Calendar

9896
Oct
5
Sun
Bay Area Rights of Nature Ethics Tribunal @ The Forum, Laney College
Oct 5 @ 5:00 pm – 9:00 pm

 

The Bay Area Rights of Nature Ethics Tribunal will examine the violations of nature’s rights and human rights caused by the fossil fuel industry, using Chevron’s refinery in Richmond as a case study. By highlighting the impacts on people and nature from the Chevron refinery and Big Oil’s activities, the Tribunal will also place on trial current legal and economic systems that advance the destruction of nature.

Tribunal judges include:
Carl Anthony (Breakthrough Communities; Urban Habitat)
Brian Swimme (California Institute of Integral Studies; Journey of the Universe)
Anuradha Mittal (Oakland Institute)
Courtney Cummings (Arikara and Cheyenne; Native Wellness Center, Richmond)
Bill Twist (Pachamama Alliance)
The day will also include:
The Web of Life Labyrinth, created by local artists
Local music; food for purchase
Insights from Bay Area ecological justice, human rights, local economy, indigenous, women’s, and other groups.
Save your space for this important event;

register now.

 

(Directions: Lake Merritt BART. Located on north campus off 10th St, across from the Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center.)
FREE; registration is required – Register now!)

*Please arrive 20 minutes early to experience the Web of Life Labyrinth.

Presented by the Bay Area Rights of Nature Alliance: bringing people together to advance the rights of nature in the San Francisco Bay Area.
For more, visit: therightsofnature.org/events/bayareatribunal
On Facebook: Bay Area Rights of Nature Alliance

56782
Not One More Black Life! A Day in Solidarity with African People @ Uhuru House
Oct 5 @ 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm

A call for white people to stand in solidarity with African resistance in Ferguson and around the world. Reparations and justice for African people everywhere!

Keynote speakers:

  • Omali Yeshitela, Chairman of the African Socialist International and author of An Uneasy Equilibrium: the African Revolution Versus Parasitic Capitalism.
  • Penny Hess, Chairwoman, African People’s Solidarity Committee and author of Overturning the Culture of Violence.

 

56772
BBQ and Hangout With the Staples Occupation Crew. @ berkeley staples
Oct 5 @ 11:00 pm – Oct 6 @ 3:00 am

Come hang out, eat (pot luck if you can swing it), get yourself heard on pirate radio and generally enjoy yourself at the Staples occupation.

56833
Oct
7
Tue
Occupy Forum: Fracking: Building a Diverse Movement to Win @ Global Exchange, 2nd floor, near 16th St. BART
Oct 7 @ 1:00 am – 4:00 am

Information, discussion & community — Monday Night Forum!

Occupy Forum is an opportunity for open and respectful dialogue
on all sides of these critically important issues!

Occupy Forum presentsF R A C K I N G:
Building a Diverse Movement to Win

Hosted by Californians Against Fracking
Speakers:
Tia Lebherz, Food & Water Watch
David Braun, Americans & Californians Against Fracking


As fracking continues to expand at an unrelenting pace in California, a movement to stop it is rising up and, like New York, is preparing to win a moratorium. But these wins aren’t easy, and this one will be hard won. The good news is that powerful networks exist and smart organizing is going on in multiple communities to stop the oil and gas industry and their toxic processes.Come hear about what the membership of Californians Against Fracking is planning for the fall,share your ideas, and find out how you can plug in for the win.

Tia Lebherz is the Northern California organizer for Food & Water Watch. Based in Oakland; she works to engage activists and hold elected officials accountable on a range of issues across the region including fracking, water privatization, and food issues including factory farms and genetic engineering. Prior to joining Food & Water Watch, Tia worked extensively in the Midwest organizing on campaigns for clean energy and fair food. Tia most recently worked as the Michigan organizer for Food & Water Watch based in Detroit.

David Braun is a co-founder of Americans Against Fracking and New Yorkers Against Fracking, and has recently relocated back to his home state of California to fight fracking where he works with Californians Against Fracking, a coalition of over 150 organizations fighting for a ban. While in New York, David founded and worked with several grassroots anti-fracking organizations` including United for Action, Sane Energy Project, among others.  Previously, he was the grassroots coordinator for the films, GASLAND and GASLAND II. Before working on the fracking issue, he worked with MoveOn and has also engaged with numerous other social, environmental and economic justice campaigns.

