community Service means Business!

23 September 2010

from the Desk of Debra Germany-Morrison

Hello Everyone,

FYI,

I was recently notified that I will be receiving the Community Service Leadership Award on October 8, 2010. at 6:45 p.m. This will be held at The CAPA High School Performing Arts Theater 111 Ninth Street, Downtown, PA 15222. (See Attached Invitation, Flyer, &  Letter)

I would like to personally extend an invitation to each of you to come out and join me in this celebration and also, join us  in Stopping the Violence in Pittsburgh.  Divine Intervention Ministries and Soul’d Out Productions  wanted to reach out to the families affected by violence and At-Risk Youth committing acts of violence.  We are hosting a Play entitled the Company you Keep.  The Company You Keep is a stage play produced by Soul’d Out Productions that addresses the effects of violence. It will be performed at The Creative and Performing Arts High School (CAPA) Theater from October 8th through October 10, 2010. (See Attachments)

If you know someone in your Family,  Community, Church, or Job, that has been a victim effected by violence or if you know any At- Risk Youth  in your Family,   Church, Community, or Organizations that you are affiliated with, I would encourage  you to invite them to this play.

If you cannot attend the play, but would still like to help out/sponsor someone to attend, please consider making a donation.  The cost of the tickets are $12.00 if you come as my guest.


Our goal is to get the message out to the families and  our young adults that we care about them and that there are other  alternatives to violence.  This play sends a strong message to our young people to Be Careful of the Company you keep.  It will be a night that families can come together and  fellowship knowing that there is still Hope and that Hope is in God.

Please RSVP  at dtm1003@comcast.net or  call 412 303-5043 if you would like to attend the play  or sponsor someone else to attend and I will place your name on my guest list to receive the discounted ticket rate.

Please forward this to all your contacts I need your help getting the word out about this event.

I would like to thank you in advance for your prayers and support.

May God Bless you always,


Debra Germany-Morrison
www.divineinterventionministries.org
412 303-5043

Download now or preview on posterous
SOP Partnership-4.doc (1677 KB)

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

from the Desk of Debra Germany-Morrison

Hello Everyone,

FYI,

I was recently notified that I will be receiving the Community Service Leadership Award on October 8, 2010. at 6:45 p.m. This will be held at The CAPA High School Performing Arts Theater 111 Ninth Street, Downtown, PA 15222. (See Attached Invitation, Flyer, &  Letter)

I would like to personally extend an invitation to each of you to come out and join me in this celebration and also, join us  in Stopping the Violence in Pittsburgh.  Divine Intervention Ministries and Soul’d Out Productions  wanted to reach out to the families affected by violence and At-Risk Youth committing acts of violence.  We are hosting a Play entitled the Company you Keep.  The Company You Keep is a stage play produced by Soul’d Out Productions that addresses the effects of violence. It will be performed at The Creative and Performing Arts High School (CAPA) Theater from October 8th through October 10, 2010. (See Attachments)

If you know someone in your Family,  Community, Church, or Job, that has been a victim effected by violence or if you know any At- Risk Youth  in your Family,   Church, Community, or Organizations that you are affiliated with, I would encourage  you to invite them to this play.

If you cannot attend the play, but would still like to help out/sponsor someone to attend, please consider making a donation.  The cost of the tickets are $12.00 if you come as my guest.


Our goal is to get the message out to the families and  our young adults that we care about them and that there are other  alternatives to violence.  This play sends a strong message to our young people to Be Careful of the Company you keep.  It will be a night that families can come together and  fellowship knowing that there is still Hope and that Hope is in God.

Please RSVP  at dtm1003@comcast.net or  call 412 303-5043 if you would like to attend the play  or sponsor someone else to attend and I will place your name on my guest list to receive the discounted ticket rate.

Please forward this to all your contacts I need your help getting the word out about this event.

I would like to thank you in advance for your prayers and support.

May God Bless you always,


Debra Germany-Morrison
www.divineinterventionministries.org
412 303-5043

Download now or preview on posterous
SOP Partnership-4.doc (1677 KB)

Posted via email from jimuleda's posterous

22 September 2010

Check out this web page I found with StumbleUpon!

StumbleUpon
View Now >
I found this web page using StumbleUpon and thought you might enjoy it.
hmmm...
Bananas and Monkeys
paws.kettering.edu/~jhuggins/h...
Don't forget to check out my favorite web pages and learn how you can use StumbleUpon to discover great content recommended just for you.

