Calendar

9896
Mar
22
Sun
North American Anarchist Studies Network conference @ California Institute for Integral Studies
Mar 22 @ 11:00 am – Mar 24 @ 5:00 pm

The North American Anarchist Studies Network is holding its sixth annual conference on March 20, 21, and 22 at the California Institute for Integral Studies, in San Francisco, California—the homeland of the Ohlone people. Attendance is free and open to the public.

You can view and/or download a preliminary schedule here:http://bitly.com/19cGhGI

There are about 70 talks planned, as well as poetry, films, and several workshops. Friday’s opening plenary features Chris Carlsson, Andy Cornell, and Kenyon Zimmer presenting on “Hidden Histories of Bay Area Anarchism,” followed by discussion, and then a trip to a local watering hole. On Saturday and Sunday there will be panels scheduled from late morning to early evening, with plenty of breaks for sustenance and conversation.

Hope to see you there!

 

 

58394
Mar
24
Tue
Court Support for BartFriday arrestees. @ Hall of Justice, 2nd Floor, Dept 17
Mar 24 @ 8:30 am – 11:30 am

Facebook event

Please come to court in San Francisco to support our 2 comrades who were arrested by the during #BARTFriday.

BART police and SF Sheriffs retaliated against these two brave individuals while they were in custody. Particularly severe pain and trauma was caused to one of our arrestees, whose cane was stolen by BART PD, and despite repeated requests for mobility assistance, she was denied any help and police mocked her as they forced her to move about the BART station and jail without assistance.

—-

We still demand:
1. Disband the BART police
2. Restitution for the people: Low-income ticket discounts
3. Drop charges and ransom against the Black Friday 14

“This is no time to engage in the luxury of cooling off or to take the tranquilizing drug of gradualism.”
— Martin Luther King

#BARTFriday was an autonomous action planned in response to the “Reclaim King’s Legacy” callout for a weekend of actions. This callout came from the Anti-Police-Terror project, a multi-racial, multi generational coalition, led by the most impacted communities, working to develop a replicable and sustainable model to end police terrorism in this country.

58052
Jobs Not Jails @ County Building
Mar 24 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

On Tuesday, March 24th the Alameda County Board of Supervisors will finally vote on the county’s public safety realignment budget.

For the past six months, the Ella Baker Center has been campaigning for the supervisors to set aside more funding for community-based re-entry programs and services—instead of giving most of the money to the sheriff.

Our community-backed budget proposal is based on the reality that less people are returning to jail, and more are in need of programs and services to help them when they come home.

Come to the Board of Supervisors Meeting and make public comment to let the supervisors know that you support a Jobs Not Jails budget!

58386
Livable Wage Assembly @ SEIU Local 1000 union hall, 2nd floor
Mar 24 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

OLWAwebThe Oakland Livable Wage Assembly builds community and power among those who seek higher wages and better work life conditions for area workers. We meet every second and fourth Tuesday of the month at the SEIU Local 1000 union hall, 1433 Webster Street, 2nd Floor in downtown Oakland. These assembly meetings occur from 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm.

Our work together encompasses:

  • (1) the concerns of precarious, contingent and care workers;
  • (2) current campaigns to improve wages for low-wage workers; and
  • (3) efforts by unionized workers and unions to improve wages and quality of work life.

At this meeting we will be planning an action at OGP on April 15th (4/15 = FOR $15)  in tandem with other actions around the East Bay and  converging on a huge FF15 rally to commence at 4:00 PM at UC Berkeley.

We share stories and information in an egalitarian and participatory way to build relationships and build the movement.

We look forward to learning with you and making change for the better. Please love and support one another. We have a duty to fight. We have a duty to win.

 

 

 

58268
Mar
26
Thu
Film Screening: 25 Cuba & Africa: Unbroken Solidarity @ Sole Space
Mar 26 @ 1:30 am – 3:30 am

Facebook event.