 

56830
Oct
9
Thu
Film showing: YEARS OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY: Winds of Change @ Humanist Hall
Oct 9 @ 2:30 am – 4:30 am

Film evenings begin with optional potluck refreshments & social hour at 6:30 pm,
followed by the film at 7:30 pm, followed by optional discussion after the film.

YEARS OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY
Episode 6: Winds of Change
Created by · Joel Bach and David Gelber

For a description of this film, see the website shown below.

Humanist Hall is wheelchair accessible around the corner at 411 28th Street

56850
Oct
10
Fri
Hands Up United, Ferguson, MO. Days of Resistance.
Oct 10 – Oct 11 all-day

OCTOBER 10-13, 2014

THE INSPIRATION

We are in a movement moment. 

Droves of people, many of them young and black, took to the streets of Ferguson to demand justice for Mike Brown. Millions stood in solidarity as protestors were met by a brutal and militarized response by local police departments.

Our country can no longer deny the epidemic of police violence facing Black and Brown communities. Mike Brown is now part of a long list of people like John Crawford, Ezell Ford, Eric Garner, Oscar Grant and countless others who have been unjustly killed by police. And, their lives mattered.

JOIN HANDS UP UNITED AND OUR PARTNERS IN FERGUSON FROM OCTOBER 10-13TH FOR A SERIES OF EVENTS, MARCHES AND OPPORTUNITIES TO CONTINUE BUILDING OUR MOVEMENT FOR REAL CHANGE.

Website.

56661
Screening of: After Innocence @ Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists Fellowship Hall
Oct 10 @ 2:00 am – 4:00 am

Dramatic and compelling stories of human beings imprisoned unjustly, often for decades, and then exonerated by DNA evidence. The film shows the emotional journey back into society and efforts to rebuild lives with little or no support. SJC is working hard for California State Ballot Prop. 47 which if it passes will make a huge difference in reforming our broken criminal justice system.

More info: http://www.afterinnocence.net/index.html

Sponsored by the BFUU Social Justice Ctee as part of our Conscientious Projector Series for the 99%
Wheelchair accessible.

http://www.bfuu.org/signup.html

56851
Oct
11
Sat
Inside Urban Shield. Special Guest Shane Bauer. @ Oakland High School Auditorium (see directions)
Oct 11 @ 2:00 am – 4:00 am

Report-back from activists who “went inside” the Urban Shield convention and trade show in Oakland September 4th-7th and were “volunteers” at some of the exercises.  And discussion of next steps.

Facebook event & RSVP.

Directions: From 580, take Park Blvd west one long block; turn right on McKinley Avenue, turn right again on Home Place East, park in the parking lot to your left. Entrance is there, walk past the cafeteria to the auditorium.

Join Shane Bauer and others on this, the 3rd anniversary of the occupation of Oscar Grant Plaza.

Shane Bauer is a journalist who, with Sarah Shourd and Josh Fattel, were kidnapped by Iranian border guards and imprisoned in solitary in Iran for many months.  After his return to the US. Shane wrote about Pelican Bay, California’s notorious solitary confinement facility for inmates.

As he was observing one of the Urban Shield exercises as a official member of the press he was ordered to stop taking pictures and leave.

Urban Shield, a convention devoted to the glorification of the militarization of the police, has been happening in Oakland since 2007.  The Mayor announced that it would not be held in Oakland next year, but it will still be held, probably somewhere else in Alameda County.  It should be stopped once and for all or, barring that, Oakland and Oakland’s police should not participate.

