Thursday, December 27, 2012

TO ALL CANDIDTATES FOR ELECTION OR RE-ELECTION IN THE WEST HOLLYWOOD COUNCIL RACE

THE ATHENIAN OATH

I WILL NEVER BRING DISGRACE, TO THIS OUR CITY, BY ANY ACT OF DISHONESTY OR COWARDICE; NOR  EVER DESERT OUR SUFFERING CONSTITUENTS IN THE RANKS;  I WILL FIGHT FOR THE IDEAL AND SACRED THINGS OF THE CITY, BOTH ALONE AND WITH MANY;  I WILL REVERE AND OBEY THE CITY'S LAWS AND DO MY BEST TO INCITE A LIKE RESPECT IN THOSE ABOVE US WHO ARE PRONE TO ANNUL OR SET THEM AT  NAUGHT;  I WILL STRIVE UNCEASINGLY TO QUICKEN THE PUBLIC'S SENSE OF CIVIC DUTY.  THUS, IN ALL THESE WAYS, I WILL TRANSMIT THIS CITY NOT ONLY, NOT LESS, BUT GREATER AND MORE BEAUTIFUL THAN IT WAS TRANSMITTED TO ME.

EVERY ONE OF OUR ELECTED OFFICIALS AND SOON TO BE ELECTED OFFICIALS CAN LEARN A LOT FROM THESE WORDS.  

REMEMBER YOU ARE TO SERVE, NOT TO BE SERVED.

TO BE CONTINUED.







Tuesday, December 18, 2012

WEST HOLLYWOOD POLICE BRUTALITY....OR NOT?

 I posted a blog several weeks ago (http://jimmypalmieri.blogspot.com/2012/11/soooo.html), about alleged police brutality in West Hollywood, by our own Sheriffs Dept.  Little did I realize just how many people would be reading it.  Actually I do have an idea how many read my blog, I just never expected the overwhelming reaction to it.  Not only by my regular readers, but also by city officials, managers, and the Sheriffs Dept.  And our Mayor Jeff Prang .  About 6 times in one day.  Now I can't seem to get him to answer an email from me.  That's another blog though.

The blog contained allegations  made by The Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center's Roger Coggan (http://www.lagaycenter.org/site/PageServer?pagename=YC_Management_Biographies#rcoggan) about some horrific brutalities on non white gay men, by certain deputies at the West Hollywood Sheriffs Dept.

You can read about it by clicking the above link.  This piece,  however,  is to address my follow up visit with the boss, the number one, the heart of the West Hollywood Sheriffs Dept. Captain Kelley Fraser.  It took about a week or two to actually meet with her after I blogged, because she was vacationing with her wife in Hawaii.


The Captain came to the last Commission meeting bravely,  and sort of apologetically addressed us, saying  she was actually thankful to  Roger, for pointing out that there was a lapse of communication between he and the Sheriff's Dept.  Some Commissioners strategically thanked her. (I CAN ALWAYS TELL A REHEARSED REMARK).   Ok, blah blah blah......let's get to my meeting with her.

Many times when I meet with people with a title, I feel like they are blowing smoke up my ass, just to make me smile and shut me up.  It never works.  I always do smile, but then do as needed, as I am a community activist above anything else in this world.

I didn't  feel this way with the Captain.  I met with her and Lt. Dave Smith (who I know for many years).  The Captains first words were that she was sorry it took so long for us to actually sit down and have a talk.  About anything.  Not just this topic of abuse.  She explained to me that 8 of the 10 cases that were brought to the table by Roger Coggan,  were independently reviewed,  some by some fancy non partisan board of Demi-Gods, and some by the Ombudsman's office.  (WHO EVER THOUGHT I WOULD ACTUALLY USE THAT WORD?)  The Sheriff's Dept. in Weho was cleared of any wrongdoing and it was formally stated that they acted appropriately.  I believe her.  I get the feeling she is good.  I haven't been fond of the gaggle of Captains dancing through Weho   since Linda Castro, but Fraser may, in many ways, be  what we need here.

