Calendar

9896
Jun
29
Tue
DSA Night School: Palestine and Socialism @ Online
Jun 29 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Join us to learn about the Palestinian struggle for justice and why it’s important for our organizing. Our guest speaker will be Professor Rabab Abdulhadi from SFSU who is a leading voice on Palestinian Liberation.

 

Join Zoom Meeting

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Meeting ID: 821 0814 3840

Passcode: school

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69142
Jul
1
Thu
Social Guarantee Launch @ Online
Jul 1 @ 10:00 am – 11:00 am

Social Guarantee Launch Event

Come and join us on Thursday 1st July as we discuss why we need a Social Guarantee!

Register here

The Social Guarantee enshrines every person’s right to life’s essentials: education, health and social care, a decent home, childcare, nutritious food, clean air and water, energy, transport and access to the internet. For this to happen, all people must have access to collectively provided services that meet their needs, as well as to a fair living income.

Speakers

  • Ann Pettifor – Award winning economist and author of The Case for The Green New Deal
  • Kate Raworth – Renegade economist and creator of Doughnut Economics
  • Georgia Gould – Leader of Camden Council
  • Chaitanya Kumar – Head of Environment and Green Transition at the New Economics Foundation

Chair

  • Maeve Cohen – The Social Guarantee

We’d absolutely love to hear from you! Come to the event to ask questions of this incredible panel. For any enquiries contact info@socialguarantee.org

69130
Harry Bridges: A Man and His Union @ Online
Jul 1 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Registration
LaborFest 2021 opens its 28th annual festival on July 1, 2021 with the most important video on the life and struggle of ILWU founder, Harry Bridges. Directed by Berry Minnott, Harry Bridges, A Man and His Union (1992; 59 minutes), chronicles the life of one of America’s most important and dedicated left-wing labor leaders.

In 1934, Bridges appealed to union members to break from the corrupt mob-controlled ILA and launched a groundbreaking strike in San Francisco. Victory led to the start of the International Longshoremen and Warehouseman Union (ILWU) in 1937.

The democratic structure of the ILWU allowed the rank and file to have not only a voice but also control of their union. That democratic structure and their politics was one of the reasons the US government tried to deport Bridges five times. The ILUW was one of only two unions that survived the anti-communist witch-hunts in the 40’s and 50’s and it continues to put principles and their membership’s first.

A panel discussion will follow the video presentation.

69158
Jul
4
Sun
“Sir! No Sir!” Film Screening On on GI Resistance to end the Vietnam War @ Revolution Books
Jul 4 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Come to Revolution Books at 2444 Durant Ave for an in-person event. We invite everyone who is sickened by the US government and what it has done to people all over the planet and to people here, everyone who refuses to join in the orgy of July 4 flag waving and patriotism, to come to Revolution Books for an Anti-July 4 screening and discussion of the powerful film “SIR! NO SIR!” by David Zeiger. This film tells the true story of the powerful anti-war movement which emerged inside the US military during the war in Vietnam. It is a powerful antidote to the lies about Making America Great Again, and the lies about the war in Vietnam that make heroes of the US military which dropped napalm on children.

Sir! No Sir! 1) Brings to life the history of the GI movement through the stories of those who were part of it; 2) Reveals the explosion of defiance that the movement gave birth to with never-before-seen archival material; 3) Explores the profound impact that movement had on the military and the war itself; and 4) The film also tells the story of how and why the GI Movement has been erased from the public memory.

As the Declaration, A Call to Get Organized Now for a Real Revolution says: “…it is a fact that, at the high point of the 1960s, the strength of the radical liberation movements at that time reached into and strongly influenced every part and every institution of society—including the armed forces of this system, where more of the soldiers looked for leadership from the Black Panther Party and other revolutionary-minded forces than from the president of the United States (the so-called ‘commander-in-chief’ of the armed forces).”

On this July 4th, there is nothing to celebrate about this blood-soaked country, its wars of empire, its destruction of the environment, its murderous police, and all the suffering it has caused people here and around the world.

