Calendar

9896
May
17
Sat
Book Discussion: “Police Brutality” – An analysis of the culture of the local police in the US @ South Berkeley Senior Center
May 17 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

A call to discuss a book, with an open Q and A

“Police Brutality”

An analysis of the culture of the local police in the US

By Steve Martinot

Police Brutality discusses the current police culture in America and how it affects our lives. Steve Martinot will discuss his book, followed by an open Q&A. Discussion will also be about current matters,  such a the new community formed around objections to Elon Musk’s financial rioting; how Trump presents himself as having a “Royal Mind;” and the meaning of recent plainclothes arrests of immigrant residents and others.

The basic schema of the police:

Police brutality = police impunity = a commanding officer paradigm,

It begins with traditional insistence on a police monopoly on gun possession;

It rapidly becomes a police law unto itself (impunity).

The police then militarize our society without consent.

The cops begin to think that they are the generals and the rest of us are only nom-coms.. .

 

When a man runs away from police restraint (as in handcuffing) and the cop shoots him, we know that the cop has decided to shoot this person.  He can say he did it against disobedience. But obedience is irrelevant to dead men.

The circularities of police reasoning:: arresting a person for resisting arrest.

            A cop stops a motorist, a few words are spoken; and then the cop rips open the car door, pulls the driver out of the car and throws him on the street. Or is the cop arresting him for objecting to the cop? That would be police impunity. The cop is the law, and a law above the law. All this even happens in Berkeley (see the Copwatch documentary).

When a homeless person took a sandwich from a downtown store, the cops surrounded him and one fired his gun. He hit the guy in the jaw.  That means he was aiming for his head, which means he intended to kill him – but missed.

Copies of Police Brutality will be available. .

 

78210
May
18
Sun
What is Economic Nationalism? Some historian’s notes on the present antagonisms among the great powers
May 18 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Speaker: Anthony D’Agostino

To Join Zoom Meetinghttps://us06web.zoom.us/j/87388824824?pwd=QTWNvr8cGeGo1ZDW7x9Y8W0sDaNxRc.1

Meeting ID: 873 8882 4824
Passcode:  042428

Call one of these numbers and enter the codes above:
• +1 646 931 3860 US
• +1 669 444 9171 US

 

 

 

Anthony D’Agostino is a diplomatic historian, emeritus of SF State University, and has written 5 books, along with many articles and reviews over the years, on the history of international politics, with attention to the Russian revolution, Soviet politics, the Gorbachev period, and the fall of the Soviet Bloc. The last book was The Rise of Global Powers: International Politics in the Era of the World Wars (Cambridge U. Press, 2012).  Anthony is currently finishing up a history book on the Era of Globalization, 1968-2025. He also has a YouTube interview show called “Glasnost in Our Time.”

 

 

 

78226
Bay 2 Gaza Community Rummage Sale & Fundraiser
May 18 @ 11:00 am – 5:00 pm

A flyer that reads "Community Rummage Sale". Art Supplies, Household and Furnishings, Tools & Construction Supplies,  Electronics, VintageJoin us on Sunday, May 18th for a community-wide rummage sale! What better way to reduce, reuse, and recycle while supporting an amazing cause?

🥳 This will be a family-friendly event with food, music, and crafts alongside tons of awesome, gently used items. All proceeds will go directly to the beneficiaries surviving genocide.

🧤We will have new and vintage furniture, art supplies, pet supplies, outdoor gear, tools and construction supplies, music and audio gear, and more.

☎️CALLING FOR DONATIONS:
If you have items to donate to the sale, please bring them between 9am and 11am on the day of the event. All items must be in a good working condition without too much visible wear.

😷 There is an ADA accessible restroom indoors and we will have a relaxation station inside as well. Masking required inside, with limited masks provided. The rest of the event will take place outdoors.

🛍️ Plan for how you will transport your newly purchased items by bringing reusable bags/boxes, or maybe a friend with a pickup truck!

