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October 31, 2011

Monday, October 31st Blue Note - NYC presents Chris Rob Live

Filed under Events

Monday, October 31st Blue Note - NYC presents Chris Rob Live

FEATURING:
Chris Rob, keyboards & vocals
Maurice Brown, trumpet
Solomon Dorsey, bass
Shelton Garner, guitar
Les Cleveland, drums

with special guests

DJ/Producer SPINNA
DOMUNIQUE
NEMISS
M.O.E. MONEY

2011-10-31
Showtime: 8:00PM
Doors Open at 6:00PM

MAKE RESERVATION
BAR $10.00 TABLE  $15.00 

for more info visit
http://www.bluenote.net/newyork/schedule/moreinfo.cgi?id=9504

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October 27, 2011

Thursday, Ocotber 27th DDHC - LA w Tony Powell

Filed under Events

House Music  Summer Madness

Every Thursday Night — Sept…

with ddhc resident dj
TONY POWELL ddhc, bounce muzik…

Akbar 4356 Sunset Blvd
$5 cover | 10pm-2am |21+

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October 12, 2011

Wednesday, October 12th Hang Together - LA

Filed under Uncategorized, Events

Hang Together - Every Wednesday

For those that love disco and house, Hang Together is the spot to go every Wednesday in Chinatown. You can find DJ Kerry and Rick Wren at the Mountain Bar spinning the gems that will help get us through the week! They dig deep in the crates delivering a disco -filled night of music, dance and good vibes!
Let’s
HANG TOGETHER
every Wednesday
with
RICK WREN
DJ KERRY (rice & beats, nitty gritty)

DISCO | FUNK | HOUSE

***Special Guests ***

**DRINK SPECIALS ALL NIGHT!***
$4 Margaritas
$4 Firestone Double Barrel Ale
$6 Bushmills / Ginger Ale

@ Mountain Bar
473 Gin Ling Way
Downtown, LA

only $5 / FREE before 11
21+

letshangtogether@gmail.com

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October 8, 2011

Domestic Workers Convention May Be Landmark

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Domestic Workers Convention May Be Landmark

www.nytimes.com…

By JASON DePARLE
Published: October 8, 2011

Mast Irham/European Pressphoto Agency
Indonesian workers preparing to leave for Saudi Arabia.
Even countries that fail to ratify the pact will eventually be judged by its standards, they said, and the campaign to pass it had enlisted fresh allies, newly mindful of abuses from unpaid wages to rape.

Two days later, Saudi Arabia, a major destination for domestic workers, beheaded an Indonesian maid — at once highlighting the need for protections and the challenges of putting them in place.

The execution followed reports from maids who said their Saudi bosses had burned or beaten them, and the condemned woman, who killed her employer, said she had been abused. But when the Indonesian president protested, the Saudis stopped hiring Indonesians and pointedly turned to cheaper workers from countries less likely to complain.

The twin developments — accord in Geneva and maid wars in Riyadh — show opposing forces in a global campaign to protect domestic workers, an overlooked group of as many as 100 million people.

More broadly, that campaign tests the effort to raise work standards in a world of cheap and mobile labor. Many domestic workers are migrants, and the precedents could shape the treatment of other migrant groups. On Sept. 30, for example, Hong Kong’s High Court struck down a law that had excluded domestic workers from the residency rights offered to other foreign citizens, potentially allowing 100,000 maids to gain the right to stay.

The events show that “officials have not forgotten about migrant workers,” said Philip Martin, an economist at the University of California, Davis. “But they are also a reminder of the difficulties of extending effective protections to them.”

“The receiving countries can always say, ‘We will get workers somewhere else,’ ” he said.

While acknowledging such challenges, the treaty’s supporters say that it establishes vital new principles and that it will accelerate changes already under way. Before the pact was approved, Singapore, Jordan and New York State had passed new laws, and proposals are being considered in places as different as California and Kuwait. Even Saudi Arabia, a source of frequent abuse complaints, is considering changes that officials may feel more inclined to accept after voting for the pact.

“The treaty was a watershed event,” said Nisha Varia, a researcher at Human Rights Watch. “There is now a global consensus that these women deserve the same rights as other workers. All the governments involved in this conversation will be under pressure to examine their labor laws.”

