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Welcome to MidwestCon 2023.
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Rob Richardson, founder of Disrupt Art
and also host of the podcast Disruption Now.
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we're we're here
live at the Digital Futures building.
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And I'm here with my next guest,
Aswad Thomas.
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and he is the VP of the Alliance
for Safety and Justice, the largest
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criminal justice
organization in the nation.
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They've been responsible for reforms
that have happened essentially
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the largest criminal justice reform
we've ever seen in this nation.
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And this is really an important point
to me.
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We spend more money than any nation
by a lot
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when it comes to locking up people.
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And you think we'd be the safest?
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The only thing we're the best
at is locking up the most people
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that spending the most money
and ruining as many lives as possible.
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There are better ways to approach safety.
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There are effective ways to approach
safety.
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But first, we have to change the narrative
and with me, Aswad.
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Thomas
We're going to talk about that in his role
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and what he's done in his story.
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In particular, We're going to talk
about the head of his organization,
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Lenore Thomas,
who's also been on this podcast
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where I talk about that book
In their names, which is a wonderful book.
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There are two books
that everybody must read when it comes
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to criminal justice reform.
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The first is In their names.
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You need to read that.
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The second of many of you probably
have read, which is the new Jim Crow.
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If you are at all interested or curious
about why criminal justice reform
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is the most important civil rights
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topic of our air,
you need to read both of these books.
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They're both of us.
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We're going to talk about we're going
to talk about the first in our podcast.
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Will see you on the other side
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If you believe we can change
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the narrative, if you believe
we can change our communities,
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if you believe we can change the outcomes,
then we can change the world.
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I'm Rob Richardson.
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Welcome to Disruption Now.
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Aswad.
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thank you, man. How are you going?
How you doing? Pretty good.
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Thanks so much for having me here. Yeah.
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So tell me, what is your passion?
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May I ask a good question?
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I'll start with what was my first passion.
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Yeah, For me, basketball.
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You know,
I was born in Hartford, Connecticut.
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I spent most of my childhood
in Detroit, Michigan.
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You know, I grew up in a single-parent
home, the youngest of five boys.
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And so for me, you know, growing up inside
the community
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was like two things that I thought
that I would need to excel at, right?
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Or for me to help
make it out of my neighborhood.
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One was my academics
and the second was basketball.
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Right?
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You know, that was the thing
that kept me out of trouble.
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That was the only safe place that I had
in my neighborhood to really get away
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from, you know, the things that surrounded
me, the poverty, the violence as well.
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So I end up going to college.
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I became the first male of my family
to ever graduate from college
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and was also on my way
to play professional basketball overseas.
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So for me, basketball was my passion.
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But things happened in my life
and opened up
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a new chapter, a new passion of mine,
which is traveling the country.
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Organized crime survivors.
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Well, tell me, tell me what happened.
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I mean, we know I know from the book
In Their Names by Lenore Anderson.
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So I know I know
something about your story, but
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your passion,
your first passion was basketball.
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But you know the universe,
that everything took another direction.
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How did that happen?
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Yeah.
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So 2009, you know, for me,
that was the highest point in my life.
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I just graduated from college,
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the first male in my family
to ever graduate from college.
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So that was just a historical moment
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for myself, my family
and also for my entire community.
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And I was also a star
basketball player as well.
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But unfortunately, 2009
became the lowest point in my life
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when I was, you know, just leaving
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the corner store in my neighborhood
in Hartford, Connecticut.
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I was shot twice in my back.
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And those bullets nearly
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ended my life, ended
my professional basketball career as well.
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You know, I remember
being in that hospital bed and my doctor,
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you know, kind of,
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you know, come to my bedside and say,
you know, you are a victim of gun violence
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and you have two bullets
stuck in your back.
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And we don't know if you will be able
to play basketball again.
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We don't know
if you ever would be able to walk home.
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How did that feel when you were there?
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That's when it hit me.
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Hit me because I worked so hard
on the basketball court to hear that,
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you know, I may not be able to play
professional basketball again.
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It kind of brought me
to a stage of depression.
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It brought me to something
that I wasn't good at something.