78222
May
20
Tue
Covid Testing Tuesdays @ The People's House
May 20 @ 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm

May be an image of text that says '스PT. antipoliceterrorproject COVID TESING UESDAYS ECTYOURSEL. PROTECT TECTYURSEL.PROTECTYOUR yoUR MUNITY Free FreeCOVID COVID testing for the community starts Tuesday, April 15 Every Tuesday from 12-4 PM The People' House -893 Willow St, Oakland PPE, fresh produce, and baked bread available take home. APTI iHealth 1Hea1D-1 COVID-1 COVID1idTest Rapid Test Antigen Results At Sei Home In ANTI POLICE POLICE-TERROR TERROR , 15 5 Mins 310'

78182
May
23
Fri
Federal Court Hearing on Berkeley Homeless Union (BHU) v City of Berkeley lawsuit @ Federal Court
May 23 @ 9:30 am – 11:30 am

Federal Court Hearing on Berkeley Homeless Union (BHU) v City of Berkeley lawsuit

See https://berkeleyspeaks.org/unhoused-in-berkeley/

3:25-cv-01414-EMC – Berkeley Homeless Union et al v. City of Berkeley et al
Motion for Preliminary Injunction

To enter Judge Chen’s virtual courtroom, please click the link below:

https://cand-uscourts.zoomgov.com/j/1619911861?pwd=TjVma1lnMlJlNHR3ZE9QMkFjNkFndz09

Webinar ID: 161 991 1861
Password: 912881

For important information and guidance on technical preparation, please see https://www.cand.uscourts.gov/zoom/.

All cases are being heard via the Zoom Webinar link above.

Federal District Court Judge Edward Chen. will hold a hearing on the suit to prevent sweep of 8th and Harrison encampment.

The BHU’s claim is that the City is violating the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

The lawsuit has already resulted a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO), the first step toward the Union’s goals in resisting the city council’s stated intention of closing down 8th and Harrison. Plaintiffs are attempting to add the threatened Ohlone Park dwellers to the suit.

78232
May
24
Sat
Celebrate Judi Bari Day @ Oakland High School at Park St., and later Grassroots House in Berkeley
May 24 all-day

Celebrate Judi Bari Day, May 24

 

 

The Bay Area IWW invites you to join them in commemorating Judi Bari Day (May 24th) to honor their late comrade and fellow worker.  Judi Bari was a revolutionary ecologist active in Earth First! and a member of the IWW.  Her story is detailed herehere, and here.

Background:

Just Before noon, on May 24, 1990, while driving through Oakland, Judi Bari and her comrade and fellow Earth First! / IWW member Darryl Cherney were nearly assassinated by a bomb placed under Judi’s drivers’ seat.  The two were headed towards Santa Cruz to raise awareness about “Redwood Summer,” a summer-long campaign of nonviolent protests to be held in Humboldt, Mendocino, Sonoma, and Marin counties aimed at timber firms engaged in accelerated clearcutting of California’s old growth redwood forests, as well as severely exploiting the timber workers involved in the logging.

Miraculously, Bari survived severe injuries (and would live another seven years, until she succumbed to breast cancer), and Cherney largely escaped injury.  They weren’t so lucky in escaping a police dragnet.  The Oakland Police and FBI were on the scene in minutes and quickly blamed Bari and Cherney for transporting the bomb themselves, making the absurd claim that they had created the bomb to engage in an act of violent ecological sabotage and that the bomb had accidentally exploded.  The pair would be quickly exonerated, and years later, after Bari had passed away, the two won a $4 million lawsuit against the FBI and Oakland PD for violation of their rights and civil liberties.  The identity of the bomber remains undetermined after 35 years.

Sometime after the two won the case, the City of Oakland declared that May 24 would be known as “Judi Bari” Day in honor of the deceased organizer.  Every year at approximately 11:30, Judi’s surviving comrades gather at the site of the bombing (On Park Blvd at E 34th Street, just down the hill from MacArthur Freeway / I-580, next to Oakland High School) to “Mark the Moment” (11:53 AM) of the bombing and honor her memory and discuss relevant current struggles.

WHEN & WHERE

Saturday, May 24

11:30 AM – 12:30 PM  –  Marking the Moment:  Gather near Oakland High School on Park Blvd. near East 34th St. in Oakland;

 4:00 – 7:00 PM – IWW Social:  Gather at the Bay Area IWW Union Hall (Grassroots House), 2022 Blake Street at Shattuck Ave. in Berkeley for a social (food & beverages will be provided), a showing of the documentary, “Who Bombed Judi Bari?” and a brief discussion about Judi Bari’s green unionism, revolutionary ecology, and their relevance to current organizing campaigns.