- jimuleda

StumbleUpon is a discovery engine that finds the best of the web, recommended just for you. Learn more

If you do not wish to receive emails sent via StumbleUpon, click here

© StumbleUpon 2001 - 2010

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

From the Desk of Leanne Aurich

Hello everyone,

I hope your days are going well.

I want to invite you all to Rankin’s Jazz Brunch and Vocal Contest this Saturday at the Rankin Christian Center from 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.  If you don’t have any plans on Saturday morning, I know RCDC would be delighted to have you there (and so would I!).  It wouldn’t be a Jazz Brunch without the band, which this year is the “Kevin Howard Trio.”  And, of course there will be a raffle, 50/50, and food.  Tickets are only $10 and must be purchased in advance. 

Let me know if you’re interested! 

Thank you,

Leanne

Leanne Aurich                                  

Community Outreach Specialist                

412-464-4000 ext. 4031

laurich@monvalleyinitiative.com

Facebook Page

Twitter

www.monvalleyinitiative.com

Mon Valley Initiative

303/305 East Eighth Avenue

Homestead, PA 15120

"You can't climb the ladder of success with your hands in your pockets."

Posted via email from jimuleda's posterous

From the Desk of Leanne Aurich

Hello everyone,

I hope your days are going well.

I want to invite you all to Rankin’s Jazz Brunch and Vocal Contest this Saturday at the Rankin Christian Center from 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.  If you don’t have any plans on Saturday morning, I know RCDC would be delighted to have you there (and so would I!).  It wouldn’t be a Jazz Brunch without the band, which this year is the “Kevin Howard Trio.”  And, of course there will be a raffle, 50/50, and food.  Tickets are only $10 and must be purchased in advance. 

Let me know if you’re interested! 

Thank you,

Leanne

Leanne Aurich                                  

Community Outreach Specialist                

412-464-4000 ext. 4031

laurich@monvalleyinitiative.com

Facebook Page

Twitter

www.monvalleyinitiative.com

Mon Valley Initiative

303/305 East Eighth Avenue

Homestead, PA 15120

"You can't climb the ladder of success with your hands in your pockets."

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

20 September 2010

Poverty Rise Stirs Debate Over Aid Programs (National Public Radio, 09.16.2010)

via National Alliance to End Homelessness by National Alliance to End Homelessness on 9/20/10

The recession drove the number of poor Americans in 2009 to its highest total in half a century, yet several measures indicate the impact could well have been worse.

While the Census Bureau's report Thursday on the economic conditions of U.S. households found that 3.8 million more people lived in poverty last year than in 2008, the agency and advocates for the poor say millions of others were sustained with the help of government programs.

Advocates cite federal stimulus initiatives aimed at low-income earners and the extension of unemployment benefits, which alone are credited with helping keep 3.3 million people out of poverty.

Social Aid, Economic Stimulus

Advocacy groups say the results provide a strong argument for continuing these programs not only as social aid but as a proven method for stimulating the economy.

"The thing about these programs is that they target low-income people, and that money goes back into the economy because they are most likely to spend whatever extra money they get," says LaDonna Pavetti of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. "And history shows that poverty levels don't go down until unemployment levels go down. So the worst thing that can happen is to end these programs before we're done needing them."

The findings carry political implications for the Nov. 2 congressional elections, which are expected to be a referendum on such economic policies pushed through by President Obama and the Democratic-controlled Congress.

Gaining momentum from voters frustrated about the economy, Republicans have staked their Election Day ambitions on attacking the Democrats' deficit spending.

As part of its counterstrategy, the White House followed the Census Bureau report with a statement claiming credit for helping to mitigate poverty rates.

"The data released today also remind us that a historic recession does not have to translate into historic increases in family economic insecurity," Obama said in the statement. "Because of the Recovery Act and many other programs providing tax relief and income support to a majority of working families — and especially those most in need — millions of Americans were kept out of poverty last year."

'The Wrong Direction'

Fiscal conservatives say Obama has simply continued costly social aid programs that haven't solved the problem.

"Welfare spending is 13 times bigger than when the war on poverty began, in the 1960s," says Jennifer Marshall of the Heritage Foundation. "Aid to the poor is now the third most expensive government function, and yet we're seeing plans to spend $10.3 trillion over next 10 years. And yet seeing the indicators that poverty continues to go in the wrong direction."