 

On the 27th Anniversary of the Battle of Cuito Cuanavale, the CPE,SoleSpace, and SF State’s Race and Resistance Studies program invite you for a discussion and film exploring the history and current nature of Cuba’s internationalist solidarity with Africa.

On March 23rd 1988, the People’s Armed Forces for the Liberation of Angola (FAPLA)—with the support of 1,500 Cuban solders and reinforcements— dealt a major blow to South African troops at the Battle of Cuito Cuanavale, forcing the army of apartheid South Africa to withdraw from Angola after 13 years of intervention in that country’s civil war. Nelson Mandela described the victory as “the turning point for the liberation of Africa from the scourge of apartheid.” Cuba’s solidarity with Africa has not ended. Last year, Cuba provided the largest medical team of any single foreign nation to fight against the Ebola epidemic in Africa.

We will explore Cuba’s ongoing relationship to Africa and its impacts on internationalist thought and practice through a panel discussion with Walter Turner and Phil Hutchings and a screening of the second portion of “Cuba, an African Odyssey,” a documentary film on Cuba’s role in Angola.

Walter is a longtime activist in struggle and solidarity with Africa-based struggles for social and economic justice. He is the host of “Africa Today” on KPFA (89.3 fm).

Phil Hutchings is a veteran community organizer and educator, early member of the Venceremos Brigade, and co-founder of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration.

** This event is part of a larger CPE series: “In the Spirit of Bandung: The History & Future of Third World Internationalism.” Click here for a full list of upcoming events in the series: http://us1.campaign-archive2.com/?u=eee9995da05d49840584ec4c8&id=d2a52fa453&e=ae989c9ddf

POSTS
58199
Politics of Debt Reading Group. @ Omni Commons (basement)
Mar 26 @ 2:30 am – 4:30 am

We’ll be discussing the Debt and Economic systems of the ancient world for this meeting, using an article written by Michael Hudson.

Here’s the reading.  Reconstructing The Origins of Interest-Bearing Debt… Last time we read through page 30, and this we’ll cover the rest of the chapter.

The Politics of Debt Reading Group is associated with the Bay Area Public School and Strike Debt Bay Area.

58283
Berkeley Post Office Sale Lawsuit Hearing: Motion to Dismiss @ San Francisco Federal Courthouse, Courtroom 8 - 19th Floor
Mar 26 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Judge William Alsup will hear oral arguments on the Post Office’s “Motion to Dismiss.” The Post Office claims that since they have delisted the Berkeley Post Office from their sales website that the City of Berkeley’s lawsuit against the sale is no longer moot and should be dismissed.

This is an important milestone in the two and a half year (so far) struggle to save the Berkeley Post Office and Post Offices around the country from being sold and the Post Office itself from privatization.

(Note: This event was postponed from its original date, on March 19th)

Via Save the Berkeley Post Office:

The U.S. Postal Service has moved to dismiss the suits filed by the City of Berkeley and the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Both suits call out the Postal Service for violations of federal environmental and historic preservation laws in the Postal Service’s attempt to dispose of Berkeley’s historic 1914 downtown post office.

The USPS is arguing that both suits are moot as the USPS is not currently in contract to sell the building. But statements made by the Postal Service tell us the building is still for sale. And the Postal Service has done nothing to remedy their flaunting of environmental and historic preservation laws. 

Judge William Alsup will hear the case. If Judge Alsup rules that the case should proceed, the attorneys defending our historic post office anticipate a full hearing on the merits will be held in the fall of this year.

No signs are permitted in the court room, but your presence will be noted and is helpful. The federal building in SF has airport-type security so bring identification (e.g. a drivers license). Judge Alsup starts court promptly. If you’re able to come, plan on arriving early, 7:30 a.m. or thereabouts.

