Monday, June 22, 2009
People's Day of Reckoning
Lost Services
become Lost Lives
The California Budget
is Killing Me!!
Tuesday,
June 23, 2009
11:00am - 3:00pm
San Francisco
City Hall to
the Governor's Office
455 Golden Gate Ave
California's safety net is rendered and torn -
we must fight to restore
benefits lost and fight to keep what remains.
As we celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Olmstead supreme court
decision - that community living is a civil right guaranteed under the Americans
with Disabilities Act - we must not lose the supports and services that
make community living possible.
Our Homes - Our Dignity - Our Civil Rights
Sacramento must stop the shell game - where California's vast resources
are segregated into "protected" pockets - and only the general fund is
subject to the vagaries of the economy and the budget process.
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Vision Loss Resource Center
listen to this program
Pushing Limits sheds light on the Vision Loss Resource Center with guests, Jessie Lorenz and Amber Dipietra.
What issues are affecting
people in the blind
and low vision community?
of the
San Francisco Lighthouse
for the Blind
discuss coalition building
in the face of state budget cuts,
accessibility to the internet,
and their new free advice service
(888-400-8933)
with hosts
Adrienne Lauby and Eddie Ytuarte.
Jessie Lorenz
with Olympic Torch
Pushing Limits sheds light on the Vision Loss Resource Center with guests, Jessie Lorenz and Amber Dipietra.
What issues are affecting
people in the blind
and low vision community?
Amber Di Prieta
of the
San Francisco Lighthouse
for the Blind
discuss coalition building
in the face of state budget cuts,
accessibility to the internet,
and their new free advice service
(888-400-8933)
with hosts
Adrienne Lauby and Eddie Ytuarte.
Jessie Lorenz
with Olympic Torch
Friday, June 5, 2009
Krip Hop Meets Homo Hop
Listen to this Program
When organizer Leroy F. Moore, Jr.
announced the first-ever joint
conference of disabled and
queer hip hop musicians
last April at UC Berkeley,
he got some knee jerk reactions.
He heard pity
for the krip hoppers,
fear of the homos -- and he collected some hate mail.
It took the determination of a hippo and the communication skills of a hundred year old parrot to pull the conference off from that point. But the musicians and audience who stuck with it flowed into the confluence of two mighty rivers of oppression and courage.
Our participants:
Miss Money comes from
Houston Texas and lives
with muscular dystrophy.
With a strong classical
and educational background
in music, she's in high demand
as a singer, producer,
DJ and rapper.
Miss Money
Tru Bloo, whose day job name is Nyla Moujaes, hales from Lebanon and Las Vegas. She's a lesbian, a community organizer, poverty lawyer, poet and MC.
B-Sick, is an Las Vegas rapper. His first EP in 1993 was called "Too Blind Too Sick." And he hasn't stopped since. You can find him on myspace aka Mr. Zero Tolerence.
G.r.e.a.t. Scott, is an underground MC from Atlanta.
He was partially paralyzed at age eighteen from a shot
to the chest during an altercation with an acquaintance.
He's got originality, lyrical skill,
and an ability to “Move the crowd.”
Last but not least, you'll hear the voice of KPFA's Anita Johnson from Hard Knock Radio who moderated the panel.
Produced, edited and hosted by Adrienne Lauby.
When organizer Leroy F. Moore, Jr.
announced the first-ever joint
conference of disabled and
queer hip hop musicians
last April at UC Berkeley,
he got some knee jerk reactions.
He heard pity
for the krip hoppers,
fear of the homos -- and he collected some hate mail.
It took the determination of a hippo and the communication skills of a hundred year old parrot to pull the conference off from that point. But the musicians and audience who stuck with it flowed into the confluence of two mighty rivers of oppression and courage.
hip hop began in a culture of tough talk,
a mighty shout of affirmation
in the face of an
ignorant and ignoring white mainstream.
Now minorities within hip hop culture
are talking with the same heart and spirit
and part of what they say is a challenge
to an ignorant and ignoring hip hop.
The conference was called, "Diversifying Hip Hop: Krip-Hop & Homo-Hop" and today, in the first week of LGBTI pride month, we bring you excerpts from a panel discussion at this historic conference.a mighty shout of affirmation
in the face of an
ignorant and ignoring white mainstream.
Now minorities within hip hop culture
are talking with the same heart and spirit
and part of what they say is a challenge
to an ignorant and ignoring hip hop.
Our participants:
Juba Kalamka, is a
founding member
of the Deep Dickollective and
developer of the micro-label
Sugartruck Recordings.
Oakland-based,
he's a prime mover in the
international
homo-hop movement.
Juba Kalamkafounding member
of the Deep Dickollective and
developer of the micro-label
Sugartruck Recordings.
Oakland-based,
he's a prime mover in the
international
homo-hop movement.
Miss Money comes from
Houston Texas and lives
with muscular dystrophy.
With a strong classical
and educational background
in music, she's in high demand
as a singer, producer,
DJ and rapper.
Miss Money
Tru Bloo, whose day job name is Nyla Moujaes, hales from Lebanon and Las Vegas. She's a lesbian, a community organizer, poverty lawyer, poet and MC.
B-Sick, is an Las Vegas rapper. His first EP in 1993 was called "Too Blind Too Sick." And he hasn't stopped since. You can find him on myspace aka Mr. Zero Tolerence.
G.r.e.a.t. Scott, is an underground MC from Atlanta.
He was partially paralyzed at age eighteen from a shot
to the chest during an altercation with an acquaintance.
He's got originality, lyrical skill,
and an ability to “Move the crowd.”
G.r.e.a.t. Scott
Produced, edited and hosted by Adrienne Lauby.
Labels:
Adrienne Lauby,
B-Sick,
Great Scott,
Hip Hop,
Homo Hop,
Juba Kalamka,
Krip hop,
Leroy Moore,
Miss Money,
Tru Bloo
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