Watch the trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jULC3SCX9wE

“Let’s get down to basics: We need a revolution—nothing less!” A DECLARATION, A CALL TO GET ORGANIZED NOW FOR A REAL REVOLUTION, from http://www.revcom.us

69152
Jul
10
Sat
Prisons and Alternatives to Harm @ Online
Jul 10 @ 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

The final class in our “What is Abolition?” series will take a look at the prison system and the conditions that prisoners face, as well as looking at alternatives to dealing with harm. Do prisons actually change people’s behaviors? Or reduce harm? What are alternative ways that we can address interpersonal harm? What is transformative justice? Join this discussion hosted by the EBDSA Political Education Committee and the Racial Solidarity Committee and explore these questions with your DSA comrades.

Check here for readings and videos

Join Zoom Meeting

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Meeting ID: 824 1261 0160

Passcode: abolition

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69155
Prisons and Alternatives to Harm – DSA @ Online
Jul 10 @ 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

RSVP

The final class in our “What is Abolition?” series will take a look at the prison system and the conditions that prisoners face, as well as looking at alternatives to dealing with harm. Do prisons actually change people’s behaviors? Or reduce harm? What are alternative ways that we can address interpersonal harm? What is transformative justice? Join this discussion hosted by the EBDSA Political Education Committee and the Racial Solidarity Committee and explore these questions with your DSA comrades.

Readings + Videos to come!

 

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82412610160?pwd=NFNUU09WTHhTTGVCYSs1M2xMRlBqUT09

Meeting ID: 824 1261 0160

Passcode: abolition

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69143
Jul
11
Sun
Group Discussion: The Communist Manifesto. @ Online
Jul 11 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Group Discussion: The Communist Manifesto.

We will go through this foundational work of Marxism reading selective paragraphs  with ample opportunity for discussion after each selection. Be prepared to voice, and defend, your views!

Our discussion will be led by ICSS member Gene Ruyle. In preparation, please re-read the Manifesto itself, and if there are particular passages you want the group to consider, please send the full text of those passages to <cuylerluyle@mac.com> by Saturday morning so they can be included – and bring your own copy to our Zoom meeting (available on the Marx-Engels Internet Archive).

LOGIN INFORMATION

We Intend to start the presentation as close to 10:30 am as possible, but the Zoom room 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.. The program (and recording) will end at 12:30, but the Waiting Room will remain open until about 1 pm for informal discussion.

Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 259 108 2607
Passcode: ICSS711rs
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69168
A Short History of Green Unionism: Sunflower Alliance Meeting @ Online
Jul 11 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm

Gifford Hartman will speak about exemplary moments in labor history that help us imagine possibilities for breaking the current jobs vs. climate-and-community impasse.  For one example: the actions of the petrochemical workers at Porto Marghera in Italy, whose struggles from the 1960s to the 1980s arguably made them the world’s first worker-ecologists:  “They fought against the bosses, but also against the destruction of the workers’ health and environmental contamination.”   (For a deeper dive, see this subtitled documentary: Porto Maghera: The Last Firebrands.)

To get the Zoom link, RSVP to action@sunflower-alliance.org.

69154
Green Sunday: US-China Relations and the New Cold War             @ Online
Jul 11 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

US-China Relations and the New Cold War
           

K.J Noh – Understanding US-China Relations in the Current Historical Moment  From dealing with Covid, to mitigating global climate change, to managing global economic shifts, the most important factor determining the outcome of these critical issues is the nature of US-China relations.  Yet, the US is clearly on a path towards conflict with China–“the US is already in the foothills of a cold war”, according to Kissinger–while analyses and news about this critical relationship in the MSM is saturated with misinformation, disinformation, and inflammatory propaganda. K.J. Noh will unpack the origins, players, forces, and risks in the current historical moment, the relationship with Anti-Asian racism, the prospects of war–hot and cold–, and what these outcomes could yield for the future of our planet. Last but not least, he will invite critical consideration about what conscientious and informed citizens can do.

