Friday, October 28, 2011

Video: See Something, Say Something

See Something, Say Something


We've been following the Occupy Wall Street protests around the country and the world, and are inspired by the passion and bravery of these Americans who have seen injustice and decided to stand up and do something about it. So often, we are accustomed to just go along with whatever is the status quo, we feel the problems are too big and complex for us to be able to truly fix or change in any way. But as we saw with Rosa Parks, sometimes all it takes is for one person, or a small group of people, to stand up and refuse to accept an injustice they see, to start a movement that can really change the world.

In this week's video post, we have a sub-group of the Occupy Wall Street protesters turning their attention to school reform and education. The group is called, Occupy the DOE and they are protesting against the Panel for Education Policy (or PEP), which enacts policy for the New York City Dept. of Education. The PEP replaced the Board of Education when Mayor Bloomberg took control of the schools in 2002. It is intended to be a democratic forum where people voice concerns, prior to the panel's vote on educational policy. However, due to special interests and lobbyists, most decisions are made prior to any votes occur. This is not a democracy. And these people, teachers, and parents have had enough and are saying something about. We challenge everyone out there, that if you see something, say something!




Thursday, October 27, 2011

Occupy Wall Street—A Timeline

Occupy Wall Street—A Timeline

The Occupy Wall Street protest, which began in September as a small encampment of mostly young activists with more emotion than clearly stated objectives, was mostly ignored by the media. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the protests quickly became a subject of ridicule. But then something happened: Occupy Wall Street exploded into a nationwide series of demonstrations drawing support from unions and mainstream liberal groups, with comparisons to the powerhouse Tea Party movement and revolutionary pro-democracy protesters in Egypt's Tahrir Square. How did that happen?

Take a look at the key events below.

June 9
Canadian anti-consumerist magazine Adbusters registers the domain name OccupyWallStreet.org.

July 13
Adbusters calls for a Sept. 17 protest, where "20,000 people flood into lower Manhattan, set up tents, kitchens, peaceful barricades.

Aug. 23
"Hactivist" collective Anonymous releases a video pledging its support for the protest.

Sept. 9
Supporters of Occupy Wall Street start posting their photos and stories to a new "We Are the 99 Percent" Tumblr page.

Sept. 17
The protest begins, with about 1,000 people gathering in downtown Manhattan and walking up and down Wall Street.

Sept. 19
Roseanne Barr becomes the first celebrity to endorse Occupy Wall Street.

Sept. 20
Police start arresting mask-wearing protesters, using an arcane law dating back to 1845 that bans masked gatherings unless part of "a masquerade party or like entertainment."

Sept. 24
About 80 people are arrested during a permit-less march uptown, and video of the event — especially the use of pepper spray on a group of women — earns Occupy Wall Street its first major media coverage. An OWS-inspired protest starts in Chicago.

Sept. 26
Filmmaker Michael Moore addresses the crowd at Zuccotti Park. Noam Chomsky sends his regards.

Sept. 27
Actress Susan Sarandon and Princeton academic Cornel West show up at the protests.

Sept. 28
Transport Workers Union Local 100 becomes the first big union to support Occupy Wall Street via a member vote.

Sept. 30
An internet hoax that Radiohead will play for the protesters draws a crowd downtown.

Oct. 1
Some 700 protesters are arrested in a march across the Brooklyn Bridge. The mass arrests push the protests to the front page of newspapers and the top of TV news broadcasts. OWS-inspired protests start in Washington, DC, and Los Angeles.

Oct. 3
Protesters dressed as "corporate zombies," in full zombie regalia and clutching fake cash, parade down Wall Street. The protests have spread nationwide, including Boston, Memphis, Minneapolis, St. Louis, Hawaii, and Portland, Maine.

Oct. 5
At least 39 organizations, including New York City's largest labor unions and MoveOn.org, join Occupy Wall Street for a march through New York's financial district. Organizers say 10,000 to 20,000 people marched; the media puts the number somewhere below 15,000.