Links to Letter Sized PDF of flyer

Older flyer and poster versions:

Inside Urban Shield Half Sheet      Inside Urban Shield 11×17″ Poster    IUS 18×24″ Poster PDF

inside-urban_shield_2up

Click to download 2-to-sheet PDF

Final flyer:


inside urban shield screenshot rev
Current posters:

inside urban shield 2up rev

inside urban shield poster 11×17 rev

inside urban shield poster 18×24 rev

Inside Urban Shield Fact Sheet and Forum Schedule (PDF)IUS-Schedule-Fact-Sheet

 

IUS-Schedule-Fact-Sheet-v2_Page_1IUS-Schedule-Fact-Sheet-v2_Page_2

 

56656
From Ferguson To The Bay Area — KPFA Live Stream
Oct 11 @ 5:00 pm – 9:00 pm

From Ferguson To The Bay Area: Connecting the Dots

KPFA 94.1 FM

Pacifica Live Programming On The Streaming Channel
http://www.kpfa.org/events/ferguson-bay-area
10:00 am – 2:00 pm


http://www.kpfa.org/kpfa-live-stream-channel

On October 11, 2014 thousands of working people and youth will be converging in Ferguson to protest the continuing racism, discrimination and failure to arrest the policeman who murdered Michael Brown. KPFA WorkWeek will provide live streaming program from the station’s channel with activists and teachers from Ferguson and also will connect the dots to Northern California. We will hear from working people and trade unionists about militarization of police departments in the bay area, the censorship of education by the Oakland school district of the case of Mumia Abu-Jamal, and the same economic and social conditions in Northern California that exist in Feruguson. We will also have video from Ferguson from the rallies and struggles. SEIU 1021 Social and Economic Justice Committee and other organizations are supporting this program.

56874
Global Frackdown Lake Merritt Tomorrow!! @ Eastshort Park
Oct 11 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm

 There will be a gathering at Eastshore park near Lake Merritt right where Lakeshore Blvd. meets El Embarcadero. We’re excited to be joined by Oakland City Councilman Dan Kalb, the talented Occupellas, Students Against Fracking and other wonderful allies fighting Big Oil in the state.

Bring a light-colored t-shirt to screen print an awesome “I support a Frack-Free California” logo, a blanket to sit on and your smart phone for our interactive social media booth to tweet at Jerry Brown. There will also be a 10ft tall mock fracking rig and other great ways to take action to stop fracking in California.

This event is not meant to be a rally, rather a day of action and community building. So please stop on by anytime between 12-3pm.

56873
Oct
12
Sun
Repression & Surveillance of Animal Rights Activists in Germany
Oct 12 @ 2:00 am – 4:00 am

Hear the stories of how the German state infiltrated animal liberation struggles and spied on activists.

 

56849
Interfaith prayer meeting for healing, dedicated to the survivors and victims of violence and police brutality in Oakland. @ Baha'i Center
Oct 12 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

Second Sundays:

Interfaith prayer meeting for healing, dedicated to the survivors and victims of violence and police brutality in Oakland.

We are organizing this gathering for the community to connect, share prayers, writings and poems from all spiritual traditions, reflect and recharge and build coalitions interested in healing.

Please feel free to bring quotes or passages to share
All are welcome

We will serve simple breakfast.

56632
“From Denzil Dowell to Mike Brown..It’s Still Going Down”!!! 48 Anniversary of Black Panther Party @ One Fam Community Event Ctr
Oct 12 @ 10:00 pm – Oct 13 @ 2:00 am
PrisonersOf ConscienceCommittee/ Black Panther Party Cubs present:

“FROM DENZIL DOWELL TO MIKE BROWN..IT’S STILL GOIN DOWN”

48th Anniversary of the Black Panther Party
Panthers Speak
Panelists Perspectives
The 10 Point Platform
Fallen Comrades

56872
Oct
13
Mon
Beyond the Red Line – UKRAINE Facism & Anti-facism @ Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists
Oct 13 @ 1:00 am – 3:30 am
A documentary chronicle of the war in Ukraine, and the suffering of people whose lives it has touched. Forty powerful photos of peaceful civilians and forced refugees. A national photo project tour, including a slideshow presentation, sponsored by the International Action Center and the United National Anti-war Coalition.

Photos prepared by multimedia international information agency Rossiya Segodnya photojournalists in Russia and Ukraine.From the exhibit opening press release in NYC: “As Washington and NATO continue to engage in provocative Cold War rhetoric falsely blaming Russia for the civil war in Ukraine, this exhibit provides a timely antidote to the myths spread by major U.S. media,” said International Action Center activist Greg Butterfield.’

“U.S. officials have portrayed the coup regime that came to power in Kiev, Ukraine, early this year as a beacon of democracy. These photos document a very different reality,” asserted Butterfield.’