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And I spent hours of training, hours
of fighting my craft within a split
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second was gone away
by two two bullets as well, while
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so walked me through the moment
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when you after it, after
this has happened, I know that then the
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the police came up and started
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their investigation.
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What happened
when that occur?
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What was that?
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You know, take us through that.
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Several things happened during that moment
when I was released from the hospital
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back into the same neighborhood where
I was shot, because that's where I lived.
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I remember
being discharged from the hospital.
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You know, my doctors and the nurses,
they told me about the physical challenges
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that I would have.
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But nobody never mentioned
the psychological effects
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of being a victim of gun violence and
having to live in the same neighborhood
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where you were shot.
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So during that recovery process,
I was struggling.
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And with the PTSD,
you know, the flashbacks, the nightmares,
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the depression to anger, you know,
the isolation that I was going through.
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And so, during this time,
as I was recovering,
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you know, law enforcement
came to visit me.
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And, you know, Rob, every time they came
to visit me, it was always about the case.
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And I remember them asking me,
you know, hey, you know,
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what were you doing
outside at that particular time?
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Did you have any confrontations
with anyone you know?
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Have you been involved in,
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you know, anything
that could have led to you being shot?
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And here I am recovering
from these bullets on my mother's couch.
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I'm saying I just graduated from college.
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Yeah, right.
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I'm a star basketball player.
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I've never been in trouble at all.
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So right then,
you know, those interacting with the law
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actually became more stressful.
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Yeah, Assumption was made.
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The assumption was made that somehow,
like, it's victim blaming or whatever.
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You deserve What happened to you?
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Something must have happened
for that to happen.
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They shot you for some reason.
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And I guarantee you that story.
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If they walk over to the suburbs
of Baltimore.
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Correct. Hartford, Connecticut.
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Hartford, Connecticut.
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If it was if it was the suburbs
in Connecticut, in Connecticut.
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And, you know, perhaps, you know, your
your skin looked a little different, yet
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the conversation would have been
we're going to
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we're going to we're going to make sure
the people that did this pay.
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How can we go about helping you there?
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And people
don't understand that that that that
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our interaction with law enforcement,
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unfortunately, that's what you went
through is not unusual.
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It's a commonplace.
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Yeah, I got to know another person
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who had a story
where he had to actually defend his life
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and he had done everything right
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in his entire life
to have spotless record.
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And because he didn't have a lot of money,
you know,
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they made him cop to a
they didn't make him.
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But essentially he had
he felt like he had to do this
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because he didn't have $100,000
to spend on an attorney to defend him.
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So he clearly had
all the facts on the side.
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But they ask him the same question.
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They said, well, you know,
they assumed he was a gang member.
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You know, he's he's you know, he was
he was a marine.
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And they still do. Didn't matter. Wow.
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Like they only saw one thing
and and they knew
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the person that he had to shoot
was actually a well known
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and was a well known gang member
and had done things to people.
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But he was assumed
to be somehow in the wrong.
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Yeah.
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So they had to find a way to get a charge.
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They said, well, you know,
we got all that, but you know, somebody,
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somebody got killed,
so we got to charge you with something.
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And so they, they didn't.
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He served hardly any time, but he had
a felony on for the rest of his life. Wow.
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And then that affected he
and then he didn't appreciate
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how that hangs over you.
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So let's talk about that. Yeah.
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You're in a hard field, man. Yeah.
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I mean, very, very.
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I You are in a very hard field.
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Yeah, it's a no, it's a noble problem.
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You and I agree with it.
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But what motivates you?
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Day in and day out?
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Keep going
when it's when you have such headwinds.
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So that's a great question.
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Several things. One,
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you know, the experience of the
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of a black male
who's been a victim of gun.
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But I know that all too well
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firsthand experience
of being a victim of gun violence.
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But I actually come from
a family of victims of gun violence.
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My father was shot in the 1980s.
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My brother was shot in the 1990.
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I have two cousins
that were shot in the 2000.
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Like all of us had interactions
with law enforcement.
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All of us had some interaction
with the justice system, but none of us
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never received any type of victim
services, any type of mental health or any
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any cause or concern for our well-being
after being victims of gun violence.
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So in my immediate family,
five out of the ten
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males are victims of gun violence,
and six out of ten males
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have came in contact
with the criminal justice system as well.
