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Act Two for Pablo Pereya — This time as GOP Activist

Pablo Pereya addressing East Shelby GOP members

  • JB
  • Pablo Pereya addressing East Shelby GOP members

If there was ever doubt as to the political content of the possibly receding matter of County Commissioner Henri Brooks’ outbursts in the May 12 Commission meeting, it was surely diminished somewhat Tuesday night at this month’s regular meeting of the East Shelby Republican Club.

Although the featured speaker was County Trustee David Lenoir, who presented a rundown on the work of his office, and some general remarks were also made to club members by Shelby County Mayor Mark Luttrell, more than usual interest was paid to a brief ad hoc appearance by one Pablo Pereya.

Club program director Arnold Weiner introduced Pereya this way : “He’s the one who had a stand-down with Henri Brooks. He’s the de facto head of the Hispanic Republican Alliance.”

The “stand-down,” it will be remembered, came at the May 12 Commission meeting when Pereya was talked into addressing the Commission on a contentious roofing-contract issue by GOP members Terry Roland and Heidi Shafer (neither of whom, it should be said, appeared to have an espressly partisan motive; Shafer would say later that she had not known Pereya in advance of the meeting and was not aware of his political affiliation.).

The issue in the Commission meeting was over the fact that the successful bidder for the roofing contract employed Hispanic workers rather than African Americans and had thereby satisfied equal-opportunity mandates regarding minority employment, Brooks and fellow African-American Commissioner Walter Bailey insisted that the arrangement amounted to denial of employment for black workers.

It was then that Pereya made his appearance, waxing rhetorical about the plight of Hispanics and contending that “growing up Hispanic in Memphis is definitely [being] a minority in the minority.”

Brooks’ response, the first of several of hers that proved inflammatory that day, was to give Pereya a dressing-down: “Your experience does not compare to mine….You asked to come here. You asked to come here. We did not. And when we got here, our condition was so egregious, so barbaric. Don’t ever let that come out of your mouth again….”

Since then, members of both the Commission and of the Democratic Party, whose standard Brooks carries as a party nominee for Juvenile Court Clerk, have been in something of a pickle, isolated members of both wondering, as a storm of public criticism erupted, if some sort of remedial action should be taken against Brooks.

That initial impulse seems to have diminished, although censure was briefly discussed (in private) by Commission members. The Democratic Party’s local executive committee has met since but ignored the issue as a likely no-win situation — the idea apparently being that action against Brooks would generate divisions within the party, while inaction potentially left the party open to criticism for ignoring her provocative statements.

That Pereya himself could have been a provocateur — an issue independent of a general consensus that Brooks’ behavior had been improper —- crossed the minds of a few Democrats. What he said to fellow Republicans at Tuesday night’s East Shelby meeting might have fed their suspicions.

In “a quick four minutes,” Pereya said, he wanted to explode some myths about Hispanics.
In order, they were:

(1) “That Hispanics are voting Democratic.” That was “not true,” said Pereya, who contended that most Hispanics are “right in accord” with the GOP, believing in the virtues of “hard work, family, and faith.: Even those Hispanics who did vote Democratic were “very conservative.”

(2) That Hispanics are “illegal.: He noted that the term “Hispanic” could be applied to 17 Spanish-speaking countries “south of the border,” not merely to Mexico, and that numerous Hispanics in the U.S., including himself, were stable citizens. “I’ve been here for 23 years. I took an oath to that flag to become a citizen,” he said to applause from club members.

(3) That Hispanics “do not vote.” Some 50,000 Hispanics were turning 18 every year, Pereya said, meaning that in 20150, there would be 132 million people of Hispanic origin in America. “And they’re going to vote for somebody. We need to get them to vote Republican.”

(4) That Hispanics are “not a minority.” This had been a bone of contention at the Commission meeting, and, reprising some of his remarks on that occasion, Pereya said, “Taxation without representation is tyranny. And rules without relationship is rebellion.” A possible paraphrase of that last, somewhat confusing bit of syntax might be that being ruled over without being involved in the process begets the urge to rebellion.”

In any case, Pereya’s meaning regarding Republicans’ attitude toward Hispanics was clear enough in his last sentence: “Let’s get them on board!”

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News

“Belle” Explores Race and Gender

Greg Akers says Belle is a provocative look at slavery, gender, and patrimony in the 18th century.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Introducing the Amazing Elvis Pregnancy Test for Lions and Tigers and Bears

Will work for a peanut butter and banana sandwich. Or any sandwich, really.

  • Will work for a peanut butter and banana sandwich. Or any sandwich, really.

Here at Fly on the Wall we like to keep readers up to date on all things related to, inspired by, and named after the King of Rock and Roll. Take, for example, Elvis the pregnancy sniffing beagle.

The relevant information:

A two-year-old beagle’s nose is about as accurate as an over-the-counter pregnancy test. Scientists at the Cincinnati Zoo’s Center for Conservation & Research of Endangered Wildlife (CREW) tested to see if a dog named Elvis could distinguish a pregnant polar bear from a non-pregnant bear by smelling fecal samples last year. Elvis was 97 per cent accurate. He was trained to pause and sit when he detects a pregnancy and to not show interest in samples from non-pregnant bears. After his training, Elvis was put to the test in October 2013. He was given 34 samples of feces to sniff from the 17 potentially pregnant polar bears that mated in the spring. The zoos that participated in this study were then told whether or not Elvis suspected their polar bears were pregnant.
This study is meant to help zoos determine whether or not they should mimic wild conditions for pregnant polar bears in the winter. In the wild, pregnant polar bears enter dens and don’t eat or drink for months. Non-pregnant bears spend the winter outside of dens. Zoos want to isolate the pregnant bears with little disruption and film them to know when babies are born and let non-pregnant females enjoy winter by swimming and socializing while out on exhibit with the other bears.