“War crimes are being committed daily by the Kiev government against its own citizens, with funding and political support from Washington,” Butterfield charged. “People in the Donbass region and throughout Ukraine are resisting a far-right regime dedicated to austerity and NATO expansion to Russia’s border, which includes openly pro-Nazi elements.”

“Before we are dragged into a dangerous confrontation with Russia, poor and working people in the U.S. need to understand what our taxes are really paying for in Ukraine,” concluded Sara Flounders.

Light refreshments served, wheelchair accessible.

56805
Not One More Deportation!!! @ Fruitvale Bart Station Plaza
Oct 13 @ 10:00 pm – 11:30 pm

The rounding-up and deportation of immigrants, including children, is part of Mass Incarceration – it is a conscious policy that criminalizes Black and Latino peoples, and treats them as less than human. Families are torn apart and children are being sent back to countries from which they fled for their lives. Along with police murder, and the imprisonment of 2.4 million people, the vicious targeting of immigrants is part of a genocidal program that is accelerating in both numbers and brutality.
WE MUST STOP IT NOW!

56995
Oct
14
Tue
Occupy Forum: Occupy the Food Supply @ Global Exchange, 2nd floor, near 16th St. BART
Oct 14 @ 1:00 am – 2:30 am

Information, discussion & community! Monday Night Forum!!
Occupy Forum is an opportunity for open and respectful dialogue
on all sides of these critically important issues!

Occupy Forum presents

Occupy the Food Supply:

Two films on the politics of food

Ripe for Change — a film by Emiko Omori &

Jed Riffe and Occupy the Farm (Trailer)

by Todd Darling

Ripe for Change: California — always a fascinating marriage of opposite extremes — is at a crossroads in agriculture. Many Californians are struggling to fend off over-development and the loss of farming lands and traditions while embracing innovative visions of agricultural sustainability. At the same time, California is where fast food was born and a center of the biotechnology industry and large corporate agribusiness. The debates raging in California over issues of food, agriculture, and sustainability have profound implications for all of America, especially in a world where scarcity is the norm and many natural resources are diminishing.

Ripe for Change explores the intersection of food and politics in California over the last 30 years. It illuminates the complex forces struggling for control of the future of California’s agriculture, and provides provocative commentary by a wide array of farmers, chefs, and noted authors and scientists. The film examines a host of questions: What are the trade-offs between the ability to produce large quantities of food versus the health of workers, consumers, and the planet? What are the hidden costs of “inexpensive” food? How do we create sustainable agricultural practices?

Through the window of food and agriculture, Ripe for Change reveals two parallel yet contrasting views of our world. One holds that large-scale agriculture, genetic engineering, and technology promise a hunger-less future. The other calls for a more organic, sustainable, and locally focused style of farming that reclaims the aesthetic and nurturing qualities of food and considers the impact of agriculture on the environment, on communities, and on workers.

Occupy the Farm will premier November 7th at the UA Berkeley (see link below — OccupyForum will preview the trailer!) On April 22, 2012, hundreds of urban farmers (and many Occupy peeps) marched onto the land in East Bay’s Gill Tract in Albany�an agricultural research center for the University and the last large piece of farmland in the East Bay, which had been marked for development by UC Berkeley. They brought 15,000 seedlings, farming equipment, camping gear and a powerful conviction about the human right to grow their own food and to connect with the land. Students, community members and even UC Berkeley professors and researchers joined forces to “take back the tract” and protect the land for important food research and as a valued public resource for access to land and agriculture.

On that same day, film director Todd Darling received a text about the protesters who were occupying the Gill Tract, and he grabbed his camera and followed their story for five months. Out of this was born Occupy The Farm, a documentary film about the plight and triumph of hundreds of urban farmers during their campaign to protect the tract from development. This film focuses on the human need for access to local agriculture, and shows the possibility that local communities can change the direction of powerful institutions and have a lasting impact on generations to come.

.

http://www.snagfilms.com/films/title/ripe_for_change

http://ediblesiliconvalley.com/2014-articles/occupy-the-farm/

56868
Oct
15
Wed
Max Haiven: Debt and the Cultural Imagination @ OMNI Collective
Oct 15 @ 2:00 am – 4:00 am

Drawing upon work by both artists and social movements, Max Haiven will examine how debt and today’s debt-driven capitalism shape creativity and inhibit the true potential of creative communities.