78229
May
27
Tue
Covid Testing Tuesdays @ The People's House
May 27 @ 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm

May be an image of text that says '스PT. antipoliceterrorproject COVID TESING UESDAYS ECTYOURSEL. PROTECT TECTYURSEL.PROTECTYOUR yoUR MUNITY Free FreeCOVID COVID testing for the community starts Tuesday, April 15 Every Tuesday from 12-4 PM The People' House -893 Willow St, Oakland PPE, fresh produce, and baked bread available take home. APTI iHealth 1Hea1D-1 COVID-1 COVID1idTest Rapid Test Antigen Results At Sei Home In ANTI POLICE POLICE-TERROR TERROR , 15 5 Mins 310'

78182
May
29
Thu
Emergency protests: ICE visits courthouses across California @ La Pena
May 29 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Right now, ICE agents are ramping up operations inside immigration courts across the country. On Friday, California Collaborative for Immigrant Justice released a press statement alerting us that court buildings in San Francisco, Concord, and Sacramento have seen ICE agents asking people for their names and IDs, and even coordinating with ICE attorneys inside the courtroom to try to get cases dismissed, just to arrest people as they walk out. This aggressive tactic is a direct threat to due process and justice, putting families and communities at risk.

While this is a terrifying development we want to instill “power, not panic,” reminding everyone that people in immigration proceedings have rights, and that help is available through local Rapid Response Networks (www.ccijustice.org/carrn) and court accompaniment programs. For more information read the full press release here.

This is the moment to show up. Stand with immigrant community members under attack. Raise your voice. Take action. Let’s move forward together.

How to Fight Back

EBSC Immigration Rights Ambassador TrainingThursday May 29, 7-9 PM: Join friends of La Peña Immigrant Rights Committee to learn how ICE operates and become an Immigrant Rights Ambassador

Caminata De 3 Días, June 7-9: The Northern California Coalition For Just Immigration Reform (NCCJIR) will hold its third annual Walk for immigrant rights on June 7-9, 2025, from Vacaville to Sacramento! We want the State Legislature to pass our Resolution saying that California condemns the deportations and calls for a fair Path To Citizenship.

  • Location
    • Vacaville, June 7, 8 AM
    • Dixon, June 8, 8 AM
    • Sacramento, June 9, 3 PM


NO KINGS NO DUNGEONS in DUBLIN: People’s Parade, Saturday June 14, 12 PM: 
The protest in Dublin will focus on stopping the reopening of Dublin Women’s Prison as an ICE Detention Center. A critical part of the fight back against deportations, abductions and separating families is stopping the expansion of detention capacity at this facility. Bay Resistance encourages people from across the Bay Area to come to Dublin to participate.

  • Location: 100 Civic Plaza Dublin, CA 94568

For all other actions visit our website or give us a follow on Instagram to stay updated and get plugged to actions happening near you!

78237
May
31
Sat
Emergency protests: ICE visits courthouses across California @ RSVP- see description
May 31 @ 10:30 am – 12:00 pm

Right now, ICE agents are ramping up operations inside immigration courts across the country. On Friday, California Collaborative for Immigrant Justice released a press statement alerting us that court buildings in San Francisco, Concord, and Sacramento have seen ICE agents asking people for their names and IDs, and even coordinating with ICE attorneys inside the courtroom to try to get cases dismissed, just to arrest people as they walk out. This aggressive tactic is a direct threat to due process and justice, putting families and communities at risk.

While this is a terrifying development we want to instill “power, not panic,” reminding everyone that people in immigration proceedings have rights, and that help is available through local Rapid Response Networks (www.ccijustice.org/carrn) and court accompaniment programs. For more information read the full press release here.

This is the moment to show up. Stand with immigrant community members under attack. Raise your voice. Take action. Let’s move forward together.

How to Fight Back

Bay Resistance Accompaniment Training, Saturday May 31 10:30-12 PM: The court room presence of ICE makes the need for accompaniment even more urgent. Join our accompaniment network training next Saturday.

  • Location: RSVP to get the details here

Tell Newsom to Stand With Immigrants: The Governor’s May Revised Budget includes massive changes and cuts to the state’s MediCal Program. This will have massive implications for immigrant communities in California, including eliminating access to services.

EBSC Immigration Rights Ambassador TrainingThursday May 29, 7-9 PM: Join friends of La Peña Immigrant Rights Committee to learn how ICE operates and become an Immigrant Rights Ambassador

  • RSVP here
  • Location: La Peña Cultural Center (3105 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley, CA 94705)

Caminata De 3 Días, June 7-9: The Northern California Coalition For Just Immigration Reform (NCCJIR) will hold its third annual Walk for immigrant rights on June 7-9, 2025, from Vacaville to Sacramento! We want the State Legislature to pass our Resolution saying that California condemns the deportations and calls for a fair Path To Citizenship.