A study released Thursday by the foundation blamed poverty on an increase in single-parent households and entitlement programs that prioritize benefits for unwed parents. The report advocates reducing "anti-marriage penalties" among other initiatives to, as Marshall says, "restore the culture of marriage."

The Recovery Act contained a raft of initiatives aimed at low-income earners such as child tax credits, increased food stamp benefits and emergency block grants issued to states that have helped create about 250,000 subsidized jobs. Advocates are urging the Senate to extend the block grants before they expire on Sept. 30.

Unemployment Benefits Helped

The larger impact on curbing the growth of poverty came from Congress' decision to extend emergency funding to help states continue paying unemployment insurance benefits. Heavy job losses in dozens of states had depleted unemployment insurance funds by early last year.

Unemployment insurance was more effective against poverty than in past years because Congress improved benefits for the longer-term jobless and approved the $25 weekly increase in jobless benefits temporarily granted by the Recovery Act.

Still, the Census Bureau report revealed the broadly harsh impact of last year's downturn.

More than 43.6 million people were impoverished in 2009 — or roughly 1 in every 7 — a 1 percent increase from the year earlier and the largest number recorded in 51 years. The 14.3 percent poverty rate is the highest since 1994 and the third consecutive annual increase.

Poverty rates increased among all racial and ethnic groups, except Asians, across all family structures and all geographic regions except in the Northeast. In addition, the number of uninsured rose.

Given the soaring unemployment rates over the past 16 or so months, most analysts projected poverty rates as high as 15 percent. Many of them also had forecast a decline in median household income, but the Census Bureau said it remained statistically flat, at $49,777.

Moving Back Home

The report also notes a large increase of people who coped with misfortune by bunking with relatives, or "doubling up." For these households, the poverty rate was 17 percent, but it doesn't capture the dire financial conditions of individuals who moved in with family members to save money.

"If you counted the people who moved in — who needed the help — their own poverty level would have been 44.2 percent," said Timothy M. Smeeding, director of the Institute for Poverty Research at the University of Wisconsin.

Smeeding found a particularly dramatic increase in poverty among people ages 25 to 34 who moved in with parents or other relatives. "For those households," he says, "the poverty rate was 8.5 percent. But if young adults' income is taken separately, their poverty rate would have been 42.8 percent. That's an important group."

Posted via email from jimuleda's posterous

Questions or answers

via Seth's Blog by Seth Godin on 9/20/10

You can add value in two ways:

  • You can know the answers.
  • You can offer the questions.

Relentlessly asking the right questions is a long term career, mostly because no one ever knows the right answer on a regular basis.

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

10 September 2010

Seven Surprising Uses for Baking Soda

via GOOD by Alexandra Spunt on 9/9/10


 

Let us be clear: Baking soda is not going to permanently cure your acne or turn back the cruel hand of time. But if you’re looking to detoxify your body and your household, this multitasking ingredient will make your life easier (and more beautiful) without denting your coffers. Mom may have taught you that baking soda will make your bread rise and your fridge smell better, but did you know of its many cosmetic applications?

Even the ancient Egyptians—and what beauty post would be complete without them?—used a compound similar to baking soda as soap. The stuff is antiseptic, antifungal, and lightly exfoliating. It will take the stains off your coffee mug and your not-so-pearly whites, and can be consumed internally to ease your tummy ache. And fridge odors aren’t the only smells it absorbs so don’t turn your nose up, and bring on the baking soda!


 

Brush Your Teeth With It Most conventional toothpastes use sodium lauryl sulfate as their primary ingredient. You may remember this verboten surfactant from previous posts explaining its harsh effects and possible contamination with a carcinogen called 1,4-dioxane. If you don’t want peroxide in your mouth, whitening strips are out too. Go natural instead with some bad-breath-killing-tooth-whitening baking soda on your brush (tastes like the ocean, salty but bearable), or add it to your SLS-free Tom’s for extra-whitening powers.


 

 

Wash Your Face With It As a rule, we think that harsh scrubs and exfoliants do not belong on your face—not least of all because you need that top layer of skin to keep bad stuff out and moisture in. Most exfoliating scrubs also contain other sketchy ingredients—like plastic balls. If you’re hellbent on scrubbring, though, at least switch to baking soda. It works great on elbows and feet too, and combined with some raw honey, this DIY face wash is refreshing and soothing—and anti-acne, too.

