Showing posts with label links. Show all posts
Showing posts with label links. Show all posts

Thursday, July 6, 2017

let's tweet together

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

how's my makeup: ahsek novel


                                 Ahsek Novel, Summer 2016 for Brown Sugar Promotions LLC

"I like to wear makeup especially eyeliner and mascara...you can use makeup to get the look you want but you also want to feel good about what you're wearing regardless of what others may think so wear it proudly...eventually you'll learn what looks good and what doesn't look good on you just like certain hairstyles and you'll develop a technique on how to best apply your makeup, no one can tell you that, please know that wearing makeup doesn't always mean looking like a clown as i've seen some really great before/after photos of natural, barely there makeup shots but healthy skin is always the winning factor, if the skin is healthy then your makeup will look even better and for some this means the less makeup you'll want to wear, it's science...the best thing about makeup in 2016 is that there are more shades to accommendate all of our skintones in regards to liquid and pressed foundation, i still mix but for the most part i'm a solid Caramel complexion with warm golds and yellow undertones just like honey or sweet tea...i don't like loud colors in general but i will try 'em just to see if i fancy how it looks on my face...as far as brands, i really enjoyed M.A.C for foundation and lip color even wanted to be a brand ambassador for them until i heard they tested on animals and i'm not cool with that so i switched up, L'oreal has a pretty good mascara and eyeliner which i currently use for most of my photoshoots...alot of times i've found that other women will try and "makeup shame" you, not guys but women (which is really not want i'm trying to catch...keeping it real grown with that) and my thing is anyone can wear makeup and good for you if you don't have to or if you choose not to...just like wearing weave, eyelashes, colored contacts, acrylic nails, spray tans and bronzers or whatever you do to look the way YOU want...not really sure why that would make someone else mad but there are so many things in this world that others have no control over...thank the heavens for maturity and common sense LOL" -Ahsek Novel, San Francisco

 shown: Milani.cosmetics prime shield oil free face primer, 03 lady-like sheer nail lacquer, 31 pink beige nail lacquer, Neutrogena nourishing long wear makeup spf20 cocoa 115, L'Oréal Parisl colour riche lip gloss 164 nude illusion, Revlon ultra HD matte lip color 600 devotion, Maybelline New York the blushed nude eye shadow and dream wonder power 90 caramel available at CVS Beauty Club
shown: L'Oréal Paris blackest black mascara extra volume 675, carbon black telescopic liner, LA palette nude 1 and 2 eye shadow available at CVS Beauty Club


Source: Instagram

Monday, May 11, 2015

lynching: the case of maile hampton


Black woman's 'lynching' charge: an unsettling tactic to punish activism?

Maile Hampton, the African American activist who was arrested for “lynching” after trying to pull a fellow protester away from police during a January rally against law enforcement brutality in Sacramento, has a large black butterfly tattooed across her neck.
Below it, scrawling script reads: “Have faith in me.”

It means: “Have faith that I am here to change the world,” said the 20-year-old with a youthful mix of passion and innocence. She got it about a year ago, around the same time she began to be politically active, she said.

That optimism will be tested when Hampton heads into court on 9 April, facing a charge that carries the possibility of four years in prison and a lifetime of being labeled a felon.
Video of the rally shows police tussling with a protester in the street while activists on the sidewalk yell: “Who do you protect? Who do you serve?”

A woman who appears to be Hampton enters the street, carrying a bullhorn. She grabs the handle of a sign held by the protester being detained by police and attempts to pull it away from an officer who is also holding it. She is then pushed away by other officers.
Hampton’s arrest – and sensational-sounding charge – made headlines. California’s lynching law was put on the books in 1933, to prevent mobs from forcibly taking people from police custody for vigilante justice.

But the statute has long been used against protesters as well, by police if not prosecutors. In 1999, anti-fur protesters in San Francisco who blocked access to a Neiman Marcus store in Union Square were charged under the lynching law. Prosecutors declined to take the case to court.

 
 
 
 
In 2011, police in Oakland used it against members of the Occupy movement, arresting at least two activists, Tiffany Tran and Alex Brown, on the count during a sweep of a public plaza. The charges were dropped.

In 2012, police in Los Angeles also used the lynching law against Occupy, when an activist named Sergio Ballesteros was accused of intervening in an arrest during an Art Walk – according to published reports, the charge was later dropped.

Last year, in the conservative Southern California enclave of Murrieta, it was used on at least one activist, Janet Mathieson, who was arrested while protesting in support of migrant detainees. She is scheduled for sentencing on 10 April, in a plea bargain that involves dropping the felony charge and pleading guilty to a misdemeanor charge of obstructing or resisting, according to Riverside County district attorney spokesman John Hall.

Shortly after Hampton’s arrest, Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson asked state legislators to take the term out of the penal code, saying via Twitter on 25 February that the “word ‘lynching’ has a long and painful history in our nation. It’s time to remove its use in CA Law”.

Perhaps that is why the use of the lynching law against a black woman struck many as notable. But some activists say the felony count itself is indicative of a change in attitude of police in the California state capital.

