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The Porch

The Porch

De : Southerners on New Ground
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Southerners on New Ground presents The Porch, SONG’s new podcast that explores the many facets of Queer Southern Organizing for Liberation in our Lifetime. We want to fill your glasses with refreshing and radical storytelling, movement insights, and strategies from key figures on the frontlines of Queer and Trans resistance. Come sit and stay a while as we build new worlds where we can all thrive—free from fear.Copyright 2025 All rights reserved. Economie Management Management et direction
Épisodes
  • The Porch Podcast S2, Episode 1: Stop, Collaborate, and Listen ft. kai lumumba barrow and Serena Sebring
    Feb 27 2026

    In this episode of The Porch, we sat down with kai lumumba barrow and Serena Sebring, two forever SONG members and community organizers, to discuss ways to create safer environments for our people as authoritarianism ramps up in the United States. With years of activism championing prison abolition and Black freedom movements, these two brilliant organizers discussed what security looks like when it is rooted in Black feminist praxis, queer liberation and collaborative practice. Kai and Serena remind us of the ways our communities have always worked to keep each other safer like making sure our kids are home before the streetlights turn on, to secret codes to warn of danger, or simply crewing up for Souls to Polls. This episode invites us all to make safety plans, build relationships with our neighbors and be aware of the ways technology has become a surveillance tool for our enemies.

    Bios

    kai lumumba barrow

    For over 40 years kai lumumba barrow has worked with numerous organizations on campaigns and projects to stop jail expansion; confront police violence; free political prisoners, and experiment with abolitionist models for shrinking carceral logics. A self-taught artist, barrow is interested in the praxis of radical imagination, experimenting with abolition as an aesthetic vernacular. Her sprawling paintings, multimedia collages, environmental installations, and found object sculptures incorporate images, materials, sites and ideas that perform queer, Black feminist theory.

    portfolio: www.kailbarrow.com website: www.galleryofthestreets.org

    Serena Sebring

    Serena Sebring, Executive Director, is a queer Black feminist, mother, organizer, and educator. She brings leadership and vision to the coalition, builds the capacity of a growing statewide progressive ecosystem, and coordinates resources and staff capacity in their service. Since 2005, she has woven and nurtured relationships across the state with organizers, artists, policy-makers, workers, parents, and caregivers on front porches, in church basements and city council rooms, at the statehouse, and in the streets.

    www.blueprintnc.org

    Resources

    Slam Hunter College

    Mumia Abu-Jamal

    Assata Shakur

    Critical Resistance

    Duke Lacrosse Rape Case.

    https://www.byp100.org/

    Souls to the Polls

    Equality NC,

    COINTELPRO

    Phone tree

    Maroonage

    Cuss and Discuss

    Study Questions

    1. From Safety to “Being Safer”

    How does adopting a “being safer” mindset change the way you design campaigns, actions, and organizational structures?

    2. Strategic Risk Assessment

    What are the highest-priority risks in your current organizing context—and what concrete protocols do you have (or need) to address them?

    3. Demilitarizing Movement Security

    What would it look like to “queer” or demilitarize our security culture while still taking threats seriously?

    4. Surveillance & Communication

    What communication practices should we shift to reduce vulnerability?

    5. Relationship as Infrastructure

    How are you investing in relationship-building (neighbors, families, cross-movement allies), and how could those relationships function as real safety infrastructure in a crisis?

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    51 min
  • The Porch Podcast S1, Episode 4: In Spirit & Strategy ft. Jade Brooks and Carlin Rushing
    Sep 2 2025

    In this episode of the Porch, Co-Directors Jade Brooks and Carlin Rushing tell the story of how they found Southerners on New Ground (SONG) and their early impressions. Both open the conversation answering a familiar question in SONG circles: “Who are your people and who are you accountable to?” Sharing their outlook on the current moment in the United States and the importance of Southern organizing, Carlin and Jade talk about SONG’s work to convene our folks, engage with our neighbors for disaster planning, and embody the best of this 32-year-old legacy organization. Get the low down on the Won’t You Be My Gaybor campaign, The CookOut, and this year’s Queer South Revival. __________________________________________________________

    Bios

    Jade Brooks Co-Director Jade Brooks joined SONG in 2009, when she first moved to the South. Originally from the Pacific Northwest, Jade is a white gay person and comes from a lineage of Jews, Quakers, single moms, hippie types, and deep dykes. Over the past 15 years, she has helped to build out SONG’s campaign organizing muscle. She also led the creation of SONG Power (our sister electoral organizing shop). She is passionate about community organizing that builds people’s power. Jade also has experience drawn from organizing in the Palestinian Liberation Movement as an anti-Zionist, diasporic Jew & within movements to build progressive electoral infrastructure. She lives in Durham, North Carolina, with her son & her pup.

    Carlin Rushing Co-Director Carlin Rushing joined SONG as a member in 2013 and first joined the staff as Regional Membership Lead in 2018. At her core, Carlin values family and faith and believes that liberation in our lifetime is possible. Unapologetically Black and Southern, Carlin is a lover of the Black women’s literary tradition, all things percussion and rural North Carolina sunsets.

