Calendar

9896
Mar
9
Mon
DISABILITY INCARCERATED: A SYMPOSIUM @ Booth Auditorium of the Berkeley Law School (Room 175),
Mar 9 @ 4:15 pm – Mar 10 @ 4:00 am

DISABILITY INCARCERATED: A SYMPOSIUM
Information on visiting the Law School can be found here.

9:15 am
Coffee in the Goldberg Room (Room 297), Berkeley Law School

10:00 am
Welcome and Introduction
Susan Schweik, UC Berkeley, and Na’ilah Nasir, UC Berkeley
Opening Remarks
Angela Davis, UC Santa Cruz

Panel 1: A Discussion with the Editors of Disability Incarcerated
Liat Ben-Moshe, University of Toledo
Allison Carey, Schippensburg University
Chris Chapman, York University

Panel 2: Responses to the Book by Berkeley Faculty
Jonathan Simon, Berkeley Law
Na’ilah Nasir, School of Education and African American Studies
Peter Manoleas, School of Social Welfare
Scott Wallin, Department of Theater, Dance and Performance Studies
12:00-1:00 Lunch Break
1:00-2:30

Panel 3:  What now, what next? Responses by scholars, artists and activists
D. L. Adams, University of Toledo
Ella Callow, National Center for Parents with Disabilities and their Families
Sascha Altman DuBrul, Icarus Project
Nora Wilson, Justice Now

2:30-3:30:  Film Showing: Deaf in Prison
Followed by discussion with Talila A. Lewis, H.E.A.R.D., Helping Educate to Advance the Rights of the Deaf
3:30-4:30 Break

4:30-5:30: Performance: Disability Liberated (Part II).
Sins Invalid performs live on stage in Booth Auditorium, culminating in leading the audience back to the altar space in 120 Kroeber.

5:30-6:30
Disability Liberated Sins Invalid performance concludes.
Location: 120 Kroeber

6:15 Reception/Dinner
Registration for limited number of audience members. RSVP by March 2 on our EventBrite page.
Location: Goldberg Room (Room 297), Berkeley Law School

7:15 PM Film Showing: Bethel.
Followed by discussion with filmmaker Karen Nakamura. Location: Goldberg Room (Room 297), Berkeley Law School

This event is free, open to the public and wheelchair-accessible. Please refrain from wearing scented products so that people with chemical sensitivities can join us. If you need any other disability accommodations in order to attend, including communication services, please contact Susan Schweik at sschweik@berkeley.edu.

Sponsored by: Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society; Center for the Study of Law and Society; Haas Institute Race & Educational Disparities Cluster, Diversity and Democracy Cluster, and Disability Studies Cluster; Dean Judith Little, School of Education; Dean Carla Hesse, Division of Social Sciences; Dean Anthony J. Cascardi, Division of Arts and Humanities; Social and Cultural Studies Program, School of Education; Canadian Studies; The Doreen K. Townsend Center for the Humanities

58155
Who Are The Zapatistas Study Sessions @ Qilombo
Mar 9 @ 8:00 pm – 9:00 pm

EVERY MONDAY IN MARCH FROM 600-800 PM AT THE QILOMBO.

THIS WILL BE AN ONGOING STUDY SESSION EXAMINING THE HISTORY OF THE ONGOING ZAPATISTA STRUGGLE FOR LIBERATION.
SESSION I: First Declaration from the Lacandon Jungle http://www.struggle.ws/mexico/ezln/ezlnwa.html

Future sessions will likely be described at the Facebook event.

58225
Mar
10
Tue
Occupy Forum: STOPPING A PIPELINE @ Global Exchange, 2nd floor (across from 16th St. Bart)
Mar 10 @ 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!

OccupyForum presents

STOPPING A PIPELINE

Effective Resistance

at the Unis’tot’en Blockade

Up in the forests near Houston, British Columbia, a permanent blockade has been constructed to stop the construction of a long list of proposed pipeline projects. Started as a grassroots effort 4 years ago, the Unis’tot’en camp now sees hundreds of supporters come through every year to help the Wetsu’wet’en people stand up to the Harper Government and its fossil fuel juggernauts.

