Archive | BuildingBLOX RSS feed for this section

Hamburgers 4 the Homeless: the 2nd link

11 Jul

The Hamburgers 4 the Homeless manifesto: To combine good work with your social network to create a web of good. We all know people all over the world, but can we inspire these people to help others. The idea is “chain letter altruism”; starting with one person making hamburgers and giving them to those that need. That person then tells the story. The following step is convincing another person to partake, to be the next H4H Chef/Giver, passing the baton of benevolence. Then we track the spread and see how far and how intertwined the good can become.

The 2nd link: Lauren, Frankie and Maria
Upon hearing about the project, these three lovely young ladies felt inspired enough to participate, drove over to the city from Napa and got their H4H on. They are the second link, now lets see where this can go.

Lauren Barstad:
I had always wanted to feed the homeless during the holidays and had never executed doing so. I wasn’t sure what to expect when going into Hamburgers 4 the Homeless nonetheless I was excited to participate in the movement. The process of H4H was simple; buying ingredients to make the hamburgers, making hamburgers and handing them out to homeless people on the streets of San Francisco. Through this experience was selfless, I was able to also be rewarded with the appreciation and the smiles on their faces. Seeing that was a really good feeling.

Frankie Barstad:
I thought it was a really interesting experience that everyone should try at least once. It felt really good to see people thankful for food that we made for them, and to see them happy about a simple hamburger.Personally I wish we woulda made more than we did because it was kinda disappointing when we ran out and there were still a lot of people wanting burgers. It was kind of sad to see how many people there were with nowhere to go, but to know that because of you they ate that day was a good feeling.

Maria Gonzalez: At first, I was skeptical about Hamburgers for Homeless, I wasn’t sure what to expect. I was a bit apprehensive about the idea of approaching random people on the street, trying to figure out who wanted food and who didnt. Once we were on the street passing out the hamburgers, I was able to see how fluid the process was. Once the people in the area knew we were passing out food, they self selected, making everything easy painless. I saw how quickly we got the Hamburgers were being passed out and I felt that we could have made 4 times as many. On the car ride home I reflected that one day of H4H wasnt enough for me.


Im excited to see who they each recruit for Hamburgers 4 the Homeless. Also, let me know if you want to participate. Cheers,

tha Giant

Love in the Lower Haight x the Girl=Boy Project

19 Jun

We are up in San Francisco. Through a few very insightful conversations with Thea Shelby, president of Lower Haight Merchants and Neighbors Association and the driving force behind the Love in the Lower Haight mural project, we were able to hash out a bit of space for a Girl=Boy mural as part of the project. The most interesting part of this for me personally is the location. The murals are located on Haight and Laguna, at the old UC extension building. This is the same building that used to be the French American International School and the same building where I attended Kindergarden through 5th grade. I relish in the opportunity to plant the seed of equality and hopefully inspire at least one child in the same place that I was instilled with the dream to be whatever and whoever I wanted.

Eugenics in North Carolina

16 Jun

This is the very the ugly under belly of America, the things that lie below the Dream, the freedom and the pursuit of happiness*. This is the essence of the asterisk, the wait a min I hope you didnt think all these lofty ideals were for everybody cause they sure as hell arent for you. This article from Colorlines breaks down the North Carolina portion of the nationwide Eugenics program that started in the early 1900′s. For the record Eugenics is “the study and practice of attempting to improve the genetic features of human populations through selective breeding and sterilization” (via wiki) aka denying certain people their human right to reproduce because they are deemed less fit than others or because their offspring are destined to be a burden on society.

“It is better for all the world, instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind,” Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. wrote in the 1927 ruling that upheld the legality of compulsory sterilization. “Three generations of imbeciles are enough.” The 1927 ruling was never overturned. However, in 1942, the Supreme Court ruled against punitive sterilization.

Obviously, we easily condem the practices of eugenics that Hitler and the Nazi used in the Holocaust. But, we still let these practices continue on our own soil, even increasing after WWII in places like North Carolina. Langston Hughes said it best “let America be America again–The land that never has been yet–”.

North Carolina Confronts the Ugly Past of Its Eugenics Law

A North Carolina state task force is holding a public listening session later this month for victims of the state’s now defunct eugenics law to come forward and share their stories. The session is part of an effort to compensate those who were forcibly sterilized decades ago. The majority of victims were poor black women, and many were minors or the victims of rape or incest.

“The fewer black babies we have the better, that’s what some people said,” Professor Paul Lombardo told the BBC about the program. “They’re just going to end up on welfare.”

