Calendar

9896
Jul
24
Sun
Unipolarism and Multipolarism @ Online
Jul 24 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Jul 24, 2022. 10:30am-12t:30pm Pacific

Unipolarism and Multipolarism:

Panel Discussion

On Feb 4, 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin met with China’s President Xi Jinping at the opening of the Winter Olympics in Beijing  They released a 5000-word document, “Joint Statement of the Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China on the International Relations Entering a New Era and the Global Sustainable Development.” This document expresses the views of two of the world’s largest nuclear powers, both permanent members of the UN Security Council. As such, it merits full discussion. ICSS members Gene Ruyle and Raj Sahai will lead our discussion.

The document can be read at: http://en.kremlin.ru/supplement/5770

Another view, “Ukraine Communists’ View of the War in their Country and How to End Ir,” By Stephen Gowans, may be found at: https://gowans.blog

Our Zoom room will be opened up as usual at 10:15 am for anyone to join and discuss technical matters, catch up with each other, say Hi, etc.. The program (and recording) will begin as close to 10:30 am as possible and will end at 12:30, but the Waiting Room may remain open later for informal discussion.

ZOOM LINK

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2591082607?pwd=WUh2TUZ5Z0tWeFdJNWcvMjY5cnNJQT09

Meeting ID: 259 108 2607
Passcode: ICSS2717rs
One tap mobile
+16699006833,,2591082607#,,,,*4821017269# US (San Jose)
+16694449171,,2591082607#,,,,*4821017269# US

Dial by your location
+1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

70149
Jul
25
Mon
Fight Back Against Mass Surveillance @ Online
Jul 25 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm

70151
Jul
26
Tue
Debt Strike! @ Online
Jul 26 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm

As of right now, Biden is still planning to turn on federal student debt payments on September 1, 2022. That’s forty-eight days from now. The payment pause, if you need a reminder, is a Trump-initiated policy from March 2020, which Biden has continued to warm-up and serve to the American people. Meanwhile, we’re still waiting on Biden’s big promise to cancel student debt. Here at the Debt Collective, we’re not holding our breath: we’re organizing.

That’s why we’re getting ready to go on a debt strike – withholding payments for money we never should havve had to borrow in the first place.

As prices reach record highs and wages fall to record lows, turning on student loan payments is nothing but a cruel blow to working people, struggling to make ends meet. Millions will not be able to pay, and may risk falling into default. We can’t pay – and we won’t pay. <

Debt strikes are not a joke and we don’t broach calls to go on debt strike lightly. For many people, there are safe ways to get to $0 monthly payments, therefore refusing to pay into an unjust system.

This is why we are having a DEBT STRIKE INFO SESSION on Tuesday, July 26 at 7:30PM EST to discuss options for safely striking. Whether you are strike-ready or strike-curious, join this session to know what options are on the table for you to fight back against the creditocracy.

We’re not in debt because we live beyond our means; we’re in debt because we’ve been denied the means to live.

In other words, we didn’t start the fire.

See you Tuesday.

XOXO,

The Debt Collective

70006
Jul
27
Wed
Mass Call on Reproductive Justice @ Online
Jul 27 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

70005
Music & Speak Out! Solidarity Rally for People’s Park @ People's Park
Jul 27 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
70148
Jul
28
Thu
Supporting Farmers for Nature-Based Carbon Sequestration @ Online
Jul 28 @ 10:00 am – 11:30 am

Register here

This webinar from The Climate Center will explain how climate-smart agricultural practices can sequester significant amounts of carbon while also improving soil health, increasing water retention in the soil, and making the land more drought-resilient and productive. They’ll also talk about what investments are necessary to support farmers in changing to these practices.

Speakers:

Patricia Hickey, Managing Director at the Carbon Cycle Institute

Albert Straus,  founder and CEO of Straus Family Creamery

Baani Behniwal, The Climate Center’s Natural Sequestration Initiative Manager.

While adopting these practices is essential and important, beware of suggestions that they can be financed by selling “credits’ to emitters of greenhouse gases. Such carbon market schemes do not reduce the rate of GHG emissions and serve as an excuse for polluters to continue climate destruction.