“I have no doubt whatsoever that the Sacramento police department’s response has changed as the police brutality protests began late last year,” said Cres Vellucci of the Sacramento chapter of the National Lawyers Guild (NLG), an organization whose members attend rallies as independent observers, to monitor police response.

“It’s very apparent, at least to NLG observers like me, that officers want the protests to stop, and if people have to be abused, or arrested or otherwise mistreated, that will happen.”

‘Targeted by police’

Hampton, sitting in her lawyer’s office in mid-March with her half-brother, Jamier Sale, for an exclusive interview with the Guardian, said she believed she and Sale were being targeted by police because they were “very active in the Black Lives Matter movement”.

Her arrest took place during a counter-protest that was marching towards to a pro-law enforcement rally.

“It’s clear [law enforcement] are trying to target two of the most powerful Answer activists,” she said, referring to the Act Now To Stop War and Racism Coalition, a group that has grown in prominence nationally as an organizing body for the Black Lives Matter movement and other issues.
“Based on how law enforcement has interacted with us and tried to get information, we know that they know that we are very intersectional in our activism and we are two young educated people of color,” said Hampton, who also has joined rallies for pro-Palestine causes, raising the minimum wage (she works a low-wage job as a car detailer), organizing fast food workers and a recent event for Cesar Chavez day, among others.

“And they see that as a threat,” added Sale, who has a habit of finishing his sister’s thoughts.
Sale recently concluded his own run-in with the law, after being cited for jaywalking at a Black Lives Matter protest in November. That case made it to court in March, resulting in a $240 fine and a friend starting the hashtag #leavethisfamilyalone in support of Hampton and Sale.

Sacramento police spokesperson Traci Trapani said she “didn’t think” lynching was a common charge in a city where rallies happen on an almost weekly basis, but she was unable to provide numbers. She added that most protests were a “peaceful process” in which officers were “accommodating” of protesters.

While video of the 18 January protest that led to Hampton’s arrest makes it clear that she did have an individual interaction with law enforcement officers, there are questions about how the resulting arrest and charges are moving through the courts.

“Certainly there did not appear to be any conduct that rose to a felony level,” said Hampton’s pro bono lawyer, Linda Parisi, who has advised her client not to speak about the events surrounding the arrest itself. “It makes you say: ‘Really, you’ve charged this young woman with a felony charge of lynching? Is that right? Is that the message we want to send?’”

Other arrests but different outcomes

Parisi said two other protesters were arrested for lynching that day, with a different outcome from Hampton’s.

Emily Cinder, a 19-year-old Caucasian woman, and her fiancé, Strong Walls, a 21-year-old mixed-race man who says he was booked into jail as Caucasian, faced the same charge.

Video shows multiple officers arresting Walls in the street while protesters, including Hampton, shout from the sidewalk, where police had ordered them to stay. Other video later shows Hampton in the street with officers.

Walls said he was in jail for three days – a claim confirmed by his lawyer – and was eventually released, along with Cinder, on his own recognizance. The Sacramento district attorney has not filed charges against either, although it has the ability to do so until April 2016, according to spokeswoman Shelly Orio.

Orio declined to comment specifically on any of the three activists, saying the DA did not comment on ongoing cases. She was also unable to give any statistics on the number of people prosecuted for lynching in Sacramento.

Walls said he had “no idea” why he and Cinder were released while Hampton’s charges remained.
The police did not detain Hampton and she said no officer recorded her personal information. She did not know a warrant had been issued for over a month, until officers came to her mother’s house to arrest her.

“The cops said to me you’re not charged with anything, the judge just wants to talk you,” she said. But she was booked into jail on multiple charges, including the felony count of lynching.
 
 
“It seemed very hypocritical and outrageous that … four uniformed white men came into my home, an African American woman, took me out of my home, put me in jail for standing up for black people – on lynching,” said Hampton, who has developed a public presence not just at rallies, but also through speaking at city council meetings and other venues.

“Under the circumstances of that day, it was apparent to me it was an intimidation tactic.”

An activist is born

Hampton attended her first protest in the summer of 2014 – a pro-Palestine event where she quickly found herself on the bullhorn, which is now a common practice for her at rallies, where she often leads chants. But it wasn’t until her brother went to Ferguson, Missouri that fall, after the Michael Brown verdict and as part of an Answer coalition, that she began to be active in the Black Lives Matter movement.

“A lot of the passion I have is also fear for my loved ones and for my own life and for people around me,” she said. “When [Sale] was in Ferguson, one of the members of Answer sent out like an alert, like: ‘Our comrades in Ferguson are being attacked by the police right now.’ So seeing that, not only is he a comrade but he’s my brother.

“You know, it’s like he could have been Mike Brown. So that fear really motivated me to really get the most involved that I could be.”

Parisi said she was “optimistic that we will arrive at a resolution” to Hampton’s case that involves removing the felony charge, though no negotiations with the district attorney had yet taken place, she added.

Hampton remains committed to her activism. When she was released from jail, she came out to find more than two dozen supporters waiting to greet her.

