Calendar

9896
Oct
3
Sat
Suds Snacks & Socialism: Socialist Perspectives on the Presidential Race @ ONLINE, VIA 'ZOOM'
Oct 3 @ 2:30 pm – 4:30 pm

Join us for this virtual discussion: connect with
https://tinyurl.com/SudsSnacksPresidents

Featuring:
Howie Hawkins, Green Party Presidential Candidate

Gloria LaRiva, Presidential Candidate of The Party for Socialism and Liberation and The Peace and Freedom Party

Ted Franklin, System Change Not Climate Change* and Labor Network for Sustainability*, on Voting for Biden
*organizations listed for identification purposes only

This event is sponsored by the Oakland Greens, Bay Area System Change Not Climate Change, and the Alameda County Peace and Freedom Party.

68191
Mutual Aid Mask Build and Distribution @ Empowerment Park
Oct 3 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Red-skies and smoke are hard on everyone, but as with most of the impacts of capitalism, create additional burdens on our poor and unhoused neighbors.

Join us for a mutual aid mask build at Empowerment park in Oakland, across from 465 Bellevue Ave.
No experience necessary. Please bring PPE!

We will be close to the nearby road and can accommodate any accessibility needs. Please email the committee Co-Chairs at green-new-deal@eastbaydsa.org with any accessibility questions or concerns.

68204
Mutual Aid Mask Build and Distribution @ Empowerment Park
Oct 3 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Red-skies and smoke are hard on everyone, but as with most of the impacts of capitalism, create additional burdens on our poor and unhoused neighbors.

Join us for a mutual aid mask build at Empowerment park in Oakland, across from 465 Bellevue Ave.
No experience necessary. Please bring PPE!

We will be close to the nearby road and can accommodate any accessibility needs. Please email the committee Co-Chairs at green-new-deal@eastbaydsa.org with any accessibility questions or concerns.

 

 

68170
‘The BOX’ Virtual Performances @ Online
Oct 3 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Please join the Pulitzer Center for a Zoom performance of The Box, a play written by a survivor of solitary confinement, Sarah Shourd, in collaboration with other survivors. There is no admission cost, but registration is required to attend.

Thursday, October 1 | 4pm PST/7pm EST

Register Here

Saturday, October 3 | 11am PST/2pm EST

Register Here

Saturday, October 3 | 4pm PST/7pm EST

Register Here

Shourd’s play, based on her three-year investigation into the horrors of solitary confinement, is a piece of transformational theater that asks us to re-examine long-held notions of punishment. It reveals the tragic—and sometimes painfully comic and absurd—realities that dictate life “inside the box.”

Learn more about Shourd, the play and some of the actors.

This performance of The Box will feature actors Carlos AguirreDameion BrownJordan DonDorian LockettTerrance Smith, and Lawrence Radecker. Produced by the Pulitzer Center. Tech manager Nikki Hyde. Written and Directed by Sarah Shourd.

68197
Strike Debt Bay Area Economics Book Group – Revenge Capitalism @ ONLINE, VIA 'ZOOM'
Oct 3 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

EMAIL STRIKE.DEBT.BAY.AREA@GMAIL.COM FOR
ZOOM INFO A FEW DAYS BEFORE THE MEETING.

MAX HAIVEN, THE AUTHOR, WILL BE JOINING OUR DISCUSSION IN DECEMBER!

Revenge CapitalismStrike Debt Bay Area hosts a non-technical book group discussion monthly on new and radical economic thinking. Previous readings have included Doughnut EconomicsLimitsBanking on the PeopleCapital and Its Discontents, How to Be an Anti-Capitalist in the 21st Century, and The Deficit Myth.

For our October discussion we will be reading the first two chapters of  ‘Revenge Capitalism: The Ghosts of Empire, the Demons of Capital, and the Settling of Unpayable Debts‘ by Max Haiven (You can order it from Pluto Press.)

For our November discussion we’ll be reading the third and fourth chapters, and for our December discussion we’ll read the final chapters and closing material.

Join us – all are welcome! (This is a dense and intricate book, so if you want to join in on the discussion in December as opposed to just auditing the discussion and listening to the author we’d ask that you make sure you’ve read it…)

Capitalism is in a profound state of crisis. Beyond the mere dispassionate cruelty of ‘ordinary’ structural violence, it appears today as a global system bent on reckless economic revenge; its expression found in mass incarceration, climate chaos, unpayable debt, pharmaceutical violence and the relentless degradation of common life.