58259
Chevron Refinery Rally Against Prop 13 @ Washington Park
Mar 26 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

Chevron Refinery Rally

It’s time to take action!  On Thursday, March 26th at the Chevron Refinery in Richmond, Evolve will be launching a series of rallies with our partners to highlight the multi-million dollar tax breaks that corporations are getting from Prop. 13. We’re kicking off our first rally at the Chevron refinery because Chevron is saving nearly $1 billion a year from Prop. 13. That’s a billion dollars each year that should be going to our public schools and services!

Join us to take a stand against Prop 13’s massive corporate loophole! We’ll meet at Washington Park (W Cutting Blvd and S Garrard Blvd) at 12pm to start the rally. Chevron won’t go down without a fight, so it’s up to people like you to help us out-organize them, so we can finally get our schools and services the funding they deserve.

RSVP

58384
Beyond the Blues: Ending the Prison Industrial Complex @ Red Poppy Art House
Mar 26 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

The Red Poppy Art House is pleased to present Beyond the Blues: Ending the Prison Industrial Complex on March 12th, 19th, and 26th, 2015.

In a series of interactive discussions, Marcus Shelby will delve into our justice system, its flaws, and how music can be used as a tool for reform and change; both in front and behind bars. This lecture series will culminate with a performance on Friday, March 27th.These engaging discussions will explore the blues, the prison industrial complex, mass incarceration, the school-to-prison pipeline, restorative justice, prison abolition, and more led by Marcus Shelby. Using readings, recorded music, poetry, video, these events are open to anyone interested in reforming our criminal justice system and how art can be part of that process.

Discussion and Performance Schedule

March 12:  History of Prisons, Rockefeller Laws, School-to-Prison Pipeline

March 19:  Mass Incarceration, The Prison Industrial Complex, Black Prison Movement; Incarcerated Women with guest speaker Naima Shalhoub

March 26:  Ending the Death Penalty, Restorative Justice, Prison Abolition

March 27:  Performance by Marcus Shelby Quartet: Beyond the Blues: Ending the Prison Industrial Complex

58271
Mar
25
Wed
Film Showing: INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM — NEW ECONOMIC SLAVERY @ Humanist Hall
Mar 25 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY SYSTEM —
NEW ECONOMIC SLAVERY

by Peter Joseph

Film evenings begin with optional potluck refreshments & social hour at 6:30 pm,
followed by the film at 7:30 pm, followed by optional discussion after the film.

For this film, see YouTube

Humanist Hall is wheelchair accessible around the corner at 411 28th Street

$5 donations are expected.

 

 

58423
Mar
27
Fri
Defend the Trees at People’s Park! @ People's Park
Mar 27 all-day

Everyone is encouraged to come to People’s Park Friday, March 27th, beginning at 6:00 AM throughout the entire day, as the scheduled tree cutting will last until 3.

At 6AM Thursday morning, the Professional Tree Care Company arrived at People’s Park accompanied by the Berkeley Police Department. They surrounded the area with orange fencing and brought their wood chippers in. Over the course of the day, the work crew proceeded to begin chopping down three oak trees and a few other trees including a plum sapling. A UC landscape architect named David A. Johnson watched over the whole affair pointing out which trees should be cut down.

At noon several defenders arrived at the park. They watched as limbs were severed from a perfectly healthy tree. We yelled at David Johnson as he directed the workers and handed out fliers explaining why they were cutting down the trees. Soon after he was confronted and tried to excuse himself saying “I was defending people’s park pulling up concrete in 1969.” We told him plainly that he sold out and there should at least have been a meeting with the community about the trees. He went back and forth about how many trees were scheduled to be cut down but we confirmed with other sources that the total was 29 over the weekend.

