BomBardened
In this episode, Eric and Amy continue their conversation with Omari Salisbury, founder of Converge Media, about community responsibility, youth violence, and why prevention efforts in Seattle often receive less support than reactive solutions. Salisbury explains why many communities already know what works to reduce violence but struggle to secure funding for the programs doing that work every day. He shares how mentorship, youth sports, music programs, and grassroots organizations often operate with limited resources, even though they are the strongest protective factors before young people reach crisis points. The conversation explores why public messaging around safety rarely acknowledges the role communities themselves can play, and why leaders are often reluctant to say that change must start locally as well as institutionally. The discussion also examines how assumptions about policy solutions, gun legislation, and intervention strategies sometimes miss what is actually happening on the ground. Salisbury reflects on the importance of acknowledging trauma when violence occurs, why empathy from leadership matters in moments of crisis, and how trust is built through honesty rather than performative responses. Finally, Salisbury talks about a challenge he sees across media and philanthropy: the tendency to fund stories centered on struggle rather than possibility. He shares why investing in prevention, youth opportunity, and what he calls “Black joy” may be one of the most overlooked strategies for creating long-term change—and how individuals can support organizations already doing that work in Seattle today. Donate — Converge Media | Local Seattle News: https://www.whereweconverge.com/donate-ptAPd
27 episodios
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