Calendar

9896
Oct
27
Sun
Sunday Morning at the Marxist Library: Impeach? @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Oct 27 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Impeachment Now? Or Never?


This is being planned as a “Town Hall” style meeting, with full participation, with comments limited to 2-3 minutes. We may watch a short video to start discussion, like “ To Impeach or Not to Impeach? Chris Hedges & John Bonifaz Debate What Congress Should Do Next,” on Democracy Now, Oct 1, 2019, at

https://www.democracynow.org/2019/10/1/trump_impeachment_inquiry_debate

67292
Ecumenical Peace Institute – American Exceptionalism @ St. Johns Presbyterian Church
Oct 27 @ 5:30 pm – 8:45 pm

At Ecumenical Peace Institute’s annual dinner, Alicia Jrapko and Paul Larudee will speak on American Exceptionalism – ‘the Doctrine of of ‘Humanitarian Intervention.’ ”  They will focus on what’s driving U.S. foreign policy in Latin America and the Middle East.

PLEASE CALL 510-990-0374 and let us know you are coming.

Cosponsored by St. John’s Mission & Justice Commission.

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Oakland Greens: Free Dinner and a Movie Night – Pan’s Labyrinth (Sept), Even the Rain (Oct) @ It's Your Move
Oct 27 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

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Oct
29
Tue
SF Public Bank Press Conference @ SF City Hall steps
Oct 29 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

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Public Banking Victory Party
Oct 29 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

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Imprisoning A Generation: Film and Panel Discussion @ Fellowship Hall
Oct 29 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

The Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists will present a film and panel discussion focused on the tragic situation of Palestinian children.

The film, “Imprisoning A Generation,” is presented under the auspices of Unitarian Universalists for Justice in the Middle East. A panel of experts will answer questions and provide additional information. Panel members include Zeiad Abbas of Middle East Children’s Alliance, Priscilla Wathington from Defense of Children International (who’s also in the film), and a representative from Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP). Each will give a brief statement on their organization’s position, and JVP will conduct the question period. Much of the discussion is expected to focus on H.B. 2047. This bill would make U.S. aid to Israel dependent on eliminating the military incarceration of Palestinian children.

The film is a production of Anemoia Projects.
Sponsored by the BFUU Social Justice Committee.

67236
Oct
30
Wed
“Red n’ Blues” Benefit Concert for AIM-WEST @ Mission Neighbor Center
Oct 30 @ 6:30 pm – 10:00 pm
“Red n' Blues” Benefit Concert for AIM-WEST @ Mission Neighbor Center

“Red n’ Blues” Benefit Concert for AIM-WEST

Annual AIM-West Red n’ Blues Benefit Concert featuring superb blues music. This year celebrating the 50th anniversary of the occupation of Alcatraz.

 

 

 

 

 

Blues bands to benefit American Indian Movement-West including:

        • The Bobby Young Project
        • Funkanuts
        • The Firebirds Blues Band

When:

Sat., Nov. 30, 6:30 (doors) – 10 pm

Where:

Mission Neighbor Center

362
Capp Street, San Francisco

Info and tickets: aim-west.org

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HATE, INC: Why Today’s Media Makes Us Despise One Another – Matt Taibbi @ first Congregational Church of Berkeley
Oct 30 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm

“Taibbi is the best American journalism has to  offer.” The Washington Post

“Taibbi, a writer of striking intelligence and bold ideas, is as hilarious as he is scathing.”— Publishers Weekly

“Where other mainstream news  sources fail, Matt Taibbi madly embraces his role as an honest political observer/writer/citizen in a democracy.”  —Janeane Garofalo

In this characteristically turbocharged new book, celebrated Rolling Stone journalist Matt Taibbi provides an insider’s guide to the variety of ways today’s mainstream media tells us lies.

Part tirade, part confessional, it reveals that what most people think of as “the news” is, in fact, a twisted wing of the entertainment business. In the Internet age, the press has mastered the art of monetizing anger, paranoia, and distrust. Taibbi, who has spent much of his career covering elections in which this kind of manipulative activity is most egregious, provides a rich taxonomic survey of American political journalism’s dirty tricks.

Heading into a 2020 election season that promises to be a Great Giza Pyramid Complex of invective and digital ugliness, Hate Inc. will be an invaluable antidote to the hidden poisons dished up by those we rely on to tell us what is happening in the world.

Matt Taibbi is a contributing editor for Rolling Stone and winner of the 2008 National Magazine Award for columns and commentary. His most recent book is I Can’t Breathe: A Killing on Bay Street, about the infamous killing of Eric Garner by the NY City police. He’s also the author of the New York Times’ bestsellers Insane Clown President, The Divide,Griftopia, and The Great Derangement.