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So I'm impacted by both sides of it
as a victim.
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And also my brothers
have been incarcerated.
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My oldest brother had been incarcerated
for the past 22 years.
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So so that's the one thing
to kind of start to mean.
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Think about the impact of the cycle
of violence that happened, how
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that often leads to people
come into contact with the justice system.
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The second thing was during
my last doctor's appointment
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to remove the bullets out of my bag, my
doctor, as he's performing surgery on me,
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he started to tell me the story of this
other young black teenager
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from my neighborhood
who he had treated for years prior.
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So that young man as my doctor
was describing to me, was 14 years old.
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He was shot.
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He was shot in his face
at the age of 14 years old.
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My doctor saved his life
but couldn't save his. I.
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And like the more details
he started to share about that young man,
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as of sitting on the operating table,
my heart started to be fast.
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Yeah, right.
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Because I.
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He was describing
the young man that shot me.
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And I remember telling my doctor,
Marshall said, Hey,
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I don't know if you know this,
but you just describe the young man that
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I knew that because of the passion
that young man had on his eyes,
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my doctor was sharing that.
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That young man lost sight in his eye,
and we sent him home with a pass.
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That's for me.
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When I made that connection,
it was that young man.
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So just just want to
just want to dive deeper into that.
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Right?
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So that teenager at the age of 14 years
old was a victim of gun
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violence, was released from that same
hospital back in to that same community,
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just like me,
not connected to any services at all.
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And then four years later,
he played a role
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in shooting me four years later. Right.
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And so that unaddressed trauma
that he was experiencing.
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Right.
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That often leads to people
coming in contact with the justice system.
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So in we just released a new study.
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I understand the trauma. Yes.
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Like people think
because I was going to get to hear
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that in the book, talks
about that in their names,
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about really addressing trauma
like because that that obviously
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I'm guessing is you feel like one of
the keys to actually reducing violence
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in our
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in our community top more to that
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yeah is the key
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to reducing violence in our communities
also the key to reducing incarceration
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rate.
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So we just released a report this year
called The Road to Re Depression.
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So our organization,
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the Alliance for Safety and Justice,
we have two flagship programs.
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One program is called Crime Survivors
for Safety and Justice,
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which is a national network of over
180,000 crime victims
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from across the country.
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The other part of our program
is called Time Done,
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which we have 200,000 people
who are living would pass convictions.
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Right.
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And so we bring these two constituencies
together to call on a better
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criminal justice
or better public safety system.
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In the report that we did
this year called The Road to Redemption,
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we found out that nine in ten people
who have a past conviction have been
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a victim of a crime before they went into
the criminal justice system.
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Yeah, right.
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So being a victim often leads
to two things.
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One, it can lead
to being revictimized again
00:13:02:24 - 00:13:06:28
and often leads to come into contact
with our criminal justice system.
00:13:06:28 - 00:13:09:11
And that's where we have failed
00:13:09:11 - 00:13:12:11
communities,
especially black and brown communities
00:13:12:18 - 00:13:16:20
in this country, by not focusing on
the victimization that people
00:13:16:22 - 00:13:17:13
have experienced.
00:13:17:13 - 00:13:21:09
But of course, that's what the narrative
that was put forward
00:13:21:12 - 00:13:24:08
when all of these laws
that were supposed to protect us.
00:13:24:08 - 00:13:28:11
Yeah, the narrative that was put forward,
it was always somebody
00:13:28:11 - 00:13:30:18
that they put forward
that was an awful victim. Right.
00:13:30:18 - 00:13:33:08
That's like the worst facts
you can think of.
00:13:33:08 - 00:13:34:18
Yeah, it happens.
00:13:34:18 - 00:13:37:20
And then that usually led
to some huge change in the law
00:13:37:21 - 00:13:41:03
that was supposed to protect people,
you know, make communities safer.
00:13:41:03 - 00:13:42:09
It did not do that. Right.
00:13:42:09 - 00:13:43:02
We know.
00:13:43:02 - 00:13:44:02
We know what happened.
00:13:44:02 - 00:13:46:03
That's how we got to where we are now.
00:13:46:03 - 00:13:50:08
But to your point, there's hardly
any money spent.
