Thursday, June 28, 2018

Affirm the People in Your Life


I have seen this excellent exercise put into practice at work, family reunions, and dinner parties. It never fails to bring a group of people closer, and it brings out the best in anyone.
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It is especially effective among a group of fractious folk, and it calms roiling waters easily. Time your moment well; never at the beginning of a get-together. Whenever there is a lull would be best. Call everyone to attention and say you want to acknowledge your appreciation for the group.

Do so with simple statements.

Examples:
“What I appreciate about Julian is his humility; he is brilliant but never showy.”

“What I appreciate about Leslie is her kindness and generosity. She helped me out when I was in a bad way. I will always be grateful to her for that.”


Offer a positive appreciation for each person and encourage others to do the same. Talk about a “turnaround”—this can turn stormy skies blue in five minutes flat.


Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Rewire Your Brain To Be More Positive

There is no doubt in anyone's mind that there is a lot of  negativity in the world right now. All the more reason to develop your ability to reframe. 
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Neuropsychiatrist David Amen, MD, posits that thoughts carry physical properties and that the properties of negative thoughts can be detrimental to your leading a healthy, happy life. To overturn these negative effects, he prescribes thinking more positively, maintaining that by doing so, you can change the way your brain works and in turn change your life for the better

Monday, June 25, 2018

Books Through Bars Is a Good in the World: Help People in Jail Read


Two plus one equals…www.BooksThroughBars.org
Books Through Bars began in 1990  with two people and one letter:
Todd was an employee at New Society Publishers (a small press then located in Philadelphia). He was given a letter that a prisoner had sent to NSP, asking for free copies of overstock or damaged books. He responded to that letter writer with a few free books. Then a few more requests came in. Todd got into the habit of setting aside damaged books, overruns, and unsold copies to send to those who wrote. After he began to get dozens of requests a week, Todd got some friends and coworkers to help, and advertised the program in some publications for prisoners. Word spread, donated books began to come in, and the fledgling group  secured room in the A-Space, a collective meeting place and community center in West Philadelphia. From there, the project grew into…
…thousands.
Over two decades later, Books Through Bars is thousands of people united in one mission:
·        Thousands of incarcerated people who write to us to ask for books (and share their stories, give suggestions, and even participate in the development our programs)
·        Hundreds of volunteers who read the letters, choose books, send out packages, and keep Books Through Bars running as an organization
·        Hundreds of people who donate the books, materials and money needed to make it all happen.
Today, Books Through Bars is an all-volunteer 501c3 nonprofit, still headquartered in the A-Space in West Philadelphia. It is formally organized as a collective, which means that a core group of members make decisions about the organization and its activities on a consensus-driven, egalitarian basis. In addition to the collective, Books Through Bars accomplishes its mission through the hard work and dedication of our volunteers and donors.