Sasha Lilley is the editor of Capital and Its Discontents: Conversations with Radical Thinkers in a Time of Tumult. She is also a contributor to the Turbulence Collective’s What Would it Mean to Win?, and a co-founder and host of the Pacifica Radio program Against the Grain.

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Oct
31
Thu
Climate Funeral March
Oct 31 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Our world is dying. We lose hundreds of species to extinction everyday. Lives and livelihoods are being lost with increasing frequency to extreme weather and climate-induced disasters. To be awake to these times is to experience the unfolding of a never-ending tragedy.

To move forward, we must acknowledge our grief. On the evening of Halloween, we will march together in a funeral procession to commiserate the ongoing death of our planet and the climate-induced loss to come.

As we respect and pay homage to the victims of the climate crisis, we welcome you to dress in funeral attire and bring flowers or a personalized message for the dead.

This action is open to anyone feeling concerned about the ecological crisis. Please, join us!

  • Extinction Rebellion SF Bay
67302
RPA Monthly film night – This Changes Everything @ Bobby Bowens Progressive Center
Oct 31 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Please join us for our monthly potluck and free movie at Bobby Bowens Progressive Center. In October, we will be screening This Changes Everything (1hr 30min)

6:30pm Potluck / 7pm Screening

Less than 20% of the global population are responsible for 70% emissions. Those most affected by climate change and environmental injustice in developing countries have the least responsibility for creating this crisis in the first place.

A heads-up, no films are scheduled for November/December due to holidays. We are concluding the year with the most critical issue of our time – Climate Change vs. Capitalism in October. This Changes Everything (90 min) based on Naomi Klein’s book by the same title, which looks at seven communities around the world with the proposition that we can seize the crisis of climate change to transform our failed economic system into something radically better.

And, don’t forget your Halloween costumes and treats!

Richmond Progressive Alliance

67245
Nov
1
Fri
Panel Discussion on Facial Recognition @ The Glass Room Exhibit
Nov 1 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

 The Glass Room, is an exhibition that gives visitors hands-on experiences with unconventional artworks and tools that visualize abstract ideas about data and digital privacy. So far we’ve had successful exhibitions in Berlin, New York, and London, which drew over 30,000 visitors.

As part of the Talks Program at The Glass Room, there will be a  panel discussion about what the facial recognition ‘ban’ in SF really means for its citizens. We are bringing together activists from EFF, ACLU, Oakland Privacy and others to discuss the topic.

67269
Nov
2
Sat
Healing Justice: Ending Mass Incarceration @ Wright Institute
Nov 2 all-day

he Racial Justice Action Group, as part of Psychologists for Social Responsibility along with the Wright Institute Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion and Justice Teams Network would like to invite you to an interdisciplinary conference at the intersections of psychology, mental health, and organizing to end mass incarceration. The conference will take place on Saturday, November 2nd and Sunday, November 3rd from 9:30am – 4:00pm on both days.

This is a working conference rooted in the principles of liberation psychology, decolonial praxis, and anti-racist organizing. The intent is to build community and movement among mental health professionals and psychologists to end mass incarceration. We would like to invite organizers, psychologists, mental health professionals, students, attorneys, journalists, and anyone interested in how to address the trauma of mass incarceration.

The conference will build on the call to action raised by Psychologists for Social Responsibility in their 2016 statement on Torture, Cruel, Inhuman, and Degrading Treatment and Racial Injustice in the United States.

The conference will include panels, breakout working groups, large group discussions, workshops, and engagement in action. We will collaboratively explore many questions, including:

  • What are the ethical responsibilities of psychologists working inside the system?
  • How would crisis intervention look like without the police?
  • What is the current state of the struggle against solitary confinement?
  • How can psychologists and clinicians contribute their skills to the movement?
  • How can communities protect one another in response to ICE raids?
  • How can we address torture in US prisons and jails?
  • How is trauma created and perpetuated by the system of mass incarceration?
  • How can knowledge of trauma help in addressing the issue?
  • How can we interrupt the school to prison pipeline?
  • What is the role of white supremacy and colonialism in creating and upholding this system?
  • What do we know about US political prisoners and how to support them?

We will provide breakfast, lunch, and snacks on both days with vegan and gluten free options.

In an effort to ensure that the conference is affordable for all, we are asking for a fee of $22 dollars for participation. However, we are committed to eliminating cost as a barrier to participation. As such, please email psysr.endmassincarceration@gmail.com if the cost is prohibitive in any way. Arrangements will be made for all who would like to attend.

67046
Dia De Los Muertos – Funeral Procession in Protest for Children in Camps and/or Dying @ Dolores Park
Nov 2 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm

IN MEMORY OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES
WHO DIED

CROSSING THE US – MEXICAN BORDER.