This sniffer-dog project is still in the testing phase.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Eddie Izzard Returns to the Scene of the Crime: Overton Square

Last week Eddie Izzard told the Memphis Flyer all about his first performance in America, in a parking lot that is now the deck for Bosco’s Squared.

Eddie Izzard in Midtown

  • Eddie Izzard in Midtown

While in town for his Orpheum date the comic visited the spot where he rode a 5-foot unicycle while escaping from handcuffs. And then, of course, he posted a selfie.

Technically, this shot is a little to the Southwest of the spot where Memphians, intrigued by the unicycle, encouraged Izzard to, “Ride that thing.”

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News

Makeover for Riverside Drive

Toby Sells reports on an upcoming redesign for Riverside Drive from Georgia Avenue to Beale.

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News News Blog

Riverside Drive Gets A Road Diet, Bike and Pedestrian Lane

Proposed Riverside plan between Beale and Georgia.

  • Jeff Speck & Associates
  • Proposed Riverside plan between Beale and Georgia.

Riverside Drive will remain closed two weeks after Memphis in May festivities conclude to implement a pilot project on the road between Beale and Georgia that will reduce vehicle traffic there and increase bike and pedestrian traffic.

That section of Riverside will be reduced from four lanes of vehicle traffic to two. The additional space will be “devoted to bicycle and pedestrian activities,” according to a news release, “to make the riverfront safer, more active, and accessible.”

“The pilot project helps the public envision how Riverside Drive could be re-purposed for greater enjoyment by bicyclist and pedestrians,” said city engineer John Cameron. “It also gives technical experts a chance to evaluate traffic impacts on Riverside Drive and the Downtown street network as the ultimate configuration of Riverside Drive is determined.”

The new Riverside configuration will remain for the next 12 to 18 months. City officials will study the space in that time to see if the street could be reconfigured permanently from Georgia Avenue to the Pyramid.

Details of the plan for Riverside were not immediately available. But officials said the project is a step toward one of the recommendations in a 2013 report from land-use consultant Jeff Speck, which said:

“Riverside Drive, which is annually narrowed and closed with little negative impact on the Downtown, should be converted from a four-lane speedway to a two-lane ‘complete street,’ including parallel parking and a protected bicycle track along the Mississippi River. This change can be accomplished through a mere re-striping, with no curbs reconstructed. Canopy trees should be added where they are lacking and can be planted at limited cost.”

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Sing All Kinds We Recommend

St. Jude Presents John Rich and Friends

On Tuesday, June 3rd, John Rich, of country mega duo Big & Rich, is bringing a wagon load of country to the Cannon Center all for St. Jude. Who we talking about? Big & Rich, Clint Black, Randy Houser, Deana Carter, and Cowboy Troy. Tickets are going fast.

St. Jude Presents John Rich and Friends

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News

New Look for the Old Forest

A local activist wants to make a few changes to Overton Park’s Old Forest. Davis Christopher reports.

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News

Grizzpocalypse: 9 Questions

Kevin Lipe takes a long, hard look at recent developments in Grizzlies World.

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Fly On The Wall Blog Opinion

Proposal Would Replace Midtown’s Old Forest with a Newer Model

Some of my best friends are trees, says Portland transplant Lake Tweely

  • “Some of my best friends are trees,” says Portland transplant Lake Tweely

Lake Tweely thinks Memphis has a lot of potential. The Boise native who spent a year-and-a-half in Portland before moving to a place where he thought that might actually impress somebody, cited all of the good things happening with Overton Square, Crosstown, Broad Ave., and Cooper Young, before airing his lone grievance and sharing his bold vision for the future.

“This place has so much energy and soul,” Tweely says. “But the so-called ‘Old Forest’ thing that’s happening in Overton Park has got to come down.” Tweely isn’t anti-tree, he just thinks Memphis would be better served by a newer forest that’s up to date and appeals to younger people.

“The name says it all,” Tweely elaborates. “‘The Old Forest’ doesn’t sound like a place you hang out with your friends, it sounds like a place you go to kick your meth habit or something.”

Although plans have yet to be finalized,Tweely has some ideas about what a new Midtown forest might look like.

“First, it has to be organic,” he says. “So, to my mind it all comes back to food trucks and locally-produced craft beer. These are the sorts of things younger people expect from nature, and if we want to attract and keep innovative business-minded people in Memphis, we can’t afford to not do this.”

Tweely also invisions pop-up style kiosks he calls “coffee stumps,” that would sell beverages and gourmet donuts while providing gallery space for local artists.

“Right now I’m talking to fabricators who build those cell phone towers that look like trees,” Tweely says. “Can you imagine a brand new forest full of craft beer and artisanal donuts with the fastest Internet in the city? Of course you can’t. That’s what I’m here for.”