Max Haiven teaches political economy and cultural studies at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax and is author ofCrises of Imagination, Crises of Power: Capitalism, Creativity and the Commons. With Alex Khasnabish, he directs the Halifax-based Radical Imagination Projecton Canada’s East Coast. Their book, The Radical Imagination: Social Movement Research in the Age of Austerity, is published by Zed Books.

Moderated by artist Cassie Thornton
This event is part of the Omni’s Jubilee Year initiative.

56848
Oct
16
Thu
Panel on Abuse of Authority & Increased Militarization @ Room 2203
Oct 16 @ 1:00 am – 3:00 am

This panel focuses on the latest trend we’ve seen of governments abusing their authority. More specifically, the panel will narrow its focus onto the increasing militarization of peace keepers in the United States. Through this panel we hope to complete two objectives: (1) shedding light on this issue for those who have been kept in the dark, and (2) showing those in attendance how best to plug and support the movement to end rampant militarization. We are targeting new lawyers and current law students.

**We encourage anyone who is interested to come! This issue affects all of us.**

Presented by Golden Gate University Black Law Student Association.

56846
Oct
18
Sat
Celebrating the Resistance: Building Unity Among Oppressed Peoples
Oct 18 @ 12:30 am – 2:00 am

Concert and Show.

Honoring the lives of all those killed by police brutality

35 year angel-versary of Lil Milagro Ramirez

Building unity amongst the oppressed

We convoke her spirit of resistance as we recite her poetry and give honor to her life. “Lover of peace, I want to struggle for her desperately, because since the beginning, I have dreamt of peace.” -Awakening

A lawyer by profession, and a guerrilla fighter by compassion, Lil was characterized for her intellect and courage. She was part of a group of writers for whom aesthetic renewal and social revolution went hand in hand. A daughter of educators, Lil played the guitar and piano, wrote poetry, practiced yoga and was a vegetarian. Disenchanted by the broken legal system, she decided not to practice law for she saw it as an instrument of oppression by the ruling political class.

Lil Milagro entered the People’s Revolutionary Army in 1972, but due to ideological differences, she broke with the organization in 1975, after the assassination of fellow poet and lover Roque Dalton. After founding the political-military National Resistance Movement (RN), she was kidnapped one morning in August 1976 by the National Guard. Tortured for three years, Lil was kept shackled, blindfolded and held completely naked. Allowed to eat four corn tortillas and about 25 grams of beans per day with five grams of cheese once a week, she died in this state of captivity. On the anniversary of her death, we convoke her spirit of resistance as we recite her poetry and give honor to her life and all those killed due to police brutality.

We will then continue with a community event at the Eastside Cultural Center from 8-1030p.

57011
Movie Night at the Omni Collective @ OMNI Collective
Oct 18 @ 2:00 am – 4:30 am
This Week's Titles:
 Nothing
   Directed by Vincenzo Natali, 2003
   90 min, (Comedy, Fantasy)
 MirrorMask
   Directed by Dave McKean, 2005
   101 min, (Adventure, Drama, Family)

 

Film Nights are held in the basement of Omni and start at 7pm; the theater dims no later than 7:15, so don’t be late!

BYO; Drinks, snacks, pillows, cushions, beanbags, etc.

Suggested Donation for popcorn and tea: $2

 

More Information:

You can submit your screening requests to the lottery fish bowl at any time during a Film Night.

All genres and eras are welcome; as are shows, shorts and documentaries!

Once there is a formidable collection of titles (compiled from various sources), that list will replace the lottery, and you’ll be able to see the line-up ahead of time! (Don’t worry, you’ll still be able to request films).

 

  • First Fridays of the month: Light-Hearted Titles – e.g. Comedy, Drama, Family
  • Second Fridays: Dark, Intense Titles – e.g. Science Fiction, Fantasy, Adventure, Action, Thriller
  • Third Fridays: Educational & Historical Titles – e.g. Documentary, Period, Biographical
  • Fourth Fridays: Indie Week – Festival Favorites, Shorts, Independent Project Screenings (Screen your video projects here!)

 

On FB: https://www.facebook.com/events/697965096966064

57012