Youth protest for life-saving trauma care met with police violence

Statement from Fearless Leading by the Youth

Youth are dying everyday on the south side. It is all over the press all over the country. But they are not talking about how the people who could help save lives are willing to let us die because they’re greedy. Everyone wants to talk about the youth, but when we talk, instead of listening, they lock us up and brutalize us.

The University of Chicago is a few blocks from where we live, one of the areas where the violence is worst. They are the richest hospital in Chicago but have no trauma care for anyone over 16. The whole south side has none because health care in our country is about profit, not about helping people who need it. That’s why the violence is so bad, because we don’t have what we need to survive. We live in neighborhoods where there’s no resources, no jobs, no youth programs, no mental health services, and the little they had they are taking away.

Fearless Leading by the Youth has been fighting for three years to change that, ever since our co-founder Damian Turner was shot by a stray bullet four blocks from the U of C but bled to death during the 10 mile ride to the nearest adult trauma center – Northwestern Hospital.

Today the University of Chicago showed how they feel about youth, especially black youth and allies who support us. We came peacefully to their new building, which they spent over $700 million on. Our point was if you can find that kind of money, you can save lives of the community around you. They are building this big flashy building right in the middle of our neighborhoods but they don’t want to open up their doors to us, you got to flash your insurance card to get your life saved. We want a trauma center for our neighborhood, and as a first step we want them to increase the age limit on their children’s trauma center to 21.

We had tickets to a tour of that building but their police said, “this ain’t for y’all, get out.” Then they started dragging us out, pushing us with batons, shoving us. They had male officers pulling young women across the ground. They even shoved and bruised Damian’s mom. They knew they were wrong, they slammed our cameraman on the ground and arrested him.

We have been peacefully protesting since Damian died. We’ve sent letters, held forums, and done lots of protests. We are sick and tired of not being heard and today, a week after Martin Luther King Day, we did a sit-in to get them to finally hear us and they responded like they did to Dr. King, with brutality.

We feel abused and disrespected and not heard but we are proud of what we did, we actually took action and showed them three years later we’re not going away. Everybody was focused, we knew what our mission was, we were of one accord. We knew what we came for we came to send a clear message – how can you ignore we’re dying at your door.

 

We’re the future and we aren’t giving up and we’re, aren’t going away. Health care is a human right and we won’t go without a fight!

TRAUMA CENTER ACTIVISTS BEATEN AND ARRESTED BY UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO POLICE 01/27/13


University of Chicago Medical Center’s $700 million dollar hospital addition, the Center for Care and Discovery, is set to open on February 23, 2013, two and a half years after the death of 18-year-old Damian Turner, a community youth leader who was shot by a flyaway bullet 3 blocks from the UCMC. He was transported 10 miles away to Northwestern Memorial Hospital because the UCMC does not have a trauma center for people over the age of 16. According to the website, the former trauma center closed down in 1988, ”to concentrate resources in the clinical specialties where the University of Chicago can play the greatest role and where it has the most to offer, which include a Level 1 trauma center for children. If we were to focus now on the demands of adult trauma care, we would have to build facilities, services and medical teams from the ground up.” In the face of the new hospital (“for innovative medical care”) opening, who can believe this is an impossibility? In the face of rising violence and traumatic injuries in the Southside, who can believe the University of Chicago cares about its neighborhood?

Today, members of Fearless Leading by the Youth and Southside Together Organizing for Power held a peaceful protest at the Center for Care and Discovery, requesting a meeting to discuss the lack of adult trauma care in the Southside. From the Chicago Tribune:

About 2 p.m., an estimated 50 protesters entered the hospital, one man announcing their intent to protest over a megaphone. Five protesters had planned to stay in the lobby and likely be arrested when most of the group would inevitably be kicked off the private property.

Before the majority of the group had a chance to leave on their own, however, University of Chicago police took out their batons and started shoving protesters toward the door, several people tripping and falling onto the floor in the middle of the crowd.

4 were arrested, including a friend of mine. In the video above, UCPD are shown brandishing nightsticks (0:03), handcuffing a protester on the ground and picking him up by his wrists (0:44), and tackling and choking a protester who is not resisting (0:53).

This is disgusting, and I am ashamed of being affiliated with the University of Chicago. The actions today by the police, on behalf of the University, vividly demonstrate the complete disregard the institution has for people living in the surrounding neighborhoods. It has long been time for us to do what we can for those suffering around us, to take responsibility for the harm that we help perpetuate, and to fight against obstacles that block these goals. University of Chicago, wake up. Your disguise isn’t fooling anyone. 

thenationmagazine:

This is what rape culture looks like—Jessica Valenti and Dave Zirin both argue that it’s as American as apple pie.

thenationmagazine:

This is what rape culture looks like—Jessica Valenti and Dave Zirin both argue that it’s as American as apple pie.

Reblogged from The Nation Magazine

The Exam: Preparing for China’s College Entrance Test

Thank you Daddy for leaving because I sure as hell never could have.