George Koo – Treating China as an adversary is a lose-lose proposition  Key talking points to be addressed are: (1) China does not have a history or policy of confrontation.  (2) US deliberate policy makes no sense but is harmful to American renewal and return to greatness. (3) The essential elements to successful win-win collaboration

K.J. Noh, is a scholar, educator and journalist focusing on the political economy and geopolitics of the Asia-Pacific.   He writes for Dissident Voice, Black Agenda Report, Counterpunch, Popular Resistance, Asia Times, LA progressive, MR Online, and is senior correspondent for KPFA Flashpoints.  He also does frequent commentary and analysis on various news programs, including The Critical Hour, By Any Means Necessary, Fault Lines, Political Misfits, Loud & Clear, and The Socialist Program.

George Koo has devoted a greater part of his career helping American companies, especially technology based companies, develop their approach to China since China began its economic reform in 1978. After his retirement from Deloitte in 2008, he joined the corporate board of Las Vegas Sands and became fully retired six years later. He has been a frequent contributor of commentaries on US China relations first to Pacific News, then New America Media and most recently to online Asia Times.

July 11th, 5:00 pm to 6:30 pm  Via Zoom: please see access info below

Green Sundays are a series of free public programs & discussions on topics “du jour” sponsored by the Green Party of Alameda County and held on the 2nd Sunday of each month. The monthly business meeting of the County Council of the Green Party follows at 7:00 pm, after a 30-minute break. Council meetings are open to anyone who is interested.

Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 826 2027 1999
Passcode: 2020

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PLANET PEOPLE PEACE
before profit!
https://acgreens.wordpress.com/
Express your green ideas and “like” us on Facebook:
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69165
Jul
13
Tue
Red Square: Transit for the People @ Online
Jul 13 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

 Be it via car, bus, train, or bike, everyone uses some form of transportation as a daily part of their lives. But how does this connect to socialism, class struggle, and racial justice?

RSVP

Join the People’s Transit Alliance and Political Education to learn about how public transportation is an important site for socialist organizing. From public transit’s role as a unionized labor sector to its crucial position as a tool in the fight for ecosocialism and collective struggle, it’s clear that the stakes of how we move around where we live are high.

We will reflect on transportation’s role in capitalism and how it might be transformed, important moments in socialist history that engage transit, and all the possible angles for organizing class struggle and winning a transit system that exists for and through the working class.

See you there!

 

Join Zoom Meeting

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Meeting ID: 853 3090 3556

Passcode: transit

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69144
Cancel This Book: The Progressive Case Against Cancel Culture @ Online
Jul 13 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

In his new book, Cancel This Book, longtime activist and labor lawyer Dan Kovalik argues that cancel culture is entirely mean-spirited, a danger to progressive movement building, and serves only the interests of the extremely powerful. Getting people fired or socially ostracizing them because they ran afoul of the ever-changing language norms or made a simple mistake is a strategy that hands more power to bosses and authority figures. While It may make the accusers feel good, it is destructive,“  Kovalik insists. CANCEL THIS BOOK argues not just for an end to cancel culture, but for a renewed focus on solidarity, compassion, and civility, all of which are required to build the mass progressive movements that we need now more than ever. Like many on the left, Kovalik has watched with concern as works of classic literature have been summarily cut from curricula, individuals have been traumatized and pilloried, jobs lost, reputations destroyed.

“The liberal proponents of cancel culture,” says Chris Hedges,” have become the Grand Inquisitors of speech. They wallow in cloying self-righteousness while at the same time they refuse, either because of cowardice or ineptitude, to confront the real centers of power—the array of intelligence agencies that monitor us 24 hours a day, the rampant out-of-control militarism, Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and the bankrupt corporate media outlets. Proponents of cancel culture are part of the American burlesque of anti-politics masquerading as politics.”

Dan Kovalik is the author of critically acclaimed The Plot to Scapegoat RussiaThe Plot to Attack IranThe Plot to Control the WorldThe Plot to Overthrow Venezuela, and No More War.  He has been a labor and human rights lawyer since 1993. Kovalik received the David W. Mills Mentoring Fellowship from Stanford Law School, has written extensively for HuffPost and CounterPunch, and has lectured throughout the world.

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.