Oct. 6
About 4,000 protesters march in Portland, OR. More demonstrations unfold in Houston, Austin, Tampa, and San Francisco.

Oct. 7
Mayor Michael Bloomberg criticizes the protesters in a radio interview, saying they are "taking the jobs away from people working in this city" and that the protests are "not good for tourism."

Oct. 8
The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC, shuts down after a crowd shows up to voice opposition to U.S. drone strikes abroad. The demonstrators are joined by members of the Occupy Wall Street offshoot Occupy DC.

Oct. 10
Mayor Bloomberg
softens his earlier criticisms, and says protesters can stay in New York as long as they want — so long as they obey the law.

Oct. 13
 Zuccotti Park owner
announces that protesters must vacate the park.

Oct. 14
Owner backs off and avoids a standoff between the demonstrators and police.

Oct. 15
The wave of protests
spreads worldwide, from Europe to the Americas to Asia

Oct. 18
President Obama
delivers a mixed message on Nightline, saying he "understands the frustrations" of the protesters, but that the movement  is "not that different from some of the protests we saw coming from the Tea Party."

Oct. 21
The host of an opera radio show aired by NPR affiliates is
fired for participating in the Occupy DC movement.

Oct. 24
Progressive icon Elizabeth Warren
takes some of the credit for the movement, telling Newsweek that she "created much of the intellectual foundation for what [the protesters] do."

Oct. 25
The Egyptian activists who toppled Hosni Mubarak lend their support to the protesters. In Oakland, CA, police clear about 170 protesters from their encampment outside of City Hall and arrest 97 demonstrators.

Oct. 26
Big Labor gave an Occupy Wall Street rally in Manhattan a big boost this week, bringing the estimated number of participants in New York alone to roughly 15,000.

New report finds that in the past three decades, the richest 1 percent of Americans have seen their income grow by 275 percent since 1979, compared to the nation’s poorest 20 percent who had only an 18 percent increase (see PDF).

So what is Occupy Wall Street so angry about?

Show Your Sponsor Some Love!

Show Your Sponsor Some Love!


By: Joyce Taylor, with David Latham

Behind most unemployed job hunters is a working spouse, parent, partner or friend. Someone you live with who is supportive during your ongoing search, but who has their own fears about the endeavor. Most sponsors become overwhelmed with the financial load as they postpone retirement, or delay other plans until your financial situation improves. If you are dependent on someone else to pay the mortgage/rent, buy groceries and bear the brunt of other living expenses, here are a few tips to deal with the frustration that often accompanies this type of situation.

Make a budget, agree on a plan:
Be upfront and realistic about the household expenses, as well as your personal finances. Make a personal budget and align it with your cash flow. Minimize unnecessary draws from savings and eliminate nonessential expenses and costly habits, such as eating out, buying prepared foods, maintaining costly cable TV packages or purchasing new clothes for fun. Although the internet is essential in conducting a job search, the public library is also an option, as well as free public Internet hot spots. If the Internet is tied to the cable TV, review the expense and eliminate entertainment channels, unless of course your sponsor does not see this as a problem.

Talk with your supporter (even mom, dad, or spouse) to get their perspective on the amount of time you can realistically go without making a contribution to the daily, weekly or monthly expenses. Develop a 30, 60, and 90 day action plan to monitor your progress. Even if bringing in an income is not critical, still consider taking a part time job to cover some of the expenses and maintain your self esteem. Employers frequently look for people with diligence and initiative, so being busy while you are looking may be seen as a positive.

If you have not recently been in the job market, look for and participate in free workshops to help you in your approach and in organizing your job search. During employment screens, human resources practitioners eliminate many resumes because they include outdated information or information that is not relevant to the available position. Take the time to learn how to market yourself as a valuable resource for each employment opportunity.