As a labor force composed mostly of women who work behind closed doors, domestic workers are hard to organize and vulnerable to attack. Many countries exclude them from labor laws, leaving no legal boundaries on their hours or pay.

In the United States, domestic workers are covered by minimum-wage laws, but they are excluded from federal statutes on occupational health, overtime and the right to organize.

As long ago as 1965, the International Labor Organization, a branch of the United Nations, saw an “urgent need” to protect domestic workers, whom it called “singularly subject to exploitation.” But interest in formal action waned, and women flooded the workplace, making nannies and maids a cornerstone of modern economies.

The export of domestic workers became big business in migration hubs like Indonesia and the Philippines, where more than half the migrants are women. Both countries celebrate the sums the women send home and simmer at the stories of mistreatment that percolate in the news media.

Saudi Arabia is a prime destination for both countries. In 2008, a study by Ms. Varia cited dozens of cases that amounted “to forced labor, trafficking, or slavery-like conditions.” While abuses occur everywhere, the report said, Saudi Arabia prosecuted few cases and sometimes allowed bosses to pursue retaliatory charges, like theft, against victims who complained.

A spokesman for the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Washington declined to comment. In the past, Saudi officials have accused critics of exaggerating isolated cases of abuse, and noted that legions of women still seek the jobs.

When the international labor group turned to domestic workers in 2010, Persian Gulf states, speaking as a bloc, called for nonbinding recommendations. In a reversal this year, they supported a binding treaty.

What is more, they strengthened it, with calls for stronger language on contract rights, overtime pay and access to courts during employer conflicts.

“It really made an impression,” said Ellene Sana of the Center for Migrant Advocacy in Manila. “When you think of abuses, you think of the gulf — yet here they are, standing up for domestic workers.”

Pressure from the Arab Spring, Ms. Sana said, may help explain the change. Others note that the rotating leadership of the bloc passed to the United Arab Emirates, which is conscious of the region’s global reputation.

Of the 128 governments that voted, only Swaziland opposed the pact, which says domestic workers should enjoy rights equivalent to those given to other workers in the same country, including limited workweeks, overtime pay and paid vacations.

While the United States pushed hard for the pact, the Senate rarely approves labor treaties that would require changes in federal law, as this one would if ratified. Legally the pact applies only in countries that ratify it, but its uses as a yardstick may be broader.

Even as support for the treaty grew, so did reports of abuse in Saudi Arabia. Keni binti Carda, an Indonesian maid, went home in 2008 with scars spread across her back and face. She said her employer burned her with an iron and forced her to eat excrement.

A Sri Lankan maid, L. D. Ariyawathie, arrived home last year with two dozen nails in her body — hammered there, she said, by her employer.

After an Indonesian woman, Sumiati binti Salan Mustapa, was hospitalized in Medina last year with broken bones and a mutilated face, the Indonesian president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, condemned her “extraordinary torture.” But the conviction of her employer was overturned.

On June 18, two days after the Geneva vote, Saudi Arabia beheaded an Indonesian named Ruyati binti Sapubi. Mr. Yudhoyono denounced Saudi “norms and manners,” and the Saudis stopped admitting new Indonesian maids.

They had already placed a similar ban on the Philippines, after several Philippine lawmakers visited in January and wrote they were “shocked into speechlessness by the tales of rape and abuse.” Saudi recruiters then described plans to hire thousands of Bangladeshis at wages of $170 a month, less than half what the Philippine government demanded.

More battles may be pending. Under a new law, the Philippine government must identify which countries are acceptable destinations for domestic workers, which could prompt more conflicts like the one with the Saudis.

Still, Philippine officials say the treaty, by laying out common principles, has given them a new weapon in an old fight.

It is “a landmark accomplishment,” said Carlos Cao Jr., who runs the Philippine government’s overseas work program. “But you don’t change cultures overnight.”