  • Location
    • Vacaville, June 7, 8 AM
    • Dixon, June 8, 8 AM
    • Sacramento, June 9, 3 PM


NO KINGS NO DUNGEONS in DUBLIN: People’s Parade, Saturday June 14, 12 PM: 
The protest in Dublin will focus on stopping the reopening of Dublin Women’s Prison as an ICE Detention Center. A critical part of the fight back against deportations, abductions and separating families is stopping the expansion of detention capacity at this facility. Bay Resistance encourages people from across the Bay Area to come to Dublin to participate.

  • Location: 100 Civic Plaza Dublin, CA 94568

For all other actions visit our website or give us a follow on Instagram to stay updated and get plugged to actions happening near you!

78236
Demand Health not profit! @ Harry Bridges Plaza
May 31 @ 11:00 am – 1:00 pm

Demand Health not profit!
Join nation-wide rallies May 31 for universal health care.  Get for-profit corporations out of our health care!
­National Single Payer has called a National Day of Action for May 31, 2025.

In San Francisco, between 11 am and 1 pm, we will rally at Harry Bridges Plaza (Embarcadero and Market) and then march to the BlackRock offices (Howard and First).

Here are two flyers for the SF action: one-page and palm-size

Visit the Action website to:

Listen to featured interviews with long-time activists Kay Tillow (Labor Campaign for Single Payer) and Ana Malinow (Physicians for a National Health Plan).

Find a local action (or start your own).

Read about the campaign here.

78227
Jun
1
Sun
Korea’s Revolution of Light: Resisting Dictatorship, Defending Sovereignty
Jun 1 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Korea’s Revolution of Light: Resisting Dictatorship, Defending Sovereignty

 

Speaker: Simone Chun

 

To Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/87388824824?pwd=QTWNvr8cGeGo1ZDW7x9Y8W0sDaNxRc.1

To join on the phone:

Meeting ID: 873 8882 4824
Passcode:  042428

Call one of these numbers and enter the codes above:• +1 646 931 3860 US
• +1 669 444 9171 US

On June 3rd, South Korea will hold its ninth presidential election—a pivotal moment following a year of political turmoil and mass mobilization. The election follows far-right President Yoon Suk-yeol’s declaration of martial law on December 3, 2024, a move that sparked a nationwide democratic uprising. In response, nearly 10 million Koreans braved freezing temperatures and escalating repression to demand his removal. Their efforts culminated in a historic victory on April 3rd, when the Constitutional Court upheld the National Assembly’s impeachment vote, officially removing Yoon from power.

This mass democratic uprising—now known as the Revolution of Light—is not only a struggle against domestic authoritarianism but also a broader rejection of U.S. militarism and support for autocratic regimes. With over 250 days of destabilizing U.S.-led war games symbolizing continued foreign domination, the Korean people have risen to defend their sovereignty and reclaim democratic rule. Yet the struggle is far from over. As South Korea stands at a crossroads, far-right insurrectionists—backed by transnational forces—continue to mobilize in an attempt to sabotage the movement for a sovereign, democratic republic.

Will South Korea’s June 3 Presidential Election Cement a Coup Regime or Restore a Democratic Republic?  Join us for an urgent and timely conversation with political analyst and activist Simone Chun as we explore the stakes of this critical election and the future of democracy and sovereignty on the Korean Peninsula.

SPEAKER BIO:

Simone Chun is a researcher and activist focusing on inter-Korean relations and U.S. foreign policy in the Korean Peninsula. She has served as an assistant professor at Suffolk University, a lecturer at Northeast University and an associate in research at Harvard University’s Korea Institute. She is on the Korea Policy Institute Board of Directors, and serves on the advisory board for CODEPINK. She can be found on Twitter at @simonechun.

78239
How to HELP Local Immigrants @ Universalist Unitarian Church
Jun 1 @ 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm
 
 
What will you do if a neighbor or colleague is “disappeared”?

Experienced organizations will describe their services, how current pressures affect their work, and ways we can help.

The East Bay Sanctuary Covenant and Friends of La Peña will lead a short Know-Your-Rights training.

Representatives from The CA Department of Education, Indivisible, and other organizations will also speak.