69126
Jul
15
Thu
California Doughnut Economics Coalition Book Group – All We Can Save @ Online
Jul 15 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Are you hungry for deeper dialogue about the climate crisis and building community around solutions? We are too.

A group of us at California Doughnut Economics Coalition are reading All We Can Save — it’s a book club! The book club helps us build on our doughnut economics foundation, further connect the (social & ecological) dots, and think more like a 21st-century economist. We want to extend the invite to all.

About Book Club: A unique opportunity to read and share some information and inspirational conversation on important issues. The book club is an unbiased and safe forum that opens our minds to ideas and information for a more in-depth look at our world, our community, and hopefully ourselves.

  • Date/Time: third Thursday of each month
  • Time: 6-7 PM PST
  • Register for event and Zoom link will be provided.
  • This Month’s Book: All We Can Save: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis. All We Can Save is a national bestseller. Provocative and illuminating essays from women at the forefront of the climate movement who are harnessing truth, courage, and solutions to lead humanity forward.

Each month, we will discuss essays from each section:

  • 4/15: Begin
  • 5/20: Part 1 – Root
  • 6/17: Part 2 – Advocate & Part 3 – Reframe
  • 7/15: Part 4 – Reshape & Part 5 – Persist
  • 8/19: Part 6 – Feel & Part 7 – Nourish
  • 9/16: Part 8 – Rise & Onward
  • 10/21: TBD

How it relates to Doughnut Economics: The book club helps us to further connect the dots and think more like a 21st-century economist.

69128
Jul
18
Sun
Is the US preparing for war with China in the South China Sea?
Jul 18 @ 10:30 am – 12:00 pm


Secretary Blinken has recently asserted that conflict in the South China Sea (SCS) between the Philippines and China could justify US war against China, due to a mutual defense treaty. This pronouncement comes as the US rallies its allies to form a bloc against China, escalates economic war, and heightens rhetoric against China. This presentation will explain:

* Why the SCS–and the Phillipines–are critical to US global geostrategy

* The SCS arbitral tribunal decision that the US claims as justification for Phillipine claims

* The history & context of the current cold war against China

* How the war would unfold

Our speaker, K.J. Noh, is a scholar, educator and journalist focusing on the political economy and geopolitics of the Asia-Pacific.   He writes for Dissident Voice, Black Agenda Report, Counterpunch, Popular Resistance, Asia Times, LA progressive, MR Online, and is senior correspondent for KPFA Flashpoints.  He also does frequent commentary and analysis on various news programs, including The Critical Hour, By Any Means Necessary, Fault Lines, Political Misfits, Loud & Clear, and The Socialist Program.

LOGIN INFORMATION

We Intend to start the presentation as close to 10:30 am as possible, but the Zoom room 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.. The program (and recording) will end at 12:30, but the Waiting Room will remain open until about 1 pm for informal discussion.

Join Zoom Meeting
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Meeting ID: 259 108 2607
Passcode: ICSS718rs
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Meeting ID: 259 108 2607
Passcode: 428457790
Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kc4RrpvAiQ

69176
Jul
20
Tue
What Can We Do About Voter Suppression & The Threat To Democracy? Activists Respond. @ Online
Jul 20 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Tuesday, July 20, 1 PM, SF Gray Panther Meeting
What Can We Do About Voter Suppression & The Threat To Democracy? Activists Respond.

This year 17 states have enacted 28 new laws to make it harder for people to vote. There have been nearly 400 voter suppression bills introduced in 48 states. What does this mean for our democracy? And what can we do or should we do about it? Find out from a panel of Bay Area activists.

Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86273983265; Meeting ID: 862 7398 3265; call in: 1 669 900 9128, then enter 862 7398 3265 ##

Speakers include:

Jan Ben Dor: Michigan Gray Panther leader and founding member of the Michigan Election Reform Alliance (MERA), which fights for elections that uphold democracy on behalf of voters to maximize representation for all US citizens.

Larry Baskett is an activist with Indivisible San Francisco and Indivisible East Bay and is on their steering committees. He will speak about Republican voter suppression and Indivisible’s local and national activism response to it. He’s a mechanical engineer who spent a year as a Science and Technology Policy Fellow with the California State Senate.