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Demontrations on Wall Street - NYC

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Protesters Against Wall Street - Published: October 8, 2011

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/09/opinion/sunday/protesters-against-wall-street.html?scp=9&sq=WALL%20ST%20PROTESTS&st=cse#

Wall Street Protest Visits Washington Sq. - October 8, 2011, 7:23 pm
By AL BAKER

Robert Stolarik for The New York Times

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/08/wall-street-protest-moves-to-washington-sq/?scp=5&sq=WALL%20ST%20PROTESTS&st=cse

23 Arrested Wednesday in Wall St. Protest - October 6, 2011, 10:22 am
By ANDY NEWMAN and COLIN MOYNIHAN

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/06/23-arrested-wednesday-in-wall-st-protest/?scp=8&sq=WALL%20ST%20PROTESTS&st=cse
Wall St. Protest Attracts Many New to This Sort of Thing
Robert Stolarik for The New York Times
Roger Schwarz, left, a criminal lawyer, spoke to protesters at Zuccotti Park on Tuesday morning.
By CARA BUCKLEY
Published: October 5, 2011

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/06/nyregion/wall-st-protest-lures-many-new-to-this-sort-of-thing.html?scp=7&sq=WALL%20ST%20PROTESTS&st=

 

Seeking Energy, Unions Join Protest Against Wall Street
Seth Wenig/Associated Press
Labor unions joined Occupy Wall Street protesters on Wednesday in a rally on the steps of the state courthouse in Foley Square.
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE and CARA BUCKLEY
Published: October 5, 2011

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/06/nyregion/major-unions-join-occupy-wall-street-protest.html?sq=WALL ST PROTESTS&st=cse&scp=6&pagewanted=all
Wall St. Protests Continue, With Arrests at Morning March - September 21, 2011, 6:35 pm
By ROB HARRIS

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/21/wall-st-protests-continue-with-arrests-at-morning-march/?scp=3&sq=WALL%20ST%20PROTESTS&st=cse
Wall Street Protests Continue, With at Least 6 Arrested - September 19, 2011, 12:28 pm
By COLIN MOYNIHAN

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/19/wall-street-protests-continue-with-at-least-5-arrested/?scp=2&sq=WALL%20ST%20PROTESTS&st=cse

Wall Street Protest Begins, With Demonstrators Blocked - September 17, 2011, 4:26 pm
By COLIN MOYNIHAN

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/09/17/wall-street-protest-begins-with-demonstrators-blocked/?scp=1&sq=WALL%20ST%20PROTESTS&st=cse

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Three Women Win the Noble Piece Prize

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http://video.nytimes.com/video/2011/9/05/continuous/100000001090477/timescast.html

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California Begins Moving Prison Inmates

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California Begins Moving Prison Inmates

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/09/us/california-begins-moving-prisoners.html?_r=1&hp

By JENNIFER MEDINA
Published: October 8, 2011
 LOS ANGELES — Facing an unprecedented order from the Supreme Court to decrease its inmate population by 11,000 over the next three months and by 34,000 over the next two years, California prisons last week began to shift inmates to county jails and probation officers, starting what many believe will be a fundamental and far-reaching change in the nation’s largest corrections system.

Last spring, the Supreme Court ruled that overcrowding and poor conditions in state prisons violated inmates’ constitutional rights and, in a first, ordered a state to rapidly decrease its inmate population. Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislature approved a plan that would place many more offenders in the custody of individual counties.

Under the plan, inmates who have committed nonviolent, nonserious and nonsexual offenses will be released back to the county probation system rather than to state parole officers. Those newly convicted of such crimes will be sent directly to the counties, which will decide if they should go to a local jail or to an alternative community program. And newly accused defendants may wear electronic monitoring bracelets while they await trial.

“This is the largest change in the California state system in my lifetime,” said Barry Krisberg, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who has watched the state prisons for decades and testified in the Supreme Court case last year. “Given that what we had was completely broken and was the most expensive, overcrowded and least effective in America, there’s some hope that this will change it.”

The shift of prisoners to county facilities began Monday, and state officials expect to satisfy the Supreme Court’s mandate by June 2013 — at which time they must have reduced the state inmate population of 144,000, which put the prisons at 180 percent capacity, to 110,000, or 135 percent of capacity. First, though, they must reach the initial court-ordered benchmark by reducing the prison population to 133,000 by December.

In what the state calls a realignment of the criminal justice system, the plan places more responsibilities on the counties, and some local officials say they are unprepared and underfinanced to get the job done. But state officials say that keeping inmates closer to their communities will increase the chances that they can be rehabilitated, rather than in and out of state prison.

For the last several years, state parole officers would often catch criminals on technical parole violations, sending them back to prison for several weeks at a time — a practice many derided as a revolving door.

The constant influx of new and former inmates also sharply increased the cost for the state, because it must pay for a medical evaluation and several other assessments every time an inmate enters the system.