North Carolina is one of 32 states that passed laws that allowed the sterilization of people deemed “unfit to breed,” and ultimately took away the reproductive rights of more than 60,000 people nationwide. The programs targeted people deemed to be criminals, juvenile delinquents, the mentally ill, women considered to be “sexual deviants,” gay men, and people suffering from epilepsy. Those on welfare were targeted as well, especially African Americans after welfare became available to them in the 1960s, because they were seen as a drain on the system.

Operations were often done without the victim’s knowledge. Sterilization was also sometimes used as a condition for release from prison or a hospital, or as an ultimatum to cutting off benefits.

In 1968, 13-year-old Elaine Riddick was raped by a neighbor. After giving birth in a hospital, a social worker deemed her “feeble minded” and officials coerced her illiterate grandmother to sign an “X” on an authorization form to have her sterilized.

“My grandmother was afraid that if she didn’t sign the paper, they would cut off her benefits, like the canned food she got every week,” Riddick said. “So she signed, without understanding what sterilization or tubal ligation really meant.” Riddick, now 57, plans to testify at the session.

Eugenics enjoyed wide support among progressives like Woodrow Wilson and Alexander Graham Bell, and from members of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Medical Association. “It is better for all the world, instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind,” Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. wrote in the 1927 ruling that upheld the legality of compulsory sterilization. “Three generations of imbeciles are enough.” The 1927 ruling was never overturned. However, in 1942, the Supreme Court ruled against punitive sterilization.

Many states began abandoning their eugenics programs after World War II, fearing comparisons to Nazis’ eugenics practices in Germany. But North Carolina’s program actually grew stronger after the 1940s, bolstered by financial support from some of the state’s wealthiest residents. That is why the state is believed to have more surviving victims, almost 40 percent of the over 7,500 sterilized, even though it is behind Virginia and California as the states with the highest numbers of sterilizations. North Carolina was also unique in that it was the only state that used social workers to urge sterilization, and allowed people to petition the state to have someone sterilized. The program lasted until the late 1970s and the state’s eugenics law was removed from the books in 2003.

After collecting testimonies in Raleigh on June 22, the state task force will make a recommendation to the governor on how to compensate surviving victims. North Carolina congressman Larry Womble is pushing for monetary compensation. $20,000 has been suggested, a figure that could amount to up to $58 million in reparations for the estimated 2,900 surviving victims, although many victims are expected to not come forward out of shame. Reparations of any amount are sure to face stiff opposition, as the state is facing a $2.5 billion budget hole this year.

To learn more about North Carolina’s Eugenics program, visit the Winston-Salem Journal’s special report, “Against Their Will.”

by Asraa Mustufa for Colorlines

Living Paycheck to Paycheck: Spent

14 Jun

This website is a prime example of using good design to do good work. It attempts to simulate the real life decisions that people makes every day, when living paycheck to paycheck. They add little facts along the way to further inform the user about the trial and tribulations of people who live like this. Its interesting to see all this layed out, when, for the most part, one would never think about these situations but simply live them. I found it rather compelling because I have lived this very lifestyle but I am not sure how well it captures the attention of those that cant relate or how well it relates the experience to those that cant empathize with this situation and lifestyle. Either way, have a look and let me know what you think.

http://playspent.org/

The Girl=Boy Project x Crocker Farm Elementary

3 Jun

J E F F JEFFS JEFFS JEFFS. I have to show my appreciation to fellow Amherst alum, Mike Morris, Principle of Crocker Farm Elementary School in Amherst, MA, for showcasing the Girl=Boy project for his nearly 400 K-6th graders. This newest mural has been a dream come true and exactly what we were hoping when this project started. Now its time to scale this out, and spread this message, like wildfire.

Also, thanks to Kimberly Stender for her help in securing a location and Dominic Sondag for the graphic artistry

The Girl=Boy Project Launch…

12 May

We finally got a mural up! This was a process several years in the making. We started in the summer of 2009, with failed attempts at finding a location, a person signing off on a house he didnt own, you name it. It took the benevolence of a full loving group of girls on the verge of graduating from college, a noteworthy feat in and of itself, to get this mural up and get the message out.

