Tagged with awareness

“We’re a Culture, Not a Costume”

Halloween has come and gone, but the discussion about stereotypes and stereotypical costumes is a topic that must constantly be addressed. 

Taken from: http://www.inquisitr.com/378153/were-a-culture-not-a-costume-ohio-students-seek-to-end-racist-halloween-garb/

October 27, 2012

Ohio University student group Students Teaching About Racism in Society (STARS) is reviving their 2011 social awareness campaign “We’re a Culture, Not a Costume” in an effort to combat racially stereotypical costumes this Halloween season. Featuring the tagline “You wear the costume for one night, I wear the stigma for life” the images have incited a discussion across the web about the appropriateness of some costume choices.

The campaign features a series of ads showing people of different races and ethnicities posing alongside some of the insensitive costumes many of us are used to seeing this time of year. The images range from rappers and gang bangers, suicide bombers, Asian “mathletes” to even depicting African tribal women and an African American woman pregnant and smoking a cigarette.

After receiving criticism last year for failing to include Caucasian stereotypes this year’s campaign also includes a white man posing next to an “Appalachian” or “Redneck” costume.

We're a Culture Not a Costume campaign

STARS President Keith Hawkins, an Ohio University senior, spoke with CNN about the group’s decision to resurrect their “We’re a Culture, Not a Costume” campaign to increase social awareness of the dangers of racial stereotyping:

“[We] decided to continue with the posters because we agreed that they were not only successful last year but actually made a difference on campus and in the global community … We were told by many professors that students wanted to talk about it, and this is exactly what we were looking to do. So we hoped we could put out another strong campaign this year that will continue the message of racial awareness and inclusiveness.”

So what exactly makes an offensive costume? Where is the line between homage and insult? Hawkins believes a costume falls into a questionable area when it portrays negative cultural stereotypes meant to poke fun at an already ostracized culture.

“When the costume portrays a hero or legend in general, I would say it is not offensive … It is the act of either using the hero or legend that over-exaggerates negative stereotypes that often stigmatize marginalized cultures that makes the costume offensive.”

Link to last year’s post: http://agentsofsocialchange.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/stars-were-not-a-costume-campaign/

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“Hello Chinky”

Shoutout to these agents of social change for bringing awareness of the commercialization of Asian culture in American society! Rock on :)

Taken from: http://hellochinky.wordpress.com/

The topic we decided to illustrate in our guerilla art project is the trivialization of Asian culture in commercialized products that provide a false representation of the Asian American identity. We wanted to capitalize on a “Hello, Kitty” theme, which is a Japanese icon that is widely known in American culture. We feel that this iconic character epitomizes the exploitation of Asian culture through commercialism. Our slogan, “Hello, Chinky,” is a parody of this theme; the purpose of this is to create a bold statement that will hopefully attract attention to our website. Our whole project is a parody of the commercialization of Asian culture in American society, which is illustrated through the already commercialized “Hello, Kitty.”

We plan on distributing stickers and posters all over the SF State campus early October.

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“The Gang Rape of a Latina 6th Grader, and a Horrific Community Response”

I know this article is from last year, but I had never heard about this incident until today. Thought I’d share it with you all. It demonstrates the (corrupting) power of media, the pervasiveness of racial and gender stereotyping, and the debilitating nature of rape culture for girls and women.  A depressing but powerful and thought-provoking read. 

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Taken from: http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/03/cleveland_texas_gang_rape_horror.html

March 14, 2011

Until last week I had never heard of Cleveland, Texas, the small town where an 11-year-old Latina was gang raped, allegedly by 18 black males ages 14 to 27.

But since The Houston Chronicle told the victim’s storywith compassion and a New York Times piece subtly blamed her; since various news outlets have essentially tried and convicted the suspects with a widely circulated mugshot collage; since Houston New Black Panther leader Quannell X sacrificed the victim in his zeal to raise questions about the police investigation; since Mujeres Unidaschecked Quanell X; and since white supremacist Web sites are partying about this tragedy like it’s 1799, tiny Cleveland, has become a major example of how not to deal with rape in our communities.

A Thanksgiving Atrocity

For clarity’s sake, I’m recapping the basics of this monstrous, quickly changing case based on local news reports. The stories don’t identify the victim or suspects who are under 18 and rely heavily on police sources and documents. Prosecutors are under gag order; I have not seen the documents firsthand.

The assault took place last November, three days after Thanksgiving. According to a Houston Chronicle story, it allegedly began when a 19-year-old with prior drug convictions called the sixth grader and invited her to ‘ride around’ with him and two friends. The guys allegedly picked her up from her home on the outskirts of town and took her to a house in the Quarters, the economically depressed, predominantly black section of Cleveland.

