Rasheda Alexander and Sterling Johnson

    Article referencing the Black Bottom Tribe (mentioned in episode) 

    I'm being evicted from University City Townhomes by Maria Lyles

    Philadelphia Housing Action

     

     

     

    How We Stay Free - Philadelphia Housing Action featuring Christopher Rogers, Fajr Muhammad, Sterling Johnson, and Wiley Cunningham

    How We Stay Free - Philadelphia Housing Action featuring Christopher Rogers, Fajr Muhammad, Sterling Johnson, and Wiley Cunningham

    This is part 1 of a 2 part conversation with the editors and contributors to a book called How We Stay Free: Notes on a Black Uprising. This book is edited by Christopher R. Rogers, Fajr Muhammad and the Paul Robeson House & Museum and is a great testament to the local dimensions of the Black uprising in Philadelphia in the months after the murder of George Floyd. 

    In this conversation Chris and Fajr introduce themselves and talk about the book and its contents and authors, which include many important activists and organizers here in Philadelphia. After that, we talk to organizers Sterling Johnson and Wiley Cunningham from Philadelphia Housing Action.  They talk about the monumental housing struggles in Philadelphia during 2020, giving credit to their fellow housing activist Jennifer Bennetch, who passed away just recently at only 36 years old.

    They talk about many aspects of this complicated struggle which included a squatting movement as well as multiple encampments and complex negotiations with both Philadelphia Housing Authority and the City of Philadelphia. Although they offer understandable caution with regard to what they actually won, this struggle was historic in its scale as well as in the agreements that were leveraged through direct action. It is a struggle that warrants deeper examination by housing activists in Philadelphia and around the world, as the forces of capitalism continue to dispossess the most vulnerable.

    At the end of the discussion Chris brings in a note on one of the big housing campaigns currently underway in Philly, the struggle to Save the UC Townhomes, a public housing facility that the owner is attempting to sell, a move that will cause dozens of Black families to be evicted by July 22nd if it cannot be stopped through organization and direct action. 

    You can buy How We Stay Free, and possibly get a solidarity copy for a student, elder, organizer or political prisoner.

    And if you like what we do, we’re still trying to get our patreon back where it was a few months ago. We’re  only down about $20 this month as we release this episode, so if a few of you can commit to $1 a month or more, or a small yearly pledge, we should be able to make that up. 

    Links:

    How We Stay Free

    Paul Robeson House & Museum Website/Paul Robeson House & Museum Twitter

    Philadelphia Housing Action/Philadelphia Housing Action Twitter/Timeline

    Save The UC Townhomes/Save UC Townhomes Twitter

    Part 1: Educating & Supporting Displaced Asylum Seekers w/ Felicia Rangel-Samponaro

    Part 1: Educating & Supporting Displaced Asylum Seekers w/ Felicia Rangel-Samponaro

    This episode is part one of two amazing episodes we’ve got with The Sidewalk School. In this episode, Weeze has a conversation with Director Felicia, about how The Sidewalk School was founded in response to the need for education and support for those facing displacement in the Matamoros Tent City, a refugee camp. They discuss the realities of asylum seekers and how they’ve been mistreated due to Trump’s immigration policy changes, Biden’s backwards approach to “fixing” them, and what we can do to support these folks who legally did exactly what they were supposed to, but have been displaced for years...years!

    ABOUT WEEZE

    Louiza Doran, known and referred to as Weeze, is a cis-het Amazigh* female identifying human who uses she/her/they/them pronouns. She’s known as a coach, podcast host, advocate, agent of change, strategist and educator (to name a few) but is ultimately a compassionate provocateur that is out to help folks uncover their path of possibility.  

    ABOUT FELICIA

    Felicia Rangel-Samponaro holds a bachelor’s degree in Psychology from the University of Houston. Prior to moving to Brownsville, TX, she was a certified teacher in the Houston area. Felicia is married and is a proud mother to her 9-year-old son. Despite being a non-Spanish speaker amongst a fully Spanish-speaking staff, she has been a volunteer in the Matamoros Tent City with the Asylum Seekers since late 2018. Through her work with the Sidewalk School, she believes that anything is possible, especially creating and running schools in Mexico.

    IN THIS EPISODE, WE TALK ABOUT

    • The education and resources Sidewalk School provides to asylum seekers in the Matamoras encampment.
    • How the Matamoras encampment grew to a population of 5000 displaced people!
    • How Trump silently legalized the separation and kidnapping of children in internment camps.
    • How children were sent to kid jails from a matter of weeks to years, deported back to their native countries, and placed in foster care.
    • The backwards way Pres. Robinette has decided to “fix” the Migrant Protection Program.

     CALL TO ACTION

     

     

    EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

    FOLLOW WEEZE TO STAY ENGAGED 

    Website: https://www.accordingtoweeze.com

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/accordingtoweeze

    The Academy (it’s like Patreon): https://www.accordingtoweeze.com/the-academy

    FOLLOW FELICIA TO STAY ENGAGED

    Website: https://www.sidewalkschool.org/

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thesidewalkschool 

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thesidewalkschool/

    Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/SidewalkSchool

    Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/sidewalkschool

    Crash Dystopia Changes

    Crash Dystopia Changes
    Crash Dystopia Changes (Air Date July 6, 2020) Agent 1 tells of the changes to their group, the travels they have made, the people in encampments they have come across with their own struggles, and her theory of what the Network drones may actually consist of. If her theory is correct, could this be the turning of the tide to bring humanity to a place of safety from the Network? In collaboration with Crash Exile, the story originator.

    S403: Planning Your Installation as Worshipful Master

    S403: Planning Your Installation as Worshipful Master

    If you're worry about how to plan your installation, and it's next year, you're in luck. If it's this June or July, boy howdy, do we have some news for you. Brothers Rhit Moore, Billy Hamilton, Gabriel Jagush, and Evve Kuykendall revisit one of our annual episodes - the installation of officers. Every year, we discuss certain subjects to share what we've learned since the last year's episode, and we hope that we can help you out with your planning!

    0:00:34 - Host Introductions
    0:03:59 - Discussion Topic: Why do you feel the decision was made, back in the day, to make our installation ceremony an "open" ceremony?
    0:11:51 - Episode Content: Planning Your Installation as Worshipful Master
    0:17:57 - The complexities of scheduling
    0:30:36 - Who can legally be on an installation team?
    0:40:30 - What kind of food should you have at your installation?
    0:53:20 - Why is decorating the room and the tables important?
    1:00:26 - Gabe goes on an unnecessary tangent on the "egregore" of a lodge
    1:03:33 - DRESS CODES!
    1:14:40 - The importance of having an itinerary and agenda
    1:27:19 - Masonic Quote of the Week: Illustrious Bro. George Foot Moore, 33°
    1:27:58 - Contact Info & Texas MasoniCon 2020 Plug

    Podcast episodes are released on the first and third Thursdays of each month!

    Check us out:
    http://www.fortworth148.org/
    https://www.facebook.com/fortworthlodge148/
    fortworthlodge148@gmail.com
    https://www.texasmasonicon.com/
    info@texasmasonicon.com
    @TexasMasoniCon on FB & IG
    #DareToBeSquare

    Contact the 64th District for events:
    64th.org