In Revenge Capitalism, Max Haiven argues that this economic vengeance helps us explain the culture and politics of revenge we see in society more broadly. Moving from the history of colonialism and its continuing effects today, he examines the opioid crisis in the US, the growth of ‘surplus populations’ worldwide and unpacks the central paradigm of unpayable debts – both as reparations owed, and as a methodology of oppression.

Revenge Capitalism offers no easy answers, but is a powerful call to the radical imagination.

Max Haiven is Research Chair in Culture, Media and Social Justice at Lakehead University, Canada. His books include Art after Money, Money after Art (Pluto, 2018), Crises of Imagination, Crises of Power (Zed Books, 2004), Cultures of Financialization (Palgrave MacMillan, 2014) and the Radical Imagination (Zed Books, 2014).

68147
Politics, Race, and the State of Play in our Nation w/ W. Kamau Bell & Steve Kerr @ ONLINE, VIA 'ZOOM'
Oct 3 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
sm_berkeleyunbound.jpg POLITICS, RACE, AND THE STATE OF PLAY IN OUR NATION

Host: Berkeley #UNBOUND of the Bay Area Book Festival

Cost: $10 for Zoom link
(We will send all ticket buyers a Zoom Webinar link and password the day before the event)

RSVP: https://www.baybookfest.org/berkeleyunbound/schedule/#!event-register/2020/10/3/berkeley-unbound-kickoff

It’s 2020, the year of all hell breaking loose—so why not let it break loose in friendly (and hilarious) company?

Good friends and headline-makers W. Kamau Bell, an Emmy-winner for CNN’s United Shades of America (Robin Williams called him “ferociously funny”), and Steve Kerr, outspoken head coach of the three-time NBA champs Golden State Warriors, are teaming up to raise the good kind of hell, talking all things race, power, dissent, the intersection of sports and activism, and comedy as coping mechanism and vehicle for truth.

In a free-wheeling conversation refereed by yet a third friend of theirs, Dacher Keltner, founding director of UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, the comedian and the coach will hold nothing back, and you’ve got (virtual) courtside seats. Berkeley might have been famous in the 1960s for its free speech movement, but this 21st century version—as uncensored and envelope-pushing as 2020 demands—might just teach us new ways of speaking truth to power.

Laugh, cheer, reflect, and get fired up (and maybe a little out of bounds) with this totally unique conversation, only in Berkeley #UNBOUND.

FEATURING:

W. Kamau Bell
Sociopolitical comedian W. Kamau Bell is the host and executive producer of the Emmy Award-winning CNN docuseries United Shades of America with W. Kamau Bell. His Netflix special, Private School Negro, was praised by TIME for “finding the comic absurdity in darkness,” and he is the author of The Awkward Thoughts of W. Kamau Bell: Tales of a 6’4”, African American, Heterosexual, Cisgender, Left-Leaning, Asthmatic, Black and Proud Blerd, Mama’s Boy, Dad, and Stand-Up Comedian. Full bio.

Steve Kerr
Currently in his sixth season as head coach of the Golden State Warriors, Steve Kerr has guided the club through four of the most prolific seasons in NBA history, with a list of accomplishments that includes three NBA championships and four of the five most victorious seasons in franchise history. He is also the first to win three NBA titles as a player and three as a coach. He’s also an outspoken activist for racial justice who the Guardian has called “an essential voice of reason in a world in which reason dies on cable news,” a vocal supporter of Black Lives Matter, a proponent of gun control, and a persistent thorn in the President’s side. Full bio.

Dacher Keltner
A professor of psychology at UC Berkeley and faculty director of the Greater Good Science Center, Dacher Keltner has consulted for the Center for Constitutional Rights to help end solitary confinement, as well as for Google, Facebook, the Sierra Club, and Pixar’s blockbuster film Inside Out. He is the co-author of Born to Be Good: The Science of a Meaningful Life, The Compassionate Instinct, and The Power Paradox: How We Gain and Lose Influence. Full bio.
_____________________________________________________________

ABOUT: Berkeley #UNBOUND of the Bay Area Book Festival

https://www.baybookfest.org/berkeleyunbound/

On Sunday, October 4, the Bay Area Book Festival presents Berkeley #UNBOUND, an all-day, free, virtual mini-festival — kicked off with a ticketed keynote program on Saturday night, October 3. Just a month before the election, Berkeley #UNBOUND will gather many of the world’s most influential thinkers, writers and other trailblazers to offer bold visions in response to this moment of political and social crucible facing our nation.