At this house, the guys allegedly demanded the victim remove her clothes. She resisted at first but told police she relented when they threatened to get a crew of girls to beat her up and said they’d leave her in the Quarters without a ride home. After she disrobed, the males allegedly took turns raping her. At some point four more arrived. When a relative came home, the group—including the girl—snuck out of a back window. They decamped to a fetid, filthy abandoned trailer nearby and continued the assault. It’s unclear how many boys and men came to the trailer. What we do know: Some participants used their cell phones to videotape and photograph the rapes.

Over 50 percent of rape victims don’t report their attack; this child was no different. Her mother told the Chronicle that she’d suspected something was wrong when a picture of a man’s penis popped up on a cell phone the girl had borrowed from her father. Her assault came to light only after video snaked its way through the corridors of the girl’s middle school. A classmate told the principal. The principal called the police.

So far, 18 boys and men have been charged with the aggravated sexual assault of a child under 14. According to Texas law, any bastard who penetrated this girl—and any sorry-ass who stood around watching—is guilty of rape.

Seven of the suspects are in high school, including two basketball stars. One alleged assailant is the 21-year old son of a school board member. Then we have a 21-year-old who is already facing charges for another sexual assault and a 19-year-old with a pending manslaughter charge. The 27-year-old has already served time for selling cocaine and assaulting a family member.

The girl has reportedly switched schools and is in foster care after receiving threatening phone calls.

A Community Reacts—Poorly:

Cleveland has a population of 7,675 people. It’s 46 percent white, 28 percent Hispanic and 24 percent black. Now, if the media coverage truly reflects conventional wisdom among its 1,819 black folks, many in it don’t see what happened to this girl as an alleged gang rape but a case of consensual group sex gone wrong.

Relatives of the accused and a double agent ridiculously incompetent defense attorney James D. Evans III have focused on her ‘much older’ appearance, her ‘attention-seeking,’ rumors of a previous sexual history in the Quarters, her alleged aspirations of porn stardom, a Facebook page where the child reportedly bragged about sex, alcohol and drugs, and her mother’s neglect (not the father’s; never the father’s). In an interview on the local news, Anita Ellis Hancock, the mother of a 19-year-old suspect, exemplified this attitude. If you can’t watch the video, an alarming excerpt:

FOX 26: What did you do? Did you talk to your son?

Hancock: Yes I did. Yes I did. I said, ‘Baby, I’m your momma. You can talk to me.’ (The victim) said she was 17 years old and that’s what he told me.

FOX 26: But Anita, a lot of people would say, ‘This is an 11 year old child. Even if she lied, she’s eleven.’

Hancock: I understand that. I understand that. I’m not defending him. I’m not defending her. I’m not defending no child because if it were my child, I would feel the same way. My point is, where was her mother?

FOX 26: If this was reversed. If your son wasn’t your son, but you were the mother of this 11 year old, what would you do? What would you say? What is justice?

Hancock: First of all, I would know where she was. That’s the justice. Not knowing where your baby is is not justice. I feel like she should be accounted for not knowing where your baby at.

FOX 26: What lesson does you son need to learn?

Hancock: ID. Identification. This (holding up nametag and picture) is what you ask for baby.

FOX 26: So you’re going to tell your son, next time he meets a girl to ask for her ID?

Hancock: Identification.

Why This is Piss Poor:

Hancock’s words strike at the heart of a lethal double standard I’ve seen, hell, I’ve experienced too often in my community. I’m not picking on her; she’s trying to keep her son out of prison for 25 to life. But I believe she’s operating in a framework dangerous to her “baby.”

In this framework, girls of color are the predators, the fast-asses, the hot-asses, the hooker-hos, the groupie bitches, the trick-ass bitches, the bust-it-babies and the lil’ freaks who are willing to let dudes “run a train” on them. Too often let translates into, “she was rolling with a bunch of dudes” or “she showed poor judgement” or “she appropriated male-identified sexual bravado to fit in,” or “she’s a child who has been sexually exploited or abused.”

This double standard also renders black men and boys as victims of their own sexuality. They’re big-dick goon and goblin niggas just doing what niggas do when a smiling, or at least not-protesting young girl comes around. She’s 11? OK, but I didn’t know she was 11, so I didn’t do anything wrong, or violent, or exploitative or dangerous. My responsibility begins and ends with a request for ID.