Granted she is a lesbian, but that doesn't make her a good Captain.  I believe fondness  and respect for  the community, understanding,  along with knowledge of the law and available services,  are the makings of a good public servant.  I do believe she is trying her best to bring that to her Dept.  She isn't a politician trying to sell us whatever we want to hear.  She isn't providing spin, that so many times just angers people.  She is trying to find,  and searching hard for solutions  to have a community that is safe and not afraid of the Sheriffs Dept.  At least here in Weho.

  I spent 2 hours with her, talking, and I mean talking.  I made my mind up before I got there, that I was going to ask whatever I had in my mind pertaining to these allegations.  She was an open book,  as was Lt. Smith.

Does she run a perfect dept.?  Doubtful.  Is every Deputy there a good guy/gal?  Doubtful.  I do , however feel, that , Fraser will work hard at making sure no shenanigans are going to be played on her watch.  She is pretty sweet, but I don't want to be the biotch on the wrong side of her.  I don't recommend any deputies getting on her bad side either.  'CAUSE THEY JUST MIGHT BE ON THE RECEIVING END OF SOME BRUTALITY!.  Well maybe not. Probably not.   I do think they will cry though. Like little girls.  Little baby girls.

By the way, the Captain wants communication with the community.  She is approachable.  She wants the community to participate in the Community Sheriffs Academy here in Weho.   She is here to serve and she is available.  Try to meet her.  I think you might like her.  I did.

Mr. Coggan, the ball's in your court..........

Monday, December 3, 2012

JAN BREWER....A STUDY IN HEAVENLY BEAUTY AND BRAINS.....

TOUCHED BY THE ANGELS.............THE VIDEO AT THE END SPEAKS OF HER AMAZING ABILITY TO COMMUNICATE .  BEAUTY AND BRAINS.....SO BLESSED!.....

P.S.  AT THE TIME I CALLED JAN BREWERS OFFICE AND ASKED WHERE THE HEADLESS CARCASSES WERE. I KEPT HER EXECUTIVE SECRETARY ON THE PHONE FOR 22 MINUTES, AND SHE  COULDN'T COME UP WITH AN ANSWER.  WHAT SHE DID SAY WAS THAT THE PRESS WAS OBNOXIOUS.....THE PRESS HONEY?   THE PRESS?

OH AND I HONESTLY DON'T THINK JAN BREWER DISLIKES MEXICANS....AS LONG AS THEY ARE CAUCASIAN AND NOT LATINO OR BLACK.






Saturday, December 1, 2012

AN OLD COLUMN OF MINE THAT I RUN EVERY WORLD AIDS DAY. IT WAS ONE OF MY FIRST AND WAS PICKED UP WORLD WIDE. I'D LIKE TO SHARE IT WITH YOU AGAIN, ON THIS WORLD AIDS DAY, 2014.


Time out for: Gay Cancer, GRIDS, AIDS and HIV

My first gay friend to die of AIDS

jimmy palmieri | December 01, 2005


More than twenty three years ago, I lost my first gay friend, to what was being called a gay cancer, or grids (gay related immuno-deficiency). His name was Marty, and I met him at a mall in Northern New Jersey. I was around sixteen and flipping burgers in a restaurant there, and he was hawking shirts at some disco clothing store. I was very brazen and went right up to him, with my green and blue colored hair and asked him if he was gay. He laughed with his pink colored hair (yes these colors were the rage as Blondie ruled the airwaves) and said “but of course I am“ , in a very proper Bette Davis mime.

We became instant friends and he took me everywhere with him, as he was a few years older than me. We did the clubs, bars, and gay jaunts. We hung out, smoking cigarettes and “acting cool “ on Christopher Street, in New Yorks notoriously gay West Village. And we watched old Hollywood movies dreaming of what we would do “when we grew up”.

