Calendar

9896
Apr
24
Sat
Ecology Center Meeting @ Online
Apr 24 @ 11:00 am – 12:30 pm

Virtual Member’s Meeting
Calling all community members! We are gathering online on Saturday, April 24, to reflect on the past year and to talk about the exciting initiatives we have planned for the year ahead.

In the Member’s Meeting, Ecology Center members will:

  • hear about the state of plastic waste and recycling from Ecology Center’s Executive Director Martin Bourque;
  • find out what our local and state programs are working on;
  • meet fellow community members, including the Ecology Center Board Members;
  • receive a thank-you-for-being-a-member gift; and more.

If you are not yet a member or have let your membership lapse, now is a great time to sign up! In addition to attending the Member’s meeting, you can also take advantage of our Spring Store Member’s Sale from April 22 – 24.

As a community striving to live sustainably and equitably, we are excited by all the possibilities that lie ahead. It is with your support that we can make a real impact on reversing the degradation of our environment and increasing our ability to live well with one another in an ever changing world.
RSVP and Become A Member

68920
Save 1921 Walnut, Save People’s Park!
Apr 24 @ 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm
sm_060a0082-aa31-469d-96c8-d292869644c0.jpeg End the UC’s displacement, gentrification, and violence!

Protect community, protect history, protect People’s Park and 1921 Walnut Street!

The University of California, Gov. Newsom and their billionaire cronies is trying to evict tenants of 1921 Walnut Street, a rent-controlled building, and destroy affordable housing in Berkeley, California to create student dorms. The UC is also trying to destroy People’s Park, an open space, center for arts and culture, mutual aid, and poor people in the East Bay.

We say NO!

Meet at 1921 Walnut Street on April 24th at 12PM.

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Demand Action Against Police Violence @ Hayward City Hall
Apr 24 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm

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Earth Week Gathering Oakland @ Snow Park & Lake Merritt Amphitheater
Apr 24 @ 4:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Spring is here and it’s EARTH WEEK! Dust off your stilts, put on an animal onesie, bring out your pots and pans, and come celebrate our hard work towards climate regeneration and environmental justice. Connect with community and a shared vision for change.

Who: Activists, Concerned Citizens, Speakers, Families, Workers, Youth, Global Citizens: You!

All people are welcome at this event. In association with Extinction Rebellion Bay Area, 350 Bay Area and many individuals and satellite supporters. Let us know if your organization is interested in co-sponsoring.

Featured talk by: Ms. Margaret Gordon, the Co-Director at West Oakland Environmental Indicators.

Where: The event will begin at Snow Park located at Harrison St & 19th St, Oakland, CA 94612 The parade will continue to the amphitheater located between 12th Street and 1st Ave., Lake Merritt Blvd, Oakland, CA 94612

What: A meditation for the earth will set the tone for the day. There will be a collaborative art activity. The event will include music, speeches, and a procession along the scenic Lake Merritt. Our goal is to leave the park better than we found it, trash bags and hand sanitizer will be provided for beautification. There will also be a reaction booth set up to get your thoughts and feelings about the climate emergency which will be made into a video for social media. Ceremonies will conclude with a candle lit vigil at 7:30pm

Why: It’s Earth Week! Let’s come together as community. Institutions need to hear us: there is a climate emergency. It is vital to our livelihood, the ecosystems we exist within.
How: We will come together in costume, with smiles under our masks, expressing ourselves with signs and ideas, from all over the Bay Area and beyond, to make art and learn from each other. Listen to those already impacted the most.

This event is outdoors. Please follow public safety guidelines, wear a mask, respect people’s space, and stay home if you’re not feeling well!