My Takeaway, For What It’s Worth:

My next post will offer expert measured insights on how black men can help one another recognize and interrupt rape culture. For now, my suggested ground rules for people who believe they’re protecting black men and boys but actually enabling toxic sexual behavior:

  • Adults should never participate in group sex with children. They shouldn’t be watching, taping or photographing it, either. Whether they’re arrested for it or not, they’ve committed sexual abuse.
  • It should be inconceivable that a 14-year-old and a 27-year-old are sexually involved with the same girl. That is physically and emotionally dangerous for the girl; risky for the boy and criminal for the man.
  • Men and boys should not have sex of any kind in a squalid, vermin-filled trailer abandoned since Hurricane Ike. If they do so, their families should be deeply concerned.
  • Even if a girl says she’s 17—the legal age of consent in Texas—and seems sexually experienced; even if she seems open to making a video or down for a ‘train;’ even if her parents are oblivious and she seems vulnerable, raping her or watching it happen is a crime. No one deserves to be gang raped. No. One. Ever. If you find yourself trying to parse that one out, something is very wrong with you.
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“Rare Disease Mimics Child Abuse and Tears Family Apart”

Taken from: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/parents-couple-died-murder-suicide-false-child-abuse-accusations-raise-awareness-article-1.1055353

April 3, 2012

William “Dave” O’Shell, distraught over charges of child abuse that were being leveled against him, snapped on June 30, 2008, killing his wife, Tiffany O’Shell, in their Henderson, Colo., home before taking his own life. Just a few weeks earlier, their green-eyed, 3-month-old daughter, Alyssa, had been placed in a foster home because x-rays revealed 11 broken bones and doctors assumed that she had been beaten.

But they were wrong.

On the same day as the murder-suicide, a doctor at Colorado Children’s Hospital suspected something else and was later proved right: Alyssa had a rare genetic disorder that caused her bones to fracture — one that authorities had confused for abuse.

Alyssa died of spinal muscular atrophy on Oct. 28, 2008, but the tragedy has rippled through a family and an aggressive social services system that is meant to protect children. Now, four years later after all lawsuits have been unsuccessful, Alyssa’s maternal grandparents are saying the tragedy could have been averted. ”We were looking for action. We could care less about the money,” said Paul Cuin, Tiffany O’Shell’s adoptive father. “We wanted someone to sit up and say, ‘This is wrong and we need to change things.’”

Cuin said there were no avenues for the O’Shells, both respected police officers, to plead their innocence. ”If our kids had some sort of outlet or grievance process or gone to someone, we would have a whole different story today,” he said. “The system has to change.”

A judge gave Cuin, 59, and his wife, Jackie Cuin, 50, custody of Alyssa after the death of their daughter and son-in-law, despite the objections of social services, according to a story first published in the Denver Post. The newspaper obtained medical, social services and police records in their investigation, as well as court documents on the Cuins’ lawsuits. ”They were wonderful parents,” said Paul Cuin, who is a supermarket manager. “We never had a single doubt in our minds [over whether] abuse was involved. We knew from the beginning, they loved that baby.”

They nursed Alyssa until her death and are convinced that if doctors knew more about SMA, the disease might never again be confused with child abuse. Spinal muscular atrophy, or SMA, is a genetic neuromuscular disease characterized by muscle atrophy and weakness. It is caused by a mutation in the gene on the long arm of chromosome 5, which makes a protein that is important in the cells of the spinal cord and lower brain stem.

It is not always a death sentence, but those with the most serious form, like Alyssa, can suffer respiratory failure. The disease is the leading genetic cause of death in infants and toddlers, affecting as many as 10,000 to 25,000 children and adults in the United States, according to the SMA Foundation. ”It took seven months to diagnose my 12-year-old daughter, and my husband comes from a family of scientists and we live in New York City,” said Loren Eng, president of the SMA Foundation. “So few doctors are aware of the disease and it causes a wide variety of symptoms. It’s really an awareness problem.”

Dr. Darryl De Vivo, a professor of neurology and pediatrics at Columbia University, said SMA can “masquerade to some degree” as child abuse, “at least to the uneducated eye.” ”The nature of this disease is such that it allows the bone to be unduly susceptible to fractures in the normal handling of the infant,” he said. De Vivo added that with heightened awareness to child abuse, “people jump in and say guilty before being proven innocent.”

The Colorado case began in on June 16, 2008, when Tiffany O’Shell noticed that Alyssa cried when she lifted her right leg. The baby was referred to Children’s Hospital of Colorado, where x-rays revealed fractures, but no bruises or abrasions. ”We pleaded with the doctor at Children’s Hospital and social service to look for something else other than child abuse,” said Paul Cuin. “They should have waited and not jumped to conclusions.” Elizabeth Whitehead of Children’s Hospital Colorado said the hospital would not comment “on alleged child abuse cases, past or present.”