Bay Area Book Festival #UNBOUND the virtual branch of our celebrated programming, amplifying bestselling and emerging voices across all genres. #UNBOUND explores compelling topics such as voter suppression, parenting in a time of anxiety, racism, health and wellness, and more — along with brilliant literary discussions. Our children’s and young adult programs present top authors who are interviewed by youth!

For a full list of events happening online with #UNBOUND, go to: https://www.baybookfest.org/unbound/directory/
_____________________________________________________________

68200
Oct
4
Sun
West Oakland Free Covid Testing @ West Oakland BART (Sat), 31st & MLK (Sun)
Oct 4 @ 9:00 am – 4:00 pm

68207
Sunday Morning at the Marxist Library @ Online
Oct 4 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Our Sunday morning programs are scheduled pretty much on a “first come, first served” basis and confirmed at our planning sessions. The opinions expressed are those of the speakers only and do not represent a group consensus on the issues by the members of ICSS. Our general practice is to allot at least half of the time to comradely discussion of the issues so that we include as many voices as practical .

Check here close to the date each week for subject matter and Zoom info if not below:

https://icssmarx.org/icss-sched-latest.html

Sun, Sep 20, 2020:
Socialism and ‘Movement for a People’s Party’
In the US, a movement is afoot for a new party and over 100,000 people have responded to the call to form a new ‘People’s Party’, which is presently a pre-party formation.  In this Sunday Morning at the Marxist Library session, we will be showing some videos of the speeches by notable speakers and analyze the platform for this new political formation from a Marxist perspective, followed by a lively discussion

LOG-IN INFO 
The meeting will be opened up, as usual, at 10:15 for anyone to join and discuss technical matters, catch up with each other, say Hi, etc. We Intend to start the presentation as close to 10:30 am as possible

Raj Sahai is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/2591082607?pwd=TTdlcFlnZEVCdWt2VlRHeWZLeHNKQT09

Meeting ID: 259 108 2607
Passcode: 6MwQP7

Sun, Sep 27, 2020: 10:30 am to 12:30 pm
CONFIRMED: Labor and Immigration

David will talk about the struggles of farmworkers on the West Coast to organize, and the way it’s affected by their work lives and status as immigrants.  He’ll include photographs and a description of his documentary work in process.

Sun, Oct 4, 2020: 10:30 am to 12:30 pm
CONFIRMED: The Crisis in Education:
Capitalist Mess and Socialist Solutions

The NY Times recently ran two articles on its front page: U.S. Campuses See Explosions Of Virus Cases,“ and “How Beijing got 295 Million Back to School.” This illustrates how socialism attempts to solve the mess in education created by capitalism. Similar forces can be seen in Oakland, CA, where billionaire-funded charter school organizations are buying our school board members, implementing school closures, and turning students and parents into vectors for billionaire profit. Meanwhile, socialists and union activists fighting to keep Oakland schools public, and to keep charter schools and their billionaire supporters out of our communities. We have invited Gerald Smith, an activist with Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and former candidate for the Oakland School Board, to lead a discussion with members of the Oakland Education Association (OEA) the teacher’s union. Discussants will include Mike Hutchinson, a candidate  for the Oakland School Board in District 5, endorse by both DSA and OEA.
The session will be moderated by ICSS Members Eugene Ruyle and Raj Sahai.

Sun, Oct 11, 2020: 10:30 am to 12:30 pm
CONFIRMED: Dealing with Covid 19:
A Comparison Between Cuba and the United States

   Cuba, a socialist nation with a population of about 11 million, has suffered (as of mid-September, 2020) about 100 fatalities from the Covid 19 virus pandemic. The USA, a capitalist nation with a population about 30 times as great as Cuba, has suffered (as of mid-September), almost 200,000 deaths from this virus. The U.S., with about 30 times the population of Cuba has lost about 2000 times as many lives! What are the social, political, economic, ideological, cultural, strategic and other factors relevant to each nation that explain this profound difference
Dr. Laurence H. Shoup has taught history at a number of universities and is the author of five books, his most recent one being Wall Street’s Think Tank: The Council on Foreign Relations and the Empire Neoliberal Geopolitics 1976-2019 (Monthly Review Press). He has been in active solidarity with the Cuban Revolution for many decades and has visited the country over a dozen times on a variety of solidarity excursions, including two Pastors for Peace caravans, several Labor Exchange trips, as well as with the Venceremos Brigade and Global Exchange.