Matthew Cate, the secretary of the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, said the state hoped that the counties would concentrate on rehabilitating prisoners and helping them reintegrate into the community, something the state system was never able to do. Figures show that nearly 70 percent of inmates in California prisons end up there again.

“The catch-and-release way we had before was not working — I don’t know how anyone could disagree with that,” Mr. Cate said. “The only alternative we had was just a massive release of people from prison. Nobody seemed to want to talk about that.”

But some city and county officials say that the changes are likely to overwhelm local law enforcement agencies and that the state has not given them enough time or money to prepare. Last week, Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa of Los Angeles and the city’s police chief, Charlie Beck, said they would have to reassign 150 police officers to help monitor the former inmates.

Sheriff Scott R. Jones of Sacramento County has been one of the most outspoken critics of the plan, saying it is likely to drive up crime. He called it a “collision course with disaster,” because there is not enough money for the counties.

“To do all the things that they are asking everyone to do will cost an enormous amount of money, and we don’t have it,” Sheriff Jones said. “If this doesn’t work, it’s not like we get to go back and try again — we’re going to be stuck with the consequences.”

Sheriff Jones said the state might have been better off simply releasing 10,000 inmates, so it could use the extra time to figure out how to get more money or create a more comprehensive system for counties. “It’s not like we’re ready, because we’re not, and it’s not like we know what is best, because we don’t,” he added. “The only thing that is driving this is a court demand.”

But Mr. Cate dismissed the criticisms, saying the state had no other choice and had been coordinating plans for months.

“Everyone just wants to inoculate themselves from any kind of crime increase and blame it on realignment,” Mr. Cate said. “This is some massive change. It’s going to be subtle and happen over time.”

Counties across the state have been working “feverishly” to figure out their plans to handle the new responsibilities, said Sheriff Mark Pazin of Merced County, president of the California State Sheriffs’ Association.

“It’s a little tiring that we’re finally at the point where we have to do something and people start to react by just hitting the panic button,” Sheriff Pazin said.

Studies show that reduced sentences do not cause drastic increases in crime, he said, and many counties are working on alternative programs. “We need to be concentrating on what works best and how we can actually turn things around,” he said.

Sheriff Pazin said Mr. Brown had reassured him that the state would consider changing the way money is allocated to individual counties. Officials hope that five years from now, they will be able to determine which counties have been most effective at reducing the recidivism rate.

But several advocates for prisoners say they worry that the state is not doing enough to ensure that the counties will consider alternatives to jail, and several counties have said they will deal with the influx simply by adding more beds to their jails. Many of the county jails across the state are already overcrowded, and the Los Angeles County jails are being investigated by the F.B.I. over accusations of inmate abuse by deputies.

“There are no kind of guiding principles or oversight or monitoring,” said Donald Specter, the director of the Prison Law Office, which argued for the prisoners in the Supreme Court case. “I think there will be extreme variations, where some counties just will use the money to lock them up with no support and others who really try to figure out real solutions.”

Any violent crime committed by one of the former inmates is likely to grab headlines, but it will be years before the state can measure the impact of the change.

“We don’t have a lot of options,” Mr. Cate said. “The question years from now will really be: Did we avoid a disaster?”

 

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Calif. pot dispensaries told by feds to shut down

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Calif. pot dispensaries told by feds to shut down

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44806723/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/

U.S. prosecutors send letters even though state law allows

Marijuana plants are shown for sale in a medical marijuana dispensary in Oakland, Calif.By LISA LEFF
 
updated 1 hour 6 minutes ago 2011-10-06T20:06:32
SAN FRANCISCO — Federal prosecutors have launched a crackdown on pot dispensaries in California, warning the stores that they must shut down in 45 days or face criminal charges and confiscation of their property even if they are operating legally under the state’s 15-year-old medical marijuana law.

In an escalation of the ongoing conflict between the U.S. government and the nation’s burgeoning medical marijuana industry, California’s s four U.S. attorneys sent letters Wednesday and Thursday notifying at least 16 pot shops or their landlords that they are violating federal drug laws, even though medical marijuana is legal in California. The attorneys are scheduled to announce their coordinated crackdown at a Friday news conference.

Their offices refused to confirm the closure orders. The Associated Press obtained copies of the letters that a prosecutor sent to 12 San Diego dispensaries. They state that federal law “takes precedence over state law and applies regardless of the particular uses for which a dispensary is selling and distributing marijuana.”