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Apr
25
Sun
People’s Park 52nd Anniversary @ People's Park
Apr 25 @ 12:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Image

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Occupy Oakland General Assembly @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Apr 25 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm

NOTE: During the Plague Year of 2020 GA will be held every week or two on Zoom. To find out the exact time a date get on the Occupy Oakland email list my sending an email to:

occupyoakland-subscribe@lists.riseup.net

 

The Occupy Oakland General Assembly meets every Sunday at 4 PM at Oscar Grant Plaza amphitheater at 14th Street & Broadway near the steps of City Hall. If for some reason the amphitheater is being used otherwise and/or OGP itself is inaccessible, we will meet at Kaiser Park, right next to the statues, on 19th St. between San Pablo and Telegraph. If it is raining (as in RAINING, not just misting) at 4:00 PM we meet in the basement of the Omni Collective, 4799 Shattuck Ave., Oakland. (Note: we tend to meet at 3:00 PM during the cooler months from November to early March after Daylights Savings Time.)

On every ‘last Sunday’ we meet a little earlier at 3 PM to have a community potluck to which all are welcome.

OO General Assembly has met on a continuous basis for over six years, since October 2011! Our General Assembly is a participatory gathering of Oakland community members and beyond, where everyone who shows up is treated equally. Our Assembly and the process we have collectively cultivated strives to reach agreement while building community.

At the GA committees, caucuses, and loosely associated groups whose representatives come voluntarily report on past and future actions, with discussion. We encourage everyone participating in the Occupy Oakland GA to be part of at least one associated group, but it is by no means a requirement. If you like, just come and hear all the organizing being done! Occupy Oakland encourages political activity that is decentralized and welcomes diverse voices and actions into the movement.

General Assembly Standard Agenda

Welcome & Introductions
Reports from Committees, Caucuses, & Independent Organizations
Announcements
(Optional) Discussion Topic

Occupy Oakland activities and contact info for some Bay Area Groups with past or present Occupy Oakland members.

Occupy Oakland Web Committee: (web@occupyoakland.org)
Strike Debt Bay Area : strikedebtbayarea.tumblr.com
Berkeley Post Office Defenders:http://berkeleypostofficedefenders.wordpress.com/
Alan Blueford Center 4 Justice:https://www.facebook.com/ABC4JUSTICE
Oakland Privacy Working Group:https://oaklandprivacy.wordpress.com
Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity: prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com/
Bay Area AntiRepression: antirepression@occupyoakland.org
Biblioteca Popular: http://tinyurl.com/mdlzshy
Interfaith Tent: www.facebook.com/InterfaithTent
Port Truckers Solidarity: oaklandporttruckers.wordpress.com
Bay Area Intifada: bayareaintifada.wordpress.com
Transport Workers Solidarity: www.transportworkers.org
Fresh Juice Party (aka Chalkupy) freshjuiceparty.com/chalkupy-gallery
Sudo Room: https://sudoroom.org
Omni Collective: https://omnicommons.org/
First They Came for the Homeless: https://www.facebook.com/pages/First-they-came-for-the-homeless/253882908111999
Sunflower Alliance: http://www.sunflower-alliance.org/
Bay Area Public School: http://thepublicschool.org/bay-area

San Francisco based groups:
Occupy Bay Area United: www.obau.org
Occupy Forum: (see OBAU above)
San Francisco Projection Department: http://tinyurl.com/kpvb3rv

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Apr
26
Mon
Imagining and Remaking a World Without Prisons @ Online
Apr 26 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

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In partnership with local and national community-based organizations that continue to lead the way to shape abolition – groups like Critical Resistance, Black & Pink, Love & Protect, Parole Illinois – Prison+Neighborhood Arts/Education Project (PNAP) is kicking off two years of programming with two events featuring key thinkers in conversation about teaching and learning, cultural work, and abolition.

Join us and learn from local and national organizers, cultural workers, educators, and scholars who are building radical teaching and learning pathways for currently and formerly incarcerated communities, sustaining crucial campaigns for freedom, and creating more just and beautiful communities.