Sun, Oct 18, 2020: 10:30 am to 12:30 pm
CONFIRMED: What Should Working People in the U.S.
do about Elections 2020?

Should we: 1. Vote Third Party? 2. Vote Democratic to oppose the Fascist tendency represented by Trump? Trump? 3. Adopt the Safe State Strategy?, 4. Sit out of the bourgeois election? 4. Vote for Trump to deny support to the real danger, Biden? 5. suport only those down-ballot candidates from any group that pushes for reform of the capitalist system, e.g Greens, Berners and “The Squad”?
We have three confirmed speakers,
* Tom Gallagher, former Massachusetts State Representative and author of The Primary Route.
* Roger Harris, among his many activities, Roger is on the Central Committee of the Peace and Freedom Party and a board member of the Task Force on the Americas
* Laura Wells, former Green Party candidate for Governor, writer (laurawells.org)
ICSS member Sharon Rose will facilitate the session..
RECOMMENDED READINGS:
* The Specter of a Fascist Coup by Trump Haunts the US, But There’s Worse to Worry About https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/08/21/the-specter-of-a-fascist-coup-by-trump-haunts-the-us-but-theres-worse-to-worry-About/
* Utopia for Realists: How We Can Build the Ideal World By Rutger Bregman, recommended by https://laurawells.org
* Joe Biden, Don’t Let Donald Trump Run as the Antiwar Candidate! https://tomgallagherwrites.com
LOG-IN INFO 
The meeting will be opened up, as usual, at 10:15 for anyone to join and discuss technical matters, catch up with each other, say Hi, etc. We Intend to start the presentation as close to 10:30 am as possible
BLURB AND LOG-IN INFO WILL BE PROVIDED ON
FRIDAY, OCT 16, 2020

Sun, Oct 25, 2020: 10:30 am to 12:30 pm
CONFIRMED: Attack on Anti-racist Organizers

On Sept. 17, 2020, several protest leaders, including four members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), were arrested in Denver, Colorado in a coordinated police attack. The organizers now face over 30 bogus charges including “kidnapping” and “inciting a riot,” and potentially years in prison. They were targeted because of their dedicated organizing efforts in recent months to denouncing the police murder of Elijah McClain in Aurora, Colorado.
This attack is part of a larger assault on the anti-racist movement directed from the White House, Governor’s mansions, and local governments and police agencies around the country. This can happen to any protester who has used their voice to mobilize in the mass movement against racism in every single corner of the United States.
   We will be joined by Lillian House, one of the protest organizers  facing 12 bogus facing charges including “kidnapping” and “inciting a riot,” and potentially years in prison and well as Richard Becker of the PSL.
For more info and to donate, see https://www.liberationnews.org/thousands-declare-their-solidarity-with-framed-denver-anti-racist-organizers-add-your-name-here/
The demands are: 1. Drop all the charges! 2. Stop the assault on the movement and on free speech!

Sun, Nov 1, 2020: 10:30 am to 12:30 pm DST FALL BACK
CONFIRMED -The fall of the Soviet Union: New insights into the sequence of events, starting with the victory of the Russian Revolution on November 7, 1917, and implications for Marxists today.”
Wadi’h Halabi, with the Center for Marxist Education in Cambridge, Massachusetts, will discuss this topic. His analysis extends to differences between the Chinese and Russian Revolutions. For example, civil war and land reform followed revolution in Russia but preceded it in China. Halabi’s discussion will touch on the ‘new Cold War’. The global class struggle hardly ended with the fall of the Soviet Union, and this is the framework of the presentation.

Sun, Nov 8, 2020: 10:30 am to 12:30 pm
CONFIRMED – WHAT NOW?
This will be our first meeting after the November 3, 2020 election, and we know they will not turn out well. Do we Dump Trump or Battle Biden? What will groups like ANSWER, the Poor People’s Campaign, and DSA  be doing? We have invited  Gloria La Riva, the only socialist Presidential Candidate on the ballot in 23 states, or her representative, to lead our discussion, possibly  she will be  joined by another speaker.
Gene is organizing.