“Under United States law, a dispensary’s operations involving sales and distribution of marijuana are illegal and subject to criminal prosecution and civil enforcement actions,” letters signed by U.S. Attorney Laura Duffy in San Diego read. “Real and personal property involved in such operations are subject to seizure by and forfeiture to the United States … regardless of the purported purpose of the dispensary.”

Only on msnbc.com  msnbc.com
Boeing settles suit over cabin air safety .
Insider out: From front office to Wall St. ‘Occupier’
 AP
PhotoBlog: US troops guard remote outpost 10 years into Afghan war .
 AFP/Getty Images
Jobs’ iPad a culmination of a life’s work .
 Reuters
Chinese Apple fans say farewell to ‘Master Jobs’ .
 Pixar
Thanks, Steve, for Woody, Buzz, Nemo and Carl .
 YouTube
Silly video makers turn serious to honor Steve Jobs .
..The move comes a little more than two months after the Obama administration toughened its stand on medical marijuana following a two-year period during which federal officials had indicated they would not move aggressively against dispensaries in compliance with laws in the 16 states where pot is legal for people with doctors’ recommendations.

The Department of Justice issued a policy memo to federal prosecutors in late June stating that marijuana dispensaries and licensed growers in states with medical marijuana laws could face prosecution for violating federal drug and money-laundering laws. The effort to shutter California dispensaries appears to be the most far-reaching effort so far to put that guidance into action.

“This really shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone. The administration is simply making good on multiple threats issued since President Obama took office,” Kevin Sabet, a former adviser to the president’s drug czar who is a fellow at the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Substance Abuse Solutions. “The challenge is to balance the scarcity of law enforcement resources and the sanctity of this country’s medication approval process. It seems like the administration is simply making good on multiple statements made previously to appropriately strike that balance.”

IRS ruling strikes fear in medical marijuana industry
Greg Anton, a lawyer who represents the Marin Alliance for Medical Marijuana, said the 14-year-old dispensary’s landlord received an “extremely threatening” letter Wednesday invoking a federal law that imposes additional penalties for selling drugs within 1,000 feet of schools, parks and playgrounds.

The landlord was ordered to evict the pot club or risk imprisonment, plus forfeiture of the property and all the rent he has collected while the dispensary has been in business, Anton said.

The Marin Alliance’s founder “has been paying state and federal taxes for 14 years, and they have cashed all the checks,” he said. “All I hear from Obama is whining about his budget, but he has money to do this which will actually reduce revenues.”

 

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Saturday October 8th Physical Therapy Benefit Event - LA

Filed under Events

Sat. Oct. 8th Benefit Event - presented by EMILIANO MIRANDA
 feat. LA’s very own
WAYNE LYONS

RAUL CAMPOS

GERRY MERAZ

MIGUEL PLASENCIA

SWEDISH EGIL

DAVID DELANO

ROBERT CHANGE

RICHARD AMAYA

@ ICON 1248 S. Figueroa - LA

$10 suggested donation

2pm - 8pm

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October 7, 2011

Friday October 7th Wunmi Live @ Apollo - NYC

Filed under Events

Friday Oct 7th, at The Apollo Music Cafe inside the Legendary Apollo Theater in Harlem.
Performances by:
Wunmi & Slow Commotion,
ManchildBalck
& DJ Set: Jihad Muhammad

This is the opening night of the 2nd season of live shows at The Apollo music Cafe.
It will truly be a wikkid uptown Afro house party and I hope to see you. Here is link to Apollo Cafe for more details..
http://www.apollotheater.org/apollo-music-cafe/details/163-apollo-music-cafe-sol-ascension
APOLLO THEATER
253 125th St, NYC
Doors: 9pm  Show: 10pm
Tickets: $20
A-LIST advance price $15 (until midnight the day before)
In person at the Apollo Theater Box Office
By phone call Ticketmaster (800)745-3000
Online at www.Ticketmaster.com

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7 APOLLO MUSIC CAFE feat. SOL ASCENSION
 
Wunmigirl Music
A.L.A ‘African Living Abroad’
www.facebook.com/WunmiakasWunmigirl
www.wunmi.com
www.myspace.com/wunmigirl
WowWow by wunmigirl online store coming soon!

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