Calendar

9896
Dec
27
Sun
Open Circle ~ Families Fighting for Justice @ Omni Commons
Dec 27 @ 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm

59100
Dec
28
Mon
Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition Rally @ Federal Courthouse
Dec 28 @ 10:00 am – 11:30 am

RALLY MON. DEC. 28, 2015, 10 am in SAN FRANCISCO,
AND MAKE PHONE CALLS.
Share the Facebook event and invite your friends!

Joi the Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition on Monday, December 28th outside the San Francisco Federal Courthouse for a rally against the so-called “welfare checks” that, since August 2nd, have been waking up men in Pelican Bay Security Housing Unit (SHU, i.e. solitary confinement) every 20-30 minutes.

As of December 28th, these men will have been tortured by being deprived of sleep for 148 days!

Lawyers and CDCr officials will be meeting inside SF Federal Court at 11am. We want to show them that these checks are TORTURE and that they need to STOP NOW!

We know that interrupted sleep can cause serious mental and physical health problems. John R. Martinez, who has been in Pelican Bay SHU for over a decade, …wrote: “there is a reasonable probability that life-threatening injuries and/or even death is inevitable, as medical symptoms are only worsening but not being treated.” CDCR claims the checks are to prevent suicide, but knowing these detrimental effects of sleep deprivation, we’re worried the checks could actually lead to someone committing suicide or developing permanent disabling, and potentially terminal illnesses and conditions.
Other actions you can take (without leaving your home!):

1. Call to advocate for the checks to stop, stating that sleep deprivation is torture. Some offices may require your name, city, and zip code.

CDCR Secretary’s Offfice: 916-323-6001
CDCR Director of Adult Divisions, Kelly Harriington (he): 916-445-7688
Senator Loni Hancock, Chair of the Senaate Public Safety Committee: 916-651-4009
Assembly Member Bill Quuirk, Chair of the Assembly Public Safety Committee: 916-319-2020

2. Forward this information to your networks to make it known widely that this torture may continue unless we, along with allied lawyers, put pressure to stop it!

For more information on how to oppose the checks, call 510-426-5322, email phssreachingout@gmail.com , visit prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com and Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity on Facebook.

Watch and share this video by Liberated Lens from our last emergency protest:

60174
Dec
30
Wed
UNTANGLED: in remembrance of sex workers victim to violence. @ The Flight Deck
Dec 30 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

brown girl dancing present…

UNTANGLED

A cumulative creative project researched by Iris, and performed by her and accompanied dance crew. This performance supports the full decriminalization of sex work and The International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers (Dec 17th). . The proceeds collected at the Dec 30th event will benefit Bay Area Girls Rock Camp and ESPLER Project Inc’s legal fund for the lawsuit pending in Federal Court. decriminalizesexwork.com

 

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Dec
31
Thu
New Year’s Eve Demonstration Against Prisons and Policing @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Dec 31 @ 8:00 pm – 11:45 pm

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Jan
1
Fri
COCOA NOT PO-PO AT THE BERKELEY P-O @ Downtown Post Office Steps
Jan 1 @ 8:30 am – 10:00 am

Continuing the tradition…

Serving:

Coffee, tea, instant cocoa and soup!

60211
7th Annual Oscar Grant Vigil @ Fruitvale BART
Jan 1 @ 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm

59815
New Year’s Day Evening at ABC4J @ Alan Blueford Center 4 Justice
Jan 1 @ 7:30 pm – 10:00 pm

We are starting the New Year off with love, community, and soul expression! This night will include iinteractive conversations through dance, re-evolutionary hip-hop, and an alter honoring Oscar Grant.

Performances by: Anisah Abdullah, Kanstant Rising, Charity Clay, Banhk the God, Brett Tyler, Stoney Creation and Jada Imani.

Items for the alter are welcome: candles, sage, grains, a letter, crystals, etc.

Be sure to come with an open heart, dancing shoes, and loved ones, as this night calls in prosperity and forward movement!

60207
Jan
2
Sat
The Saint Francis Homelessness Challenge @ SomArts
Jan 2 @ 10:00 am – 6:00 pm

A pop-up prototype in support of secure sleep, hygienic toileting, and services for San Francisco’s homeless neighbors.

Former San Francisco mayoral candidate Amy Farah Weiss, along with Ken Fisher of RouteHome, will team up with a slew of community organizations to hold the first Saint Francis Homelessness Challenge Showcase event.

The event will feature services for those in need, as well as workshops for those wishing to donate their time. The program will showcase many different ideas for what Weiss calls a people-powered solution to a citywide problem. “We are one group that is working on a solution and we want to set the bar for people to take action around these [homelessness] issues.”