68156
Oct
5
Mon
Reopen Oscar Grant’s Case @ Fruitvale BART
Oct 5 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

PRESS CONFERENCE:

In the wake of renewed international attention to the murders of Black men, woman, children, and most notably the recent tortuous killing of George Floyd — who was killed beneath the knee of Officer Derek Chauvin, using the same technique that was used on Oscar Grant minutes before he was shot to death by BART Officer Johannes Mehserle — the family of Oscar Grant and the community that supports them demand that the District Attorney of Alameda County, Nancy O’Malley, reopen the case of the murder of Oscar Grant. Among Oscar’s last words were, “I can’t breathe.” Anthony Pirone, the BART Officer who created the climate of violence, pinned Oscar down with a knee on his neck, fracturing bones in Oscar’s face, and called Oscar a “bitch-ass nigger”, three times has escaped justice.  The family demands that DA O’Malley reopen Oscar’s case.


WHO:
Rev. Wanda Johnson, mother of Oscar and CEO of the Oscar Grant Foundation, will be joined by Oscar’s uncle, Uncle Bobby X, and Ms. Beatrice X Johnson, of the Love Not Blood Campaign, along with a host of supporters, civic and religious leaders and a community that seeks justice and supports the demand to reopen the case of Oscar Grant.

Note: Alameda County Supervisor Keith Carson called the murder of Oscar Grant an “execution.”  The Community is looking for renewed support for reopening the murder case of Oscar Grant from Mr. Carson and other Black elected officials, including Congresswoman Barbara Lee and Lateefah Simon, current President of the BART Board.  The Community is also looking to Black celebrities such as now-renowned director Ryan Coogler to give his support to this effort, the Black Panther director having launched his career with the film Fruitvale Station, the story of the murder of Oscar Grant.

68213
People’s Park Gardeners tour @ People's Park
Oct 5 @ 3:00 pm – 4:30 pm
Come to People’s Park. Enjoy the garden tour. Find out what you can do to prepare for the rain in the garden.
We might even do some gardening. Also methodology regarding response to park closure in the future. Food Not Bombs feeds around 3 so we will start after people have eaten. Seed: amaranth, mugwort, nettles and collard, help yourself, [use the buddy system!] I usually work until dark or dusk. Bring gloves and a small garden trowel. Bring water.
68215
Oct
6
Tue
Protecting the 2020 Elections in the Age of Facebook @ Online
Oct 6 @ 11:30 am – 1:00 pm

Register here

Please join us for a special webcast about protecting election integrity, voting rights, and democracy in the age of Facebook. Our guests will discuss what they see as the most perilous threats to democracy that are being promulgated on Facebook and what can be done about them—through government regulation, legal efforts, changes to company policies, and pro-democracy activism.

– Ángel Díaz is counsel in the Liberty & National Security Program of the Brennan Center for Justice. His work focuses on the intersection of technology with civil rights and civil liberties.

– Yaël Eisenstat is the former Global Head of Elections Integrity Operations for political advertising at Facebook. She is a key voice and public advocate for transparency and accountability in tech.

– Myaisha Hayes is the Campaign Strategies Director at MediaJustice, where she oversees the launch of campaigns such as #NoDigitalPrisons and #ProtectBlackDissent.

– Jesse Littlewood is the Vice President of Campaigns at Common Cause, which is training election protection social media monitors to combat cyber-suppression in their communities.

Sponsored by the Protest Facebook Coalition, Media Alliance, and Global Exchange.

68212
Film Screening: Arc of Justice @ Online
Oct 6 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Register for this event.

Arc of Justice Livestream and Q and A on Tuesday, October 6. Guests include Mark Lipman, Steve King, and Gus Newport.

Join AC Library’s Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) team for a screening of Arc of Justice: The Rise, Fall and Rebirth of a Beloved Community on Tuesday, October 6, 2020 from 2-4pm. This short documentary is about the community land trust, New Communities, Inc., in Albany, Georgia. NCI was created in 1969 by leaders of the Civil Rights Movement to help secure economic independence for African American families.

The screening begins at 2:10pm, followed by the Q&A from 2:35pm to 3:35pm. The Q&A will feature guests Mark Lipman, filmmaker, Gus Newport, former Mayor of Berkeley, and Steve King, Executive Director of the Oakland Community Land Trust. Register for this event.

Mark Lipman is a documentary filmmaker whose topics delve into a range of social issues. His films include Holding Ground: The Rebirth of Dudley Street (1996) and its sequel Gaining Ground (2013), Street of Dreams: Development Without Displacement in Communities of Color (2013), and States of Grace (2014).

