The 28th Amendment - Limiting Militant Infringement of Civilian Rights Bill

THE 28TH Amendment.jpg

PROPOSAL FRAMEWORK 

United States Constitutional Amendment 28 - Limited Militant-State

Militant Infringement of Civilian Rights Bill

Dismantle and reform all current militant and policing practices/policies within the United States of America, perpetuated by the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches, and fortified by law enforcement departments and agencies, which infringement upon basic rights of growth, prosperity, and life, and are based on discrimination of ethnicity, wealth, gender, sex, or sexuality, physical or mental exceptionality, and citizenship. Enact new comprehensive laws that are uniformly practiced across all villages, cities, counties, and states, with no exceptions, which does not infringe upon states’ 10th Amendment Reserved Powers, but assures rights originally granted under the United States Constitution. New universal laws/policies to include without limitation:

 ● Dismantle all current militant policing practices/policies within the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and other departments, reforming all agencies within these departments, especially but not limited to the Federal Protective Service (FPS). Enact new comprehensive laws/policies uniformly practiced across all villages, cities, counties, and states, including but not limited to:

1. Rewrite and reform current Use of Force Continuum Models, including but not limited to: De-escalation Stage, and ESCALATED Situations Stage. Reforms to be voted on.

2. Ban of excessive force and lethal force practices, including but not limited to: ban of No-knock entry, ban shooting with traditional guns, ban use of assault weapons, ban Shoot-to-kill practice, ban pepper spray, ban strangulation/chokeholds, ban tear gas, rubber bullets and tanks during civil protests, ban of any other weapons of opportunity (reforming Use of Force Continuum Models), and ban lethal force for security and protection of items, property, resources, and capital (cash or liquid assets).

3. De-escalation practices BEFORE ANY form of physical interaction (reform to be the first stage in Use of Force Continuum Model).

4. Force ONLY to be enacted in ESCALATED Situations (ESCALATED Situations practices to be tiered and voted on, reforming Use of Force Continuum Models).

5. Exhaust all prerequisite options available within the De-escalation Stage BEFORE using ESCALATED Situations Stage within reformed Use of Force Continuum Model.

6. ESCALATED Situations Stage in reformed Use Of Force Continuum Model to allow tasers and rubber bullets ONLY, and ONLY as last resorts due to lethality, tiering tasers use BEFORE rubber bullets.

7. Require warning BEFORE use of EACH stage/tier involving verbal force and physical force. 

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Supporting the local has never been more important than now. As an independently owned Magazine, Media and Design firm, we have always searched for ways we can help navigate and change the narrative of our diverse community. Where structures of propaganda and content overload often distract us from the REAL, we want to make sure that services, stories, and social stimulation that we are linked to speak to our community, instead of shadowing it. Please hit us up with your thoughts, email us with your request for creative media service, drop a comment, join the team, or pitch an idea for collaboration.

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/CW

The Love Project III: Closure - Ortizus

Here at CopyWrite, we are always working behind the scenes. This week we decided to highlight one of our very own, Imani! While mainly known by her social media tag @ortizus, she is what can again be described as the jack of all trades. This week Imani released her final piece of her trilogy mini-documentary, The Love Project. In her final piece, she focuses on what closure means to Gen Z (people born between now and 1994) but the conversation is open to everyone.

“In the final part of my love trilogy, we tackle the concept of "closure." What is closure? What does it mean? How we look at things like this is important because what we may feel is a common conception is not defined by one singular definition. Are we bad people for understanding healing differently? Or do we all heal the same?

Sidenote: What makes these responses so unique is that no one was briefed what the project was about nor the questions prior to the interview. These are all honest and unbiased answers--off the dome. Thinking on your feet is a talent and I only let the participants have less than 20ish seconds before I asked them to start speaking. I wanted real authentic answers and here we have it.

Thank you all for your support and please watch this with open hearts and open minds.

You are always welcome to leave comments or thoughts below. Disagree? Have a different viewpoint? Feel moved? Let us know below or join the conversation on Twitter using the hashtag #Theloveproject!”

There are three parts to this series: Love, Complications and Closure. All video can be found on her youtube: ortizus

So join the conversation and let’s discuss your thoughts on this project!

/CW

C-Space: the new spot for Black & Brown Creatives (Press Interview w/ CopyWrite Magazine)

THE FUTURE IS YOUNG, BLACK, BROWN, AND LIT (& now it is creative too.)

Say it one more time for the people in the back!

LIT [MKE] (or Leaders Igniting Transformation) has moved to Bronzeville neighborhood on Milwaukee’s East Side. The organization itself “work[s] to build homegrown leadership, expand access and opportunity, and promote an equitable society by engaging and organizing young people” (@lit_mke). Of course, that is #LIT in every sense of the urban dictionary word, but it is their new program, C-Space that has us ramped up for the movement. CopyWrite sat down with Corey Fells and Nailah Johnson from LIT’s Cultural Organizing Department to get the heads up on what they have instore for MKE and why they are in need of Black and Brown creatives ( Artist, Photographers, Videographers, Musicians, lyricist, Writers, Poets, etc.) to link up.