Friday, June 22, 2018

Fastest Way You Can Help Migrant Children and Families: Post Their Bail


How much does freedom cost? For immigrants detained in the U.S. it can be as low as $1,500 or as high as $8000 but give what you can or gather with other and give:
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The public backlash to a new policy from the Trump administration that, in effect, separates immigrant parents from their children at the border has been growing, with criticism from advocates and politicians, including the four living former first ladies, who separately condemned it as “cruel” and “immoral.”
President Donald Trump has said his administration will continue to “arrest people coming into our country illegally” and has called on Democrats to work with Republicans to pass immigration legislation — including funding for the $70 billion border wall he proposed — to put an end to the administration’s “zero-tolerance” policy of separating families. On Tuesday, he said that Democrats want“illegal immigrants to infest the country.”
Financial support for immigrant families affected by the policy began to pour in over the past 48 hours. One Bay Area couple created a fund-raising page on Facebook FB, +0.12%   for Raices, a nonprofit organization providing low-cost legal defense services to immigrant families in Texas, and raised more than $15 million after setting a goal to raise just $1,500. They have since increased it to $15 million.
“The challenge of how to humanely house and process undocumented immigrants, particularly unaccompanied children and children separated from their parents, is not new,” said Michael Rosen, president of Philadelphia-based charity consulting firm ML Innovations, Inc. “Many charity options exist for people who want to help undocumented immigrant children.”
He suggested finding charities with a proven track record rather than new organizations, determining what services you want to help provide, researching the charities before donating, and donating by mail, over the phone, or through a secure donation site to ensure security. Sites such as Charity Navigator and Charity Watch help donors vet charities.
Immigration advocates have noted one sure-fire way to help people separated from their children: Posting their bail. This is one of the fastest ways to reunite immigrants with their family, said Pilar Weiss, project director at the National Bail Fund Network said.
Donating to community bond funds can immediately “lead to freedom,” she said. Community bond funds are charities, like Raices, that use funds to post bail and provide legal defense for detained people.
Bail can cost anywhere from $1,500 to $80,500
When undocumented immigrants are detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), they are held in detention until they go to trial where the court will decide whether they can stay in the country.
In some cases, the immigration judge will let them go while they await trial if they first pay a bail bond. Bail is set at a legal minimum of $1,500, but can be much higher. The bond is meant as a deposit to ensure the accused will report to their trial. If they attend all of their court appointments, they can get the money back.
But many people have trouble coming up with the funds. The average bail bond issued by the San Francisco immigration courts in 2014 was $3,411 and the average cost of bond in immigration courts nationally is $6,500. Bond amounts could be as high as $80,500 on Central District of California immigration bonds, according to a 2015 study by USC law professor Emily Ryo.
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In theory, bonds are set higher for some immigrants because they are deemed more of a “flight risk,” or likely to skip their court date, said Trevor Houser, director of the Immigrant Family Defense Fund, a nonprofit that pays bonds for detained immigrants.
An immigrant new to the U.S. may have a higher bond than one who has lived there for many years with a family and is less likely to leave, he added. However, in practice there are huge discrepancies in bond amounts across the country largely based on what individual judges decide, Houser said.
By law, immigration bail is set at a minimum of $1,500. That’s higher than traditional criminal court bail, which can be as low as $50. A recent comparison of bail amounts in New York City found that it’s 50% more expensive to get out of immigration detention than regular jail.
Immigrants who are unable to make bail can spend days, months, or even years in detention awaiting their court date. There is no federal limit to how long an immigrant can be detained without trial. In criminal court, the defendant is entitled to a trial between 30 and 60 days of being in custody, according to the law, but the date can be delayed months or even years while they sit in jail without being convicted.
Under the Trump administration, very few immigrants are being offered bail initially, Houser said. Nonprofits that provide free or low-cost legal defense to undocumented immigrants are working to get their clients court dates where defense attorneys can request that bond be set. Those same groups then pay the bond so the defendant can spend the time awaiting trial out of jail with their family.
In one recent case, a client of the Immigrant Family Defense Fund spent the last year and a half in detention after he was denied bond, House said. The immigrant came to the U.S. with his 9-year-old son to flee violence in Guatemala targeting them for their indigenous identities. By the time he is released from jail in the coming weeks, his son will be 10.
Being free on bond also helps immigrants in court
A number of community bond funds have been set up across the country to help those detained by ICE. Paying bail can make a huge difference in the trajectory of a case: Immigrants who are bonded out are eight times more likely to win their cases than unrepresented detainees, according to the Immigrant Family Defense Fund.
“In addition to the reduced financial and mental-health strain on the family, getting released on bond substantially increases the odds of winning relief in your immigration case because you can meet freely and regularly with your attorney and have greater ability to prepare the documentation you need,” Houser said.
The United States has a uniquely expensive bail system compared to other developed countries, according to an analysis from Pricenomics.
The traditional criminal courts’ bail system, which is different but parallel to the immigration detention bond system, has been recently criticized by high-profile advocates. Musician and singer Jay-Z released a documentary in 2017 about Kalief Browder, a New York boy who jailed in 2010 at the age of 16 after being charged with stealing a backpack.
Unable to pay the $3,000 in bail, Browder remained in jail on Rikers Island for three years, including two years in solitary confinement. He maintained his innocence and the charges were dismissed in 2013. But he took his own life in 2015 after his release, a death his parents blame on his treatment in jail.
In California , the state Supreme Court is weighing a proposal that would allow a judge to consider a defendant’s ability to pay when setting bail amounts.
Advocates say the ongoing immigration issue is highlighting the flaws of the cash-bail system in the U.S. “The sheer number of people who are incarcerated in this country has reached crisis levels,” Weiss said. “But with immigrant detention and incarceration due to ICE, there is a new awareness growing around that as well.”
In addition to paying the bail for detained immigrants, some organizations are also able to negotiate the cost of bail down or pay for several bail funds at once. The Eastern Iowa Community Bond Project paid a total of $35,000 to release 20 of the 32 men arrested in a recent raid.
National organizations funding bail across the U.S.
Local organizations funding bail for immigrants
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Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Legal Help for Immigrant Children: What You Can Do To Help

I wasn’t worried because I had my AI JUSTICE attorney and God."
                                 CNN’s “Latino in America"

 The Children’s Legal Program was launched in 1999 following the case of “Baby Margaret,” who was abandoned after she was smuggled into the United States.  Learn how to help here: https://www.immigrantjustice.org/how-help

In 2005, AI Justice collaborated with community partners to create the Immigrant Children’s Legal and Service Partnership (ICLASP). This program was recognized by the Office of Refugee Resettlement as a “model program for care providers throughout the country.”  Today, we remain the lead agency in this unique holistic partnership.