Several years passed, and while we remained friends, we were not as close, as our lives seemed to happen so fast. It was a very snowy Christmas Eve and I got a call from him. He was crying his eyes out, and as I watched the most beautiful snowstorm I had ever seen falling outside my bedroom window, Marty explained to me that he had just been kicked out of his house. His mother had found his Christmas present for his boyfriend and she flipped. She and his dad made him leave with just the clothes on his back. He went to his boyfriends in New York, and there he remained. He had to quit fashion school as he now needed a way to pay half of the rent, and his boyfriend was losing patience since finding a job seemed so difficult a task at the time.

Sadly, Marty did what so many do. He started hustling and doing what we now refer to as “survival sex”. He worked the piers by the river in New York. Of course he never had safe sex, as we knew nothing about HIV back then. He did this for a while, and somehow managed to even get through fashion school. I was off to college, and we kept in touch, here and there.

While I was at college, we started to hear stories of this gay cancer or gay disease that was killing people somewhere in New York. I honestly didn’t believe it, and thought it was anti-gay government propaganda. We heard of how lesions would cover your body, and your entire immune system would close down, leaving you to die in the most treacherous of ways. It all sounded so dramatic, and we were dismissing it as just urban legend, until it appeared in the New York Times. Unbelievably this was true. This horror of horrors was actually happening. No one knew how it was spread, or what to treat it with. All we knew was that it wasted your body away to skin and bones and covered you with these hideous spots (kaposis sarcoma). People who actually had it looked like the walking dead.

I ran into Marty, a few years into this strange epidemic, at a grocery store of all places, but something was very wrong. He was drawn, and thin. He was always thin, but this time he looked painfully thin. He looked sad, almost hollow in the eyes. But he hugged me and couldn’t wait to show me his new Louis Vuitton wallet. I told him it was as fake as his hair color, and we laughed our asses off. That was a Friday and we made plans to have dinner the next Wednesday and catch up.

That dinner never happened, as Marty died that Tuesday from PCP, a parasitic pneumonia that was killing many people that had what was now being called AIDS or HIV. I got a call from a common friend and was told they had a very difficult time finding a funeral parlor that would do the services. Back then, people were even afraid to visit funeral parlors that would have services for victims of this dreaded illness. They found one in New Jersey, and I drove there, very afraid, as I was sure so many of our crowd would look the same. Some did, some didn’t. What I noticed was that all of our gay crowd were in the back of the funeral home, and no one had gone to his casket. I asked why, and was told the family wanted all the gay people to remain in the back of the room, so he could have a dignified “goodbye”. This his very same family that threw him out on a snowy Christmas Eve years before.

I believe my activism began that night. I refused to remain in the back, and went up to his casket and said “goodbye my friend, it was a blast!”. Everyone followed, and we had a good cry and a great laugh at the horrified look on his family’s face, as a few drag queens sashayed up to the coffin, and bawled their lashes off.



I learned that night, never to be second best, and never to be ashamed of who I was. Marty was my friend. He was funny, dangerous, cute, and bawdy. He made me laugh, showed me things I had never seen before, and helped me feel “cool“. I learned from him, but also taught him as well. It was at his funeral, that I became empowered. I promised myself I was never going to hide in the back of a room, because of someone else’s opinion of me. And I also promised myself, never to forget Marty, or my more than twenty friends that would eventually succumb to AIDS in the ensuing years.

World AIDS Day, although many times sad, also brings back happy, silly times for me. Times that were free from HIV. Times that we didn’t have to be afraid of sex, and what could happen. And times when I had Marty around to help me feel “cool”.

jimmy palmieri – is a gay rights activist, who has been appointed to the Lesbian and Gay Advisory Board, and serves as a Human Services Commissioner currently for the city of West Hollywood. He has a double award winning lgbtq television show in West Hollywood called Time Out as well as as an enormously successful radio show called Donkey Punch on La Talk Radio.  . He has also written for The Canyon News, Wehonews.com and The West Hollywood Journal as well as Wehoville.com.. His byline is Nuff Said. Time Out. – Issued by Gay Link Content