COP15: Biking Across The World For The Climate

December 17, 2009 Front Page No Comments

Follow all of Heather’s copenhagen coverage at http://youngvoter.org/cop15

“When Kim Nguyen, 28-year-old social worker, left his homeland of Australia in August of 2008, he thought of climate change as an abstract subject that was occasionally discussed on the evening news and something that politicians argued about. But Nguyen always sensed there was a bigger story out there.

So in the lead up to the United Nations (UN) Climate Negotiations in Copenhagen, Nguyen set out on a sixteen-month bike ride through 22 countries between his hometown of Brisbane, Australia and Copenhagen, Denmark to hear firsthand the story of climate change and it’s effects throughout the world…”

Continue reading the full article by Heather Box over at Huffington Post!

Stay tuned here at 99Problems.org for more updates from the Copenhagen Climate Change Conference!

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Hit Down Hard in Copenhagen

December 15, 2009 Front Page 1 Comment

Heather and Jayme interviewed by Current TV

The League of Young Voters Education Fund is on the scene in Denmark! It was inspiring to fly all the way across the world last night only to disembark from the plane and see dozens of familiar faces walking through the streets of beautiful Copenhagen. Some good friends, some co-workers, some acquaintances; all allies, but the quality they had in common was a visible, tangible feeling of exhaustion. As I jumped up and down in the streets of Denmark, taking in the experience and excited to connect with the people I knew to find out where I should be in the AM to get the best story I was stopped in my tracks by their warnings:

“Heather, lower your expectations. It seems like the decision to make no decision is already set.”

It’s stunning, honestly. So I am in search of the silver lining – the good news from Copenhagen – which I know is here, I just haven’t found it yet. A group of international youth sitting next to me right now are discussing the need for the United States Senate to mandate action in order to make the US move in Copenhagen. They are talking tactics for pressuring Congress. Many people are considering an international push on the US Senate; district by district pressure in the States, massive global direct action … I wish I could jump in the conversation with the answer but there are still so many questions.

What I can say with confidence is that we need to fight the exhaustion and keep pushing our elected officials. We don’t have time for exhaustion, only for action. We need to join the small nations, the independent voices, who are crying out for true change, for diplomacy and equal treatment.

Off to join the conversation – will send updates soon. Less than 24 hours on the ground and it’s a different world…

What’s the view from America?

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Legendary activist Dorothy Height on action, NOW

August 14, 2009 Front Page No Comments

When I was in DC last week at the Green Jobs Briefing the white house, Green For All and Hip Hop Caucus put on to honor the work we have all been doing in the community to build an inclusive green economy, I was in the presence on one of most powerful women in American history, Dorothy Height.

You know when you have those moments when you feel like you are on the right path at the right time, that is how I felt when I saw Mrs. Height enter in the room for a green jobs briefing.  When I saw her, I was like, if Dorothy and I are at the same meeting – I must be at the right meeting!!

Dorothy Height has been a key part of the women’s and civil rights movement since she was young.  She was standing on the platform with King when he gave his I have a dream speech during the March on Washington; she was one of ten young people selected to help Eleanor Roosevelt plan a World Youth Conference in 1938; in the 1960s Height organized “Wednesdays in Mississippi”, which brought together black and white women from the North and South to create a dialogue of understanding.  Basically she is a legend in our movement and she has paved the way for so many of us.

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We Gotta Work On Youth Violence NOW!

June 18, 2009 Front Page No Comments

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It was a warm spring evening on Milwaukee’s north side and four-year-old Jasmine Owens was playing double dutch outside her family’s home. As she enjoyed the simple pleasures of childhood, a stray bullet struck her in the head. She died on the scene. Days later, Carey Jenkins would stand over Jasmine’s casket, looking at the four-year-old in her pink dress and listening to the cries echoing in the church for the violence to end.

“I prayed to God that day that I would never be there to help bury another kid, but last year alone there were 71 murders in our small city of Milwaukee,” says Jenkins, a 33-year-old Milwaukee native who has launched a campaign to bring urban violence to the nation’s attention. The sky-high homicide rate in Milwaukee is not unlike many other American cities….

Continue reading at Huffington Post!

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Schools Don’t Need the Police to Solve Problems

May 12, 2009 Front Page No Comments

Ben Gilbarg is the Director of 3rd EyE Unlimited, a film/video producer and socially conscious Hip Hop artist from New Bedford, MA. Ben works in New Bedford to build a movement of young people to organize for the betterment of their communities. Check out: http://www.3rdeyeunlimited.com/

IEP stands for Individualized Education Program. This is a legally binding document that spells out exactly what special education services your child will receive and why. Makes a lot of sense, right? It is supposed to help our friends and children who need a different kind of education to succeed but a lot of school districts are just ignoring IEP’s and setting up young people to fail.

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