Panelists: Angela Davis, Beth Richie, Kathy Boudin, Timmy Chau

Angela Davis

An author, activist, educator, and Civil Rights icon, Davis has authored 10 books that cover race, feminism, class, and the U.S. prison system including If They Come in the Morning: Voices of Resistance, Women, Race and Class, Blues Legacies and Black Feminism, and Freedom is a Constant Struggle: Ferguson, Palestine, and the Foundations of a Movement. Through her activism and scholarship over many decades, Angela Davis has been deeply involved in movements for social justice around the world. Her work as an educator – both at the university level and in the larger public sphere – has always emphasized the importance of building communities of struggle for economic, racial, and gender justice. Professor Angela Davis, distinguished professor emerita of History of Consciousness and feminist studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, is an author of ten books. A political activist, scholar, educator, and founding member of the Critical Resistance, she continues her work focusing on social problems associated with incarceration and the generalized criminalization of those most affected by poverty and racial discrimination. An international lecturer known for powerful speeches and dialogue about injustice, Professor Davis has been involved in movements for social justice worldwide. Since the early 1970s, she continues to address racial injustice and social equity on an internationally recognized platform.

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Apr
27
Tue
Justice 4 Mario Gonzalez @ Alameda City Hall
Apr 27 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

68990
Protect Your Home from Foreclosure @ Online
Apr 27 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm

68993
DSA Night School: Socialists and the Non Profit Industrial Complex @ Online
Apr 27 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Many people work at nonprofits for the same reason they become socialists – they see the ills of the world and want to have a hand in changing them. Join us for this EBDSA Night School exploring the relationship between the fight for socialism and nonprofits. We’ll look at the limits of philanthropy and enacting change through nonprofits, and explore what it means to build working-class power to fight capitalism.

Readings
https://midwestsocialist.com/2019/07/29/non-profits-in-the-coming-struggle/

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/08/peter-singer-charity-effective-altruism/

Audio
Not for Profit? The Nonprofit Industrial Complex

 

Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 820 6567 4829
Passcode: school
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68963
Apr
28
Wed
Art Build for May Day Mass Action @ San Pablo Park
Apr 28 @ 3:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Whether you’ve got zero crafting ability or you’re a design genius, we need you to help create the art for the May Day Action! Hundreds of DSA members are joining the May Day March to call for the passage of the PRO ACT, so that means we need a lot of people to help make **hundreds** of red flags for DSA members to wave at the march!

Join us for a socially distant art build on Wednesday, April 28th, 3-7 pm at San Pablo Park, Berkeley near the intersection of Park and Oregon St. In addition to flags, we’ll also be crafting puppets for the DSA PRO Act street theater(!) Come hang and do some art in the park with us!

If you’re a music-maker, bring your instrument! At 5 pm during the art build, those who want to form a DSA marching band for the May Day march will be able to gather and practice!

Please remember to wear PPE (especially a face covering or mask)

68980
DSA Medicare for All Committee Meeting @ Online
Apr 28 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

With the pandemic and its multiple, intersecting crises, and the polling popularity of Medicare for All, our commitment to the movement is more important than ever. Come learn about our committee’s efforts, as well as local, state, and national initiatives around Medicare for All and single-payer healthcare. All are welcome!

Join Zoom Meeting – Feb 24th

RSVP

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Meeting ID: 812 3504 8894

Passcode: M4A

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Join Zoom Meeting – March 24th

RSVP

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Meeting ID: 812 3504 8894

Passcode: M4A

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Zoom Meeting April 28th

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81235048894?pwd=RDZHcnRDQ0FpV3ZndzdUenVJZ3JaZz09

Meeting ID: 812 3504 8894

Passcode: M4A

One tap mobile

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68623
Apr
29
Thu
Clean Mobility with Speed and Equity @ Online
Apr 29 @ 10:00 am – 11:30 am

Transportation accounts for over half of all greenhouse gas emissions in California. Join the Climate Center in this webinar on equitable transportation and clean mobility strategies that can wean us off fossil fuels.