 
Join neighbors and advocacy groups to learn how we can support and protect immigrants in our community.

Free. Donations appreciated. Wheelchair ramp on Bonita Ave.
https://bfuuevents.info/ 


78248
Jun
3
Tue
Make Your Voice Heard for a Safer, Fiscally Sound Oakland – Support MACRO on June 3rd @ Oscar Grant Plaza, Oakland City Hall
Jun 3 @ 3:30 pm – 9:30 pm

URGENT:

Our city is at a crossroads. We face a significant financial crisis, with projected annual budget deficits ranging from $115 million to nearly $130 million through fiscal year 2029-2030. A major contributor to this unsustainable financial model is the substantial cost of our current approach to public safety. Oakland Police Department (OPD) spending accounts for nearly 50% of the city’s general fund spending, with OPD’s overtime budget alone projected at $33.6 million for FY2025-26 and $38.2 million for FY2026-27. It’s clear we cannot afford to continue down this path.

We have a viable, proven alternative that needs our collective support: the Mobile Assistance Community Responders of Oakland (MACRO) program. MACRO is designed to provide a compassionate, care-first response to non-violent, non-emergency 911 calls, addressing issues like mental health crises, homelessness, and community disturbances without a police-first approach. This not only offers care as opposed to criminalizing but also has the potential to significantly reduce police spending by redirecting calls away from OPD.

However, MACRO has not been set up for success and is now on the brink of being cut entirely.

Lack of Call Diversion: Despite its purpose, calls are not being adequately routed from 911 or non-emergency dispatch to allow MACRO units to do their jobs effectively. Critics point out that on average, MACRO teams respond to only three or four 911 calls per day, a number considered far too low given the number of 911 calls eligible for a non-police response.

Funding Uncertainty: MACRO received a $10 million state grant in 2022, but this funding is set to run out at the end of 2026. The program needs approximately $4 million annually to continue operating.

This is where YOU come in.

This is a critical opportunity to demand that the City Council take concrete steps to properly fund, empower, and reform the MACRO program. An informational report on an OPD Staffing Study is also on the agenda, which could provide further data for reallocating resources.

Here’s how you can take action:

ATTEND THE CITY COUNCIL MEETING (In-Person or Virtually):

Date: Tuesday, June 3rd

Virtual Participation:

MAKE PUBLIC COMMENT:

Register to Speak: For virtual participation, you need to submit an electronic speaker card via the City’s Granicus system (https://oakland.granicusideas.com/meetings) at least 24 hours BEFORE the meeting. In-person speaker cards may also be available at City Hall before the meeting. Check the final agenda for specific instructions.

What to Say (Key Demands):

Commit to Sustainable MACRO Funding: Demand the City Council allocate a minimum of $4 million in dedicated, annual city funding for the MACRO program to ensure its stability and growth beyond its current grant.

Implement Critical MACRO Reforms:

Establish robust community oversight for MACRO, ensuring the program is accountable, transparent, and responsive to the needs and goals defined by the community it serves.

Direct city staff to develop and implement a concrete plan for significantly improving 911 and non-emergency call diversion to MACRO. This must include broadening call acceptance criteria, streamlining dispatch protocols, and ensuring comprehensive training for dispatchers.

Ensure MACRO leadership is empowered and held accountable for expanding the program’s reach and effectiveness, drawing lessons from successful models in other cities like Denver’s STAR program.

Reallocate Funds Based on Evidence: Urge the Council to use data from the calls for service report commissioned by the Anti Police-Terror Project (APTP) and conducted by AH Datalytics. This analysis shows that only 4.2% of OPD calls are for violent crimes, while a significant portion, such as 10% for medical/mental health/welfare checks and 12.6% for traffic incidents, are suitable for alternative responders.

Implement the recommendations from the “Smarter Public Safety: A Roadmap for Oakland” report by IFPTE Local 21, SEIU Local 1021, and IBEW Local 1245. This report identifies that civilianizing at least 38 sworn officer positions currently performing administrative and other non-patrol duties could save the city approximately $13.2 million annually. These substantial savings should be reallocated to fully fund and expand MACRO and violence prevention services, creating a more effective and fiscally responsible public safety system.

EMAIL THE CITY COUNCIL (If you cannot attend):

Send emails to the entire City Council at council@oaklandca.gov and your specific Councilmember. Voice your support for the demands listed above.