The west coast of Canada is home to several indigenous territories whose lands have come under threat as the fossil fuel industry seeks to transport its product to empty tankers via numerous new pipeline projects. Freda and Toghestiy of the Wet’suwet’en nation decided 4 years ago to take action in helping their people stop the destruction of their lands. Exercising their right to practice their cultural customs on their land, they chose to build right in the path of the pipeline projects setting the stage for an ongoing blockade and reclamation of their lands at the Unis’tot’en camp.

In the ensuing years, they have confronted numerous pipeline employees who have come onto their lands, often without permission and by helicopter, to do surveying and other exploration activities. Support for the camp has been growing steadily in nearby towns and all across Canada as the camp raises the bar for what a non-violent resistance effort can achieve.

A website for the camp has been created and can be viewed here: http://unistotencamp.com/

First and foremost, the camp supports an effort to bring Wet’suwet’en people back to their lands to live traditionally and begin healing their families from the destruction wrought by western society on their culture. The plan for the future is to build homes and places of tribal gathering for those who wish to return to the land that sustains them. In order to make this happen, the camp needs the support of settlers and other indigenous tribes to hold off the development efforts of fossil fuel giants TransCanada, Enbridge, Chevron, and others. The camp organizers are opening their doors to anybody willing to provide their time and resources to building and maintaining the efforts at the blockade.

At tonight’s Forum, hear from a supporter who stayed at the camp for 3 weeks in February of this year, and how you or someone else can help get involved. Discussion and pictures of daily life at the camp will be shared. Success at the camp relies on spreading of information, fundraising, solidarity actions, and networking with other groups to find people willing to provide their labor on the grounds at the camp. There is a year round need for supporters at the camp with a couple specialized events planned for the summertime — an action camp for sharing skills and strategy, and a separate work camp for building new structures and implements needed at the camp. The continued organized effort will be desperately needed as pipeline crews converge on the eastern and western borders of the Wet’suwet’en territory sometime this year.

Other camps have started to emerge across Canada with the newest one going up only a few hundred kilometers north of the Unis’tot’en camp. This new blockade, known as Madii Lii, stands in the way of a new LNG project proposed by TransCanada. They will undoubtedly need the same outpouring of support to be successful. The continued existence of these ecosystems rests on the shoulders of those willing to put their bodies in the path of fossil fuel tycoons.

Discussion and Announcements to follow.

OccupyForum welcomes donations, no one turned away.

58236
Court Support for the Ferguson 3 @ Superior Court of California County of Alameda
Mar 10 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Check the AntiRep website and Facebook for last minute schedule changes.
58252
Film Screening: “Black Ice” (Greenpeace vs Big Oil) @ First Unitarian Church
Mar 10 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

“Black Ice,” the Greenpeace struggle to stop Arctic drilling

Join us for the screening of “Black Ice”, the inspiring new film about Greenpeace members who risked their lives and freedom to stop Russian Oil giant Gazprom from drilling in the Arctic.  Afterwards find out about the massive call-in campaign to President Obama asking him to stop oil drilling in Alaska.

More about this award-winning movie.
Synopsis and credits at at IMDB

58260
Mar
11
Wed
Court Support for Dante @ Wiley Manuel, Dept 112
Mar 11 @ 4:00 pm – 6:30 pm

AntiRep calendar entry.

Always check there and their Facebook page for last-minute changes.

More info about Dante.

58241
All Out On 4th Anniversary of Fukushima Meltdown: Rally and Speakout @ Japanese Consulate
Mar 11 @ 10:00 pm – Mar 12 @ 12:00 am

March 11, 2015 people throughout the world will be acting to protest the continuing danger at Fukushima.
The Japanese pro-war Abe government has announced that the tanks surrounding Fukushima are full and they will release thousands of tons of radioactive water.

http://ajw.asahi.com/article/0311disaster/fukushima/AJ201412130042
They also are intent in reopening the nearly 50 nuclear power plants that were shutdown after the earthquake. They are also exporting nuclear power plants to Turkey and throughout the world to make more profits in this industry.

The government is also ordering families and children back to Fukushima telling them that it has been decontaminated despite continuing radiation and a growing epidemic of thyroid cancer cases. The government refused as well using a newly passed secrecy law to release information on cancer surgeries in the Fukushima region.