More Info

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BLM Bay Area Rise Up 4 Tamir @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Jan 2 @ 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Bay Area rises up in solidarity with Tamir Rice’s family one year after Cleveland police officers killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice. Please join Black Lives Matter Bay Area, Black Lives Matter and the Last 3 Percent Coalition as we gather in solidarity with the family of Tamir Rice and Black Lives Matter Cleveland, and to uplift all of the families of those we have lost to police violence.

This is a black led ceremony that is centered in Black love, Black healing and Black rage. We invite allies to join us under the direction of our elders.

We support the family’s demands:
1. The immediate termination of Officer Loehmann and Officer Garmback.
2. A Federal Department of Justice investigation of Timothy McGinthy, and his removal as Cuyahoga County prosecutor.
3. A Federal Department of Justice investigation of the shooting and murder of Tamir Rice.

60203
Keep Warm The Bay: Winter Gear Drive! @ Qilombo
Jan 2 @ 12:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Qilombo is dedicated to supporting our communities and neighbors every day, whether we’re open or closed. It’s that time of year again: It’s Hella cold, Oakland and many of our neighbors are facing this winter outside. Tent cities are a part of Afrikatown until we can build the economic support to enrich us all. So let’s pool our resources to create winter gear kits to help folks better survive the outdoors. See the list we have created, but also think of vital necessities that go under the radar!

The 2-day event (also Jan 3, 10am-6pm) will consist of a fundraising benefit concert and a volunteer driven distribution event to disperse all the collected donation items to the local homeless community. Local business will also have the opportunity to host drop boxes to receive donations leading up to the distribution event. The need for warm-wear items during winter is critical for the homeless community as many die each year from hypothermia and other cold weather related illnesses.

PARTY WITH A PURPOSE!
Local Bay area artists come together to rock out for a good cause. With live performances, dancing and a DJ bay area citizens will be able to “Party with a Purpose”!
The event will also be an opportunity for guests to drop off items or to sign up as a voluteer for the blanket giveaway. Partial proceeds from these events will go towards purchasing distribution items

BLANKET GIVEAWAY!
Our plan is to distribute a Keep Warm Kit as well as a hot beverage and meal into the homeless Community in the Bay area. Every winter we provide essential aid in the demand for warm-wear items during the colder months. This campaign is called “KEEP WARM!” This year as we bring the campaign to the Bay Area we hope, that with your help, at least 300 will have the necessary provisions! Sign up as a volunteer now!

 

60196
Abolish the death penalty @ Starry Plough
Jan 2 @ 2:00 pm – 4:30 pm

The Peace and Freedom Party presents

Abolish the death penalty

In our formative period, the Peace and Freedom Party joined with the Black Panther Party in the movement to free all political prisoners and abolish the death penalty. We have invited the Founding Chairman of the Black Panthers, Bobby Seale, to discuss this history. We have also invited speakers representing current death row prisoners, including Kevin Cooper in California and Rodney Reed in Texas.

FREE! (Please buy food & drink at the Pub.) FREE!

This is part of our on-going Socialist Forum Series on the first Saturday of every month. Doors open at 2 pm and the program will start promptly at 2:30 pm. The forum will end by 4:30 pm, but folks can stay and talk as long as you like.

The Peace and Freedom Party, born from the civil rights and anti-war movements of the 1960s, is committed to socialism, democracy, ecology, feminism, racial equality, and internationalism.

60178
Jan
3
Sun
NATIONAL TPP TEAM INTERACTIVE CALL @ USA
Jan 3 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm

 

TPP 101: WHAT IS THE TPP AND WHY SHOULD WE CARE? Sign up here:

https://actionnetwork.org/events/what-is-the-tpp-and-why-should-we-care-webinar?source=email&referrer=harriet-heywood

Once you sign up, you will get the number and login link to the meeting room.

60210
Sunday NightFree Movie: Let the Fire Burn (Documentary) @ LongHaul
Jan 3 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Free Movie: Let the Fire Burn (2013 documentary Directed by Jason Osder) Found footage film about the May 13, 1985 bombing of the MOVE house in Philadelphia that killed 11 people (including 5 children) and destroyed 61 homes. Free.

 

60219
Jan
4
Mon
Make Permanent the Drone Moratorium in Berkeley @ North Berkeley Community Center
Jan 4 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

A resolution for the Peace and Justice Commission to consider recommending to the Berkeley City Council, making permanent the current one-year moratorium on BPD acquisition and use of drones, which expires this February, will be heard.

Your presence and comment in support of this effort is welcome.