Oakland has an opportunity to build a more effective, humane, and financially sustainable public safety system. MACRO is a key component of that vision, but it needs robust community advocacy to overcome its current challenges.

Let’s show up in force on June 3rd and demand the change our city desperately needs!

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.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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78241
Jun
5
Thu
Oakland Privacy Advisory Commision @ Oakland City Hall, Hearing Room 1
Jun 5 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

To observe and participate in the meeting via Zoom, go to: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85817209915

Agenda: https://www.oaklandca.gov/meeting/privacy-advisory-commission-25

4. Action Items:

a. Annual Reports 1. CrimeTracer Forensic Logic 2024 (OPD) 2. Cellebrite 2024 (OPD) 3. Pen Register (OPD) 4. Live Stream (OPD)

5. Unused Tech 2025 (OPD)

6. Apricot data management system (Department of Violence Prevention)

b. Use Policies 1. OPD Community Safety Camera Systems (OPD)

c. Proposed Ordinance 1. The No Stolen Data Ordinance

78249
Jun
7
Sat
Strike Debt Bay Area Book Group: “The New Possible: Visions of Our World Beyond Crisis” @ Online
Jun 7 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Email strike.debt.bay.area@gmail.com a few days beforehand for the online invite.  All are welcome!

For our May, 2025 meeting we will be reading the first fourteen essays in The New Possible: Visions of Our World Beyond Crisis (Barnes and Noble).  For our June meeting, we will read the remaining essays.

2020 upended every aspect of our lives. But where is our world heading next? Will pandemic, protests, economic instability, and social distance lead to deeper inequalities, more nationalism, and further erosion of democracies around the world? Or are we moving toward a global re-awakening to the importance of community, mutual support, and the natural world? In our lifetimes, the future has never been so up for grabs. The New Possible offers twenty-eight unique visions of what can be, if instead of choosing to go back to normal, we choose to go forward to something far better.

Assembled from global leaders on six continents, these essays are not simply speculation. They are an inspiration and a roadmap for action. With essays by: Kim Stanley Robinson, Michael Pollan, Varshini Prakash, Vandana Shiva, Jack Kornfield, Mamphela Ramphele, Justin Rosenstein, Jack Kornfield, Helena Nordberg-Hodge, David Korten, Tristan Harris, Eileen Crist, Francis Deng, Riane Eisler, Arturo Escobar, Rebecca Kiddle, Mike Joy, Natalie Foster, Jess Rimington, Jeremy Lent, Atossa Soltani, Mark Anielski, Ellen Brown, John Restakis, Zak Stein, Oren Slozberg, Anisa Nanavati, and Fr. Joshtrom Isaac Kureethadam

Strike Debt Bay Area hosts this non-technical book group discussion monthly on new and radical economic thinking. Previous readings have included (in chronological order) Doughnut EconomicsLimitsBanking on the PeopleCapital and Its Discontents, How to Be an Anti-Capitalist in the 21st Century, The Deficit Myth,  Revenge Capitalism, the Edge of Chaos blog symposium , Re-enchanting the World: Feminism and the Politics of the Commons, The Optimist’s TelescopeMission Economy: A Moonshot Guide to Changing Capitalism, Exploring Degrowth, The Origin of Wealth, Mine!, The Dawn of Everything  A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things, Beyond Money, Less is More,  Cannibal Capitalism,  Debt, the First 5000 Years , Poverty, By America, End Times, Jackson Rising Redux , The Feminist Subversion of the Economy, How Infrastructure Works, Inside the Systems that Shape our World, Wealth Supremacy, The Persuaders,  The Path to a Livable FutureSolidarity,  Mutual Aid, Breaking Together, Making Sense of Chaos and TechnoFeudalism.

78189
Jun
8
Sun
The Great Patriotic War and Its Aftermath @ Online
Jun 8 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Speaker: Mark Albertson

June 22, 1941, Adolf Hitler hurled 3,300,000 German troops against the Soviet Union, the start of the greatest land war in modern times. It will be the Soviets who will win the land war, defeating the German Army, not the United States and the Western allies. During the second chapter of the Great War, Britain will incur 495,000 dead; 405,399 for the US. A colossal 25,000,000, one of every seven in the Soviet Union, will die in 47 months. Yet the Eastern Front will loom large in the irrevocable alteration of the global dynamics of power. No longer will the Europeans dominate the globe. The two big winners were the US and the USSR. This mark a new global geopolitics and usher in the Cold War.