Match your energy with your Sponsor’s:
Unless you work during the day, avoid the tendency to conduct the job search at night, or watch TV until the wee hours of the morning, which is a drain on utilities and may appear thoughtless to the sponsor with whom you reside. If your sponsor begins the day at 5:30 a.m., match their routine and energy by synching your schedule with theirs. Get up, get dressed and get groomed, which will invigorate your emotional energy! Use the newness of the morning to organize your job search activities, or better yet, take an early morning walk or exercise to stimulate your self-awareness. Create a daily work plan: list your activities and complete all actions listed each day. This plan can also be shared with your sponsor to help with their awareness of your efforts.

At the end of your full work day, start or organize dinner! For some, this may be a new life skill, but a lifelong one worth learning. If you don’t know how to cook, the Internet provides a good number of quick, tasty, and budget menus that you can master. Most people appreciate walking into the door to the smell of food cooking and a clean or at least straightened house. Before launching into your job search frustrations, ask about their day and genuinely listen to their story. Be supportive, yet remember most people do not want advice, they just want a place to vent!

Stone Soup anyone?
If you are on a limited or no-income budget, you do not have to become a hermit or miss out on small or special events. Plan a “Stone Soup” gathering where you contact your friends for a social get-together. You can be spontaneous by asking each person to bring an ingredient of their choosing that does not exceed $5.00. Most anything can go into a hearty stew, soup, or salad so you can figure out what to make with the ingredients when your friends arrive! If you prefer more predictability, send out a list of ingredients and ask people to identify their ingredient of choice. The idea is to bring a host of people together and have affordable fun, rather than allowing the predictable job search anxiety to define all of your activities.  Maintaining your social networks and having fun is critical to keeping your sanity throughout the rigorous job search!

HPV Vaccine: A Diversity Issue?

Gardasil is currently the only FDA-approved HPV vaccine for both males and females.
HPV Vaccine: A Diversity Issue?

By: Tamara Braunstein

This week, a CDC panel endorsed males ages 13 to 21 receive the HPV vaccine, previously recommended for females between the ages of nine to 26.

Backlash against the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices’ decision is anticipated, mostly due to the fact that the Human Papillomavirus is contracted via sexual transmission. However, HPV is the most common sexually transmitted infection and about 75 percent of sexually active women will contract it during their lifetime:

“Most will overcome the infection with no ill effects. But in some people, infections lead to cellular changes that cause warts or cancer, including cervical, vaginal and vulvar cancers in women and anal cancers in men and women. A growing body of evidence suggests that HPV also causes throat cancers in men and women as a result of oral sex.” (The New York Times)

Whether or not people want to acknowledge that children and teens are engaging in sexual behavior (they are, and it’s not always safe), the risks that accompany those decisions persist. And the consequences, it seems, are not equally distributed.

According to the CDC’s own data, Hispanic and Black women have the highest rates of cervical cancer and resulting death rates in the country. Most recent data from 2007 indicates that compared to a national rate of 7.9 percent of females with cervical cancer, 7.5 percent of White women, 10.5 percent of Black women and 11.5 percent of Hispanic women contract the disease.

Not all female-specific cancer is a result of HPV. But from 1998 to 2003, HPV-associated vaginal cancer rates were also significantly disproportionate against Black and Hispanic women as well. The numbers are less skewed for men. During the same time period, HPV-associated anal cancer rates for men reached 1.2 percent for Black men, 0.8 percent for Hispanic men and 1.0 percent for White men.

Even if the new recommendations do prove a “hard sell,” it bears mentioning that in a study among low-income children, boys reported their first sexual experience at a younger age (average 12.48 years old) than girls (average 13.16 years old). And by the way, aren’t low-income youth considered a high-risk population for contracting STDs? So aren’t low-income minorities even more at-risk? I thought so.

Instead of discussing the moral dilemmas in advocating that youth – regardless of gender or sexual orientation – receive a vaccine that can play a significant role in preventing the spread of a serious infection and potential disease, maybe we should be discussing how to make the vaccine more accessible and affordable for the populations already disparately affected?

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Social Justice: Equality By The Numbers

Equality By The Numbers

Twitter: ShannonRenee


If a society is judged by its leadership, then what do these numbers say about the us?