00:13:50:10 - 00:13:52:13
Yeah, almost zero.
00:13:52:13 - 00:13:56:04
Yeah, relatively speaking,
when it comes to helping the victims
00:13:56:04 - 00:13:58:13
who were actually affected. Exactly right.
00:13:58:13 - 00:14:01:09
All of the money goes to pay
for everything else.
00:14:01:09 - 00:14:01:20
Yeah.
00:14:01:20 - 00:14:05:05
The militarization of police,
the the parole
00:14:05:05 - 00:14:08:22
officers, the big correctional facilities.
00:14:08:22 - 00:14:09:17
Yeah.
00:14:09:17 - 00:14:11:00
None of it goes to the victims.
00:14:11:00 - 00:14:13:06
People were like. And so, like, and
00:14:13:06 - 00:14:16:21
and so, like, it's interesting,
people talk about the victims,
00:14:16:23 - 00:14:18:02
but I don't care.
00:14:18:02 - 00:14:18:21
You talk, right?
00:14:18:21 - 00:14:23:26
What do you show me what you spend
money on and I'll show you what you value.
00:14:23:26 - 00:14:25:27
Yeah. And it's not the it's not.
00:14:25:27 - 00:14:27:09
It's not the victims, right?
00:14:27:09 - 00:14:32:02
It's the it's everything else
that's supporting
00:14:32:05 - 00:14:35:14
our huge multi
00:14:35:16 - 00:14:39:16
national incarcerate and system
that's making a few people wealthy,
00:14:39:16 - 00:14:42:16
providing jobs for a few,
00:14:42:17 - 00:14:45:10
but taking away
so much opportunity for others.
00:14:45:10 - 00:14:48:17
I mean, that's why I'm so passionate
about what you guys have done
00:14:48:17 - 00:14:51:17
and you've been
a great supporter of the podcast,
00:14:51:22 - 00:14:55:16
but before that, even if you weren't,
your work is very important
00:14:55:17 - 00:14:59:10
and it is the seminal civil
rights issue of our time.
00:14:59:17 - 00:15:05:01
So something that we're going
to talk about more in moral is
00:15:05:04 - 00:15:06:07
in technology.
00:15:06:07 - 00:15:09:09
Yeah, they say to have the greatest impact
00:15:09:09 - 00:15:12:28
you need to know the problem
your solving, right?
00:15:12:28 - 00:15:13:22
Yeah.
00:15:13:22 - 00:15:17:00
And Lenore talked about this on our show.
00:15:17:03 - 00:15:19:14
We need to flip the narrative
of the problems that we're solving.
00:15:19:14 - 00:15:21:20
Yeah, and
00:15:21:20 - 00:15:23:23
I don't want to focus too much on that
because we're going to talk about that
00:15:23:23 - 00:15:28:01
more later tomorrow
when we get more into our talk.
00:15:28:03 - 00:15:30:13
But I do want to talk about change,
the narrative
00:15:30:13 - 00:15:33:04
that is a similar conversation. Yeah.
00:15:33:04 - 00:15:36:15
How do we change the narrative about crime
00:15:36:17 - 00:15:40:08
given that we have forces
that are so effective marketing
00:15:40:10 - 00:15:45:06
so effective, that's simplifying
a message, that's emotional?
00:15:45:09 - 00:15:48:09
How do we do that, given that?
00:15:48:11 - 00:15:50:04
So several things that we can do.
00:15:50:04 - 00:15:52:14
Why don't we think
about mass incarceration?
00:15:52:14 - 00:15:54:22
You know, who played a key
role in mass incarceration?
00:15:54:22 - 00:15:58:21
It was a law enforcement, you know, it was
politicians and it was crime victims.
00:15:58:23 - 00:16:01:23
Yeah, but it was a very narrow
00:16:01:24 - 00:16:04:19
and it was noise
and media played a key role in it.
00:16:04:19 - 00:16:08:16
And also thinking about, you know,
we have to make our communities safer
00:16:08:16 - 00:16:12:21
right now with the kind
of the kind of the call to action.
00:16:12:28 - 00:16:13:08
Right.
00:16:13:08 - 00:16:18:01
And we also listened to crime victims
who supported those policies as well.