As workers used their cherry picker to begin cutting down branches one of the defenders stood under the branch being cut and the worker yelled for them to get out but the defender refused. The worker stopped and came down to tell management to call over the nearby police. Soon the cops biked over and told the activists to move from under the tree but the defender refused while saying it was their legal right to be on the side walk. The arborist went to cut down a different tree but the same thing happened there as well. We mournfully watch as a plum sapling was uprooted by a tow rope pulling the whole tree straight into the chipper. As more people began to show up in opposition to the project, management decided to call it a day and pack up. After the landscaper David Johnson told the cops to make sure no homeless people slept within the fence line saying that the bedding of mulch was for the trees not the people.

People will be meeting at the People’s Park stage at 9 PM Thursday evening to discuss possible next steps. We strongly encourage everyone to come by People’s Park tomorrow at 6 AM to prevent further damage to the park. Everyone is encouraged to come to People’s Park tomorrow throughout the entire day, as the scheduled tree cutting will last until 3.

In the meantime, here are some numbers to call and ask that the park not be desecrated:

David A. Johnson (Assistant Director, Project Management)
510-642-7533

Christine Shaff (UC Berkeley Real Estate)
510-643-4793

58450
Defend Knowland Park! @ Knowland Park
Mar 27 @ 4:00 pm

Mountain Lion

58388
Rally Against Downtown Berkeley Association for Beating of Homeless Person
Mar 27 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm

A Downtown Berkeley Association (DBA) employee (now fired) attacked a homeless person some days ago. The DBA has essentially declared war on the homeless in downtown Berkeley, pushing the City Council to enact and enforce ordinances meant to criminalize the homeless.

A call has gone out to protest the DBA as a result of the incident caught on video below (trigger warning):


58447
Mar
28
Sat
Community Forum on Building a People Powered Economy in Richmond @ Grace Lutheran Church
Mar 28 @ 4:30 pm – 11:00 pm

  • Invitation to all people interested in planning a new economy for Richmond based on pro-people values are invited to join. To RSVP contact Ellen Choy at ellen@movementgeneration.org

58269
Community Gardening at the Berkeley Post Office! @ Downtown Berkeley Post Office
Mar 28 @ 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

The planting was in January.  Now the garden is in full bloom! The gardening work continues. Join us!

More information on  the Berkeley Post Office Defense against the sale and privatization here.

More pictures here.

58449
Black / Brown / All Lives Matter Protest: Rip David Bremer @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Mar 28 @ 6:00 pm – 10:00 pm

Original IndyBay listing.

 

police killing is a problem…. and we are starting to realize it. but we need to come out and show that realization, show our frustration…. I don’t know were we’re marching exactly, something like the millions march, I just hope people show up and we take it from there.

theres too many names to list here of all the dead but here are a few. RIP DAVID BREMER RIP OSCAR GRANT RIP ERIC GARNER AND ERIC DORNER, RIP THE WHITE N TRANSGENDER KILLED RIP THE MENTALLY DISABLED WHO ARE KILLED RIP KELLY THOMAS RIP THE MISSING 43, REMEMBER MR PATEL THE INDIAN MAN BEATEN IN MADISON, RIP SHAIMAA AL-SABBAGH!RIP TO ALL AROUND THE WORLD.

I don’t care for looting or destruction of property, were coming for the police… not anybody else… nobodys mom and pop OR whole foods has done shit to us… so lets not break their stuff.

all I have left to say is this poem I wrote about police brutality…I hope it means something to somebody…

Im sick of people dying

Im sick of people dying as you can guess just from the title,
I hope that people hit the streets and attempts iv made are vital,
I try to hit the heart say “its your boy were fighting for”, n people say they’ll come today but never come I scorn, I really hold resentment about the way that people talk, cause then when it comes down to it they don’t fuckin walk the walk….to me its really simple as I look around the world, Bahrain and Gaza/Israel the CAR abroad, Remember Ali Baddah, n FREE Nabeel Rajab and watch for things to escalate the Kurds just want auton, the shits short for autonomy, we want it all the same, so viva Kurdistan and all resistance to the state, resistance to oppression, and resistance to ideas, that land kids just walking home in mourges with grieving peoples, im talking bout the boy, 14 and walking home, n Turkish Special Forces shot him n no not in the dome, they shot him in the heart, and it went out through his spine, n what he did was nothing, he didn’t do a crime, he just really didn’t know that there were soldiers on the line, n that on his way from work hed turn that corner n a dime, it seems it was the wrong corner n BOOM the rifle shot, and now I sit here as a mourner my moral begins to rot, but I remember that the struggle cant be brought down by the evil, the shit we struggle hard against so please bring out the people, Im sick of people dying as you can tell just from the title, so FUCK THE PEOPLE KILLING US ill say it with a smile….

