Talk about a New York minute!
Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced this morning that embattled Schools Chancellor Cathie Black has resigned.
"I have nothing but respect and admiration for the work she has done," Bloomberg told reporters at a lower Manhattan press conference. He said he met with Black earlier this morning, and they "mutually agreed that it was in the city's best interest" that the former magazine executive step down because "the story had become about her" and not the city's 1.1 million public school students.
The mayor appointed Black to succeed Joel Klein in November, but her lack of experience and a series of public gaffes left her with a 17 percent approval rating. A number of Department of Education officials have also stepped down since her tenure officially began in January.
"It’s been clear for months now that, like the Titanic, this ship has been sinking with more than one million school children on board," said Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer.
Dennis Walcott, deputy mayor for education and community development, will succeed her.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Embattled NYC Schools Chancellor Cathie Black resigns
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Boy in Bushwick
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10:47 AM
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Labels: Cathie Black, New York City
Much to do about nothing?
Will the federal government shutdown?
President Obama, House Speaker John Boehner [R-Ohio] and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid [D-Nev.] could potentially reach an 11th hour agreement—they have 36 hours and 53 minutes to avoid what appears to the potentially inevitable government shutdown. What are the implications of the looming government shutdown? Would a shutdown actually prove a good thing? Would it solidify the Tea Party as a viable political movement? Would it impact average Americans in any way?
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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9:48 AM
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Labels: District of Columbia, Federal Government
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Phelps clan hijacks NOH8 campaign

Leave it to the Phelps clan to use Adam Bouska’s NOH8 campaign to further propagate their particular brand of religious-based lunacy.
The New Civil Rights Movement reported earlier this morning that the Topeka-based bigots posted a 25-minute video to their Web site late last night that mocked the successful anti-Proposition 8 campaign—I received an error message when I clicked on the YouTube link from Bushwick. Their Web site also appears to be down.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8-1 last month that the First Amendment protects the Phelps clan’s right to protest military funerals. The images of young Westboro Baptist Church members that accompany the so-called GodH8s video, however, simply speak for themselves.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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10:46 AM
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Labels: California, NoH8, Proposition 8, Westboro Baptist Church
The view from Jefferson Street
It's a cool, but sunny morning here in Bushwick.
Let's hope this weekend's weather allows for some early spring gardening and a day trip to Fire Island...
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Boy in Bushwick
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7:57 AM
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Labels: Brooklyn, Bushwick, New York City
Monday, April 4, 2011
Does POTUS' re-election announcement matter?
President Obama finally announced his re-election bid earlier this morning, but does it even matter?
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and even former House Speaker Newt Gingrich are among the potential Republican presidential candidates who responded to Obama’s announcement throughout the day. Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin have successfully used the media to advance their anti-Obama talking points and sound bites, but none of those who could become serious presidential candidates have broken out of the partisan gaggle. And this places Obama—who enjoys a 53 percent approval rating in a recent Associated Press poll—at a distinct advantage.
Progressives, independents and even Donald Trump should take note!
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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8:26 PM
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Labels: 2012, Barack Obama, White House
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Postcards from Raleigh
Spring (and my allergies) have definitely sprung in Raleigh. In between sniffles, sneezes and itchy eyes, however, the Carolina Ballet, the American Tobacco Historic District in Durham and Cup of Joe and Poole's Diner in Raleigh were on the itinerary.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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9:01 AM
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Labels: Carolina Ballet, North Carolina, Raleigh-Durham
Postcards from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
There were enough Nigerian masks and Picasso paintings at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond on Friday, April 1, to titillate this traveler's interests while en route to Raleigh, N.C., but the building and those that surround it works of art in their own right.
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Boy in Bushwick
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8:53 AM
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Labels: Nigeria, Pablo Picasso, Virginia, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Postcards from the Tidal Basin
It may not feel like spring along the Northeast Corridor today, but the cherry blossoms along the Tidal Basin in Washington, D.C., are a definite sign of the season for which the region's winter-weary residents continue to yearn.
Here are some snapshots from earlier this afternoon.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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5:45 PM
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Labels: Cherry Blossoms, District of Columbia, Spring, Washington
Friday, March 25, 2011
Is Uganda's anti-homosexuality bill dead?