Our speaker, Mark Albertson, is a frequent presenter at the Library. Mark is a military historian with a commanding knowledge of geo-politics. He is the historical research editor at Army Aviation magazine and is the historian for the Army Aviation Association of America. He has authored several books: USS Connecticut: Constitution State Battleship; They’ll Have to Follow You! The Triumph of the Great White Fleet; On History: A Treatise. He is at work on a two-volume history on the saga of Army aviation. Mark teaches history at Norwalk Community College in Norwalk, Connecticut.

To Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/87388824824?pwd=QTWNvr8cGeGo1ZDW7x9Y8W0sDaNxRc.1

Meeting ID: 873 8882 4824
Passcode:  042428

Call one of these numbers and enter the codes above:
• +1 646 931 3860 US
• +1 669 444 9171 US

 

78256
Police Accountability in the Age of George Floyd @ Online
Jun 8 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Join Zoom Meeting:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85449203697

In the five years since the murder of George Floyd, where does the movement against racist police violence stand, locally and nationally? Please join us for this Sunday’s panel with two renowned guests, Steve Martinot and Walter Riley.
Steve Martinot has been a human rights activist for most of his life, as union organizer, community organizer, and anti-war organizer, including Latin America solidarity work. He has worked as a machinist and truck driver, and taught literature and cultural studies at the University of Colorado and San Francisco State University. His latest book is “Police Brutality: A Study of Police Culture in the US”. Some of his previous books, published by Temple University Press, include, “The Machinery of Whiteness,”, “The Rule of Racialization” and “Forms in the Abyss: a philosophical bridge between Sartre and Derrida.” He l ives in Berkeley and has led seminars on the structures of racialization in the US, and was active in a neighborhood assembly and with participatory budgeting.

Walter Riley is a renown civil rights attorney and organizer. Walter grew up in Jim Crow North Carolina; first being active in the NAACP there around desegregation and voter registration campaigns, then a leader in the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), in the era of the freedom rides and their strategy of mass direct action.
Walter moved to the Bay Area in 1965, attending SF State and was very involved in the 1968 strike there around ethnic studies a nd a Black Student Union, and was afterwards, working in support of a Black Caucus amongst SF Muni bus drivers. He was also involved with the Black Panther Party and other community political groupings, and has been active in fighting the racist system and violent police culture here ever since. For example, Walter was attorney for Black Livers Matters protestors.
He has also received awards for his legal work from the California Black Legal Association and the National Lawyers Guild. He is a founding member of the Coalition for Police Accountability, as well as the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund and has been active lately in the fight against removing Pamela Price as County DA and against the corporate political offensive in Oakland.

78252
Jun
9
Mon
Bay Area Resists Trump’s Attacks on Immigrants and Travel Ban: Press Conference
Jun 9 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm

78260
Jun
10
Tue
The Bay Stands with LA: Interfaith Vigil @ Fruitvale Bart Plaza
Jun 10 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Jun
14
Sat
NO KINGS East Bay @ Wilma Chan Park
Jun 14 @ 1:00 pm – 3:30 pm

The narcissist-in-chief is throwing a ridiculous military parade for himself in DC – everywhere else we rise up to say NO KINGS!!

WATCH THIS SPACE FOR UPDATES!

Before 1:00: Gather at Wilma Chan Park (810 Jackson St.) – we recommend you arrive by 12:45. Parking will be challenging, so take BART to Lake Merritt Station (right next to the Park). Come early and have lunch in Chinatown!

1:00: March kicks off! March for 1 mile to Oscar Grant / Frank Ogawa Plaza.

1:15: At the Plaza: live music, plus tabling by the orgs co-sponsoring the event!

1:45-ish: Rally kicks off!

MCed by the fabulous Francisco Herrera!

Confirmed Speakers so far:

-Representative Lateefah Simon

-Pastor Mike McBride: https://livefreeusa.org/our-team/

-Joe Hawkins: https://www.oaklandpride.org/joeh

2:45/3:00-ish Rally wraps up!

SPONSORED BY Indivisible East Bay, along with these wonderful partners:

-50501 East Bay

-Alameda County Dems

-Bay Area Coalition

-Faith in Action

-Food & Water Watch

-Indivisible Kensington

-Indivisible Euclid

-Kehilla Community Synagogue

-ProRep Coalition

-Wellstone Democratic Renewal Club

-Working Families Party – California

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