 

Create a DIY Deodorant This recipe from our book makes for a pretty effective homemade deodorant. Here’s what we suggest: Mix four tablespoons of baking soda with about ten drops of your favorite essential oil and apply to underarms. Guys, this sounds girly, but there are plenty masculine smells too—like Texas cedar wood. Ladies looking to reapply throughout the day can carry it in their purses: Just fill an empty mineral makeup container with it and use one of those stubby Kabuki brushes for no-mess application.

 

Spot-Treat Acne Our favorite natural acne remedy is clay, like this green tea one we swear by. But in a bind, making a little paste from baking soda and water and applying it to an unwelcomed visitor will help dry it out. We don't recommend this for deep cysts, but for more surface afflictions, it works like a charm.

 

Cleanse Your Hair If you’re looking to join the ranks of non-shampooers (we know a few), to reduce how often shampoo, or simply to get rid of some product build-up on your roots, look no further than baking soda. Just fill a glass with warm water and dissolve about a tablespoon of baking soda into it. Take that to the shower, and after wetting your hair pour the mixture through. Comb it well before rinsing—your hair will feel a little coated and slippery until it’s fully rinsed out.

 

Soothe Your Stomach Acid stomach, heartburn, gas, and other tummy issues are quickly relieved by baking soda because its slight alkalinity can neutralize the acid causing the problem. Just mix a teaspoon into a glass of warm water and drink it down. We swear by this trick.

 

Soak Your Skin That's right, dissolve some into your bath for a soothing and skin-softening experience. The added bonus? You won't need soap—and sometimes that's a good thing.

Know of any other cool uses for this magic powder?

This is a series inspired by No More Dirty Looks: The Truth About Your Beauty Products and the Ultimate Guide to Safe and Clean Cosmetics, a book by GOOD's features editor Siobhan O'Connor and her co-author Alexandra Spunt.

Read more on their blog

Illustrations by Brianna Harden

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

9 September 2010

Ten must-read books on prisons and criminal justice reform

Ten must-read books on prisons and criminal justice reform by Kelley October 05, 2008 05:33 PM (PT)

There are hundreds of books on criminal justice out there - from pulp legal thrillers to dry law texts. But somewhere between trashy and arid, we find these 10 gems - must-reads from the last four decades that cover the world's courts and prisons from every angle.

1Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison (1975)

Michel Foucault

Considered by many to be the greatest work by 20th Century French philosopher Michel Foucault, this book examines the transition in Western countries from execution and torture to mass imprisonment. A prescient classic.

2Dead Man Walking (1994)

Sister Helen Prejean

This moving personal account of Prejean's moral opposition to capital punishment made her the face of the movement to end the death penalty. In this book, she tells of serving as a spiritual advisor to two Louisiana death row inmates before they are executed. The book was later adapted into a major film starring Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn.

Also by Prejean: "The Death of Innocents - An Eyewitness Account of Wrongful Executions."

3The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison (1979)

Jeffrey Reiman

An important textbook by American University philosophy professor Jeffrey Reiman on class inequality in our criminal justice system. Reiman argues that the American criminal justice system punishes the poor while ignoring white-collar crime and injustice.

4. The Gulag Archipelago (1973)

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

A personal account of life in the Soviet Union's horrifying labor camps by the late Russian Nobel Laureate Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who was imprisoned and then exiled by the Soviet state for his writings. This book is an indispensable examination of human rights violations and the horrors possible in a society that incarcerates millions.

5. Tulia: Race, Cocaine and Corruption in a Small Texas Town (2005)

Nate Blakeslee

The stunning tale of a rash of false and overstated drug arrests in a small Texas town in 1999 that left 20% of the town's African-Americans in jail - many of them completely innocent.  Blakeslee then examines the case to overturn their convictions. This book tells the story of the injustice of America's War on Drugs through a fascinating microcosm. A forthcoming film from director John Singleton is based on the book.

6. In Cold Blood (1966)

Truman Capote

The book that inaugurated the "true crime" genre that continues to fascinate readers around the world today.  It's a classic, gripping character study and a compelling glimpse into the minds of two men who committed several heinous, and seemingly random, murders. Capote captures the reader's attention with wonderful - and sympathetic - profiles of the victims and the men executed for killing them. In the process, he questions the American criminal justice system, its role in creating the two men who committed these murders, and the justice - or lack thereof - offered by the death penalty.