Reading of letters will start at 2:30 PM from around the world. Also there will be a march to PG&E on 245 Market St. near Spear St. San Francisco demanding the closure of Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant

The 32nd NNA Monthly Rally-The Fukushima Fourth Anniversary Rally
2 :30 pm The letters to PM Abe will be read loud
3 :00 The speaking out begins
Aroud 3:30 Some more letters will be read loud by actual writers.
4 :00 We start to march to the PGE headquarter on the Market St. to demand the closure of Diablo Canyon Nuclear Plant

4 :30 Rally Ends
Please wear something yellow, scarf, cap and whatever!
Please bring many people, many signs and your energy!

Sponsored by No Nukes Action Committee, Fukushima Response
http://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/
http://fukushimafourthanniversaryevents.blogspot.com
http://www.facebook.com/fukushimawatchblogspotcom?_rdr
https://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/
www.upwa.info

58265
Mar
12
Thu
Barney Frank on Reducing the Military Budget: Necessary to Improve Our Quality of Life @ International House, Chevron Auditorium
Mar 12 @ 12:30 am – 2:15 am

 

Speaker: Congressman Barney Frank
Sponsor: Goldman School of Public Policy

5:30 p.m. Reception with Refreshments
6:00 p.m. Presentation and Q&A

First elected to Congress in 1980, Barney Frank represented Massachusetts’s 4th District for 32 years. He is known as a superb legislator and a pragmatic politician whose sharp intellect and sense of humor has made him one of the most influential and colorful figures in Washington. While in Congress, Frank worked to adjust America’s spending priorities to reduce the deficit, provide less funding for the military and more for important quality of life needs at home. As chair of the House Financial Services Committee, he adopted sweeping financial regulations to prevent a recurrence of the financial crisis and was a key author of the 2010 Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.

58278
Town Hall to End Homelessness @ Nourse Theater
Mar 12 @ 1:00 am – 4:00 am

Registration.

The Town Hall to End Homelessness
Join Supervisors Jane Kim and Mark Farrell, Project Homeless Connect, and 1,000 other community leaders, volunteers, and San Francisco friends, as we rally behind new initiatives that can bring us closer to ending homelessness in our city. This solutions focused event will be different than anything you’ve ever seen before. We hope you can make it.

Agenda:
6:00 – 6:30: Doors open | Networking
 
6:30 – 6:45: Take your seats
 
6:45 – 7:00: Understanding Homelessness in San Francisco w/ Kevin Fagan (Chronicle)
 
7:00 – 8:00: New and Upcoming Solutions presented to the audience (10 minutes each with 5 minutes of Q&A)
 
8:00 – 8:50: Policy Panel w/ Supervisor Jane Kim, Supervisor Mark Farrell, The Chronicle’s Heather Knight, & Executive Directors from non-profit groups
8:50 – 9:00ish – Closing remarks w/ Greg Gopman (A Better SF) and Kara Zordel (Project Homeless Connect)
58229
Body Cameras and Police Accountability @ Boalt Hall, Berkeley Law, Room 100, Bancroft & College
Mar 12 @ 7:45 pm – 9:00 pm

58243
FireChat @ 205 South Hall, School of Information
Mar 12 @ 11:00 pm – Mar 13 @ 1:00 am

Prof. Xiao is inviting a special guest, Stanislav Shalunov, co-founder of FireChat, to his class Internet Freedom on Thursday, March 12, 4-6pm.

FireChat in recent news: FireChat — an ‘off-the-grid’ smartphone app — emerged this month as the technological glue holding Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protests together and a powerfulweapon in the hands of mass movements, dissidents and protesters. The app works by creating its own network outside the internet, relying simply on the Bluetooth or Wi-Fi link that exist between one phone and another (source).

58277
Mar
13
Fri
Together for Tristan @ Everywhere
Mar 13 – Mar 14 all-day

In solidarity, we ask you to make time to join in sending healing prayers and healing energy to Tristan Anderson and his family on Friday March 13, 2015 the six year anniversary of Tristan’s shooting by Israeli Border Police. Tristan was shot in the head with a tear gas grenade following a demonstration against the building of the “Separation Wall” in Palestine, in the West Bank village of Ni’ilin. To this day, Tristan requires 24 hour care.

