June 4, 2021 By Ryan Songalia
Two city council candidates will host a conversation in Long Island City Sunday about the impact that American colonialism has had on the Black and Filipino communities, as well as the current human rights abuses in the Philippines and the NYPD’s expansion overseas.
Jonathan Bailey and Steven Raga, who are running to represent the 26th Council District, will discuss their shared experiences pertaining to the struggles of Black Americans and Filipinos due to America’s colonial history.
The event will take place at the Blissville Veteran’s Memorial located at the intersection of Greenpoint Ave., Van Dam Street, and Review Street, beginning at 3 p.m.
The candidates are accepting questions in advance via their Instagram pages. The event will be livestreamed via the candidates Twitter, Instagram and Facebook pages.
“When people reference Black and brown people, really, it’s just another way of saying colonized peoples of the world,” Bailey said. “Both Filipino and Black Americans have violence done upon them through the legacy of American imperialism.”
Bailey says that American colonialism has completely shaped the face of race relations.
“It’s dictated everything about the relationship of Black America to other racial and ethnic groups,” he said.
Raga says the two candidates linked up a few months ago when they were speakers on a panel and discussed issues relating to the Filipino American community.
They discussed the current issues in the Philippines, where President Rodrigo Duterte has called on police to kill those suspected of dealing or using drugs. Over 7,000 people were killed by police or unknown assailants in the first seven months of Duterte’s “war on drugs,” according to police statistics.
The pair addressed legislation that is before the U.S. House of Representatives that would limit this country’s police and military assistance to the Philippines until the Philippine government makes a commitment to prosecuting human rights violators.
That bill, called the Philippine Human Rights Act, was introduced last September and is co-sponsored by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Raga and Bailey say that the NYPD should not be opening satellite offices abroad. It opened an office in the Philippines in 2012.
“Our taxpayer money should not be used to fund international partnerships,” Raga said. “We should specify that this is a perfect example of what we can do to reallocate the funds that are budgeted to the NYPD.”
Members of NY4PHRA and Malaya Movement, organizations that promote human rights and pro-democracy causes in the Philippines, will be on hand to join the discussion.
Raga and Bailey are among the 15 Democratic candidates running for the seat, which encompasses Woodside, Sunnyside, and parts of Astoria and Long Island City. The others are Amit Bagga, Julia Forman, Jesse Laymon, Ebony Young, Emily Sharpe, Hailie Kim, Badrun Khan, Denise Keehan-Smith, Julie Won, Lorenzo Brea, Glennis Gomez, Brent O’Leary and Sultan Maruf.
9 Comments
whats wrong with Duterte or anyone destroying drug dealers? better than the drug dealers destroying your kids and your family. i guess these socialist liberal progressives dont care about your children, only their political agenda.
So nice to see so many good candidates in our district running for city council and using their platform to get their message across. I am so proud of them all and very proud to be living in Sunnyside.
Never feel guilty or apologize for the shortcomings of the prior generations. You can only control your own character and your government.
I’ll be sure to avoid this one and not vote for either one of them. I really don’t want to hear more hatred of white people.
Ireland was a colony of England for 800 years,Australia was a penal colony where white people were sent to for the smallest infractions of the law ,,but we moved on and get on with life in the present.How about local matters like helping small businesses,cleaning up graffiti, more garbage cans and not looking in the past and it sounds like raga should be running in the Philippines !!
We are in big trouble folks
is this the part of the movie where they bash white people? Ive seen this movie before, getting old
Looking forward to this. Steven Raga is an excellent speaker.
How about addressing real issues like crime, taxes, sanitation and over-development or, heaven forbid, something as mundane as fixing potholes?