    Study/Reflection Questions 1. What new practical skill do you want to learn? 2. Are you in your dignity? 3. How is your full-throated love practice going? 4. How is your listening going, and to whom…to folk you don’t know or others?

    Recources

    The Sound of the Genuine (Baccalaureate ceremony) (Spelman College), 1980 May 4 · The Howard Thurman Digital Archive https://thurman.pitts.emory.edu/items/show/838

    Southerners on New Ground, Strategic Almanac https://southernersonnewground.org/our-work/strategic-almanac/

    The Street by Ann Petry https://archive.org/details/street00annp

    The Color Purple by Alice Walker https://archive.org/stream/the-color-purple-alice-walker/the-color-purple-alice-walker_djvu.txt

    Beloved by Toni Morrison https://archive.org/details/beloved0000morr/page/8/mode/2up

    The Full Imago Dialogue Process https://higherthoughtinstitute.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Full-Dialogue-Process-3-2-2038-1.pdf

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    1 h et 24 min
  • The Porch Podcast S1, Episode 3: Don’t Mourn! Organize! ft. Mama Pat Hussain and Mandy Carter
    Jun 24 2025
    The Porch sat down with two beloved founders of Southerners on New Ground (SONG), Mandy Carter and Pat Hussain. With collectively over 100 years of organizing experience, Mandy and Mama Pat chat about how they first got started as teenagers in the War Resistance and Civil Rights movements, the 1987 March on Washington for Gay, Lesbian and Bi Equal Rights and Liberation, and how they began to connect the dots between LGBTQ rights and other forms of oppression. The two long-time friends share how they founded SONG with four other friends: the late Joan Garner, Pam McMichael, Suzanne Pharr and Mab Segrest. This conversation also digs into their philosophy for organizing “Don’t Mourn! Organize!” and how they responded to need at every moment with their labor and love to build an inclusive movement for liberation in our lifetime. Mandy Carter Mandy Carter is a southern African-American lesbian with a 58-year movement history of social, racial and LGBT justice organizing since 1967. Raised in two orphanages and a foster home for her first 18 years in the state of New York, Ms. Carter attributes the influences of the Quaker-based American Friends Service Committee, the former Institute for the Study of Nonviolence, and the pacifist-based War Resisters League for her sustained multi-racial and multi-issue organizing. It was specifically her participation in the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. inspired 1968 Poor People’s Campaign organized by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) that solidified her sustained commitment to nonviolence. This was to have been Dr. King’s most dramatic appeal to the conscience of the nation, designed to call attention to the fact that thousands of American citizens -both white and black – continued to suffer poverty in the midst of plenty. Ms. Carter lived in the tent city named Resurrection City on the National Mall in Washington, DC. The Poor People’s Campaign was the last project Dr. King was working on before his assassination in Memphis, TN on April 4, 1968. Ms. Carter helped co-found two groundbreaking organizations. Southerners On New Ground (SONG) and the National Black Justice Coalition (NBJC). SONG, founded in 1993, is about building progressive movement across the South by creating transformative models of organizing that connects race, class, culture, gender, sexual orientation and gender identity. Specifically, SONG integrates work against homophobia into freedom struggles in the South. She served as its Executive Director from 2003-2005. The National Black Justice Coalition, (NBJC) founded in 2003, is a national civil rights organization dedicated to empowering Black lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people. NBJC's mission is to end racism and homophobia. NBJC provides leadership at the intersection of national civil rights organizations and LGBTQ organizations. In 2015, Ms. Carter received the Union Medal, the highest honor from the Union Theological Seminary, a leading progressive seminary and voice for justice, as did former Vice-President Al Gore. In 2015, Ms. Carter helped organize diverse broad-based participation for the 50th Anniversary of the 1965 Selma-To-Montgomery Voting Rights March activities in Selma, Alabama. This 1965 march moved Congress to pass the 1965 Voting Rights Act that enfranchised hundreds of thousands of blacks across the South. Former President Obama and the First Family were in attendance. Pat Hussain Pat Hussain, born in 1950, grew up in Atlanta, Georgia, attending segregated schools. She has been both a Southern debutante and a Marine. She has been a community organizer since she started stuffing envelopes for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in high school. In 1963, Pat attended a civil rights sit-in at a Krispy Kreme doughnut shop. When a man purposely poured a hot cup of coffee down the back of a fellow protestor, Pat stood up and left to prevent herself from lashing out. She realized she wasn’t cut out for non-violence. Pat has always been at the center of community organizing. She co-founded the Atlanta chapter of GLAAD, helped the Task Force prepare for the 1987 March on Washington, and was the Grand Marshall for the first Pride parade in Knoxville, Tennessee. Prior to the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, when the commissioners of nearby Cobb County approved an anti-gay resolution, Pat led a successful campaign to move the Olympic volleyball competition out of the county. In 1984, Toys “R” Us hired her, even after she disclosed in her interview that she was queer. At work she met Cherry, a fellow employee. Pat helped Cherry escape from a physically abusive marriage, and the two became partners, jointly raising Cherry’s two kids from her previous marriage. She and Cherry are now grandparents, and have been together for over 30 years. At the 1993 National LGBTQ Task Force conference, Pat joined five other women to found Southerners on New ...
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    1 h et 2 min
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