70012
Demand a halt to Phoeun You’s deportation. @ State Building
Jul 28 @ 10:30 am – 11:30 am

70150
Jul
29
Fri
Protest to stop the plan to privatize Medicare @ SF Federal Bldg
Jul 29 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Join this Friday 7/29/22 action to protest a Trump-era program continued by the Biden administration that increases privatization of Medicare and threatens continuity of care for seniors while enriching private companies with taxpayer dollars. The program, the Direct Contracting Entity program, soon to morph into another called ACO-REACH, shifts traditional Medicare patients into privately managed plans without their consent.

70010
Jul
30
Sat
“Lil Tokyo Reporter” 10th Anniversary Screening @ Oakland Asian Cultural Center
Jul 30 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
In celebration of the 10th anniversary of “Lil Tokyo Reporter,” OACC presents a special screening followed by a film talk with director Jeffrey Chin. He will be joined by Chris Tashima who plays Sei Fujii in the film and others. Lil Tokyo Reporter is a film inspired by the True Story of Civil Rights Leader Sei Fujii, a man who protected the livelihood of the Japanese American people from 1903-1954. It has been screened at U.S. Consulate in Seoul, Beijing, and Tokyo.

More speakers to be confirmed.

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69864
Nicaragua: The Revolution Betrayed @ Online
Jul 30 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
On Zoom. Please register in advance: tinyurl.com/FSJuly30
Over four decades ago, the 1979 Sandinista Revolution ousted the hated Somoza regime, challenged U.S. imperialism and inspired workers and the oppressed around the globe.
This conversation will explore how this revolution was betrayed and will focus on the lessons for today, especially for women, students and indigenous people in our hemisphere.
This discussion will feature Stephen Durham co-author of “On the nature of the Nicaraguan State” and co-ordinator of the Freedom Socialist Party’s work with the Committee for Revolutionary International Regroupment.

This conversation will explore how this betrayal occurred and focus on the lessons for today, especially for women, students, and indigenous people in our hemisphere.

Featuring:
Stephen Durham,
Co-author of “On the nature of the Nicaraguan State” and coordinator of Freedom Socialist Party’s work with the Committee for Revolutionary International Regroupment

To benefit the $100,000 Freedom Socialist Fund Drive; donations requested

Sponsored by Freedom Socialist Party
For more information, visit socialism.com, call 206-722-2453, or email SeattleFSP@socialism.com.

70155
Jul
31
Sun
Black Future Parade @ Omni Commons
Jul 31 @ 12:00 pm – 8:00 pm

70009
Aug
3
Wed
March to Defend People’s Park @ Sproul Plaza, UC Berkeley
Aug 3 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

70164
Aug
5
Fri
Protest Chevron on 10th Anniversary of Massive Explosion @ Richmond City Hall
Aug 5 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

Ten years later: what has changed?

Join a coalition of Richmond community and environmental justice organizations to call out Chevron’s 120 years of harm and mark the tenth anniversary of the August 6, 2012 explosion and fire at the Chevron Richmond refinery. On that date ten years ago, Chevron’s willful negligence caused a fireball that spread a cloud of toxic smoke over Richmond, sending 15,000 residents to local hospitals with complaints of breathing problems.

In 2015, the federal Chemical Safety Board issued a stinging indictment that blamed Chevron for the event. The report said Chevron had failed to do necessary repairs to keep its equipment safe: When a badly corroded pipe sprang a leak, instead of shutting operations down, it tried to patch the pipe, which made the danger worse. Soon the pipe broke, releasing a huge cloud of toxic fumes that ignited into a fireball.

The CSB dramatized the story in this animated video.

The state Division of Occupational Safety and Health issued 25 citations against Chevron, including 11 “willful serious” and 12 lesser “serious” violations related to the blaze. Chevron pleaded no contest in a criminal case and accepted a plea bargain of $1.28 million in fines and more than $720,000 in restitution payments to three different agencies,

The following year, 3,000 people marked the explosion’s first anniversary with a march and nonviolent direct action at Chevron’s gate, part of the 350.org Summer Heat campaign of civil disobedience to call attention to the crimes of the fossil fuel industry. More than 200 people were arrested at that action.