“That feeling was – it was really unexplainable,” she said. “It really just brought me to tears. Seeing that really made being an activist and being an organizer ... it all makes sense of why I am out here doing what I do.”
 
 
Source: The Guardian                
 
 
UPDATE: 5/9/15 While in attendance at the Mother's Day Forum via W.O.R.D (San Francisco), where Maile was honored for her courgae and activism, she also spoke about her case and how the charges were recently dropped!!!                                                                                                         

Monday, February 2, 2015

love your heart: february is american heart month!!!






Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the U.S., for both men and women. Having a stroke isn't far behind. And each year, about 720,000 Americans will have a heart attack.

For the most part, cardiovascular disease - which includes heart disease and stroke - is liked to risk factors that are easy to identify. By knowing your risks and changing behaviors, it's most often preventable.

This month Personalabs is all about protecting our hearts in honor of American Heart Month. Save 15% off heart disease blood tests with promo code HEAR15 and get the peace of mind of knowing your heart is healthy, and if it isn't then you can make lifestyle changes to reduce your risks, before it is too late...love your heart!!!

Sunday, September 7, 2014

call to action: free marissa alexander




Green Afro Honey along with SisterHood, Inc mobilizes supporters through our grassroots efforts to impact various causes as volunteering (in-person and remotely) with organizations locally, nationally and internationally...

Here is our current list of action calls for 2014:

Free Marissa Alexander (organized by W.O.R.D)

Please see FREE MARISSA NOW and JUSTICE FOR MARISSA to support and make secure donations for Marissa Alexander and to help cover her legal expenses.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

equality, diversity and justice: a word for women's equality day 2014




Reflecting back when Easy Bake Ovens, My Little Pony and Barbie were what girls were made of
Occupations like nurses, maids and secretaries were the only alternatives for being housewives and mothers and then feminism gave birth to votes and working women with 9 to 5 jobs just like the boys in blue collar suits…

Women’s Equality Day is not about “being a woman” it’s about equality, diversity and [social] justice. 8 years, 4 months and 3 days before I was born, congress member Bella Abzug dubbed the date Women’s Equality Day to commemorate the 1920 passage of the 19th amendment to the U.S. constitution granting women the right to vote. That was on August 26th 1971. It has been 43 years of celebrating equality and today in 2014 we continue to appreciate and cultivate progress for this struggle for women’s rights dating back to 1848.

Today as we’re gathered here in San Francisco basking in unity and peace, look around and witness our equality. The white and black, red and brown, yellow, tan and orange. A melting pot of homemade multicultural-ness and diversity. Today, we share this anniversary with our sisters and brothers in spirit. Regardless of age, sexual orientation, gender identification, wealth, health, education, political affiliation or choice of occupation, today at this very moment, we are simply equal.

As humans but specifically as women, we deserve to be seen and heard for our contributions to society, our global community. I speak now of our sister Marissa Alexander in Florida. Where is her equality? Where is her justice? Marissa is a working mother who fired a warning shot at the ceiling to protect herself from being brutally attacked by her ex domestic partner. As a result Marissa was jailed and is facing a 60 year prison sentence per Florida State law. The Stand Your Ground Law did not work in her favor as it did George Zimmerman who shot and killed 17 year old Trayvon Martin.

I’m outraged by this and I don’t even know Marissa personally however her case and the specific details of her charges just serves as a reminder that this struggle for equality especially within our judicial system is far from over…for any of us. If you are not familiar with the Marissa Alexander’s case, I urge you to look it up, logon to defendwomensrights.org and join the fight for justice. Thank you!



“Equality, Diversity & Justice: A Word for Women’s Equality Day” written
by Kesha Johnson-Clark © 2014
Kesha is a W.O.R.D organizer with the San Francisco, California chapter

Saturday, July 19, 2014

open call for models




Green Afro Honey a Brown Sugar Promotions LLC company is seeking female models age 18 and older (and "Plus Size" is preferred) to feature via Green Afro Honey's website http://greenafrohoney.blogspot.com and related Social Media for Hair, Make-Up, Women's Fashion including lingerie, swim suit and various spotlight posts to promote diversity among women of color.

Models DO NOT need previous experience, just a positive attitude and body image with self confidence. Models also have to be comfortable with showing themselves with and without make-up, natural hair to show process before/after chemical processing as well as weaves, wigs and braids along with face profile and full body shots. NO NUDES OR PORNOGRAPHIC ALLOWED. All pics will remain the property of the individual models who have the right to remove their individual pics with written notice to Brown Sugar Promotions LLC.

Green Afro Honey and Brown Sugar Promotions LLC reserve the right to remove any pics with or without notice at anytime for any reason. Please note that participation is "at will" and does not promise any type of employment. Compensation varies upon theme and seasonal stock and will be detailed separately upon submission. Brown Sugar Promotions LLC is a limited liability company. If still interested, please email greenafrohoney@gmail.com

IMPORTANT: http://brownsugarpromotionsllc.mynetworksolutions.com



Source: Project Eve