60214
Jan
5
Tue
Occupy Cal Police Brutality Lawsuit: Press Conference and Trial Hearing @ Dellums Federal Building
Jan 5 @ 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm

1 PM PRESS CONFERENCE in front of the building.
2 PM HEARING in Judge Yvonne Gonzalez-Rogers’ Courtroom.
(bring your ID to get into the building)

Defend Student Protesters’ Free Speech Rights! Stop the Resegregation and Privatization of UC Berkeley!
Defend the Right to Public Higher Education for All!

Fight Police Brutality! A Badge is Not a License to Brutalize and Kill!

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UCB student and community protesters have a right to bring the UC Berkeley administration, UC Police, and Alameda County Sheriffs to trial for brutalizing student protesters on UC Berkeley’s campus during the Occupy Wall Street movement!

Demand Judge Yvonne Gonzalez-Rogers rule in favor of an open and public trial, not an individual judicial “summary judgement”!

DETAILS: The Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration, and Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary (BAMN) will present our case against the UC administrators, UC Berkeley Police (UCPD), and Alameda County Sheriffs Officers (ACSO) responsible for the brutal police riot on peaceful student protesters on November 9, 2011 when students at UC Berkeley tried to set up an encampment in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street movement. Students protested to oppose income inequality, to defend public education, and to restore affirmative action at UC Berkeley. To this day, the UC administration and the police are defending and justifying their attack. They want to protect their prerogative to repeat this kind of brutal censorship of student political protest when it is aimed at furthering equality and integration.

BAMN has filed a federal lawsuit (Felarca v. Birgeneau) on behalf of 21 student and community activist Plaintiffs against UC Berkeley (UCB) administrators, UCB police and Alameda County Sheriffs for police brutality, false arrests and violation of their free-speech rights. In our lawsuit against UC Berkeley administrators and police, we intend to put the former Chancellor and the top administrators responsible for the attack, together with the police officers and supervisors in charge, on the stand to have to answer, publicly and under cross-examination, for their decisions and actions that led to a police riot on peaceful protesters.

All the evidence uncovered in BAMN’s case shows that the UCB administration were completely responsible for the police violence on Nov 9, 2011 because they were afraid of the movement growing on campus that could unite with the Latina/o and black communities of Oakland and wage winning struggles for public education. The administrator defendants deemed the political speech of the student movement so hostile to the financial and political interests of the university’s private donors and corporate investors that their response to the specter of Oakland uniting with the student movement at UC Berkeley was to have riot police violently suppress and attempt to disperse the demonstration by force.

Thousands of students gathered to defend the tents that had been put up by Occupy Cal from the administration’s efforts to take them down. Videos of baton-wielding police beating students and even some professors, while the protesters held the line and refused to retreat, went viral and gained national media attention.

The UC administration authorized the use of batons against the student protest in violation of its own policies on November 9. Then UCB Chancellor Robert Birgeneau, sanctioned the use of indiscriminate force to terrorize and disperse the second protest action on that day, even as public outrage over the earlier violence was growing. The UCB anti- Occupy policy was so fanatical that students were banned from even walking through the campus with tents,bullhorns or “signage” of which the administration disapproved. People across the country were shocked that police would brutally beat peaceful protesters at UC Berkeley, the historic site and center of the Free Speech Movement of the 1960s.

The UC Berkeley administrator defendants claim they have the exclusive and unfettered right to dictate any and all “time, place, and manner” restrictions on student political speech. To absolutely no one’s surprise, these restrictions are only ever invoked against the most progressive and popular student political speech – against the fee hikes, against privatization, against the increasing racism, sexism, and inequality at UC Berkeley and in this society.

Chancellor Birgeneau made clear that the decision to suppress Occupy on the campus and to shut down the movement was also fueled by fear of the campus being “taken over” by “outside anarchists” on to the campus. Other members of the Chancellor’s “Crisis Management Team,” in charge of formulating the policing policies for the day, referred to their fears of “intransigents” coming to the campus. The term “non-affiliates” was also used as code to describe the people and politics they were hostile to and wanted to keep barricaded off from the campus. This was understood among them as code for denying people from Oakland access to the campus. The variety of demagogy against ‘outsiders’ has never had anything to do with protecting the right of students to govern their own campus and fight for their own interests. It’s a defense of elitism, of racism, of discrimination against immigrants, and in end it’s a reflection of the administration’s fear of its own students and their potential to join and lead a national movement. UC Berkeley is the world’s premiere public university because of its history of radical student protest and the gains won and enforced by the student movement. All the hallmarks of a great university – academic freedom, social criticism, honest scientific inquiry, and a dedication to the ideals of democracy, equality and justice – were won by struggles waged on this campus and in our communities.