7. Why Our Drug Laws Have Failed and What We Can Do About It - A Judicial Indictment on the War on Drugs (2001)

James Gray

Gray, a prosecutor and judge, offers a fierce and thorough indictment of America's War on Drugs - calling it a waste of time, money and lives. He argues that incarcerating hundreds of thousands of non-violent drug offenders has diverted precious government resources from more important needs, and presents as evidence statistics, case studies, and the words of dozens of participants in all aspects the legal system.

8.  The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court (2007)

Jeffrey Toobin

A surprising page-turner chronicling the current U.S. Supreme Court and how it came to be. Toobin walks readers through the nomination of justices Rehnquist through Alito, and covers the major decisions through this era, comparing the court with its predecessors throughout American history. Toobin focuses on major decisions made by this court and these justices, and renders harsh judgment of what he considers a major blunder by the court in the Bush v. Gore in 2000. Through extensive interviews with former clerks, friends of the justices, and others, Toobin offers a rare backstage view of the most powerful court in the country.

9Actual Innocence (2000)

Barry Scheck, Peter Neufeld, Jim Dwyer

This book introduced the American public to the new era of criminal justice ushered in by DNA science. The founders of the non-profit Innocence Project (for whom I work), writing with New York Times reporter Jim Dwyer, detail the causes of wrongful conviction as they've been revealed by DNA testing and how these causes play a part in all convictions - not just those involving DNA testing.

10Courtroom 302 (2006)

Steve Bogira

An extraordinary and memorable account of a year in a criminal courtroom on Chicago's South Side, this book leaves the reader with an insider's knowledge of America's criminal justice system, from the perspective of defendants, guards, judges, defense attorneys, prosecutors and reporters.

Matt Kelley is the Online Communications Manager at the Innocence Project and a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.

Jim Reid

jreid@monvalleyinitiative.com

412.464.4000 x4034

SouthWestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Coordinator

Mon Valley Initiative

www.monvalleyinitiative.com

303/305 East Eighth Ave

Homestead, PA 15120-1517

Fax: 412.464.1750

“The problem of crime cannot be simplified to the problem of the criminal”

-Leslie Wilkins

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

31 August 2010

The corporate conscience

via Seth's Blog by Seth Godin on 8/31/10

There isn't one.

Corporations don't have a conscience, people do.

That means that every time you say, "It's just my job," or "My department has a policy," or "All I do is work here," what you've done is abdicated responsibility--to no one.

It's convenient and even comfortable to blame the anonymous actions of many working in concert on a evanescent brand or organization, but that starts you on an inevitable race to the bottom. Organizations have more power than ever before. They are better synchronized, faster, and possess more tools to change the economy and the people in it than ever before. And the only option available to the rest of us is for individuals to take responsibility (it's not given) for what they do and how they do it.

The very same tools that permit organizations to synchronize their efforts are now available to you and to me. I guess the question is: will we use that power to humanize the systems we've created?

PS It's not just about being a good citizen: when bad behavior comes back to hurt the company, it hurts you, too.

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

The first step is to start

via Signal vs. Noise by Jason Z. on 8/31/10

Many people ask me, “How can I get started in web design?” or, “What skills do I need to start making web applications?” While it would be easy to recommend stacks of books, and dozens of articles with 55 tips for being 115% better than the next guy, the truth is that you don’t need learn anything new in order to begin. The most important thing is simply to start.

Start making something. If you want to learn web design, make a website. Want to be an entreprenuer and start a business selling web based products? Make an app. Maybe you don’t have the skills yet, but why worry about that? You probably don’t even know what skills you need.

Start with what you already know

If you want to build something on the web, don’t worry about learning HTML, CSS, Ruby, PHP, SQL, etc. They might be necessary for a finished product, but you don’t need any of them to start. Why not mock-up your app idea in Keynote or Powerpoint? Draw boxes for form fields, write copy, link this page to that page. You can make a pretty robust interactive prototype right there with software you already know. Not computer saavy? Start with pencil and paper or Post-it Notes. Draw the screens, tape them to the wall, and see how it flows.

You probably don’t even know what skills you need, so don’t worry about it. Start with what you already know.

You can do a lot of the work with simple sketches or slides. You’ll be able to see your idea take form and begin to evaluate whether or not it really is something special. It’s at that point you can take the next step, which might be learning enough HTML to take your prototype into the browser. The point is, go as far as you can with the skills and tools that you have.