Currently, his family is in court against the government of Israel in a civil lawsuit which is scheduled to conclude on March 23. His parents, Mike and Nancy Anderson are 68 and 72 years old. This is not a symbolic lawsuit, it is a demand that the State pay for the long term care that Tristan needs to survive. Tristan is paralyzed with chronic pain on the left side of his body, he is blind in his right eye, and he has suffered severe injury to his brain. Much power lies now in the hands of the judge. But we appeal to you, our friends.

Facebook event.

58266
Mar
14
Sat
East Bay Community Forum on Race Issues with W. Kamau Bell @ Willard Middle School
Mar 14 @ 2:00 am – 4:00 am

East Bay Community Forum on Race Issues with W. Kamau Bell

W. Kamau Bell

Join the ACLU of Northern California Staff Attorney Novella Coleman at a community forum on implicit bias and microaggression experiences in the East Bay hosted by comedian W. Kamau Bell and The Elmwood Café.

Berkeley residents, W. Kamau Bell and his wife Dr. Melissa Hudson Bell,posted a blog on his website describing an incident that happened to them on January 26th at the Elmwood Cafe. It occurred between them and an employee of the café.

Very quickly, the blog spread around the Bay Area and eventually all over the country. It was the kind of story mainstream media couldn’t resist: a local TV personality, accusations of racism, and the backdrop Berkeley – reportedly the most liberal place in America. And usually that is where a story like that ends. But not this time.

Soon after the incident Michael Pearce, an advocate for social justice and owner of the Elmwood Café reached out to the Bell family and immediately apologized. He said he wanted to know what he could do to make sure that this kind of incident never happened again. Melissa and Kamau said all they wanted was a conversation with him, and they wanted to invite the community to come participate.

On March 13 that conversation is happening, and you’re invited. Thanks to the Berkeley Unified School District, it will be at Willard Middle School. The Bells and Michael Pearce will participate on a panel in Berkeley that will be facilitated byPamela Harrison-Small former Executive Director of the Berkeley Alliance.

More info.

58294
Panel Discussion: US Imperial Foreign Policy in Crisis @ Temescal Oakland Public Library
Mar 14 @ 2:00 am – 5:00 am

A panel discussion with:

Michael Parenti, internationally known award-winning author and lecturer. Parenti is one of the nation’s leading progressive political analysts. His most recent books include: The Face of Imperialism (2011), Waiting for Yesterday (2013) and Profit Pathology and Other Indecencies (2015)

Charlotte Silver, independent journalist formerly based in the West Bank, Palestine. Silver’s work appears in Al Jazeera English, Electronic Intifada, Alternet, The Nation and VICE News, among many other publications.

Jeff Mackler, National Secretary, Socialist Action; Admin. Comm., United National Antiwar Coalition; Director, Mobilization to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal; author, Free Palestine!, Ukraine in Turmoil & Revolution & Counter-revolution in Egypt

 

58297
Pi Day! @ Everywhere
Mar 14 @ 4:15 pm – 4:30 pm

58242
#GillTractDefense Call for Support: Rally at Sprouts @ Sprouts
Mar 14 @ 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm

This is a Call for Support.

Facebook event.

In the early morning of Thursday, February 26th, UC Berkeley’s office of Capital Projects brought in a huge demolition team and police force to clear-cut 60 trees on the south side of the historic Gill Tract. For 20 years, the local community, students, and faculty have attempted to create a visionary research and education center on this public land. In 2012 Occupy the Farm’s successful land occupations pushed out Whole Foods from the development, and saved 10 acres for 10 years. But 5-6 acres of the southern half of the Gill Tract is now under threat of imminent development, and our ability to create a 20 acre community-driven living laboratory for a just transition could disappear in an instant. See our website for a complete update: http://occupythefarm.org/everything-can-change-in-a-second-we-build-from-here/.

Why focus on Sprouts?

We’ve kicked out Whole Foods, and we can kick out Sprouts. Sprouts “farmer’s market” is a big-box, union-busting corporate chain supermarket that perpetuates industrial agricultural and food system injustices. Their greenwashed use of the “Farmer’s Market” term and imagery is an assault on our efforts to create a just local food system. See more:http://occupythefarm.org/boycott-sprouts/

What can you do right now?
1. Please join Occupy the Farm for a #GillTractDefense Rally and Press Conference at the Sprouts “Farmer’s Market” in Walnut Creek on March 14th at 1pm. This is a call out for support.