Gus Newport was the mayor of Berkeley from 1979-1986 and is currently on the National Council of Elders. He is a lifelong social justice activist and has been deeply involved with community land trusts. After his time as mayor, he became the director of the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative that was featured in the documentaries Holding Ground: The Rebirth of Dudley Street (1996) and Gaining Ground (2013).

Steve King is the Executive Director of the Oakland Community Land Trust. His work with community-based organizations focuses on equitable development, affordable housing, and applied social research. He previously served as the Housing and Economic Development Coordinator at the Urban Strategies Council.

68217
Night Out for Safety and Liberation – Oakland Digital Event @ Online
Oct 6 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Register at: bit.ly/nosl20oakland

Join Oakland activists and artists for performances streaming live on Zoom and Facebook lifting up what #SafetyIs means and how #WeKeepUsSafe. Performers include:

Kymi
Jasmine Fuego
TJ Sykes
68193
Oakland Police Commission @ ONLINE, VIA 'ZOOM'
Oct 6 @ 6:30 pm – 10:00 pm

Agenda

Zoom link

Notable agenda items:

  • Update from Interim Police Chief
  • OPD Presentation on Race and Equity
  • Use of Force Ad Hoc Committee Presentation of Department General Order (DGO) K-3
    Use of Force
  • Report from Special Concurrent Meeting of the Oakland City Council, Community
    Policing Advisory Board (CPAB), Public Safety and Services Oversight Commission (SSOC),
    and Police Commission on September 29, 2020
  • Update on Special Order (SO) 9205 Banning Carotid Restraint and All Forms of Asphyxia

 

68209
Oct
8
Thu
Film Screening: The Boys Who Said No
Oct 8 all-day

During unsettling times, it helps to remember how we survived past struggles. The Boys Who Said NO! focuses on the nonviolent warriors who actively opposed the military draft during the Vietnam War and whose brave actions would eventually lead to the end of both the draft in the United States and the long-standing, devastating war. Offering a thorough and fascinating (recent) history lesson, Oscar®-nominated filmmaker Judith Ehrlich (The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers, MVFF32) highlights several heroes of the anti-war movement—from iconic figures like Martin Luther King, Jr., musician Joan Baez, and famed resistance leader David Harris to ordinary youth organizing sit-ins.

Alongside harrowing, breathtaking news footage of the struggles at home and overseas, the film is a captivating account of a historic turning point in America, celebrating the amazing resilience of humans fighting for change and speaking truth to power.

Judith Ehrlich co-produced and co-directed Oscar®, Emmy®, IDA Award-nominated and Peabody Award winner, The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers. That film won over a dozen film festival awards, sold to 20 international broadcasters, and made over half a million dollarsat the box office. Her film, The Good War and Those Who Refused to Fight It, was also an ITVS documentary and broadcast on PBS. She is the only person to twice win the major history film awards in the US.

 

68223
Oakland Police Commission @ ONLINE, VIA 'ZOOM'
Oct 8 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm
Oct
9
Fri
Film Screening: The Boys Who Said No
Oct 9 all-day

During unsettling times, it helps to remember how we survived past struggles. The Boys Who Said NO! focuses on the nonviolent warriors who actively opposed the military draft during the Vietnam War and whose brave actions would eventually lead to the end of both the draft in the United States and the long-standing, devastating war. Offering a thorough and fascinating (recent) history lesson, Oscar®-nominated filmmaker Judith Ehrlich (The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers, MVFF32) highlights several heroes of the anti-war movement—from iconic figures like Martin Luther King, Jr., musician Joan Baez, and famed resistance leader David Harris to ordinary youth organizing sit-ins.

Alongside harrowing, breathtaking news footage of the struggles at home and overseas, the film is a captivating account of a historic turning point in America, celebrating the amazing resilience of humans fighting for change and speaking truth to power.

Judith Ehrlich co-produced and co-directed Oscar®, Emmy®, IDA Award-nominated and Peabody Award winner, The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers. That film won over a dozen film festival awards, sold to 20 international broadcasters, and made over half a million dollarsat the box office. Her film, The Good War and Those Who Refused to Fight It, was also an ITVS documentary and broadcast on PBS. She is the only person to twice win the major history film awards in the US.