This year the anniversary will be marked with a press conference on Friday and on Saturday, marches through Richmond, a kayaktivist demonstration, and a rally at Chevron Gate 14.

WHEN

Friday, August 5, Press Conference in front of Richmond City Hall, noon

Saturday, August 6, see schedule below

WHERE

10 AM. Gather at Richmond BART station
10:30 AM. March to George D. Carroll (formerly Washington) Park, Richmond (about 2.5 miles)

11 AM. Kayaktivists gather at Keller Beach, Richmond
12:15 PM March from Keller Beach to George D. Carroll Park (.6 miles)

12-12:15 Gather at George D. Carroll Park
12:30 March to Chevron Gate 14, across from Castro St./Richmond Parkway offramp of I-580W

12:45 Rally and street-mural painting at Chevron Gate 14

 

70157
Aug
6
Sat
Protest Chevron on 10th Anniversary of Massive Explosion @ Richmond City Hall
Aug 6 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

Ten years later: what has changed?

Join a coalition of Richmond community and environmental justice organizations to call out Chevron’s 120 years of harm and mark the tenth anniversary of the August 6, 2012 explosion and fire at the Chevron Richmond refinery. On that date ten years ago, Chevron’s willful negligence caused a fireball that spread a cloud of toxic smoke over Richmond, sending 15,000 residents to local hospitals with complaints of breathing problems.

In 2015, the federal Chemical Safety Board issued a stinging indictment that blamed Chevron for the event. The report said Chevron had failed to do necessary repairs to keep its equipment safe: When a badly corroded pipe sprang a leak, instead of shutting operations down, it tried to patch the pipe, which made the danger worse. Soon the pipe broke, releasing a huge cloud of toxic fumes that ignited into a fireball.

The CSB dramatized the story in this animated video.

The state Division of Occupational Safety and Health issued 25 citations against Chevron, including 11 “willful serious” and 12 lesser “serious” violations related to the blaze. Chevron pleaded no contest in a criminal case and accepted a plea bargain of $1.28 million in fines and more than $720,000 in restitution payments to three different agencies,

The following year, 3,000 people marked the explosion’s first anniversary with a march and nonviolent direct action at Chevron’s gate, part of the 350.org Summer Heat campaign of civil disobedience to call attention to the crimes of the fossil fuel industry. More than 200 people were arrested at that action.

This year the anniversary will be marked with a press conference on Friday and on Saturday, marches through Richmond, a kayaktivist demonstration, and a rally at Chevron Gate 14.

WHEN

Friday, August 5, Press Conference in front of Richmond City Hall, noon

Saturday, August 6, see schedule below

WHERE

10 AM. Gather at Richmond BART station
10:30 AM. March to George D. Carroll (formerly Washington) Park, Richmond (about 2.5 miles)

11 AM. Kayaktivists gather at Keller Beach, Richmond
12:15 PM March from Keller Beach to George D. Carroll Park (.6 miles)

12-12:15 Gather at George D. Carroll Park
12:30 March to Chevron Gate 14, across from Castro St./Richmond Parkway offramp of I-580W

12:45 Rally and street-mural painting at Chevron Gate 14

 

70157
Aug
7
Sun
Nancy Pelosi’s Taiwan Visit @ Online
Aug 7 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

What are the motives and likely effects of Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan? We will be looking at these questions in the light of the interlocking crises of the US empire, US capitalism and the US Democratic Party. We will start the discussion with short presentations by ICSS members Gene Ruyle and Raj Sahai and other invited speakers, including David  Ewing, Chair of the US-China Friendship Society.

LOGIN INFORMATION

Our Zoom room will be opened up as usual at 10:15 am for anyone to join and discuss technical matters, catch up with each other, say Hi, etc.. The program (and recording) will begin as close to 10:30 am as possible and will end at 12:30, but the Waiting Room may remain open later for informal discussion.