2. Call and Email Ted Frumkin, Sprouts’ Senior Vice President of Business Development. Tell him: “DON’T BUILD YOUR NEW STORE ON THE GILL TRACT!” tedfrumkin@sprouts.com; 602-682-1556

3. Join our social media campaign. Take a photo of yourself with your definition of a farmer’s market, and tweet: @sproutsfm Don’t pave over the Gill Tract for your greenwashed, union-busting supermarket! #BoycottSprouts #GillTractDefense #OccupyTheFarm

4. Join the Emergency Bulldozer Response Team:https://docs.google.com/forms/d/14ca3kz0dCt47XRXZ-kwoD8JEVyOWUuBH1-Y9AxILVqM/viewform?usp=send_form

We are trying to remain proactive in our strategy and response, but we are aware that the bulldozers may come any day to scrape away the top soil and lay concrete. We are preparing for active resistance on the land.

58250
Solidarity Bike Ride in Support of #BlackLivesMatter @ Ohlone Park
Mar 14 @ 9:30 pm – 10:30 pm

Event listing web page.

Meet us in Berkeley on your bike on March 14, 2015 at Ohlone Park just above Sacramento. North Berkeley Bart Station. Meet at 2:30pm ride at 3:30pm.

Dress in black.

58282
OO Hike around Knowland Park: This may be the last chance to see it before it is privatized. @ Knowland Park
Mar 14 @ 10:00 pm – Mar 15 @ 12:00 am

As early as next month the Oakland Zoo is going to start throwing up 8′ fences topped by 3′ of barbed wire around perhaps the most lovely park on the western flank of the East Bay hills and excluding the public from it forever unless you pay big bucks to visit the newly constructed paved roads, 50 structures, 15-car gondola, vistor center or high-end restaurant.  So I’m leading a little hike Saturday, March 14th so we can see what we are about to lose unless we fight back.IMG_2543-800

BACKGROUND

Knowland Park is a 453 acre parcel granted to the city of Oakland in 1949 with the proviso that it always remain a public park. It is a beautiful expanse of live oak woodland and grassy slopes with amazing vistas, festooned with rare and beautiful native plants and wild life. Most local residents know Knowland Park solely as the site of the Oakland Zoo, located on 100 acres of Knowland Park on its western flank near Highway 580. The zoo is run by a private non-profit, the East Bay Zoological Society (EBZS), but funded by over 1.5 million dollars of public money every year, as well as high ticket prices, $15.75 & $8 parking with no free days for the general public (there are apparently annual free days for senior citizens). The Zoo also tried to pass a 25 year parcel tax last fall, Measure A1, which would have assessed $12 annually on all properties in Alameda County from the most humble shack to the most palatial mansion or sprawling apartment complex, but it didn’t get the required 2/3rds vote.

Oaklanders can be forgiven for believing that there is no public access to Knowland Park except the Zoo. The city doesn’t post online information about it or put up signs leading to the trails, and the Office of Parks & Recreation didn’t even list Knowland as a city park until 2012 after activists repeatedly demanded it. For years I drove around the park and tried to find trail heads, and only discovered a single fire road that paralleled Golf Links Road in the main part of the park and a small network of fire roads on the eastern part of the park, accessible off of Skyline Blvd (this part of Knowland doesn’t directly link up to the rest of the park, which lies west of Golf Links Road).

But a few weeks ago I discovered the there were indeed some directions & maps to the area hosted by the Save Knowland Park folks who are attempting to halt the expansion of the Zoo into the rest of Knowland Park.  So I started exploring the area and was just bowled over by how enchanting it is, by far the most lovely grassy, oak-clad hill sides I’ve seen in the East Bay, with some of the most incredible views. (FWIW, I’ve hiked just about all the trails I can find within a 30 mile radius of O-town, and I will grant that for seasonally green grassy hills the northern part of Wildcat Regional, the Bort Meadow area of Chabot RP, Mission Peak, Garin, Briones, etc. have their charms, but this place was extra special, I felt like a Hobbit in the Shire traipsing over the slopes, except with views of the Bay Bridge, GG, Richmond Bridge, downtown SF & Oakland, etc.)