 

68223
Oct
10
Sat
“Landless Not Voiceless” an exhibition @ Pro Arts Gallery & Commons
Oct 10 @ 11:00 am – 12:30 pm
Pro Arts Gallery & COMMONS is proud to present Landless Not Voiceless, an exhibition curated by the newly found, Oakland-based, Cardboard & Concrete Unhoused Artist Collective. Landless Not Voiceless will open at Pro Arts Gallery & COMMONS on Saturday, October 10th, 2020 (Indigenous People’s Day) with public reception, talks, and mural street art action by the Poor People’s campaign. Artists will begin painting the mural at 11 a.m. The exhibition will feature the works of unhoused artists, members of the Cardboard & Concrete Unhoused Artists Collective — from Oakland and Berkeley, and guest artists, including art installations, paintings, drawings, photography, writing and short films.
The intention of the Cardboard & Concrete Unhoused Artists Collective is to spotlight the skills and imaginations of displaced communities. Poor and unhoused people are facing evictions and increased criminalization in the midst of a global pandemic, a nationwide housing crisis and looming evictions, which further jeopardize the livelihood, stability, and future of the most vulnerable. We hope our unity, and leadership encourages the People–whether housed or unhoused, facing evictions in the San Francisco Bay Area to stand up, work together and organize.
This day is also the nine-year anniversary of Occupy Oakland – the militant movement of the 99% vs. the 1% symbolized by a massive tent city on the plaza in front of Oakland City hall. Contrary to popular belief, the political encampment at the plaza was held down and led by the unhoused Black and Brown folks who were already living at the plaza prior to the social justice upheaval. This exhibit will create space for those unhoused militant voices to tell their stories.
A street mural in collaboration with Poor People’s campaign will be painted at the plaza, shedding light on the adversities and intensified criminalization of unhoused residents during a pandemic. Join us for a physically distanced outdoor and indoor event, celebrating the resilience of our unhoused communities. A virtual video tour will also be made available after opening night. Masks required for attendees. Free food will be provided.
The Cardboard & Concrete Unhoused Artist Collective is a group of people with like minds that are living in curbside communities, working towards an ultimate goal: Housing is a human right and homelessness is not a crime. We strive for fair treatment for all people. These artists have come together to form a union. A circle with no beginning, no end, no hierarchy. Unbreakable. Undivided. Unafraid.
The vision of the collective is to inspire the exploration of diverse and complex narratives of our shared humanity through art. Using visual art and dialogue, we want to seed and interpret our societal diseases, encouraging a truthful perspective from the negative stereotypes on unhoused communities. To explore the ways in which we relate to each other and one’s self outside of societal programming and the economic systems that separate us. To stand against the death of humanity.
Masks and social distancing will be required. To join the opening via Zoom:
Topic: Landless Not Voiceless Art Opening