C-Space is a co-creative space for Black and Brown creatives to get the support they need, build community and expand their networks through art. 

So let’s just get it out of the way now. The plight of Black and Brown people is documented from the eyes of the oppressor and thus that has created generational disenfranchisement. Though there are many non-Black/Brown advocates for change and push for equality in all sectors of society, they still have many inherited advantages that Black and Brown people don’t possess. Because of this, C-Space is a safe and productive space, strictly for culturally BLACK and BROWN creatives. 

(We all thank you in advance for respecting that boundary).

Nailah: “We are developing creatives as leaders and arts activist. That’s basically C-Space”.

As “Cultural Organizers” it's both Corey and Nailah’s job to get creatives to want to be apart of C-Space, make their time there prolific, help guide (and partially sustain) a creative to use their talent as a political, activating, informing, and culturally re-defining form. This will be done through monthly meetings, workshops, and fellowship/residency opportunities that include stipends (Yes that's money!), networking, partnerships, real-world experience and testimonials from Black and Brown creatives that have had success in their fields. Once again I say “Its #Lit”.

Corey: “I have a question for you [as a creative] what would you have needed in 2013 when you were just starting out?”

CW: “Money.” We all chuckled in agreement, but it was that plus many other things that as a young creative of color I had to struggle through. Without resources or guidance I had to learn, and still am learning how to navigate the system. Something many of our counterparts know nothing about. 

As I listed off my grievances, including lack of access to other Black and Brown professionals, lack of studio/space and resources, Corey and Nailah listened intently to what I had to say. At certain points they would stop me and ask more questions as if they were researching perspectives on creative needs and how C-Space can serve them better. 

With or without a degree a creative should be able to enter the market and be taken seriously for their craft. Black and Brown art forms should not have to present themselves as historical monuments, or mappings of the Black and Brown diaspora to be relevant and C-Space wants to help change that narrative by inviting YOU to their space.

Corey: The C in C-Space stands for a lot. What we are trying to do is expand upon all of that. . . We are partnered up with many other states but we have yet to see something like this in Wisconsin. Because of that, this is something that really could help creatives in our community.”

Their aim is for those creatives, who are ages 14-35 (the young), who have work that has a message, or want to develop work that has a message, that are willing to be apart of the movement. Even though LIT has a very political presence, Corey & Nailah suggest that C-Space is beyond traditional politics but opens the conversation of Black and Brown existence in itself being political and that those interpretations of existence are part of building community and changing the narrative that we don't get enough of. So don’t be scared if protesting and polling is not your thing, there are other ways in which your art can have a voice.

Through our conversation we discussed the idea of those who become a part of their fellowship program to be helped with the production of resumes and portfolios in order to actually have tangible items that will help them transition into creative carriers and actually have the experience to back them up.

Corey: “How do we cultivate these people’s talents and help them figure out how to monetize it and be able to be a person that has something tangible that can be brought to a company or a carrier that can give them some type of insight? See for me [as a self-taught photographer] I wasn't able to track all that.”

So the game plan is to level up the next era of creatives out of MKE, so they don't have the same issues as those who came before them, like Corey. We will call this intergenerational “communal” mobility.

Nailah: “So as a cultural organizer my job is to intersect art and activism. . . One of the things that I have noticed about Milwaukee is that it has a lot of activists and not organizers. Like people who know how to use that anger, information, and knowledge to really impact communities and make a change. So affecting legislation, and things like that. So a lot of my job is making sure artists understand and know how important their art is; how important culture is and not to sacrifice that.”

Corey: “I’m a photographer and videographer, so I’m coming from that standpoint. I have always wanted photographers to know that they can do more than event photos, profile photos, wedding photos, or whatever. They are not just photographers, they are a part of a marketing tactic and if they use it in the correct way, they can use that tactic to [their own advantage]. They don’t have to take pictures of celebrities or the most poppin person in the city to be relevant. . . I want photographers and filmmakers to be empowered because of that. . . Anything they can't be inspired by they shouldn’t have to do.”

As C-Space representatives, their intentions to help other creatives in our community is more than a job. It’s coming from a very personal place and putting what always seems to be just a conversation into action is far overdue.

“Freelancers are the most disrespected people.”

Say it two times for the people in the back and down the street!

As abstract as C-Space may seem it is in its tangibility that we find its most vital component. C-Space is meant to establish Black and Brown spaces and protecting those spaces.

They are currently looking for people to come and be apart of C-Space which is a monthly meet up. The first two of the year will be January 25th and February 22nd from 2:00-5:00pm at the LIT (2201 N. Martin Luther King Dr. Milwaukee, WI 53212). From that group of individuals, they are hoping to find creatives from all different kinds of backgrounds and talents to join the cohort. From the cohort, with a certain level of commitment, some creatives will receive a fellowship, stipends and all the other assistance we wish we had when we were finding our way.

Corey: “Every time they come they will learn something more.”

And “more” is what we need if we are going to make the change to put creatives in the place they belong in our society; right at the top. 

So check out C-Space, if you are a young creative looking for a way to succeed. The world is waiting. 

/Lexi for CW