Panorama of future zoo

When I first heard about the Save Knowland Park movement last fall I thought, meh?, I don’t have much use for a zoo that never has free daze, and I voted against the parcel tax, but how bad can it be?  They are only gobbling up another 53 acres or so, only a eighth of a park that is basically not open to the public anyway. And what has an endangered whipsnake recently done for me personally? I figured it was just NIMBYism from the relatively well-heeled neighbors who didn’t want their viewscapes mucked with. But it turns out that the the zoo is planning to develop the vast majority of the publicly accessible parts of the western section of Knowland Park, the zoo is planning to fence off another 22 acres from the public as a “conservation easement”. This hardly seems like mitigation, they are taking land that is now protected from development, and excluding the public from its own land in order to enrich the local contractors and build a bunch of new structures & roads.

Proposed Zoo Expansion

So why did the city council vote 6-2 to allow this taking of public land with no environmental review last fall?  (Kaplan & Kalb voted against it, for those of you keeping score at home) And how can a city which can’t keep toilet papers in its public school bathrooms afford $61 million dollars to expand a zoo that most lower-income residents can’t even afford to visit?  Well, guess who funds the city councillors’ election campaigns?  Yup, developers and contractors. And most of the bills won’t become due until long after the current crop of council critters are out of office and counting the money they made from flipping properties with the help of “nonprofit” corporations.IMG_2546-650

THE PLAN FOR SATURDAY

So I’d like to meet folks at OGP (14th just west of Broadway at City Hall) at 2:30 PM Saturday morning, March 14th (3’14: Occu PI Day- and yes, I have a little reality distortion field about what exactly constitutes mourning).  It would be good if folks could give me a call at (510) 763-0591 or (415) 623-6473 (cell) or email me at biow  AT riseup  DOT net so I know about how many folks are planning to attend and can arrange to have enough car space and stock-piled liquid refreshment on the hill.  Then we can car pool to Knowland Park, about 17 minutes away. Folks that want a bit more of a hike can join me at the 106th Street entrance to Knowland Park and hike up the hill through the zoo parking lot and past the new (2012) veternary hospital that the zoo built.  The rest can join my first wife Kathy and park on one of the roads off of Malcolm Avenue that lead to the higher entrances to the tract. I selected Snowdown Avenue because it reminded me of Edward Snowdon.  Both groups will rendezvous at a spot on the hill and have some beverages, and maybe a sandwich, and then hike over to see the bison & tule elk paddock and the current gondola, and then walk around the rest of the area that is slated for development. We should be back at Snowdown Ave. by 5 PM, and can discuss what actions we can take to stop the development.

Proposed hike route, click for larger version

Proposed hike route, click for larger version

Please bring comfortable shoes, cameras, and whatever medications you need, I will have sandwich fixing and beverages cached at the rendezvous. Folks who are interested can repair to Slothaven (my humble abode) later for swine & beer.

LEARN MORE:

http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/zoo-gone-wild/Content?oid=4059113&showFullText=true   Zoo Gone Wild, East Bay Express

http://www.saveknowland.org/

http://www.saveknowland.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/FAQ-Sheet-Updated-Sept2014.pdf

http://baynature.org/2014/11/17/conservationists-take-knowland-park-controversy/

http://bayleafnewsletter.org/wp/saving-knowland-park-november-2014/

https://vimeo.com/105172300

Subscribe to the Save Knowland Park mailing list by sending an email to:

defendknowlandpark-subscribe@lists.riseup.net
58248
Mar
15
Sun
Benefit Concert for Anti-Repression and the NLG
Mar 15 @ 12:30 am – 5:00 am

58215
Sunday Morning at the Marxist Library @ Neibyl-Proctor Library
Mar 15 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm

Essentials of Scientific Socialism: Part One of a Series

“Clarity about the aims and problems of socialism is of greatest significance in our age of transition.” Einstein’s comment remains true in our Century, when the growing interest in socialism is matched by a growing confusion about socialism. This workshop, led by Gene Ruyle of the ICSS, will be the first in a series seeking to overcome this confusion through study and discussion, focusing on the classics of scientific socialism: The Communist Manifesto, by Marx and Engels, Socialism: Utopian and Scientific, by Engels, Critique of the Gotha Program, by Marx, and Fundamentals of Leninism, by Stalin. This session will focus on the Communist Manfesto. In preparation, participants are urged to read, or re-read, this important document.

58328