How do they speak to our being the "land of the free and the home of the brave?"

51% - 157.2 million women in the United States (as of Oct. 1, 2010)

34% - 3 women sit on the Supreme Court

24% - 1,732 women serve in state legislatures (as of Aug. 29, 2011)

17% - 17 women serve in the Senate

17% - 72 women serve in the House of Representatives

12% - 6 women governors in the US

4% - 18 women CEOs at Fortune 500 companies

These numbers don't add up. 

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

PR Tips: False: All Around the World Same Song

False: All Around the World Same Song


Cutbacks. Higher prices. Lost jobs, closed businesses. Foreclosed homes. For more than three years, we’ve been bombarded with these words. For some of us, this may be true of our current situation. Others may consider the possibility “contagious” and assume they’ll soon become infected, singing the same tune as those who succumbed to a failed economy. But what happened to viewing “the glass half full” instead of “half empty”? All around the world, it’s not the same song…and here’s why.

More people (whether or not of their own volition) are viewing the “economic crisis” as an opportunity to reinvent themselves or pursue dreams long ignored for the sake of a steady paycheck and benefits. Some women were managers and after becoming suddenly unemployed, found their joy and business in the kitchen. Other people put a twist on daily activities to offer as a unique product or service. So how can you sing a different tune when the world is cracking around you? Here are four suggestions:

1)    Listen to and understand what drives you, excites you. This could very well be your path to reinvention.
2)    Put your face in the place—Network! By maintaining relationships with old colleagues and friends and meeting new people, opportunities are often what you make of them.
3)    Go where the people are—Social Media.  According to a recent Pew Research Center survey, at least 79% of American adults use the Internet; of which 65% use a social media networking site (Facebook or Linked In)—this is up from 61% in 2010. Social media is a vehicle where you can receive broad and rapid responses to a need or pursuit. Give it a try! Some of us (myself included) are being forced to grow our skills in the social media space, where others are more adept. Saying you “don’t have time” or “don’t know how” are simply excuses that will shut you out of waiting opportunities. Update your social media profiles regularly, let people know what you do, what you need. Someone will respond!
4)    You frame your world with your thoughts, words. Simply put, if you think it, it shall be.

If you’re not already, we encourage you to follow one or more of these suggestions to create and seize new opportunities. The sad song someone else is singing doesn’t have to be yours!

Monday, October 24, 2011

Food Day 2011


By Shannon Mouton

Today was the first annual Food Day. It was a day to bring attention to our need for "for healthy, affordable food produced in a sustainable, humane way." There were any number of ways you could have participated in Food Day, what did you do?

Did you attend a Food Day event?
Did you write a blog post about it?
Did you tweet about it?
Did you like it?
Did you in any way, shape or form show the slightest bit of regard for this day and what it means?

There is nothing more important than the food you eat and water you drink because without them, you will die. This is a fact, not an exaggeration or an overstatement. You can survive without shelter, you can live without a job and you most certainly can even thrive without a car; however, without f-o-o-d, nothing else matters.

As people around the world are taking to the streets to Occupy this and that place, why not OccupyYourKitchen and demand affordable, sustainable and healthy food. If you don't, who will?

Friday, October 21, 2011

Video: Spices of Life - Welcome to Food Day

Video: Spices of Life - Welcome to Food Day

 We hope you enjoyed our week long series devoted to covering food related issues in celebration of National Food Day! Remember, to celebrate healthy food & healthy living this Monday, October 24 and hopefully continue all year long!

For our weekly Friday video series post, we present this Introduction to Food Day video:

Probably many of you are familiar with the Center for Science in the Public Interest or CSPI : Founded in the early 70's, CSPI has become the leading consumer activist agency in the U.S regarding nutrition, health, food safety, alcohol safety and sound science. Or perhaps you know its Its award-winning newsletter, Nutrition Action Healthletter, with some 900,000 subscribers in the United States and Canada, the largest-circulation health newsletter in North America.