Janani Ramachandran is a candidate for California State Assembly District 18, which represents the cities of Oakland, Alameda, and San Leandro in the Bay Area of California. Janani is a social justice attorney and community activist; she has served on the Oakland Public Ethics Commission and is on the California Commission on Asian and Pacific Islander American Affairs. She is a graduate of Stanford University and Berkeley Law.

Richard Becker is the West Coast Coordinator of ANSWER (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism) which is composed of many antiwar and civil rights organizations. Becker is a long time activist and organizer against war and racism and for global solidarity for social justice.

Contact:
Art Persyko, SF Gray Panthers Convener
artpersyko [at] gmail.com
650-228-4188

69180
Jul
21
Wed
Policing in the Era of Big Data @ Online
Jul 21 @ 8:00 am – 9:00 am

REGISTER: [Click here]

In the age of algorithms and informatics, law enforcement agencies across the country have turned to data-driven programs to help fight crime. But what happens when such programs infringe on civil rights, amplify racial biases or become abusive? And how can journalists hold those agencies accountable while detailing the steep human costs for those targeted? In this webinar, 2021 Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporters Kathleen McGrory and Neil Bedi will explain how they unearthed a secretive policing operation in Florida that used data to harass residents and profile schoolchildren. And they will discuss strategies that reporters can use to go beyond press releases and sniff out similar programs in their own communities. They’ll also share practical reporting tips for fact-checking police claims, finding the right people to bring the story to life, and some broader lessons learned from landing difficult stories in the face of sustained opposition.

Kathleen McGrory is the deputy editor for investigations at the Tampa Bay Times. She and her colleague Neil Bedi won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting for their reporting on a local policing program used to monitor and harass residents. The series was also a finalist for the 2021 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting and the Scripps Howard Award for Local/Regional Investigative Reporting. Their prior series, on problems at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, was a finalist for the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting and won the 2019 George Polk award for local reporting and an IRE award. As a 2016 Center for Health Journalism National Fellow, she reported “In Harm’s Way,” revealing for the first time that between 2010 and 2015 nearly 3,200 kids in Florida were killed or injured by firearms. She started her career at the Miami Herald, where she covered breaking news, education and government. She is a graduate of Hamilton College and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

Neil Bedi is a reporter at ProPublica in Washington, D.C., where he covers federal government agencies. He was previously an investigative reporter at the Tampa Bay Times. His 2020 National Fellowship project with 2016 National Fellow Kathleen McGrory focused on a local predictive policing program in Pasco County, Florida that harassed residents and profiled schoolchildren. It was recently awarded the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, and led to a federal investigation and several civil suits. His 2018 investigation with McGrory into the alarming death rate at the cardiac surgery unit of a Florida children’s hospital won the George Polk Award and was a finalist for the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting. In addition, he has twice been named a finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists. He graduated from the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering.

69186
BAAQMD Refinery PM Regulation Vote @ Online
Jul 21 @ 8:30 am – 12:00 pm

BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETING:

WHERE

Join Zoom call with option for public speaking here

Update:  After an hour of staff presentations, questions from the Board of Directors, and 5 1/2 hours of impassioned public testimony, the Board lost its quorum and the clock ran out on the scheduled June vote on BAAQMD’s Rule 6-5.  It has been continued to July 21st at 8:30 AM.  There will be further opportunity for public comment, but those comments will be limited to 30 seconds, and only if you didn’t speak at the June 2nd meeting.

Previous action alert:

Join the Bay Area public in demanding that BAAQMD adopt the strictest refinery regulation of particulate matter emissions!

Last March, a majority of the BAAQMD Stationary Source Committee voted 7-4  to send the most stringent proposal for Rule 6.5*—a measure to reduce health-destroying particulate matter from the Chevron and Marathon refineries—to the full Board of Directors. The community turned out in force and made eloquent, persuasive comments in favor of the tightest possible regulation of Bay Area refinery particulate matter emissions, or PM 2.5, the primary cause of our “stationary” (non-transportation) air pollution–related illness. They demanded that these refineries install wet scrubbing technology in the chambers that break down heavy oils—the Fluidized Catalytic Cracking Units (FCCUs), or “cat crackers”—on the earliest feasible timeline, as recommended by BAAQMD’s own Advisory Board.