Speakers:

Assemblymember Phil Ting

Rebecca Fisher, Bay Area Air Quality Management District

Dr. Joseph K. Lyou, Coalition for Clean Air

Andrea Vidaurre, Peoples Collective for Environmental Justice

Ricardo HidalgoInternational Brotherhood of Teamsters

Register here

To see the full lineup of the Climate Center’s Climate-Safe California webinar series, as well as recordings of past webinars, click here.

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REIMAGINING PUBLIC SAFETY – Cat Brooks @ Online
Apr 29 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

Register

Amid nationwide reckoning with racial justice and calls to reimagine policing in America’s cities, Oakland has moved ahead with plans to change its public safety funding and performance.

The Defund OPD campaign was launched by the Anti Policy Terror Project five years ago. Join us for a discussion with two leaders in the effort to change the criminal justice system.

About the Speakers

Cat Brooks is an activist, performer, politician and speaker or who has served as the communications director for Coaching Corps, as executive director of Youth Together and executive director of the National Lawyers Guild. Brooks is the co-founder of the Anti Police-Terror Project (APTP) whose mission is to rapidly respond to and ultimately eradicate what it calls state violence in communities of color. With APTP, she shepherded the development of a “first responders” process, which provides resources and training for a rapid community-based response to police violence. She also helped negotiate the passage of AB392, AB 931 and SB 1421 and has organized with local housing advocates to bring Proposition 10 (Repeal Costa Hawkins) to the ballot in November. n late 2018, Cat was the runner up in the Oakland mayoral race. Brooks currently serves as the executive director of the Justice Teams Network, a network of grassroots activists providing rapid response and healing justice in response to all forms of state violence across California. In addition, she is touring her one-woman show, Tasha, about the in-custody murder of Natasha McKenna in the Fairfax County Jail. She lives in West Oakland with her daughter.

Born and raised in Natick, MA, James Burch grew up with the direct impacts of a punitive carceral system within his immediate family; all three of his siblings have been entangled in the criminal justice system for their entire lives. To address this, James became a lawyer after attending Yale University and Georgetown Law School. Upon moving to the Bay Area, James became an active member of the Anti Police-Terror Project, eventually becoming the director of policy and a member of the Black Leadership Team. Burch now works as the policy director for the Justice Teams Network (JTN), a statewide coalition working to end state violence in California. James is also the current president of the National Lawyers Guild of the Bay Area.

NOTES

This program was rescheduled from April 12, 2021.

This is a free, online-only program; you must pre-register to receive a link to the live-stream event. We welcome donations made during registration to support the production of our online programming.

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Central America’s Forgotten History: Revolution, Violence, and the Roots of Migration @ Online
Apr 29 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm

Aviva Chomsky restores the region’s fraught history of repression and resistance to popular consciousness and connects the United States’ interventions and influence to the influx of refugees seeking asylum today.

At the center of the current immigration debate are migrants from Central America fleeing poverty, corruption, and violence in search of asylum in the United States. In Central America’s Forgotten History, Aviva Chomsky answers the urgent question “How did we get here?” She outlines how we often fail to remember the circumstances and ongoing effects of Central America’s historical inequality and oppression, a direct result of colonial and neo-colonial development policies and the cultures of violence and forgetting needed to implement them.

Chomsky expertly recounts Central Americans’ valiant struggles for social and economic justice to restore these vivid and gripping events to popular consciousness. She traces the roots of displacement and migration in Central America to the Spanish conquest and brings us to the present day, where she concludes that the more immediate roots of migration from the three Northern Triangle countries (El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras) lie in the wars and in the US interventions of the 1980s and the peace accords of the 1990s.

Chomsky also examines how and why histories and memories are suppressed, and the impact of losing historical memory. Only by erasing history can we claim that Central American countries created their own poverty and violence, while the United States’ enjoyment and profit from their bananas, coffee, vegetables, clothing, and export of arms are simply unrelated curiosities.

