Christopher Pittman

Secretary

Chris Pittman is an educator and investigative researcher who works to build communities seeking to enact social and environmental justice across the public and political spectrum with a background in small business and logistics management. 

A 20 year Richmonder and VCU alumnus, Chris has taught courses and lectured in both public and non-profit settings. Shaped and informed at a young age by the symbiotic cultural effects of public/private works projects on both the environment and the citizenry living within it; Chris pursued volunteer work with the Sierra Club and various other political and educational organizations. In the southern counties of West Virginia Chris dedicated years of his life to the work of documenting and organizing anti-mountain top removal efforts and education. Centering his curriculum on the sometimes-radical tenets of ‘intention", "purpose" and "free will” in lieu of established educational methodologies; like the “pass/fail” dynamics of standardized tests, always seeking a more enlightened and empathic path towards progress and truth, chartering a somewhat altruistic self doctrine of comportion that he hopes to share with the body during his first serving term.

Chris holds a BFA in Fine Arts, a minor in Political Science and is currently administrating private servers for multiple clandestine independent research groups involved in war crime evidence gathering as well as research/education into alternate physics and energy production that if implemented correctly/responsibly could both reduce scarcity and proliferate abundance for all. 

What does human rights mean to you?

Human Rights are inherent but not given. It is the work of a healthy and just society to collectively define, revise and uphold these interminable and agreed upon values for itself as it’s populous progresses and evolves. This has not been, and may never be a linear path towards true peace and equality in our society. So it is the duty of those willing, to continually question and strive to better ourselves and those connected to us.

 
Mediaspace