Calendar

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Sep
24
Tue
Documentary Film: What Happened to DUJUAN ARMSTRONG? @ Valley Center for Performing Arts.
Sep 24 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

When a young man mysteriously dies in Santa Rita jail, his mother, Barbara Doss, begins a determined quest to find out what happened to him, but quickly runs into the opaque and powerful position of American sheriffs.

********* OAKLAND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL *********

(Preceded by the short film Table Stakes, followed by a panel discussion with Lucas Guilkey)

$10 (tickets)

 

67116
Film: Paris to Pittsburgh (Climate Change) @ Fellowship Hall
Sep 24 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

 

Despite what the U.S. Administration is doing to deny the effects of Climate Change, people around the country are doing something about it. National Geographic’s film Paris to Pittsburgh shows inspiring stories of local, private sector, and community leaders across the U.S. who are continuing to take action to transition to a clean energy economy—regardless of federal inaction.

Bring your family, friends and neighbors and join us!

RSVP: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/film-from-paris-to-pittsburgh-tickets-66526144489

No one turned away for lack of funds.

Hosted by Barbara Chan on behalf of BFUU’s Social Justice Committee and Social Justice Ministry Task Force

66937
Health Justice Now – Book Event with Author Timothy Faust and East Bay DSA @ Wolfman Books
Sep 24 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Health Justice Now: Single Payer and What Comes Next is an excellent new book by Timothy Faust that passionately details the need and fight for a federal universal single-payer, comprehensive healthcare plan, i.e. Medicare for All. Please join the Medicare for All Committee of East Bay DSA, along with other representatives from the chapter, in welcoming Timothy at Wolfman Books for an engaging reading and discussion! Plus, East Bay DSA members will get 10% off when buying the book!

Accessibility Information:

67120
Documentary Film: What Happened to DUJUAN ARMSTRONG? @ Jack London Regal Cinema.
Sep 24 @ 9:00 pm – 10:30 pm

When a young man mysteriously dies in Santa Rita jail, his mother, Barbara Doss, begins a determined quest to find out what happened to him, but quickly runs into the opaque and powerful position of American sheriffs.

Oakland International Film Festival

(Followed by the feature documentary Iron Grit, about the 1979 campaign of the Richard Arrington, Jr, the first black mayor of Birmingham, Alabama)

$15 (tickets)

 

67117
Sep
25
Wed
Objector: Screening / Fundraiser @ East Bay Community Space
Sep 25 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm
https://eastbaycommunityspace.org/calendar/

Objector Screening / Fundraiser

OBJECTOR (the feature documentary) is complete and ready to be shared with our dear Bay Area community!

Please join us for this exclusive PRE-PREMIERE SCREENING and fundraising party.

Witness the story of Atalya Ben-Abba, an Israeli 18-year-old imprisoned for refusing to serve in the Israeli army, sweeping her family and surroundings into a journey of political transformation.

After the screening, we will talk about the Impact Project accompanying the film, and how you can get involved in supporting the mission of Israeli conscientious objectors and local organizing for a just peace for all Palestinians and Israelis.

Check out the trailer here: https://vimeo.com/330097421

Doors open at 7pm, and film will start at 7:30pm. It runs 75 minutes. The space is wheelchair accessible. Delicious goodies will be served.

We have big plans for OBJECTOR – help us realize them: tax-deductible contributions to support the film’s distribution are available at: https://objectorfilm.com/

Please feel free to invite folks who you think would be interested in attending this screening and supporting the project.

Looking forward to seeing you there,

Molly, Atalya, Amitai, Sue, David, and the rest of the OBJECTOR family and crew.

67068
Sep
26
Thu
DSA Labor Social @ 7th West
Sep 26 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Join the East Bay DSA’s Labor Committee for their regular Beer and Roses social. Hang out with other members who are interested in the labor movement, hear about what’s happening in EBDSA Labor Committee & learn how you can get involved.

Accessibility Information:
Venue is on ground floor and there is a ramp that leads into the patio, venue has an ADA bathroom.