BAAQMD staff has been taking the indefensible position that oil companies’ costs outweigh the health benefits of wet scrubbing technology, already in place at Valero in Benicia as well as over half of U.S. refineries. They’ve  justified this stance by accepting industry’s extravagant cost claims and grossly underestimating the health consequences—asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, heart disease and stroke—borne primarily by low-income, Black, and Brown residents of frontline communities.

It’s clear that industry has been pulling out all the stops to prevent Board approval of the most health-protective standards: every union member (from unions opposing this rule) was instructed to call in to the June 2nd meeting and speak in opposition. This is wildly unprecedented. While this struggle is again being framed as the environment vs. jobs, what is not generally understood is that job loss in the fossil fuel industry is not driven by environmental regulations:  it’s market forces that are to blame.

Talking points here.

 

*See a detailed analysis of “Rule 6-5” and its potential to reduce enormous health impacts in this December post.

69141
Speculative Nonfiction: Re-writing Law in an Interdependent World @ Online
Jul 21 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm

 

RSVP (scroll down)

If you love sci-fi, fantasy, and other speculative fiction, chances are you love futuristic world-building and supernatural elements. What if we made more space for daydreaming, re-imaginings, and inventions in the real world?

If our systems of law and property were designed around a flawed worldview of separation and dominance, then what does it look like if we rebuild them on a foundation of interdependence? Bring your imagination!

Sustainable Economies Law Center staff, interns, and partners will share about our on-the-ground work and visions for the future. We’ll also do some small group visioning and then turn our collective story about the future into a sci-non-fi blog post or video!

Guest Speakers:

Christopher J. Chew | Co-Director of Cooperative 4 the Community

Chris (they/them) was born and raised in Oakland, where they consumed a LOT of sci-fi and fantasy. They use their imagination to dream up unique solutions to the world’s problems. For example, when the Community Democracy Project needed a way to pay signature gatherers to help with the People’s Budget Amendment Campaign, Chris co-founded Cooperative 4 the Community to create the first worker-owned signature gathering firm.

Hope Williams | Co-Director and Legal Apprentice of Radical Real Estate Law School

Hope (she/her) is a legal apprentice at the Sustainable Economies Law Center! She is excited to finally begin her path to becoming an attorney advocate that helps black and brown marginalized communities. Devoted to housing rights and organizing people power to fight the oppressive white supremacist regime, Hope spends most of her time making sure that the law is accessible to the people.

Victoria Jin Yu | Member of the Community Democracy Project

Victoria (she/her) works at Design Action Collective and spends her free time reading/writing fantasy fiction and volunteering at the Community Democracy Project on a campaign to put the entire city budget in the hands of the people. Every other week, she combines those two passions and plays D&D with a group of Oakland activists, cooperators, and organizers.

Yeji Jung | Intern at the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust and Sustainable Economies Law Center

Yeji (she/they) is a Korean American immigrant woman continuously learning their histories and connecting with their ancestors. They connect the land struggle on the Korean peninsula to land struggles everywhere, especially where they reside, and join movements for liberation with a growing understanding of Indigenous sovereignty as environmental justice in the face of the global climate/capitalist crisis. They strive to show up for community in various roles, including artist, organizer, Korean political pungmul drummer, law student, and gardener learning Korean farming. At SELC, they are working with Sogorea Te’ Land Trust to support the rematriation of Lisjan Ohlone land.

 

69195
Views from An Ordinary Resilient Disabled Body @ Online
Jul 21 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Thirty years since the passing of the Americans with Disabilities Act, awareness of disability rights, advocacy, and visibility has increased, yet there is still a long way to go toward equality and understanding. Examining the complexities of disability issues with wisdom, humor, and honesty, author and disability advocate Rebekah Taussig offers a roadmap for broadening our awareness and expanding our understanding to help build a more inclusive world.