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2591082607?pwd=WUh2TUZ5Z0tWeFdJNWcvMjY5cnNJQT09

Meeting ID: 259 108 2607
Passcode: ICSS2717rs
One tap mobile
+16699006833,,2591082607#,,,,*4821017269# US (San Jose)
+16694449171,,2591082607#,,,,*4821017269# US

Dial by your location
+1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

70167
Protest the FBI: A Government Against the People @ Phillip Burton Federal Building
Aug 7 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Join us for a coalition rally at the SF Federal Building to protest the FBI’s repression of activists. We will have speakers from different organizations doing anti-oppression work, and they will share stories of government repression and how we can come together to support one another’s work.

Speakers will include:
– Susan Stryker, renowned professor, author, and theorist whose work focuses on gender
– Jason Woody, Development Director at Rich City Rides,
– Andrés Soto, Richmond community organizer,
– Paul Paz y Miño, Associate Director at Amazon Watch
– Doggtown Dro, Activated Anguished Artist, Anti-Colonial Acab Abolitionist and Agitator, and
– Wayne Hsiung, an animal rights activist with Direct Action Everywhere who is facing felony charges for investigations and rescues.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has a long history of abusing its powers to surveil, infiltrate, and thwart progressive activist groups. The bureau has targeted civil rights and Black power groups, women’s rights groups, anti-war activists, environmental activists, animal rights activists and many others challenging an oppressive status quo.

From 1956 to 1971, as part of the FBI’s Counterintelligence Program, or COINTELPRO, federal agents partnered with state officials and police to eavesdrop on phone calls, create fake activist publications, infiltrate organizations, and fabricate evidence aimed at turning activists against each other.

Today, the FBI continues to monitor activist groups, including some of us hosting this protest, as we have seen from Freedom of Information Act requests and other sources. Instead of letting this repression hold us down, we must come together, expose the FBI’s abuse of power, and support one another as we work to overcome similar obstacles to a more just world for all.

———-

WHO: Everyone is welcome! However, please do not come if you have or recently had symptoms of or exposure to COVID-19. If you’re nervous, you can come observe or hold a sign quietly.
ACCESSIBILITY: This event will involve standing for a couple of hours. Some chairs will be provided.

Direct Action Everywhere (DxE) is a grassroots network of animal rights activists. Through open rescue, demonstration, and disruption, we help build a world where every animal is safe, happy and free.

DxE cultivates a welcoming and supportive community. We ask that all those who attend our events (online and offline) respect our Code of Conduct which can be reviewed at dxe.io/conduct.

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70156
Aug
9
Tue
Alameda County Board of Supervisors Meeting on Militarized Equipment – AB 481 @ Online
Aug 9 @ 9:30 am – 2:00 pm

Alameda County Board of Supervisors Meeting on AB 481Find the Zoom link for the Board meeting here!

The American Friends Service Committee has let us know that next week, the Board will be reviewing a military equipment use policy from Sheriff Ahern that would continue to authorize using his arsenal of military weapons for any purpose, including future pre-dawn raids on families. The sheriff’s military equipment inventory includes over 450 assault weapons, 3 armored vehicles, 162 drones, and much more. See the full toolkit from AFSC here, and make your voice heard on the issue on Tuesday!