00:16:18:01 - 00:16:22:10
But one thing we haven't did for the past
40 years is actually
00:16:22:10 - 00:16:26:25
listen to the crime victims
that are most impacted by violence.
00:16:26:27 - 00:16:27:05
Right.
00:16:27:05 - 00:16:30:13
So that's what our organization
have been doing for the past ten years
00:16:30:15 - 00:16:33:13
of building this movement
across the country and asking
00:16:33:13 - 00:16:36:26
crime victims
what does safety look like to you?
00:16:36:29 - 00:16:39:19
And what crime victims are seeing across
countries are crime
00:16:39:19 - 00:16:43:15
rates who are victims of domestic
violence, sexual assault, parents
00:16:43:15 - 00:16:48:07
who've lost loved ones to homicide,
victims of gun violence like myself.
00:16:48:08 - 00:16:52:17
For crime
victims, safety is actually more trauma
00:16:52:17 - 00:16:56:29
recovery centers to help people heal
when they have been victims.
00:16:57:02 - 00:17:01:23
Safety is about preventing violence
from happening in the first place.
00:17:02:00 - 00:17:04:22
Safety
is actually about getting people jobs.
00:17:04:22 - 00:17:07:21
So that they can help
take care of their families.
00:17:07:21 - 00:17:12:04
Safety isn't about funding people
in to this punishment system because
00:17:12:04 - 00:17:17:09
they have not worked for us for the past
for funding, for life and funding.
00:17:17:11 - 00:17:19:29
Yeah, because I think the bigger part
of what you're saying
00:17:19:29 - 00:17:23:20
and what often gets lost is
people think that they're saying, okay,
00:17:23:23 - 00:17:25:11
is that mean you're being soft on crimes?
00:17:25:11 - 00:17:27:29
I mean, you're saying people
there's no prison.
00:17:27:29 - 00:17:31:25
No, what we're saying is how we structure
00:17:31:28 - 00:17:33:20
rehabilitation is not a part of it.
00:17:33:20 - 00:17:35:03
Exactly. Right. Yeah.
00:17:35:03 - 00:17:39:18
Being able to come into society again,
that's not thought to because of the
00:17:39:20 - 00:17:43:21
because once you make a mistake
00:17:43:23 - 00:17:45:17
in any way
00:17:45:17 - 00:17:49:05
and if it's a felony that affects
everything for the rest of your life.
00:17:49:05 - 00:17:51:11
And there's and it's very hard
for you to come back from that.
00:17:51:11 - 00:17:53:26
And you got to ask, are we going to
we just throw away people here?
00:17:53:26 - 00:17:56:16
Yeah. And then what does that do?
That creates more crime.
00:17:56:16 - 00:17:59:16
Yeah, but what I think
we're up against right now,
00:17:59:18 - 00:18:04:14
what makes me nervous
and I want to hear you talk about this is
00:18:04:17 - 00:18:06:01
there's obviously a rising crime
right now.
00:18:06:01 - 00:18:09:23
I mean, or at least it seems relatively
in some places, some places
00:18:09:23 - 00:18:12:23
homicide rates are down,
some are just some are down.
00:18:12:28 - 00:18:15:12
But perception is reality. Yeah, right.
00:18:15:12 - 00:18:20:17
And right now, enough of the
I've seen this play before in the eighties
00:18:20:17 - 00:18:21:07
and the nineties.
00:18:21:07 - 00:18:21:28
Yeah, right.
00:18:21:28 - 00:18:24:10
We've just started to talk about criminal
justice reform.
00:18:24:10 - 00:18:25:22
We've just got people to understand
00:18:25:22 - 00:18:30:11
the enormous amount of money and resources
and injustice that happens.
00:18:30:14 - 00:18:34:04
But I'm nervous about that other part
of the brain that takes over from people
00:18:34:06 - 00:18:37:06
when they're when they're fearful. Yeah,
00:18:37:06 - 00:18:40:06
what can we do at this moment
to keep people
00:18:40:09 - 00:18:43:27
focused on the long term safety
and not settle for short
00:18:43:27 - 00:18:47:24
term results, that the short term efforts
that we know will take us backwards?
00:18:47:28 - 00:18:49:03
One thing we've got to continue,
00:18:49:03 - 00:18:51:17
we've got to listen to the crime victims
that are most impacted by.