Michael Jacobson, it's founder has come up with a brilliant idea:- day styled after Earth day called "FOOD DAY" on October 24th this coming fall. It's hoped it will be a day when thousands of events in schools, college campuses, houses of worship, and even in private homes will be aimed at" fixing America's food system". According to the organizers, a Food Day event could be as small as a parent organizing a vegetable identification contest at a kindergarten class—or as massive as a rally in a city park, with entertainment and healthy food.

I like to think it will be a day when all kinds of people working in parallel universes from farmers, chefs, teachers, and politicians will come together with a common goal: t to bring awareness to improving the food and diet in the U.S.

Spices of Life asked Michael Jacobson, CSPI's founder to give you an introduction, so please give him a listen.

Enjoy!!

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Diversity: How Are Food Deserts Really Affecting Us?

Photo caption: Map showing percentage of households throughout the nation currently living in a food desert.
Diversity: How Are Food Deserts Really Affecting Us?


If you’re following our blog, you know that this week we’re doing a series to prepare for National Food Day, which is next Monday. According to the website, the movement is designed to “push for healthy, affordable food produced in a sustainable, humane way.” To sponsors and supporters this includes advocating for “food labeling, better nutrition, and safer food,” which sound like great ideas anybody can get behind.

But what good does all of that do if access to those labeled, nutritious and safe foods doesn’t improve?

The dilemma of food deserts isn’t new, but with First Lady Michelle Obama shining the spotlight on gaps in communities’ access to healthy food – access meaning “the food is available and affordable” – the discussion is becoming a hot topic.

Much of the conversation surrounding food deserts involves their distribution and effect. While some organizations, like the National Association of Convenience Stores, challenge the view that food deserts significantly affect health and nutrition in a surrounding area, others, like the US Department of Agriculture, have found that 3.2 percent of all US households live between ½ and 1 mile from a supermarket without access to a vehicle. In low income urban areas, that figure jumps to 22 percent. In a city like DC, where our nation’s outrageous socio-economic gaps are starkly illustrated across racial lines, the issue transcends health and food.  

Once you set foot in a grocery store, what food you buy is ultimately your decision. You choose whether to eat natural, healthy food or sugary, processed food. But if getting to a grocery store is in and of itself a daunting endeavor, how likely are you to care whether the food you buy is labeled or produced “safely”?

Food for Thought... and Wellness

Food for Thought... and Wellness



More than 150 nation’s celebrated World Food Day this week—a good thing.  However, the ongoing dialogue about food, hunger and production is fraught with emotion and opinion and arguably even some good “science.”


Of course, I totally get it.  We are constantly bombarded with mixed messages about what foods are healthy and/or good for us.  Add to the dialogue, debate over how food is grown or prepared.  Let’s get back to basics and take a look at Natures Pharmacy, I believe the best cure for what ails us—and her foods taste great, too!

A sliced carrot looks like an eye. The pupil, iris and radiating lines actually mirror the human eye; and, yes, science has documented how carrots greatly enhance blood flow to and function of the eyes.

A tomato has four chambers and is red. The heart has four chambers and is red. All of the research shows tomatoes are loaded with lycopine and are indeed pure heart and blood food.

Grapes hang in a cluster that has the shape of the heart. Each grape looks like a blood cell and has profound heart and blood vitalizing properties.


A walnut looks like a little brain, a left and right hemisphere, upper cerebrums and lower cerebellums.  Even the wrinkles or folds look like the neo-cortex. We now know walnuts help develop more than three (3) dozen neuron-transmitters for brain function.

Kidney beans actually heal and help maintain kidney function and yes, they look exactly like the human kidneys.  Celery, bok choy, rhubarb resemble bones. These foods specifically target bone strength. And like bones, which are comprised of 23 percent sodium, these foods are 23 percent sodium.

Avocados, eggplant and pears target the health and function of the womb and cervix of the female—and they look just like these organs. Today's research shows that when a woman eats one avocado a week, it balances hormones, sheds unwanted birth weight, and prevents cervical cancers. And how profound is this?  It takes exactly nine (9) months to grow an avocado from blossom to ripened fruit.