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Oakland Police Commission – CANCELLED @ Oakland City Hall
Sep 26 @ 6:30 pm – 9:30 pm

https://cao-94612.s3.amazonaws.com/documents/Police-Commission-9.26.19-CANCELLATION-NOTICE.pdf

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Naomi Klein / On Fire: The (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal @ First Congregational Church of Oakland
Sep 26 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Berkeley Arts & Letters presents #1 international and New York Times bestselling author Naomi Klein (The Shock Doctrine and This Changes Everything) as she makes the case for a Green New Deal, explaining how bold climate action can be a blueprint for a just and thriving society. Joining Naomi in conversation is the editor-in-chief of Mother Jones, Clara Jeffery.

Please note: This event is ticketed. Tickets, including discounted book bundles, are available in advance here: https://onfire.bpt.me/

Advance sales are highly recommended. Unless otherwise noted here, general admission tickets will be available at the door.

On Fire shows why Naomi Klein was described by the New Yorker as the most influential figure on the American left and why leading environmentalist Bill McKibben calls her the intellectual godmother of the Green New Deal — which just happens to be the most important idea in the world right now.

For more than a decade, the acclaimed journalist and ground-breaking thinker has documented the movement of the climate crisis from future threat to a burning emergency. She has been among the first to make the case for what is now called the Green New Deal — a vision for transforming our economies to battle climate breakdown and rampant inequality at the same time. In our era of rising seas and rising hate, she argues that only this kind of bold, roots-up action has a chance of rousing us to fight for our lives while there is still time.

These long-form essays, based on her extensive research and reporting, show Klein at her most prophetic and philosophical, investigating the climate crisis not only as a profound political challenge but as a spiritual and imaginative one as well. Delving into the clash between ecological time and our culture of perpetual now; the soaring history of rapid human change in the face of grave threats; rising white supremacy and fortressed borders as a form of climate barbarism and more, this is a rousing call to transformation — and a dire warning about what awaits if we fail to act.

With dispatches from the ghostly Great Barrier Reef to the smoke-choked skies of the Pacific Northwest, to post-hurricane Puerto Rico, to a Vatican waking up to the case for radical change, Klein paints a vivid picture of both social and ecological breakdown — as well as the people and movements rising to turn humanity’s greatest disaster into our greatest opportunity.

Naomi Klein is an award-winning journalist, columnist, and author of the New York Times and international bestsellers The Shock Doctrine, No Logo, This Changes Everything, and No Is Not Enough. A Senior Correspondent for The Intercept, reporter for Rolling Stone, and contributor for both The Nation and The Guardian, Klein is the inaugural Gloria Steinem Endowed Chair in Media, Culture, and Feminist Studies at Rutgers University. She is co-founder of the climate justice organization The Leap.

Clara Jeffery is the editor-in-chief of Mother Jones, which was named “Magazine of the Year” by the American Society of Magazine Editors in February 2017. During her tenure, Mother Jones has won other National Magazine Awards, including for general excellence, reporting, and video; redesigned its magazine and website; established bureaus in Washington and New York; and become a social-media powerhouse. Clara has edited stories that have been included in pretty much every “Best American” anthology. Along the way, she also won a PEN award for editing, became a mom, and forgot what it’s like to sleep. It probably doesn’t help she’s on Twitter so much: @clarajeffery.

About Mother Jones: Mother Jones is a reader-supported investigative news organization recently honored as Magazine of the Year by our peers in the industry. Our nonprofit newsroom goes deep on the biggest stories of the moment, from politics and criminal and racial justice to education, climate change, and food/agriculture. We reach more than 10 million people each month via our website, social-media presence, videos, podcasts, email newsletters, and print magazine. Our fellowship program is one of the premier training grounds for emerging investigative storytellers. Founded in 1976, Mother Jones is America’s longest-established investigative news organization. We are based in San Francisco and have bureaus in Washington, DC, and New York. We are independent (no corporate owners) and are accountable only to you, our readers. Our mission is to deliver hard-hitting reporting that inspires change and combats “alternative facts.”

This event is co-presented by The Leap, Sunrise Movement, and The Intercept.