00:18:51:17 - 00:18:51:25
Right.
00:18:51:25 - 00:18:55:03
Continue to listen to
about what safety looks like to them.
00:18:55:10 - 00:18:59:02
Also, we have to make sure we're uplift
in some safety solutions.
00:18:59:03 - 00:18:59:08
Right.
00:18:59:08 - 00:19:00:01
The things that help
00:19:00:01 - 00:19:03:29
stop the cycles of, as I mentioned,
the trauma recovery centers.
00:19:03:29 - 00:19:06:14
We started with one trauma
recovery center in California.
00:19:06:14 - 00:19:10:07
Now we have 52 of these centers
across the country
00:19:10:07 - 00:19:13:24
that are in communities for people
to get access to free mental health
00:19:13:24 - 00:19:16:26
services, free cars
and feet therapy support as well.
00:19:16:26 - 00:19:20:23
So we got to build this infrastructure
of mental health and victim services
00:19:20:23 - 00:19:23:14
in community.
That's one thing that we have to do.
00:19:23:14 - 00:19:26:20
The second thing that we have to do,
we have to mobilize.
00:19:26:20 - 00:19:31:11
I mean, across the country,
every movement starts with the people.
00:19:31:11 - 00:19:35:10
So that's why we are mobilizing crime
victims and people with past convictions.
00:19:35:10 - 00:19:39:23
These two constituencies
that are most impacted by the criminal
00:19:39:26 - 00:19:41:06
justice, we've got to mobilize them.
00:19:41:06 - 00:19:43:15
We've got to build their power.
We've got to share their stories.
00:19:43:15 - 00:19:46:13
And we got to train them
to be leaders and advocates.
00:19:46:13 - 00:19:50:17
We got to train them to talk to the media
to go to editorial board.
00:19:50:18 - 00:19:50:25
Right.
00:19:50:25 - 00:19:54:02
To talk about what
your safety priorities are, you know,
00:19:54:02 - 00:19:57:25
to go meet with local reporters, to talk
about what your safety priorities are.
00:19:57:25 - 00:20:02:09
We have to continue driving this message
and uplifting these safety
00:20:02:11 - 00:20:03:24
solutions across the country.
00:20:03:24 - 00:20:04:25
If not, we'll go back
00:20:04:25 - 00:20:09:05
to the eighties and nineties, which for us
haven't made our communities safer.
00:20:09:05 - 00:20:12:02
No, at all. Doesn't didn't work
00:20:12:04 - 00:20:12:22
as well.
00:20:12:22 - 00:20:16:18
Look, I got a couple
of final rapidfire questions for you.
00:20:16:21 - 00:20:19:14
What does legacy look like for you, man?
00:20:19:14 - 00:20:22:21
Great question for me, legacy look like.
00:20:22:21 - 00:20:26:19
So we have about 400,000 members
of CROSSFIRE
00:20:26:19 - 00:20:27:22
for Safety and Justice at the time.
00:20:27:22 - 00:20:30:12
That legacy look like
we need to be a million members
00:20:30:12 - 00:20:32:17
strong in the next few years.
00:20:32:17 - 00:20:35:26
I talked about only having 52 trauma
recovery
00:20:35:29 - 00:20:39:06
center legacy look like for me is that
every community will become members.
00:20:39:08 - 00:20:40:17
So how can people become members?
00:20:40:17 - 00:20:47:00
So go to our website www.CSSJ.org that
what if you have crimes www.CSSJ.org
00:20:47:06 - 00:20:49:27
or if you are incarcerated
so I mean join us and membership is free
00:20:49:27 - 00:20:51:02
if you are living with a past
00:20:51:02 - 00:20:54:19
makes you want to be part of a community,
go to the timedone.org
00:20:54:19 - 00:20:59:05
So build power through membership
advocating for more service as a resource
00:20:59:05 - 00:21:03:10
and do what we've been doing for
the past few years is changing state laws
00:21:03:12 - 00:21:06:27
state by state in uplift, in better
safety solutions.
00:21:06:29 - 00:21:09:23
That's awesome.