Figs are full of seeds and hang in twos when they grow.  Figs increase the mobility of male sperm and increase the numbers of sperm as well as to overcome male sterility.

Sweet potatoes look like the pancreas and actually balance the glycemic index of diabetics.  Olives assist the health and function of the ovaries.  Oranges, grapefruits, and other citrus fruits look just like the mammary glands of the female and actually assist the health of the breasts and the movement of lymph in and out of the breasts.

Onions look like the body's cells. Research shows onions help clear waste materials from all of the body cells. They even produce tears, which wash the epithelial layers of the eyes.


Of course, I know there will always be debate over food, including whether we are or are not what we eat.  But I think we can all agree—Mother Nature got it right!

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Confessions of a Foodie: We Are Not What We Eat

Confessions of a Foodie:
We Are Not What We Eat


When Team McKinney decided we’d dive into National Food Day by raising our voices in the blogosphere, I immediately proclaimed, “I’m in!”

As an evangelical member of the Weight Watchers (WW) Lifetime circle, I have forged a relationship with food that is a lifeline to good health, a relatively streamlined body and joy. Food, like weight management, is a journey. It requires a commitment first and foremost to self. You must honestly zero in on why you eat, how you eat and what you eat. The journey need not be punctuated with denial “diets” and punitive food plans that ebb and flow as the scales tilt north. You can eat well, eat often and eat deliciously even as you drop pounds.

The multisensory passion of good eating gives me something to look forward to from one meal to the next. The Wednesday Food Section of the Washington Post is among my “must reads.” New recipes are cherished treasures. I collect them like jewels. And as a frequent flyer on Epicurious.com, there are always more ways to prepare my favorite foods than I have time to create or eat. The extravaganza of planning, shopping and preparing for a dinner party is almost as fun as the guests. Food is my friend, my salvation and an adventure with each gastronomic foray!

But back to Weight Watchers. It works with unparallel success. This is not an ad for WW. National Poster Child Jennifer Hudson is doing that just fine without me. In fact, she recently opened a weight loss center in Chicago that is primarily targeted to African American women. That makes the point about our community’s need to reassess its relationship with food.

Since Weight Watchers rolled out its phenomenally successful ad campaign featuring the sleek, sexy and seventy-pounds-lighter Hudson, new legions of wannabe smaller Black women have been stepping up to WW scales. My weekly WW meetings have been transformed from sparsely attended motivational lectures into standing room only Amen sessions. Sadly, if the stats prove true, the vast majority of those new recruits will fall off the wagon, trading sustainability for the old and easy way out. Weight management is not just about the scales. The centerpiece is behavioral change. And that is a bitch.

Role model or marketing scheme?

Hudson’s phenomenal reach to African American women surfaces a swelling epidemic. African American women of all ages and economic groups suffer the highest rate of obesity compared to any other demographic. Four out of five of us are considered overweight or obese. With that distinction comes all the evil ills: heart disease, diabetes, cancer and premature death.

Overweight women raise overweight children. The challenge of childhood obesity has become a national state of emergency. Our client, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, embracing the issue as a health equity initiative, has targeted 2015 to reverse the epidemic.

The notion of being “big boned” or voluptuously healthy in line with our African roots have long served as a rationalization for the status quo. Culture, genetics and glandular conditions are not the culprits. Admittedly, as a forthright foodie who shed four dress sizes over a 14-month period, I will always struggle with weight management. Food and caloric intake are almost incidental to the challenge. At the core of a slender body is affirmation of me. I am not what I eat. I am what I am determined to be.

I end here with the verb to be. We are our own best solution if we affirm we can BE. Counsel for good health care? More appropriately, it is a clarion call for Self-Care. Drawing from a campaign that McKinney & Associates launched for the California Department of Public Health, I ask every African American woman to embrace food as a key to life. But command your body as your temple to BE Well.

BEcause we’re worth it.