In contrast to the fear and pessimism of the University, the anger and optimism of the new generation of civil rights and immigrant rights leaders are already propelling our whole society in the direction of freedom and equality. The explosive and militant mass resistance in Ferguson, Baltimore, Oakland and Berkeley show that the status quo is becoming increasingly unviable and volatile. In the Bay Area, BAMN played an active, and at times, crucial leadership role in the Oakland and Berkeley marches to win justice. BAMN is building a movement that can connect our campus with the ongoing struggles of minority, progressive and oppressed people around the world. The growing inequality and polarization in the United States and across the world means no shortage of struggle in the next period of history. Whether these struggles win or lose is a question of leadership – it’s up to us and what we do. Come fill the courtroom for this court case, where the power of the people can make and shift history!

LINKS TO OUR UCPD POLICE BRUTALITY TRIBUNAL:
Part 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SryVD6ofqiY
Part 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBtvSp528m4

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Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration & Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality By Any Means Necessary (BAMN)

60228
Alameda City Council: Rent Control and Just Cause Eviction @ Koffman Auditorium
Jan 5 @ 5:00 pm – 9:00 pm

60193
Oakland City Council – Privacy Committee Ordinance @ Oakland City Hall, 3rd Floor
Jan 5 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Item 7.11 (On Consent)

Subject: Creation Of A Privacy Advisory Commission

From: Office Of The City Administrator

Recommendation: Adopt An Ordinance Establishing The Privacy Advisory Commission, Providing For The Appointment Of Members Thereof, And Defining The Duties And Functions Of Said Commission.

Proposed Ordinance

The Oakland Privacy Working Group invites you to come and support the creation of a first-of-its-kind privacy commission for Oakland, an outgrowth of our work opposing the Domain Awareness Center.

60224
Jan
6
Wed
Kurdish Film Festival – The Kurdish Student Movement, BAHOZ @ Tamarack
Jan 6 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

60155
Jan
7
Thu
Climate Action Now- Report Back from Paris (COP21) + Local Updates @ Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists’ Hall
Jan 7 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

What really happened at the Paris Climate Talks and what does it mean now that they are over? Hear first hand from Kathy Dervin, 350 Bay Area, and other local activists.

Why does local action matter? Learn about the City of Berkeley’s progress in reaching its climate action goals and how YOU can take action now through the Transition Streets program and the Berkeley Climate Action Coalition.  Bring your questions and ideas on how we’re going to transition to a lower carbon, more equitable and connected future. Please feel free to bring a snack to share around 6:30 pm (ditching plastics if you can). Film starts at 7.

For more info: info [at] transitionberkeley.com
website: http://www.transitionberkeley.com

This event is co-sponsored by Transition Berkeley, the BFUU’s Social Justice Committee, the Ecology Center and the Berkeley Climate Action Coalition

Wheelchair accessible.

60179
Jan
8
Fri
Court Support for Jayne @ Wiley Manuel Courthouse
Jan 8 @ 8:00 am – 11:00 am

Court Support for Janye

Janye’s next court date is January 8, 2016 at Wiley Manuel in Oakland at 8am in Dept 112. Please Note the 8am time (not a mistake).

The fight isn’t over. Let’s keep the pressure on the kangaroo court!

SUPPORT JANYE WALLER! – arrested in an obvious case of racial profiling, in which the cops said he “fit the description” of a crime he did not commit. A witness to the “crime” immediately confirmed that Janye had nothing to do with it, but Janye was still taken into custody where he was questioned and then leveled with serious charges related to last year’s protests in Oakland against the non-indictments for the murders of Michael Brown and Eric Garner.

JANYE WALLER IS A YOUNG BLACK ACTIVIST, A LOCAL OF THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA. He lives and works in Oakland, providing financial support to his mother, his two younger brothers, and his cousin. He attended Berkeley Community College where he planned to major in Accounting, but had to take leave in order to help support his family, and he hopes to return to college soon. Janye also volunteers at a social center in West Oakland that works to empower black and indigenous people living in the Bay Area through education and mutual aid. Within this space Janye works tirelessly, helping coordinate and administer programs focusing on skills like urban farming, which foster both community and individual autonomy.

JANYE IS THE ONLY PERSON WHO IS CURRENTLY FACING SERIOUS CHARGES AFTER THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE FLOODED THE STREETS DURING THE WAVE OF PROTESTS IN THE BAY AREA LAST WINTER. After several high profile police killings of young black men, the Bay Area, like much of the rest of the country, surged into a wave of protest and resistance. The state responded by using the legal system as a tool of repression, threatening incarceration and steep fines for some of those involved in these actions. It is sad but obvious that the one person getting targeted for that beautiful moment of protest is a strong and politicized young black man.

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