00:21:09:26 - 00:21:11:09
If you had a theme
00:21:11:09 - 00:21:15:18
for your life, hmm,
what would that theme say and why?
00:21:15:20 - 00:21:19:13
It'd be a saying theme
00:21:19:15 - 00:21:21:11
is something that my college basketball
00:21:21:11 - 00:21:24:22
coach used to say to us when we should be
running those sprints, Right.
00:21:24:25 - 00:21:26:20
You know, running these drills.
00:21:26:20 - 00:21:29:28
He always used to say, You're
never as tired as you think you are.
00:21:30:00 - 00:21:30:27
You're never tired.
00:21:30:27 - 00:21:33:17
You think you're never tired
as you think you are. Right.
00:21:33:17 - 00:21:36:09
And so we're those you know,
if you are a student, right?
00:21:36:09 - 00:21:40:27
You know, you tired as heck from homework
and and preparing for says you know
00:21:40:29 - 00:21:45:03
keep going right for survivors you've been
through a experience of victimization.
00:21:45:04 - 00:21:48:19
If you've been incarcerated,
you can overcome so many different things.
00:21:48:19 - 00:21:50:11
So for me, this I that's my motto.
00:21:50:11 - 00:21:52:19
What keeps me going is you know what?
00:21:52:19 - 00:21:52:26
You know,
00:21:52:26 - 00:21:56:23
despite how hard it can be, you know,
we're never too tired as we think we are.
00:21:56:23 - 00:21:57:13
And we always got
00:21:57:13 - 00:22:01:11
we all got something left in us
to continue fighting, to continue pushing.
00:22:01:14 - 00:22:04:00
I love it. All right. Final question.
00:22:04:00 - 00:22:08:01
You have three members of the board
of your Advisors
00:22:08:01 - 00:22:11:17
for Life
or business or community advocacy.
00:22:11:17 - 00:22:14:16
Tell me who these three people are
and why, who you got.
00:22:14:16 - 00:22:17:25
So you got some good
questions. Come to me and,
00:22:17:28 - 00:22:18:15
you know, if
00:22:18:15 - 00:22:21:26
you had ideal board members, right.
00:22:21:26 - 00:22:24:26
You know, think of someone like Oprah.
00:22:24:28 - 00:22:29:00
You know, we think of crime and violence
that's happened to African-American women
00:22:29:02 - 00:22:31:21
in this country and the lack of support.
00:22:31:21 - 00:22:34:06
So being having someone like Oprah, Right.
00:22:34:06 - 00:22:37:23
To help uplift what folks are going
through in communities,
00:22:37:23 - 00:22:43:09
but also being able to help empower
others to give back to this movement.
00:22:43:09 - 00:22:47:17
You know, I think about folks like LeBron
James who come from the city of act
00:22:47:17 - 00:22:49:05
actor in a community
that has been devastated
00:22:49:05 - 00:22:53:02
by violence as well,
being able to have LeBron join the charge.
00:22:53:02 - 00:22:53:10
Right.
00:22:53:10 - 00:22:57:26
To help us build more of these trauma
recovery centers across the country
00:22:57:26 - 00:23:02:20
in a third is just like the average person
who wants to get involved.
00:23:02:22 - 00:23:05:04
You know, whoever that can be,
a doctor can be a lawyer,
00:23:05:04 - 00:23:06:24
it can be an activist in the community,
00:23:06:24 - 00:23:10:18
like someone who wants to make
this country better than it was before.
00:23:10:18 - 00:23:15:02
Because 2024 is a critical moment
for criminal justice and public
00:23:15:02 - 00:23:18:09
safety bosses is a critical moment
for our country as well.
00:23:18:10 - 00:23:20:01
It is. It's a it's critical.
00:23:20:01 - 00:23:22:01
Tell us who we are, what our values are.
00:23:22:01 - 00:23:25:11
So, as my brother, say,
good to have you on and of course, great.
00:23:25:13 - 00:23:27:26
Thank you for having me here.
So will join you again.
00:23:27:26 - 00:23:33:23
Midwest 2023 here at the Digital Futures
Building at the University of Cincinnati.
00:23:33:26 - 00:23:38:25
Rob Richardson here, CEO of Disrupt Art,
also host of the Disruption Now podcast.