It appears as though Uganda’s controversial anti-homosexuality bill is dead.
The New Civil Rights Movement; Blabbeando and other bloggers posted last night that Ugandan media indicated the measure, which would impose the death penalty upon anyone found guilty of repeated same-sex acts, will no longer remain on the table. The proposal sparked widespread outrage among LGBT activists inside the East African country and around the world. And gay activist David Kato’s murder in late January highlighted the plight of LGBT Ugandans.
This potential development comes only days after the United Nations' Human Rights Council voted to condemn anti-LGBT violence. President Obama also highlighted the issue in a Jan. 27 statement that urged Ugandan authorities to investigate Kato's murder.
"LGBT rights are not special rights; they are human rights," he stressed. "My administration will continue to strongly support human rights and assistance work on behalf of LGBT persons abroad. We do this because we recognize the threat faced by leaders like David Kato, and we share their commitment to advancing freedom, fairness, and equality for all."
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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7:53 AM
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Labels: David Kato, Gay, LGBT, President Obama, Uganda, United Nations
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
A spring snow falls upon Bushwick
Thunder sleet and snow is certainly not an everyday occurrence in New York City, but that is exactly what happened earlier tonight.
Here are three pictures and a clip I shot around 9 p.m. as a burst of heavy snow approached the area. And yes, that is a tag scrawled onto the camper van parked across the street from my building on Jefferson Street. Only in Bushwick...
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Boy in Bushwick
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9:26 PM
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Labels: Brooklyn, Bushwick, New York City, Sleet, Snow
The view from Jefferson Street
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Boy in Bushwick
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10:01 AM
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Labels: Brooklyn, Bushwick, New York City
Monday, March 21, 2011
Brooklyn Community Pride Center seeks to connect LGBT Brooklynites
By Caran Wakefield
Out of the five boroughs that comprise New York City, Brooklyn's LGBT population is arguably the largest and most diverse. But until recently, Brooklyn had no LGBT-oriented community center—making it the last district to provide this service for its residents. In 2008, Borough President Marty Markowitz and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn pledged $2 million in capital funding towards the creation of the Brooklyn Community Pride Center. Since it opened its doors in 2009, BCPC has been working relentlessly—not only to provide various supports and services to the community, but also to serve as a hub of information regarding related organizations in Brooklyn. By promoting the empowerment; development and general welfare of the community with emphasis on gender, racial and ethnic parity, the Center is committed to affecting positive change within the borough and the LGBT community at large.
BCPC has offered a wide range of programs, ranging from social to educational. In the past, BCPC has hosted legal clinics, panel discussions, and holiday parties for same-sex families. More recently launched services include coming out groups for men and women (with Identity House), after-school youth programs (at the Urban Assembly School for Law and Justice) and workshops for older adults.
Last April, BCPC hosted its first Founder's Ball fundraiser at Galapagos Art Space in Brooklyn. The money that was raised allowed the organization to expand much-needed services in the borough. This year, this event will feature live entertainment, h'ors d'oeuvres, an open bar, and a silent auction. The Founder's Ball also provides an opportunity to network with other individuals who share a commitment to the LGBT community. The money raised from the event will allow BCPC to further develop its programming, and obtain a permanent space where these programs can be hosted.
Caran Wakefield is with the Brooklyn Community Pride Center.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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12:13 PM
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Labels: Brooklyn, Brooklyn Community Pride Center, Gay, LGBT
The view from Jefferson Street
It's another rainy morning here in Bushwick. Forecasters have predicted it may snow in the five boroughs on Wednesday, but this news is almost certainly the last thing weather-weary New Yorkers want to hear.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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9:15 AM
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Labels: Brooklyn, Bushwick, New York City
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
The view from Jefferson Street
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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9:19 AM
1 comments
Labels: Brooklyn, Bushwick, New York City
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Queens man succumbs to injuries after alleged anti-gay attack
Not again!
An 18-year-old Queens man died at Jamaica Hospital yesterday after four teenagers beat him in what police said was an anti-gay attack.
The Daily News reported four teenagers—Alex Velez, Nolis Ogando, Christopher Lozada and Luis Tabales—attacked Anthony Collao with a metal pipe outside a Woodhaven birthday party on Satuday, March 12. A judge arraigned them on Monday, March 14, on manslaughter and assault charges. And the teenagers remain held on $100,000 to $200,000 bail.