If you dont know the Girl=Boy Project is about jumping into your life’s time machine and travel back to your childhood…

In the end, we put the mural on plywood, giving it the opportunity for multiple homes. Keep your eyes peeled around the pioneer valley for a G=B mural at your local elementary…


S/O to Renee and all the folks out in Amherst that supported me in getting this mural up. Also thanks to Haz for some work behind the lens. The goal is simple, to propagate this message and to let girls and boys believe they can be whatever they can dream.

a thank you…

10 May

I just want to thank the ppl that check in. I can’t really call myself a blogger because thats much too narrow and not really what I do. I just share thoughts and things that are interesting. I do not put up the #s that some blogs do but what does happen is people that I actually see and know in real life tell me they checked this out and found something interesting or inspiring or cool thats all it takes.

So hats off, bends at the waist, bows.

The Internet and Graduation

10 May

What do you do now that you have graduated?

This is the question I am asked the most often. My typical answer is nothing. Followed by a chuckle, then an explanation that I have been on the job hunt, applying to positions in Advertising, Branding, and Marketing while trying to embrace my entrepreneurial spirit on the side. In actuality, in the past few months, I have been applying on the side and trying to start projects while really just living life. The internet provides a tremendous opportunity to be able to create movements that can be propagated to a vast audience with very very little overhead. In essence, you can touch people, and all you have to do is click. I feel liberated because as much as I do nothing, I do quite a bit. I peruse the internet, through a laundry list of social media avenues, collecting ideas and inspiration from all the cool shit thats going on here and there. All of which effects the way I think, act, and live. I am truly connected. In my cover letters, I explain that “I don’t just like social media, I grew up in it and I live it daily.” This is pure truth. As I sit in a house in Atl, in the midst of what many would describe as a crazy trip, I am still able to do all the things that I do when I am home, the things that I feel are key to my daily feeling of accomplishment. Sometime thats just seeing something amazing on the internet, like the NYC Dining Car or blogging about it, or checking on my friends on fb. Being away from home has allowed me to feel how connected I am really am in SF. all the friends that hit me up on weekends to know where they should party or monday afternoon txts about where we are going to play some ball. I appreciate the power of knowledge and then sharing what you know.

Who are you?

I guess asking what I do with myself is asking in part who I am. I could answer that question with blogger. Maybe. Social activist. Maybe. Good party aficionado. :) . I am one to look at the world critically and set out to change it for the best, just a little bit. That could be giving Hamburgers to the Homeless or trying to convince someone to go out without being scared of the consequences. I have looked around at the things that I do, the things that other ppl do and tried to find what makes me happy and what doesnt. Then I fight, tooth and nail to do much much more of the first and much less of the second. I love a good drink, the company of other ppl, an intriguing woman, sport, fashion, a good laugh and a satisfying meal no matter what time it is, just to name a few. If I can inspire one person, then I can die happy. I am tha Giant, looking at the world from the Clouds, with a bird’s eye view, a comb and a magnifying glass.

Now step right up to the edge of the cliff, and ….

TAKE THE LEAP with me.

Hamburgers 4 the Homeless

4 May

Fortune threw this lil project, if you can even call it that, in my lap. Its simple as the name says, Hamburgers 4 the Homeless. I was having a BBQ at the crib, all the folks came thru, we were watching the playoffs, all that, and they left me with hella lbs of ground beef. Seeing as all I do with beef is handle it, never eat it, I figured I’d whip up some burgers and pass em out to the my more nomadic mission neighbors. Threw em some mustard and some buns and then took to the magic school bus to find some hungry folks out in the streets. Funny thing was, I ended up driving around for a koo hr looking for some homeless ppl. As I drove, I realized, they dont really sit in a collective spot that I could locate, esp after the new loitering laws. I decided to swing back by my house and fancy that, a fat group of willing takers. I then ran down to Franklin Park down the st and found some more folks. It was a funny cycle in my head because when I thought to make the burgers in the first place, I had an idea that homeless ppl would be everywhere and so easy to find. The search both reaffirmed and contradicted my hypothesis. On the one hand, they were everywhere, just everywhere on my block. The next step is to pass the baton. Someone needs to take charge to be the next one to pass out burgers and tell a story about it. Hit me @andre.g.gray@gmail.com if you are willing to be the next one. If not, imma track someone down and terry tate officer linebaker them till they get down with the H4H mvmt.


Jay-Z x Warren Buffet X Forbes

24 Apr

For sure worth the time. There are interesting overlaps between the two moguls. The key is knowing what you want to do at an early age. Like the book Outliers says, you need roughly 10k man hrs to be an expert, about 10yrs. and if you happen to know at 12 what you want to do then you might be there at 22. Ultimately, wherever you are in your 10, put the work in and you will see the results, with a little bit of luck here and there.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 579 other followers