This coming Tuesday, Alameda County’s Board of Supervisors will be voting for the first of two times on the sheriff’s draft policy on militarized equipment. Since AB 481 passed, all law enforcement agencies in California are required to list their militarized equipment (drones, robots, “less lethal” beanbag rounds, chemical weapons like flashbangs, tear gas, and pepper spray; armored vehicles, rifles). They’re also required to write policies dictating how each piece of weaponry is to be used. These policies must be approved by a governing body (a county board of supervisors, or a city council), and they must be presented at meetings where members of the public can comment.
The sheriff’s office has done all right at listing the equipment. They’ve done remarkably poorly at writing useful, restrictive policies, even though restrictive policies save lives. (To wit, they haven’t ruled out using their tank-like BearCat as a shooting platform, even though all the uses of it they enumerate in the policy are defensive. They haven’t ruled out using flashbangs when children are likely to be present. They haven’t ruled out aiming less lethal ammunition at the parts of the body where they are likeliest to cause death or permanent injury.) And in fact, they’ve used this policy implementation process to lobby for *more* militarized equipment (four pepperball launchers, to be used in Santa Rita Jail).
On Tuesday, Aug. 9, Supervisors will be voting for the first time on the policy. American Friends Service Committee has– again!– written a helpful guide to writing a comment. You can share your comment with supervisors in writing before 3 pm Monday (send it to CBS@acgov.org), you can read it aloud during the meeting, or you can do both. All public comment at Tuesday’s meeting will come at the beginning, 9:30 am.
Zoom link for the meeting: Join our Cloud HD Video Meeting

70165
Aug
10
Wed
Know Your Rights – Copwatch Training @ Grassroots House
Aug 10 @ 12:14 am – 1:14 am

70168
Rally and Board Meeting Against OUSD Firings and Violence
Aug 10 @ 4:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Join us tonight for a rally before the board meeting, and send messages today!

Community,
Oakland Unified School District (OUSD) is retaliating against educators and community members protesting the district’s racist school closure policies, both through physical violence and firings.

Last Thursday, August 4, untrained, unlicensed, third-party security providers contracted by OUSD violently assaulted parents and community members at Parker School, injuring at least 11 people and sending four to the ER. Meanwhile, the district has fired at least two educators—32-year veteran Oakland educator Craig Gordon and another teacher who declines at this time to be name – who have actively participatedd in the fight against school closures, including the Parker Liberation in East Oakland.There’s a school board meeting tonight and your solidarity is needed!

Take action now – send messages to OUSD board members to demand EDUCATION, NOT RETALIATION!

Then show up for the board meeting TODAY at 5:30 pm and a rally beforehand at 4:30pm to demand that OUSD:

  • STOP firing teachers for supporting the Parker liberation and other school closures
  • STOP the violence that sent multiple activists to the hospital last Thursday

Send your message!

Mr. Gordon, a longtime teacher and now substitute, learned of his firing on August 8, the first day of the school year. Firing a district employee who has publicly criticized district officials at several recent school board meetings and who has done effective media outreach for the Parker Liberation is a blatant attack on speech and press freedom. Mr. Gordon is also involved in the teacher’s union.

A beloved OUSD contract teacher also recently learned that their contract would not be renewed for the 2022-23 school year. This teacher was about to begin their sixth year with OUSD, is a dedicated advocate for teachers, students, and families displaced by OUSD’s school closure policies, and a supporter of the Parker Liberation.

OUSD’s actions are in violation of a letter issued by Chief Governance Officer Josh Daniels to OUSD employees Moses Omolade and André San-Chez during their hunger strike protest against school closures, stating that: “OUSD will not retaliate against any OUSD employee involved in protesting school closures […] or supporting those who are involved in such protests.”

Send messages to OUSD board members demanding they stop firing teachers and attacking our community!

These firings are also part of a clear pattern of what is now sporadically violent repression waged by OUSD against teachers, parents, and community members protesting school closures, privatization, and gentrification in Oakland.

We call on OUSD Chief Talent Officer Tara Gard, Chief Governance Officer Josh Daniels, and Superintendent Dr. Kyla Johnson-Trammell to immediately reverse the decision to terminate these educators, and to cease retaliating against anyone involved in protest against the district’s school closure policies!

Love and solidarity,
APTP
Anti Police-Terror Project is a Black-led, multi-racial, intergenerational coalition that seeks to build a replicable and sustainable model to eradicate police terror in communities of color. We support families surviving police terror in their fight for justice, documenting police abuses and connecting impacted families and community members with resources, legal referrals, and opportunities for healing.

 

 

70173
Aug
11
Thu
Stop Shotspotter Week of Action
Aug 11 all-day

70172