Meeting ID: 840 9352 0370
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ABOUT THE ARTISTS OF CARDBOARD & CONCRETE COLLECTIVE
Timothy J Petty is a poet, free form dancer, and garden artist focusing on edible landscaping. He is currently based in the Bay area, although a Colorado transplant. He is primarily a peer- taught, having found vibrant inspiration around him most of his life. Tim desires to connect people through common goals. He seeks to dissolve the dishonest systems in society. Tim aims to remind everyone of the Artist inside.
Tim feels the strongest urgency relating to the environmental crisis, but having lived a strange and sometimes rough life, he feels at ease when speaking about social justice issues. Through food justice, he believes it is possible to serve both the people and the planet. His ultimate goal as an artist is to transform culture through the integration of ancestral wisdom into our daily lives.
Toan Nguyen was born in Biên Hòa, Vietnam and now resides in Berkeley, California. He is an artist that immerses himself in the art he displays and shares. By doing so, he is able to capture the experience and transfer it to the art he creates. His work is at the intersection of art and protest, always engaging with passersby. Toan is interested in creating a discourse that goes beyond the presence of the artist.
He enjoys cultural diversity and is rarely seen without his extra limb (bicycle).
Anita “Needa Bee” De Asis Miralle wears many hats in Oakland. With Cardboard and Concrete collective, she wears the hat of an educator, activist, visual and spiritual artist. She uses culture and arts to inspire peoples political imaginations, spark critical thought about the world we live in, and offer solutions to the social ills of our society. She is a published writer and a self-published book artist, accomplished thespian, acclaimed spoken word artists and dancer. Miralle practices sacred arts including divination, healing and protection works, and has built community altars in public spaces throughout Oakland from street corners to Oakland Asian Cultural Center Art Gallery.
As a performer, she has opened for Dead Prez, KRS-1, Michael Franti, Tone Toni Tony, The Roots and Medusa to name a few. In Oakland, she was a member of several multi-disciplinary Hip Hop krus, including Underground Railroad, Overseas Artists, People’s Art and Axe Dance Ensemble.
Yesica Prado is a multimedia journalist and a first-generation Mexican immigrant from Nezahualcoyótl, Mexico. She grew up undocumented in a southeast neighborhood in Chicago, Archer Heights. With limited choices for a job without social security, she ventured into photography to learn a skill – a trade. She hoped to earn a living as an independent contractor and attended the University of Illinois at Chicago, earning a BFA in Photography. But unexpectedly before turning 21, she was granted a U-Visa. Yesica took advantage of this new opportunity, expanding her borders to seek a master’s in journalism from the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.
Prado lost her housing in San Francisco while she was a graduate student. She came to the Berkeley Marina and joined a community of vehicular residents already residing there. They created a network of support for one another, showing the empathy, resilience, and kindness present even in the face of precarious living. Prado captures these elements in her photography in her most recent work, “Driving Home: Surviving the Housing Crisis,” which she completed for visual nonprofit Catchlight as an inaugural CatchLight Local Fellow for the San Francisco Public Press.
Ayat Bryant-Jalal was born in San Francisco in 1973, and his parents were Black Panthers. Bryant-Jalal’s family was displaced by the attack on the Black Panther Party and forced to move to S.E. Washington DC. In 1989, he returned to the Bay Area.
In DC, Ayat was a self-taught artist, drawing portraits (pencil), graffiti on the desks and walls. Through the Arts, Ayat grew and matured in understanding himself and others. He began writing poetry and philosophical sayings – understanding what being Black is. As a painter, Ayat has presented his work at the Impressions Gallery in Berkeley, taking part in a Displaced Artist Venue exhibition. He has been painting and drawing pieces ever since.
Tracy Lee is an immigrant from Thailand. She is Iu Mien. A single mother of seven children. Lee and her parents were residents of a refugee camp. In 1983, they came to America. They were brought here by the Americans to have a better life, during a war between the communists in Thailand.
Lee’s artwork takes a critical view of social, political and cultural issues. Often referencing police brutality, her work explores the varying relationships between popular culture and fine art. Having engaged subjects as diverse as the civil rights movement, black life matters and modernist architecture, her work reproduces familiar visual and aural signs, arranging them into new conceptually layered installations. She has different ways of expressing her work, but her preferred methods are drawing or green screen movies.
About Pro Arts Gallery & COMMONS
Pro Arts Gallery & COMMONS is a collectively-held space in Oakland, California that blurs the line between art, debate, experimentation, and collaboration. Through the sharing of material and immaterial resources, we reflect Oakland’s existing artistic and cultural fabric, while creating future landscape of other commons-centric spaces that encourage the economic and cultural power of the community. Our collaborative activities are rooted in these mutual values and principles.
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Mutual Aid Mask Build and Distribution @ Empowerment Park
Oct 10 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Red-skies and smoke are hard on everyone, but as with most of the impacts of capitalism, create additional burdens on our poor and unhoused neighbors.

Join us for a mutual aid mask build at Empowerment park in Oakland, across from 465 Bellevue Ave.
No experience necessary. Please bring PPE!

We will be close to the nearby road and can accommodate any accessibility needs. Please email the committee Co-Chairs at green-new-deal@eastbaydsa.org with any accessibility questions or concerns.

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Recognizing Prison Resistance : From George Jackson to Attica to the Agreement to End Hostilities
Oct 10 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
We will meet at 4:30pm at the Larkspur Ferry Terminal at 101 E Sir Francis Drake Blvd, Larkspur, CA, 94939. At 5pm we will walk up to the West Gate of San Quentin, where we will hold the demonstration.
Join us at San Quentin on the anniversary of the Agreement to End Hostilities! We will be recognizing prison resistance from George Jackson to the Attica Uprising, from the Pelican Bay Hunger Solidarity Strikes to the Agreement to End Hostilities, an agreement put together by progressive-minded incarcerated people bringing forth a new profound movement. In observance of the 65 lives lost to Covid-19 at the hands of the state and the tens of thousands of lives put at risk – now is the time more than ever for continued resistance and to demand mass releases NOW! No State Execution by Covid-19!
There will be a handful of politically engaging speakers, performances by formerly incarcerated people, and a vigil to honor lives lost in both the struggle for liberation and the struggle to survive the pandemic on the inside.
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