Image

67238
Reckoning With Nia: A Community Symposium @ The Greenlining Institute
Nov 2 @ 11:45 am – 4:30 pm

eckoning With Nia: A Community Symposium on Black Womxn, Public Safety & Collective Trauma On July 22, 2018, Nia Wilson and her sisters, Tashiya and Letifah, were brutally attacked by a white man wielding a knife at the MacArthur BART station in Oakland; while her two sisters survived the attack, Nia died that night on the platform. Her murder shocked the Town as thousands marched in the streets of Oakland and cities across the country demanding accountability. Yet more than a year after her death, little has changed and justice for Nia’s death has not been forthcoming.

Reckoning With Nia: Black Womxn,* Public Safety & Collective Trauma is a community symposium convened by Ashara Ekundayo Gallery that brings together black womxn artists, scholars, activists from the Bay Area to examine the structural conditions that make black women vulnerable in the public sphere and to share the political strategies and aesthetic practices that they are developing in response to this violence.

Every Body Welcome | Limited Space |

Doors 1145am

Lunch – 1200p – 1245p – Catered by Miss Ollie’s
w/ musical offerings from Destiny Muhammad

Panel Discussion – 100p – 230p
Roundtable – 245p – 415p

The symposium will consider the following questions:
What would it mean to center the experiences of black womxn in discussions of public safety?
What are the structural processes and logics that explain why public institutions – mass transit, the education system, the police – continually fail to keep black womxn safe?
How do we make our communities safer without criminalizing them or increasing the presence of the police in our communities?
What are the artistic and cultural responses that create collective safety and how do can we show up as “First Responder” in situations of need?
And finally how we can intervene in these public institutions in ways that protect all black womxn’s lives and bodies?

Guest Speakers:
Lateefah Simon , President, Akonadi Foundation, BART Board of Directors District 7

Letifah Wilson , Community activist, Sister of Nia Wilson

Olka Forster , Creator/Host of the Black Moon Podcast

Courtney Morris, PhD , Assistant Professor – Women & Gender Studies, University of CA – Berkeley, Artist-In-Residence at Ashara Ekundayo Gallery

Leigh Raiford, PhD , Associate Professor – African American Studies, University of CA – Berkeley, Curator

Angela Hennessy, Associate Professor – Fine Arts/Critical Studies, California College of the Arts, Visual Artist

Janelle Luster, Program Associate, Compton’s Transgender Cultural District

Moderator, Ashara Ekundayo , Curator, Cultural Strategist

womxn* is an inclusive term and identity that welcomes cis and trans women, femmes, gender non-conforming people, and non-binary folx into the narrative

Ashara Ekundayo Gallery is honored to Partner with: The The Greenlining Institute, City of Oakland Human Services – ReCAST Grant, the Girls & Women of Color Collaborative aka “Breaking The Silence” Bay Area Town Hall on Women & Girls of Color, Compton’s Transgender Cultural District, National Black Women’s Justice Institute, and the Nia Wilson Foundation

Accessibility Information: The Greenlining Institute is an ADA compliant, wheelchair accessible venue. Restrooms will be labeled as Non-Gendered.

67266
Medicare for All March and Rally @ UN Plaza
Nov 2 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Join National Nurses United to demand  that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi take leadership to win Medicare for All. Universal health care is essential part of any Green New Deal and sustainable future. Access to good health care is especially crucial for people in communities whose air is poisoned by the pollution, and will become increasingly needed as climate change brings new health threats,.

This  statewide rally will feature speakers from the California Nurses Association / National Nurses United and other movement leaders.

The organizers say, “We know that Medicare for All is the only true solution to the health care crisis. But we will only win when a mass movement of people stand up and demand it. We’ll be in San Francisco to call on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to move forward H.R. 1384, the Medicare for All Act of 2019, which now has the support of over half of the Democrats in Congress.”

After the rally at UN Plaza, demonstrators  will march to Yerba Buena Gardens.

Limited bus transportation to San Francisco will be available from select locations in California.

info/RSVP

67287
Nov
3
Sun
Healing Justice: Ending Mass Incarceration @ Wright Institute
Nov 3 all-day

he Racial Justice Action Group, as part of Psychologists for Social Responsibility along with the Wright Institute Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion and Justice Teams Network would like to invite you to an interdisciplinary conference at the intersections of psychology, mental health, and organizing to end mass incarceration. The conference will take place on Saturday, November 2nd and Sunday, November 3rd from 9:30am – 4:00pm on both days.