Avoid self doubt

Many times the reasons we don’t start something have nothing to do with lack of skills, materials, or facilities. The real blockers are self-criticism and excuses. In the excellent book, Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, the author, Betty Edwards, discusses how we all draw as kids but around adolescence, many of us stop developing that ability.

“The beginning of adolescence seems to mark the abrupt end of artistic development in terms of drawing skills for many adults. As children, they confronted an artisitc crisis, a conflict between their increasingly complex perceptions of the world around them and their current level of art skill.”

At that age kids become increasingly self-critical and equally interested in drawing realistically. When they fail to draw as well as they know is possible many give up drawing at all.

This feeling continues into adulthood. We want to design a website or build an application but if our own toolset doesn’t match up to the perceived skillset we never start. It doesn’t help that the internet gives us nearly limitless exposure to amazing work, talented individuals, and excellent execution. It’s easy to feel inadequate when you compare yourself to the very best, but even they weren’t born with those skills and they wouldn’t have them if they never started.

Do—there is no try

People who succeed somehow find a way to keep working despite the self-doubt. The artist, Vincent Van Gogh was only an artist for the last ten years of his life. We all know him for masterful works of art, but he didn’t start out as a master. Compare these examples from Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain showing an early drawing compared to one completed two years later:


Vincent Van Gogh Carpenter, 1880 and Woman Mourning, 1882

He wasn’t some child prodigy (he was 27 when he started painting), he learned his craft by hard work. If he’d listened to his own self doubt or despaired that his skills didn’t compare to Paul Gauguin’s it’s likely he never would have even tried.

This is all to say that there are many things that can get in the way of the things we should be creating. To never follow a dream because you don’t think you’re good enough or don’t have the skills, or knowledge, or experience is a waste. In fact, these projects where there is doubt are the ones to pursue. They offer the greatest challenge and the greatest rewards. Why bother doing something you already have done a hundred times, where there is nothing left to learn? Don’t worry about what you need to know in order to finish a project, you already have everything you need to start.

Posted via email from jimuleda's posterous

22 August 2010

Time, Teaching, and Lost Boys

via Sociological Images by lisa on 8/21/10

In this ten-minute talk, super-famous psychologist Philip Zimbardo talks about cultural differences in the perception and orientation towards time… and  how that translates into boys dropping out of high school and underperforming in college.  How does he make the link?  Watch:

Via BoingBoing.

(View original at http://thesocietypages.org/socimages)

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

20 August 2010

The Will

via Chiron by Rory on 8/20/10

I'm cribbing from an unknown author today. Somebody wrote something and I penciled it on a post-it note and it now hangs on the bathroom mirror. I didn't write down who said it, and it deserves a lot of credit.

Everyone has the will to win. When two people show up at a contest, both want to win. Both have their spirits set on prevailing. In the nasty world of predators and victims, the will to win is even more pronounced. The coyote is hungry. The rabbit wants to live.

Everyone has the will to win. When everyone has something, it is meaningless.

What many lack is the will to prepare to win.

It is a disservice to say that the one who wants the win most, the one who is hungriest, has the edge. Wanting isn't enough. When we say that it matters, we say that desire itself has a magical power to shift the world in our favor.

What does shift the world into our favor is preparation, and preparation is an act of will. You train when there is no immediate goal. You study the problem. You learn the factors and the nuances. For the deep and dangerous stuff, you have to know your own heart. Not what you think you can do if and when-- those are fantasies. You need to know your core and where you core starts to shift...and which direction it shifts to... under fear and pain and hunger and ego threat and all of the other different ways that identity shifts.

As broad and deep as you can go, you can increase your chances through preparation.

It's amazing how lucky someone who trains four hours a day can get.

The stick-it on the mirror? It says, "The will to PREPARE to win."

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

18 August 2010

Groups Press Justice Department on Prison Rape

via Colorlines by Michelle Chen on 8/18/10

Groups Press Justice Department on Prison Rape

Rape is an abominable crime everywhere, except behind bars. In state and federal prisons, sexual assault occurs at appalling rates, and the perpetrators often go unpunished--another symbol of the culture of impunity that looms over the incarcerated. On Tuesday, a coalition of civil liberties groups called on the Justice Department to finally enact structural reforms to hold attackers, and the institutions that create an abusive environment, accountable.