“I want to express my deepest condolences to the family and friends of Anthony Collao,” said City Council Speaker Christine Quinn in a statement. “My Council colleagues and I are saddened and disturbed by this outrageous attack. We celebrate diversity in New York City, we do not tolerate bias attacks in any neighborhood in Queens or anywhere else in our great city.”
A number of anti-LGBT hate crimes have unfortunately garnered headlines over the last couple of years. These include José Sucuzhañay’s murder on a Bushwick street corner in Dec. 2008, the near-fatal beating of Jack Price outside a College Point bodega in Oct. 2009, gay Puerto Rican teenager Jorge Steven López Mercado's brutal death in Nov. 2009. Gang members also allegedly sodomized and beat two teenagers and a man in the Bronx in October because they reportedly thought one of their recruits was gay.
Collao's death once again proves New York City is not immune to anti-LGBT hate crimes.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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12:58 PM
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Labels: Anthony Collao, Gay, Hate Crimes, Jorge Steven López Mercado, José Sucuzhañay, LGBT, New York City, Queens
Monday, March 14, 2011
An indescribable tragedy
The scenes that continue to emerge from Japan are simply heartbreaking.
I was listening to Christiane Amanpour’s live report from outside Tokyo as I began to write this blog. I also streamed NHK English on my computer throughout the weekend, but mere adjectives and superlatives cannot possibly capture the scope of the tragedy that continues to unfold.
The destruction an earthquake can cause only became clear to me when I visited Chile’s Colchagua Valley in January. Our guide pointed out several vacant lots along the road into Santa Cruz that had been homes before an 8.8-magnitude earthquake struck Central Chile on Feb. 27, 2010. The earthquake, which generated a tsunami that inundated coastal cities and towns, largely destroyed the church that had stood along the south side of Santa Cruz’s Plaza de Armas. The hotel in which we stayed sustained serious damage during the earthquake, and it only reopened in September.
The Chilean government evacuated low-lying areas along the country’s coastline on Friday, March 11, but the tsunami caused only minor damage. Japan, however, was not nearly as fortunate. And the only thing that seems appropriate at this time is to keep the Japanese people in one’s thoughts.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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8:43 AM
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Labels: Chile, Earthquake, Japan, Pray for Japan, Terremoto, Tsunami
Saturday, March 12, 2011
The view from Jefferson Street
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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10:54 AM
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Labels: Brooklyn, Bushwick, New York City
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Brooklyn state senator surrenders to federal authorities
A case of another (potential closet case) hypocrite who falls hard?
New York State Sen. Carl Kruger [D-Brooklyn] surrendered to federal authorities earlier this morning for alleged corruption.
Kruger was one of the handful of Democrats—including disgraced former state Sen. Hiram Monserrate [D-Jackson Heights]—who voted against a bill in late 2009 that would have allowed gays and lesbians to marry in New York State. LGBT activists protested outside his Mill Basin home after the vote, and some even questioned Kruger’s sexual orientation.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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9:47 AM
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Labels: Carl Kruger, Gay, Marriage, New York State, New York State Senate
Monday, March 7, 2011
Mongolian LGBT activists honored in Manhattan
Bushwick is probably as far away from the Mongolian steppe as one can get, but Anaraa Nyamdorj of the Mongolian LGBT Centre had one of the best sound bites this cynical journalist has heard in a long time when she accepted the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission's Felipa de Souza Award at Landmark on the Park in Manhattan on Monday, March 7.
“Long ago, our warriors conquered half of the world,” she said. “Now our warriors will go and conquer hatred. We are fierce and determined.”
IGLHRC also honored journalist Jeff Sharlet for his reporting on the links between The Fellowship and Uganda’s so-called Anti-Homosexuality Bill that would impose the death penalty upon anyone found guilty of repeated same-sex sexual acts.
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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10:44 PM
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Labels: Gay, International Lesbian and Gay Human Rights Commission, Jeff Sharlet, LGBT, Mongolian LGBT Centre, New York City, Uganda
The view from Jefferson Street
Posted by
Boy in Bushwick
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9:09 AM
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Labels: Brooklyn, Bushwick, New York City