Child protective services took Alyssa immediately and placed her in a foster home. Her grandparents were ruled out as guardians because Jackie Cuin had spent time babysitting the child and was considered a suspect.

SMA Broken Bones Looked Like Abuse

The O’Shells had one supervised visit with Alyssa, according to Paul Cuin. The baby turned her head away from her parents several times and authorities interpreted that as confirmation of abuse. Dave O’Shell became a chief suspect when he admitted that he often held her by the legs upside down — which he said made the baby smile, according to the Post.

Cuin said the signs of SMA were evident in Alyssa, “but no one saw it” until the baby’s foster mother took her to the doctor because she was failing to thrive.

A pediatrician at Children’s Hospital noticed the classic symptoms: the baby’s thumb turned inward, a “bell-shaped” stomach and “frogs legs” that wouldn’t straighten, according to Cuin. Alyssa’s breathing was labored and she struggled to hold her head up. Suspicious, the doctor called for genetic tests, but no one alerted Alyssa’s parents, according to Cuin.

“If they had had a little bit of hope,” Cuin said, “this all would have been different.

On July 9, the results confirmed SMA, and on July 11, a caseworker called the Cuins’ lawyer. The O’Shells had been dead nearly two weeks. By July 16 the Cuins went to court and a judge granted them custody. The Cuins defend their son-in-law against abuse charges, but are still struggling to understand why he murdered their daughter. ”David was a very stable individual,” said Cuin. “It shocked us. But I fully understand the pressures he was under.” Cuin said O’Shell had lost all hope, told by his lawyer that he would go to prison and lose not only his daughter, but his wife, his job and his military status. If arrested on felony abuse, he would have had to raise $50,000 bail. Two days before the murder-suicide, O’Shell told his wife he was “going to shoot people” so police would have a reason to arrest him, according to the Denver Post. He became increasingly despondent.

One June 30, the couple was scheduled to meet with lawyers and a criminal investigator about the abuse charges. Jackie Cuin tried to call her daughter but got no answer. She went to check on her at the house, but was too afraid to enter, calling her husband. Paul Cuin found the bodies: Tiffany, who had been shot in the head twice, was covered in blood in bed. Dave’s legs were sticking out the bedroom doorway. ”I haven’t forgiven him,” said Cuin. “And I don’t know if I will ever be able to.”

Cuin and his wife now live day-by-day, and their awareness campaign is what keeps them going. ”We don’t want the kids’ death to be in vain,” he said. “We want something good to come of it.” ”I don’t have a problem at all with social services coming and taking a child and doing an investigation,” said Cuin. “There is a need for this service. There are bad people out there and kids need to be protected.”

“But the system did the opposite,” he said. “It tore a family apart.”

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“Firefighters donate Mega Millions winnings to ailing fellow fireman”

Taken from: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/firefighters-donate-mega-millions-winnings-ailing-fellow-fireman-183135668.html

April 3, 2012

Five Albuquerque Station Eight firefighters who won a $10,000 share of the Mega Millions jackpot last week have decided to donate an unspecified part of their winnings to fellow fireman Vince Cordova, who is suffering from a life-threatening tumor.

“We decided to get tickets ten minutes before the sales closed,” said Capt. Jed Hyland told local news affiliate KOB. “I ran in shouting that we hit 5 of the 6 numbers.”

After convincing their fellow firemen that it wasn’t an April Fools’ joke, Hyland and his four fellow winners (Steve Keffer, Paul McClure, Clinton Anderson and Si Do) decided to donate part of their winnings to the local firefighters Survival Fund. “Everybody at the station agreed that this would be a good opportunity,” Hyland said.

KOAT reports that Cordova, 24, has a rare aggressive tumor that puts pressure on his brain. He’ll die if the tumor isn’t removed, but life-saving surgery from a specialist in Los Angeles costs several hundred thousand dollars. While the $10,000 is only a small portion of Cordova’s total medical bills, his fellow firemen hope that their donation will help raise awareness and encourage others to donate.

KRQE News 13 reports that Cordova has already undergone two of the three necessary operations, with the final to be performed on Wednesday. ”I’m nervous. I’m scared. I’ve got these butterflies in my stomach that just won’t leave, but I’m hanging in there,” Cordova told the station in an interview before his first operation on Saturday. “I can’t believe that the fireman bond is so strong.” ”I just want to tell everyone thank you for standing by me and staying strong,” Cordova said. “Thank you for believing in me, and I promise to see you guys soon!”