About one in every 20 people in prison were sexually assaulted last year, according to federal statistics. For juvenile inmates, the annual rate is about one in eight. The threat of sexual violence and coercion stems from both fellow inmates as well as staff, and women and girls especially are at risk of being exploited by the officers controlling their facilities.

The problem, says the ACLU and other groups, is compounded by restrictions on litigation that limit the legal remedies available to incarcerated people, which means that assault survivors must first go through a labyrinth of internal grievance procedures before they can seek justice in the courts.

Despite the passage of the Prison Rape Elimination Act, prisons around the country have yet to adopt uniform standards for addressing sexual abuse and assault.

In a letter issued to Attorney General Eric Holder, the coalition wrote, "For each day that the standards are delayed, more men and women--and, yes, boys and girls-will be raped." The groups urged Holder to implement (way past a congressional deadline) the standards recommended by the National Prison Rape Commission, which focus on prevention, detection, legal response and monitoring of sexual assault, and to set guidelines for responding to complaints among high-risk populations.

A demographic overview of the groups most at risk says a lot about why the problem has gone unaddressed for so long. The racial and gender hierarchy in the prison system mirrors that of society at large, but in an institution that harbors society's most marginalized, the consequences are far more brutal.

According to the Commission's report, youth, especially girls, are extremely vulnerable:

Juveniles are ill-equipped to respond to sexual advances by older, more experienced youth or adult caretakers. Based on reports of rampant physical violence and sexual abuse in a juvenile correctional facility in Plainfield, Indiana, the U.S. Department of Justice began investigating conditions of confinement in 2004. Investigators were shocked by the age and size disparity between many of the youth involved. Youth as old as 18 were assaulting or coercing children as young as 12; children weighing as little as 70 pounds were sexually abused by youth outweighing them by 100 pounds.


Simply being female is a risk factor. Girls are disproportionately represented among sexual abuse victims. According to data collected by BJS in 2005-2006, 36 percent of all victims in substantiated incidents of sexual violence were female, even though girls represented only 15 percent of confined youth in 2006. And they are much more at risk of abuse by staff than by their peers. Pervasive misconduct at a residential facility for girls in Chalkville, Alabama, beginning in 1994 and continuing through 2001, led 49 girls to bring charges that male staff had fondled, raped, and sexually harassed them. Abusive behavior is not limited to male staff. In 2005, the Department of Justice found that numerous female staff in an Oklahoma juvenile facility for boys had sexual relations with the youth under their care.

Immigrants are also especially at risk, not least because they lack many of the legal protections afforded to citizens:

Many factors--personal and circumstantial, alone or in combination--make immigration detainees especially vulnerable to sexual abuse. One of the most pervasive factors is social isolation. Individuals are often confined far from family or friends and may not speak the language of other detainees or staff. Those who have already suffered terrifying experiences in their home countries or in the United States can be almost defenseless by the time they are detained and may even expect to be abused.

People who defy gender norms are easy targets for both staff and fellow inmates:

Unless facility managers and administrators take decisive steps to protect these individuals, they may be forced to live in close proximity or even in the same cell with potential assailants. When Alexis Giraldo was sentenced to serve time in the California correctional system, her male-to-female transgender identity and appearance as a woman triggered a recommendation to place her in a facility with higher concentrations of transgender prisoners, where she might be safer. Yet officials ignored the recommendation and sent her to Folsom Prison in 2006, where she was raped and beaten by two different cellmates.

The most horrific aspect of the issue is that many of these survivors will be released one day, and then be forced to reintegrate into society with few, if any, resources for healing their sexual trauma. Prison rape doesn't happen in a vacuum, but it's not inevitable, either. It's just another accepted reality in a system that dehumanizes people by design.

Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

Where to Get the Best Free Education Online

via Lifehacker by Whitson Gordon on 8/18/10

Whether you're a student looking for supplemental learning or you're in the workforce but thirsty for knowledge, you don't have to drop thousands of dollars in tuition to enjoy a top-notch education from some of the best schools in the world. More »


Posted via email from the Un-Official Southwestern PA Re-Entry Coalition Blog

Talk2Me

be here-Now!

into the Gaping Void

My Friend Flickr

Talk Gone Wrong

Drop-off Box

drop.io: simple private sharing
Powered By Blogger

plan2planet

Blog Archive