Aviva Chomsky is a professor of history and the coordinator of Latin American Studies at Salem State University. The author of several books, including Undocumented and “They Take Our Jobs!,”  Chomsky has been active in the Latin American solidarity and immigrants’ rights movements for over thirty years.

Mickey Huff  is the current Director of Project Censored and president of the nonprofit Media Freedom Foundation. He has edited or co-edited ten annual volumes of Censored, and contributed numerous chapters. He is currently professor of social science and history at Diablo Valley College, where he is also co-chair of the history department.  He is executive producer and co-host of the Project Censored Show, a weekly syndicated public affairs program aired over KPFA Radio and fifty community radio stations.

68860
MACRO – Non police emergency response – learn more @ Online
Apr 29 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

68987
May
1
Sat
First Annual Social and Economic Justice Film Festival
May 1 all-day

All featured movies

Global Women’s Strike/Bay Area, part of the Alliance for Social and
Economic Justice, invites you to take part in the film festival (info
below) to help raise funds to launch a Center for Social and Economic
Justice in the Redstone Labor Temple in SF.

The mission of the San Francisco Social and Economic Justice Film Festival is to provide a platform for films made by independent filmmakers who are exploring and advocating for social and economic justice. The Social and Economic Justice Film Festival highlights films and videos to encourage change around the world and to promote a global culture of equality. The festival will showcase works that challenge exploitative and oppressive social and economic systems and structures on a global and local level.

FILM TOPICS

  • Organizing for justice in the time of COVID-19
  • Hunger, poverty, homelessness
  • Worker justice
  • Racism and oppression
  • Women’s rights and gender equality
  • LGBTQ rights
  • Prisoner justice and mass incarceration
  • Disability rights
  • Environmental justice and sustainability
  • Water and food insecurity
  • Privatization and corporate control
  • Alternative economies
  • Arts and rights of expression and speech
  • Immigrant Rights and Migrant Justice
  • Access to public education, including higher education
  • Living wage jobs
68992
North Oakland Mutual Aid at the OMNI Commons @ Omni Commons
May 1 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm

68996
SF Bay Area May Day Parade & Rally for Workers’ Rights & Racial Justice @ Embarcadero & Market St.
May 1 @ 10:00 am – 2:00 pm

SF Bay Area May Day Parade & Rally for Workers’ Rights & Racial Justice

Join Bay Area Labor on May 1st as we recreate the famous 1934 May Day march up Market Street from the Embarcadero to Civic Center for a rally. Wear your union shirts and jackets! Organizations should sign up HERE. You can also download the FLIER.

Celebrations of International Workers’ Day, also called May Day, date back over 100 years to the fight for an eight hour work day. In San Francisco, May 1 has also played host to a rich history of collective action by workers—and this year will be no different.

The triple-threat of rising income inequality, racial injustice, and COVID-19 has hit working families hard. In order for our communities to emerge from this crisis healthy and prosperous, we need a just and equitable recovery for all.

That means building support for key legislation like the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act, which will empower workers to exercise our freedom to organize and negotiate for better wages and working conditions. It also means uniting together—no matter who we are or where we come from—to #StopAsianHate, proclaim that #BlackLivesMatter, ensure immigrants are safe and welcome in our communities, and fight to ensure that workers everywhere can live and work with the dignity and respect we all deserve.

Saturday, May 1 @ 10 am

Meet at the Embarcadero

Organizations should RSVP at http://www.bit.ly/mayday2021

68957
Celebrate May Day! A salute to the rebels who sparked this international working-class holiday @ Online
May 1 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm

Register

Salute the working-class rebels who sparked this international holiday

A story in song, dramatic readings and images Explore May Day’s origins in the world struggle for an eight-hour day and honor the heroes who put their lives on the line for the rights of every worker.

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