I hope ALL types show up wear black for the fallen, this IS everybodys problem…lets show them we get that. power to the people VIVA LA REVOLUCION!

police_beating.jpg
police_beating.jpg

 

58424
Orion’s Joy of Revoluntionary Bebop Jazz and Latin Jazz @ Caffe Leila
Mar 28 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

We will be playing Revoluntionary Bebop and Latin Jazz
Kids Welcome sorry no guest Musicians
Steve Mcquarry Keyboard
Rubin Salcido Alto sax and flute
Jim Grantham Tenor sax
Dave Casini Vibes
Dennis Kong Stand up Bass will replace  our regular bass player Jim Shearer
Orion Leader, Drumset and Cow bell 510541 3835

 

 

 

58458
Mar
29
Sun
Sunday at the Marxist Library: The Dreyfus Affair @ Niebyl-Proctor Library
Mar 29 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm

The Dreyfus Affair

In a scandal hat divided France from 1894 to 1906, Captain Alfred Dreyfus was convicted of treason based on falsified evidence and blatant anti-Semitism and spent five years on Devil’s Island before being completely exonerated.

Elazar Friedman, a member of ICSS, will discuss this case and its continuing significance, including: 1.) A synopsis of the case and frame up of Dreyfus, 2.) The role of antisemitism in the army, society at large , 3.) The direct linkage to the League of Human rights on the one hand and to Accion Francaise and the Vichy regime. 4.) How the Dreyfus Affair split French Society and set the intelligentsia at each others throats. 5.) The role of Emil Zola and other important Dramatis Persona and conspiratorial aspects of the case. 6.) The role of the left and the workers movement. Rosa Luxembourg essay on Dreyfus and the need for the left to intervene.

For our full schedule, go to:  http://icssmarx.org

58330
Fundraiser for Jabari Shaw. @ Eastside Arts Alliance
Mar 29 @ 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Jabari Shaw, a well-known Oakland activist, his daughter and friend were nearly killed by US Marshalls and Oakland Police in a case of “mistaken identity.”

Come show your support for Jabari!

Check out this video for more info.

And these articles:

http://www.crc4sd.org/blog/2015/3/17/the-6-phases-of-engagement-of-power

http://www.crc4sd.org/blog/2015/3/16/black-oakland-activist-attacked-by-opd-feds

Embedded image permalink

 

58379
Planning for Creating PEOPLES ACTIONS around US Conference of Mayors @ UNITE / HERE (Local 2)
Mar 29 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

SF and Mayor Ed Lee will be hosting the 83rd U.S. Conference of Mayors, June 19th – June 22nd, in San Francisco.

SF Action Council is focusing on creating events around their meeting.

This is an opportunity to raise issues locally and nationally that are of concern to us, THE PEOPLE, that the mayors have resisted and refused to act upon – or acted against the interest of The People. For instance: “Black Lives Matter”, police militarization and excessive use of force, gentrification of our communities, homelessness, racism, immigration, privatization of our commons, homophobia, trans-phobia, the People’s taxes being spent on wars enriching the 1% and not serving the people and more.

All are welcome to help plan for actions as equal participants, OccupySF Action Council is merely acting as a central hub for organizational purposes.

Meetings Every Sunday, 2:00pm – 4:00pm

58425