AI Justice has served thousands of unaccompanied children over the years, whether they are in foster care, in local shelters overseen by the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), or in the community living with a parent or guardian. Children undertake the perilous journey to the U.S. alone as a last resort because they lack protection in their home country. Once here, they encounter a system that is complex, bewildering and frightening. They need attorneys to navigate the convoluted worlds of State Juvenile and Family Courts, Immigration Courts and the Asylum Office. AI Justice has influenced national policies and laws affecting immigrant children and is widely recognized as an expert in immigrant children’s issues.
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We are the only non-profit organization providing comprehensive free legal services to children in immigration shelters in South Florida.  The numbers of unaccompanied children entering the country has increased dramatically over the years.  They are fleeing war, desperate poverty, oppression, abuse, and persecution.  Many have been orphaned, abandoned, or trafficked into the U.S.
9 out of 10 children without attorneys are ordered deported. Those with attorneys are 5 times more likely to be granted protection. For many, this is a matter of life and death.  

AI Justice has influenced national policies and laws affecting immigrant children and is widely recognized as an expert in immigrant children’s issues. Staff helped shape new laws for expanding legal protections of unaccompanied immigrant children, incorporated into the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008.  We continue to advocate nationally for unaccompanied children to have the right to government provided counsel in immigration proceedings.  

“I didn’t think I had any hope to stay in the United States after I was returned from New York to the shelter.  But AI Justice kept fighting for me;  they never gave up.  Now I can go live with a family and one day become a citizen.  God loves you guys.  I love you, too.”

Sunday, June 17, 2018

Dad’s Big Day: A Brief History of Father's Day

On July 19, 1910, the governor of the U.S. state of Washington proclaimed the nation’s first Father’s Day. However, it was not until 1972, 58 years after President Woodrow Wilson made Mother’s Day official, that the day became a nationwide holiday in the United States. Celebrate your father today by making him feel special and loved with a homemade gift or meal or even the nicest gift of all, your time!
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For your friends who may have lost their father, check in with them as this day will be difficult and there are many “rad dads” who are elders with wonderful stories to tell at senior centers.  Head to your local café and grab some yummy pastries, coffee and tea and honor the elders in your community

Saturday, June 16, 2018

Ways to Help Migrant Children in Today's Immigration Crisis

Have you considered volunteering to serve as a Child Advocate in Chicago, Houston, San Antonio, Harlingen, Phoenix, Los Angeles, New York, or Washington, D.C. 
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Who are Child Advocates?

A Child Advocate is an adult who volunteers to spend time with and advocate on behalf of an individual unaccompanied immigrant child while he or she is subject to deportation proceedings. We welcome volunteers from all cultures, professions, races, ethnicities and social backgrounds. Advocates must be at least 21 years old. We have a particular need for bilingual volunteers who speak Spanish. In Chicago, we always need volunteers who speak Mandarin, Hindi, Punjabi, Gujarati, Bengali, Romanian and other languages.

How can I become a Child Advocate?
Volunteering as a Young Center Child Advocate means being a reliable, trustworthy, and professional presence for children who are in federal custody, and accordingly, we have a thorough clearance and training process. We get to know prospective volunteers through an initial screening interview, an application Make a difference in the life of an unaccompanied immigrant child by and reference check, and at the required two-day training.
In order to be eligible to enter the detention centers, volunteers must also submit to an FBI background check, a child abuse and neglect (CAN) background check, and a medical screening for tuberculosis.
Once assigned to an individual child, each Child Advocate receives continuing training, support, and supervision from the Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights.
What do Child Advocates commit to do?
  • Visit with the child each week.
  • Help the child think through options and decisions.
  • Accompany the child to court hearings and other important meetings and interviews.
  • Conduct research on the child’s situation in his or her home country.
  • Develop best interest recommendations with Young Center staff.
  • Maintain communication with the Young Center staff.
  • Advocate for the best interest of the child alongside Young Center staff.