00:23:38:25 - 00:23:41:07
We've had Aswad Thomas on our show.
00:23:41:07 - 00:23:45:01
He is the VP of the
the Alliance for Safety and Justice.
00:23:45:01 - 00:23:48:23
You can find more about them in the
in the in the intro on the comments.
00:23:48:23 - 00:23:51:08
We're going to put all the links
so you can learn more about them.
00:23:51:08 - 00:23:54:11
Obviously, you can also learn more
about what we do at Disrupt Art
00:23:54:18 - 00:23:58:24
we use the power of entertainment to
empower creators and also empower brands.
00:23:58:26 - 00:24:02:25
But we're also about social impact and
that's why we do everything that we do.
00:24:02:28 - 00:24:05:11
We appreciate all that you do.
Thank you for listening.
00:24:05:11 - 00:24:06:04
We'll see you next time.
Meet Aswad Thomas, the indomitable Alliance for Safety and Justice Vice President. Once on the cusp of a glittering professional basketball career, a devastating gunshot wound forever altered his destiny. Yet, the injustice didn't end there. In his darkest hour, he was wrongfully labeled a criminal by the system that should have protected him. His is a tale of survival, rebirth, resilience, and redemption.
Today, Aswad stands tall, channeling his experiences and passion into transformative change. He's on a relentless mission: to overhaul a flawed system, ensuring no one else suffers the way he did.
Learn about the Alliance For Safety and Justice: https://asj.allianceforsafetyandjustice.org/
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Clarence Wooten
Clarence Wooten is a Silicon Valley tech entrepreneur with a track record of success spanning back to 1999 when his debut Internet startup, ImageCafe.com, was acquired for $23 million by Network Solutions (Nasdaq: NSOL) just 7-months after it launched. As an encore to his early success, Clarence founded and scaled Groupsite.com, where he now serves as Chairman, to more than 50,000 customers. Most recently, in June 2018, Clarence's fourth startup, Progressly Inc., an enterprise software startup that turns business processes into visual repeatable workflows in the cloud, was acquired by Box (NYSE: Box). In tandem with leading Groupsite, Clarence is the founding General Partner at Revitalize. Revitalize a venture studio focused on transforming the complexion of tech by building break-out software startups led by diverse teams.
Monique Idlett
Entrepreneur, investor, philanthropist, and innovator , Monique Idlett-Mosley is well known within both the entertainment and tech industries as a woman who positively impacts lives through her work. For her entertainment career, Monique was CEO of Mosley Brands and Mosley Music Group, with former husband Tim “Timberland” Mosley for over fourteen years. In 2017, she founded Reign Venture Capital, an early stage investment firm that focuses on women and minority led startups. Working with companies like the award winning technology innovator LISNR, and Appy Couple, Reign Venture Capital is changing the VC world. She is also the star of Undercover Billionaire on Discovery.
Leigh Radford
Leigh Radford is the Senior Vice President and Founder of P&G Ventures, an early-stage startup studio that creates and grows brands and businesses by building win-win partnerships with entrepreneurs, visionaries, and startups. Under her leadership, Leigh has step-changed the P&G’s development and launch of new brands. Leigh has a talent for taking small ideas with promise and turning them into proven global brand success. Her accomplishments have been recognized across the industry including: Brand Innovators’ Top 100 Women to Watch, OTC Marketer of the Year and Ad Age Top 50 Marketers. Leigh is also a Harley Procter Award recipient given to only the Top 1% of marketing innovators at P&G.
Candice Matthews Brackeen
Candice Matthews Brackeen is a General Partner at Lightship Capital, a first-of-its-kind $50 million venture fund for underrepresented founders in the Midwest. Candice is also the Executive Director of the Hillman Accelerator, the first accelerator in the Midwest for underrepresented founders.
Rob Richardson
Robert Richardson is a resolute leader with a breadth of experience in labor law, civil rights, digital marketing, branding, labor-management relations and public service. Passionate about challenging the status quo, he’s been the voice for the under-represented and disadvantaged. His vision and expertise in workforce development, labor practices, entrepreneurship and crisis management have influenced law enforcement policy, systemic inequities and private/public partnerships that led to reforms, new opportunities and an inclusive, more innovative economy.