Growing up as a paralyzed girl in the 1990s and early 2000s, Rebekah saw disability depicted as something monstrous (The Hunchback of Notre Dame), inspirational (Helen Keller), or angelic (Forrest Gump). None of these depictions felt right because none of them represented her lived experience-complex and ordinary, uncomfortable and fine, painful and fulfilling. Rebekah seeks to normalize the lived experience of disabled persons while also advocating for improvements and a paradigm shift-something that we all play a necessary part in. Disability affects all of us, directly or indirectly, at one point or another.

We need more stories and more voices to understand the diversity of humanity and in Rebekah’s latest book, Sitting Pretty: The View from My Ordinary Resilient Disabled Body, she challenges us as a society to be patient and vigilant, practical and imaginative, kind and relentless, as we build a more radically inclusive future together.

Join Rebekah in conversation as she talks about her book, her life and her work, and challenges us to work together to build a more inclusive world.

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Jul
23
Fri
Fukushima, The Pandemic & Olympics On The Opening Of the Olympics @ Online
Jul 23 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Register
7/23 Fukushima, The Pandemic & Olympics On The Opening Of the Olympics

http://www.laborfest.net
July 23 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm PST free

The plans by the International Olympic Committee and the Japanese Suga government to go ahead with the Olympics in the middle of a pandemic could create a new virus according to Japanese scientists. It also takes place with the government threatening to release over 1 million tons of radioactive water from Fukushima into the Pacific Ocean and the failure to remove the melted nuclear rods from the reactor 10 years after the meltdown.

This panel and discussion will look at the business and corruption of the Olympics, and how it now could lead to a health-care disaster as Japanese hospitals are already overloaded with Covid patients. Even the health-care and doctors union is demanding that the Olympics be canceled.

Speakers:
Professor Geoge Wright, An expert on the history of the Olympics
Tsukuru Fors, Pacific Asian Nuclear-Free Peace Alliance
Seto Tadashi, International Secretary/Doro Chiba Support International Committee
Chizu Hamada, NoNukes Action Committee
Louis Carlet, Tokyo General Union Founder of TOZEN & Teacher
and others

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Jul
24
Sat
Medicare for All March in San Francisco
Jul 24 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm

 

 

March for Medicare for All in San Francisco!
CPA invites you join progressive organizations throughout the Bay Area for Medicare for All March in San Francisco this Saturday, July 24th. There are over 40 Medicare for All Marches in cities across the country that we stand in solidarity with for national day of action.
As we continue to fight the worst healthcare crisis in a century, Americans still suffer from an inefficient and unsustainable healthcare system. Experts have long said universal, single-payer healthcare would save thousands of lives and billions of dollars annually. March for Medicare for All—a volunteer-led, grassroots movement—encourages people from across the country to stand in solidarity with one another and to continue to apply pressure on all fronts.
 
Meetup Info: We will start our day at 10am at the Embarcadero Plaza (1 Ferry Building), march down Market Street to the Civic Center Plaza where the post-march rally will take place 11:30am to 1pm.
Speakers Include:
-Assemblymember Alex Lee, Lead Author of Medicare for All bill, AB1400
-San Francisco DA Chesa Boudin
-Janani Ramachandran, State Assembly Candidate in District 18
-Daniel Hilsinger, Singer/Songwriter, Cancer Survivor/lead organizer for March for our Lives (Oakland, 2018)
-Dr. Ana Maria Malinow, advocate for undocumented, children & refugees, former President of Physicians for National Health Program
-Jupiter Peraza, Director of Social Justice Initiatives and The Transgender District
-Marielle Reataza, MD, Senior Program Manager, Asia Pacific Partners for Empowerment, Advocacy and Leadership;
Aidan Rodriguez-Swanson, Field Representative for Assemblyman Ash Kalra, lead author of AB1400, Medicare for All bill in CA, South Bay Bernie office organizer
Eric Curry (MC), Congressional Candidate, CA-12
-Dr. Ahimsa Porter Sumchai MD, doctor and community organizer for health issues of the Bayview Hunters Point residents in San Francisco

 

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