This is a working conference rooted in the principles of liberation psychology, decolonial praxis, and anti-racist organizing. The intent is to build community and movement among mental health professionals and psychologists to end mass incarceration. We would like to invite organizers, psychologists, mental health professionals, students, attorneys, journalists, and anyone interested in how to address the trauma of mass incarceration.

The conference will build on the call to action raised by Psychologists for Social Responsibility in their 2016 statement on Torture, Cruel, Inhuman, and Degrading Treatment and Racial Injustice in the United States.

The conference will include panels, breakout working groups, large group discussions, workshops, and engagement in action. We will collaboratively explore many questions, including:

  • What are the ethical responsibilities of psychologists working inside the system?
  • How would crisis intervention look like without the police?
  • What is the current state of the struggle against solitary confinement?
  • How can psychologists and clinicians contribute their skills to the movement?
  • How can communities protect one another in response to ICE raids?
  • How can we address torture in US prisons and jails?
  • How is trauma created and perpetuated by the system of mass incarceration?
  • How can knowledge of trauma help in addressing the issue?
  • How can we interrupt the school to prison pipeline?
  • What is the role of white supremacy and colonialism in creating and upholding this system?
  • What do we know about US political prisoners and how to support them?

We will provide breakfast, lunch, and snacks on both days with vegan and gluten free options.

In an effort to ensure that the conference is affordable for all, we are asking for a fee of $22 dollars for participation. However, we are committed to eliminating cost as a barrier to participation. As such, please email psysr.endmassincarceration@gmail.com if the cost is prohibitive in any way. Arrangements will be made for all who would like to attend.

67046
Sunday Morning at the Marxist Library: Turkey, Syria, and the Kurds. @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Nov 3 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

We have confirmed ICSS member Mehmet Bayram, freelance journalist, who currently writes for the Sendika.org news outlet, which has been shut down 62 times by the Turkish government. He has recently returned from Turkey and will clarify the situation.

Here’s a preview:  Turkish invasion of Syria serves many purposes for the Turkish regime.  It distracts the masses from the harsh economic realities of capitalism, it unites the Turkish people fed with nationalism behind the fascist dictator when his voter support has fallen below 40%, it kindles the old flame of building the Islamic-Turkish empire that died after the WW1, it legitimizes the barbaric attacks with the long held hatred against the Kurds, it demands funds from the West to keep the “hordes of refugees” from reaching the metropolitan centers of Europe, and, yes, it exposes the hypocrisy of imperialism, to be used as blackmail against Erdoğan’s bosses that created him.

Erdoğan is trying to capitalize on the contradictions within the imperialist camp and tries playing one against the other by forcing the issues that will benefit his presidency and him personally, until, of course, his personal wealth is put on the table.  The victims of course are the Kurds, Arabs, Yazidis, Armenians.  This invasion, supported by the imperialist centers has become an ethnic cleansing tool for the Turkish racist nationalists to use against the Kurds.

67308
Spill The Disabili-Tea™: A Disability Justice Workshop @ Sierra Club
Nov 3 @ 12:45 pm – 3:00 pm

What is Disability Justice? People often express feeling intimidated and ill-equipped to unpack what we’ve been taught about disability, and how to support and advocate for disabled people in our everyday lives. This workshop is a fabulous opportunity for you to dive into the magic of disability justice with SURJ and Alex Locust at the helm.

With “Spill the Disabili-Tea™”, Alex will be facilitating an interactive discussion of disability justice for those committed to elevating their support for disabled folks in their community. Using his lived experience, education, and advocacy know-how, he’ll lead a candid conversation exploring the following questions (and more):

-Who is “disabled” and what creates that experience?
-What is “disability justice?”
-What’s the “right way” to interact with people with disabilities?
-How can I do better about those tricky “microaggressions?”
-What’s the difference between “access” and “inclusion?”
-Is disability a cultural experience and how can that intersect with other cultural identities?
-How can I integrate these skills in the community (e.g. Pride celebrations, workplace culture, community gatherings)?

Come join us for an afternoon of real talk, experiential exercises, group work, and lots of laughs as we all Spill the Disabili-Tea™.

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Challenging Conversations About Race and White Supremacy @ East Bay Community Space
Nov 3 @ 1:30 pm – 4:30 pm

How do we approach difficult conversations, whether it’s about racist violence on the border, cultural appropriation, or white supremacy and racial justice in general? What is it like to have these conversations with our family, friends and coworkers with a vision for the long haul? Members of the White Noise Collective will facilitate this workshop exploring the difficult conversations in our lives around race and power.

Preregistration is required due to limited space.

67235
Michael Diehl Memorial Celebration @ The Berkeley School
Nov 3 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Food, Stories, Dancing.  All for Michael.

Celebration of Michael’s life.

Michael Dress Code: Wear It Like Michael.

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