The final surgery will be performed by a team of five surgeons and is expected to last at least 10 hours.

“(Cordova) has such a great attitude. He looks at it as another challenge, like he would a structure fire that we face as firemen. He’s going to overcome it. He’s positive and he’s strongthat’s the kind of man he is,” AFD firefighter Gilbert Baca, who trained Cordova in the academy, told KOAT.

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“Hoodies and Hijabs: Uncovering Injustice”

Wake Forest and Salem Students, organized by Muslim peers, came together to show solidarity with Trayvonn Martin and Shaima Al Awadhi. Students are calling on our community leaders to condemn hate crimes and make sure our community is a safe place for everyone.

Please re-post this picture to raise awareness about these atrocities! Let’s encourage other Universities & schools to create photographs such as this one!

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“TV5 reporter gets tattoo for great cause; along with hundreds”

Taken from: http://www.wnem.com/story/15860050/tv5s-tia-ewing-gets-a-tattoo-for-a-cause?hpt=us_bn4

October 24, 2011

The line is a block long, but everyone here knows exactly what they want. Many know the story of survival and struggle.

“My grandma had breast cancer and lost both of her breast to the cancer, she’s still living,” said Angela Becerril, who is getting her 13th tattoo. Becerril was the first person in line with her husband and their friend; they’re going pink for a cause.

Andrew Switala, a tattoo artist at VooDoo Tattoo in Bay City says, “My record is 18 tattoos in one day.” From the looks of it, this 24-hour tattoo marathon, may mean Switala will exceed his record, and he plans to get in line, too. ”Yeah, I am getting one. I want mine bigger, though. Go big or go home,” he said.

Everywhere we turned, breast cancer awareness ribbons were being permanently placed on arms, necks, and everywhere in-between. For some of the people in line, the ribbon is a symbol of courage and pain. ”She’s been through two surgeries and has two more she has to go through,” said Katie Gower. Her mother is battling breast cancer. Katie showed us a ribbon with the word “MOM” going across it, she says it’s a way to remember her mother’s fight that is still raging on.

The stories of beating the odds were undeniably touching. That’s why I decided to get one too. I will never forget the battle my grandmother faced with breast cancer. It was a disease that she couldn’t defeat.

I was approached by Carol Johnson, who had tears in her eyes. She wanted to share her story to make other women get checked. ”I had a double mastectomy last Friday,” said Carol Johnson. “Please get a mammogram; that is how it was caught.” Carol had no symptoms, had a biopsy — and here she stands ready to get her first tattoo. She says it can’t be worse than battling cancer. “I am a little bit scared, but it can’t be worse than what I went through.”

One thing is true: the pain of getting a tattoo is undeniable, this was my first and my last. It’s all worth it though, to know half the money raised goes to help people like Carol and all the other men and women in the fight of their life.It’s a way to forever acknowledge that we want a cure so the pain of losing a loved one is never felt again.The fundraiser will benefit the American Cancer Society.

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STARS: “We’re Not a Costume” Campaign

Taken from: http://lissawriting.wordpress.com/2011/10/23/racism-think/

STARS (Students Teaching Against Racism) mission: “to educate and facilitate discussion about racism and to promote racial harmony and to create a safe, non-threatening environment to allow participants to feel comfortable to express their feelings.”

The “we’re not a costume” campaign may be timed for Halloween, but it’s a reaction to an attitude that’s accepted every day as normal. It’s hard to explain exactly what is so wrong about being a geisha or a sheik for Halloween. It’s unsettling. It’s a feeling I’ve always struggled to articulate — a discomfort that sort of just sits in the place between your heart and your stomach, quietly nagging. It’s a sense of being wronged without knowing exactly what was done to you.

People who think racism is dead think so because they don’t see active discrimination. They think, “But minorities are allowed to do everything I’m allowed to do, so where’s the harm?” STARS’ poster campaign calls attention to another problem: Minorities are often made into caricatures.

And that’s why Ohio University’s Students Teaching About Racism in Society exists. STARS aims to “educate and facilitate discussion about racism and to promote racial harmony and to create a safe, non-threatening environment to allow participants to feel comfortable to express their feelings.”

STARS exists because racism is only playing dead. It manifests itself not in slurs and exclusion, but in stupid jokes and really inaccurate costumes. As a minority, you’re a character, not a person. People dress up as you on Halloween. On TV, you’re the token black guy, easily replaced by some other black guy after one season.

Racism is so much stealthier now. It doesn’t announce itself, and it’s complicated.

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