ESPN’s response to “Chink In The Armor” Headline

From ESPN Front Row, Feb 19th 2012:

At ESPN we are aware of three offensive and inappropriate comments made on ESPN outlets during our coverage of Jeremy Lin.

Saturday we apologized for two references here. We have since learned of a similar reference Friday on ESPN Radio New York. The incidents were separate and different. We have engaged in a thorough review of all three and have taken the following action:

  • The ESPN employee responsible for our Mobile headline has been dismissed.
  • The ESPNEWS anchor has been suspended for 30 days.
  • The radio commentator is not an ESPN employee.

We again apologize, especially to Mr. Lin. His accomplishments are a source of great pride to the Asian-American community, including the Asian-American employees at ESPN. Through self-examination, improved editorial practices and controls, and response to constructive criticism, we will be better in the future.

HEY! On the 70th anniversary of Executive Order 9066, let’s consider the power and privilege systems in America that make hostility towards Asians & Asian Americans possible, almost acceptable, and long-lasting. While “dismissing” and “suspending” individual oppressive behavior seems to be the best that ESPN can do, we must tackle discrimination as the totality that it is. 

Additionally, it’s almost cute how ESPN’s post perpetuates the racist belief that Asians and Asian Americans can never become part of the mainstream American culture. Lin’s accomplishments are a “great source of pride to the Asian-American community?” What about, you know, the American community? You know, like America, where he was born? It’s time to stop hyphenating Asian American.

msnbc:

Chimpanzees should hardly ever be used for medical research, a prestigious scientific group told the U.S. government Thursday — advice that means days in the laboratory may be numbered for humans’ closest relatives.
(That’s good news for Patin, Emslee, and Arielle, the chimps at the New Iberia Research Center in New Iberia, La., pictured here in October 2011.)
Image: Tim Mueller / Redux Pictures

msnbc:

Chimpanzees should hardly ever be used for medical research, a prestigious scientific group told the U.S. government Thursday — advice that means days in the laboratory may be numbered for humans’ closest relatives.

(That’s good news for Patin, Emslee, and Arielle, the chimps at the New Iberia Research Center in New Iberia, La., pictured here in October 2011.)

Image: Tim Mueller / Redux Pictures

Reblogged from DiscoveryNews
latimes:

Chinese reindeer wrangler won’t be herded into city: Ninetysomething Maliya Suo decided to let the beasts, not the government, determine her path after members of her tribe were forcibly relocated to a theme-park-like site with the soul of the projects.
Photo:   Once her tribe’s best reindeer herder, Maliya Suo, a last link to the traditional Ewenki language and way of life, lives in an encampment in the woods in northeastern China. Credit: Jonathan Kaiman / For The Times

Let people be.

latimes:

Chinese reindeer wrangler won’t be herded into city: Ninetysomething Maliya Suo decided to let the beasts, not the government, determine her path after members of her tribe were forcibly relocated to a theme-park-like site with the soul of the projects.

Photo: Once her tribe’s best reindeer herder, Maliya Suo, a last link to the traditional Ewenki language and way of life, lives in an encampment in the woods in northeastern China. Credit: Jonathan Kaiman / For The Times

Let people be.

Reblogged from Los Angeles Times
theatlantic:

How the 19th Century’s Occupy Wall Street Found a Message—and Won

Corporate greed. Businesses amassing fortunes at the expense of workers. Frustrated, disgruntled, fed up masses. Protests, strikes, and violence.
Think I’m talking about Zuccotti Park? Actually, I’m describing the landscape in the 1880s during the height of the Industrial Revolution, but it sounds eerily familiar. At that time, workers were struggling with horrible work conditions: 14-hour workdays and six day work weeks, children laboring in factories, unhealthy and unsafe work conditions, and low pay.
The workers eventually hit a breaking point. They knew that their work environment was unhealthy and that their lifestyles were unsustainable. They were slaving away and making dismal pay, while the industrialists prospered like never before. They were at the losing end of extreme income inequality. They had a low standard of living, and no time for civic and community participation, due to their long hours. They were the 99% of the 19th century. And they were fed up. Read more.


strength in numbers

theatlantic:

How the 19th Century’s Occupy Wall Street Found a Message—and Won

Corporate greed. Businesses amassing fortunes at the expense of workers. Frustrated, disgruntled, fed up masses. Protests, strikes, and violence.

Think I’m talking about Zuccotti Park? Actually, I’m describing the landscape in the 1880s during the height of the Industrial Revolution, but it sounds eerily familiar. At that time, workers were struggling with horrible work conditions: 14-hour workdays and six day work weeks, children laboring in factories, unhealthy and unsafe work conditions, and low pay.

The workers eventually hit a breaking point. They knew that their work environment was unhealthy and that their lifestyles were unsustainable. They were slaving away and making dismal pay, while the industrialists prospered like never before. They were at the losing end of extreme income inequality. They had a low standard of living, and no time for civic and community participation, due to their long hours. They were the 99% of the 19th century. And they were fed up. Read more.

strength in numbers

Reblogged from The Atlantic