*** Please note ***

– Duration of event is subject to author’s preference.
– Signing and additional details coming soon.
– This event is all ages. Accessibility is important to us! If you have special needs of any kind, please write events AT booksmith DOT com and we will do our best to accommodate you.
– If you can’t attend the event but would like to request a signed copy of On Fire, order below and put your request in the special field. If you’d like to request signed copies of any of Naomi’s other books, order here and be sure to add your request in the special field: https://www.booksmith.com/book/9781982129910

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Sep
27
Fri
Reclaim Our Vote-East Bay Info Session & Fundraiser @ United Methodist Church
Sep 27 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

this Fri. eve, Sept. 27th

Please consider coming to a presentation by Reclaim Our Vote�s Founder and Director, Andrea Miller. Andrea is the spiritual/moral/intellectual powerhouse behind the Reclaim Our Vote Campaign (a project of the Center for Common Ground, a nonpartisan 501(c)3 organization based in Virginia).

At this session, Andrea will offer an overview of the voter-suppression landscape in the United States in 2019, and talk about our campaign’s plans for the next year and two months to contact millions of voters of color.  RECLAIM OUR VOTE is a volunteer-driven, nonpartisan voter outreach campaign to fight voter suppression, (re)register voters, and turn out the vote among people of color.

Reclaim Our Vote is organized by the Center for Common Ground and works with the NAACP, Black Voters Matter, VoteRiders, DemLabs, Mi Familia Vota and other organizations.

Come find out what Reclaim Our Vote is doing right now, our plans for 2020, and how you might participate.
Light refreshments provided. Tickets are $20 and up; no one turned away due to lack of funds.

Click here for details and to RSVP:
https://actionnetwork.org/events/reclaim-our-vote-east-bay-info-session-fundraiser?source=email&

67149
Documentary Film: What Happened to DUJUAN ARMSTRONG? @ Jack London Regal Cinema
Sep 27 @ 6:15 pm – 7:45 pm

When a young man mysteriously dies in Santa Rita jail, his mother, Barbara Doss, begins a determined quest to find out what happened to him, but quickly runs into the opaque and powerful position of American sheriffs..

Oakland International Film Festival

(Followed by the feature documentary Decade of Fire, about the history of the South Bronx)

$15 (tickets)

 

67118
A Night for the Buffalo @ Art House Cultural Center,
Sep 27 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

A Night for the Buffalo: Buffalo Field Campaign 2019 Road Show presentation

Marking 22 years of front line action for the wild buffalo, the 2019 Buffalo Field Campaign Roadshow is coming to the Bay Area on September 27.

When: Friday, Sept. 27, 7 pm  

Where:  the Art House Cultural Center, 2905 Shattuck Ave. in Berkeley

Buffalo Field Campaign co-founder and field organizer Mike Mease brings captivating stories and striking film footage direct from the land of the buffalo, in a multi-media presentation, with Indigenous soul music by flutist Mignon Geli..

The Buffalo Field Campaign works to end the slaughter and harassment of the last wild herds of buffalo in their native habitat in West Yellowstone, Montana.

BFC used video documentation, non-violent direct action, education and lobbying to change archaic laws targeting buffalo. Volunteers from around the world spend every day, sunrise to sunset, monitoring, documenting and running patrols on skis, snowshoes and other means to defend buffalo as they migrate in their traditional winter habitat.

They bring new stories every time they come to the Bay Area, so come on out on Sept. 27 for a very special event!

We ask for donations at the door, NOTAFLOF.  Wheelchair accessible.

Info: bach [at] headwaterspreserve.org, buffalofieldcampaign.org or 510-548-3113.

67131
Sep
28
Sat
CBE presents Toxic Tour of East Oakland @ Coliseum Amtrak
Sep 28 @ 11:00 am – 2:00 pm

Communities for A Better Environment (CBE) presents…

East Oakland Toxic Tour
11 AM sharp

RSVP>>

Please bring your own water bottles, and pen and dress weather pending, bring sun visors, umbrellas, sunscreen, etc.

67066
KPFA Movie Matinee Presents: BOULEVARD NIGHTS 40TH ANNIVERSARY @ New Parkway Theater
Sep 28 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Forty years ago this summer, in 1979, Warner Bros released “Boulevard Nights,” a film that centers around a fatherless Mexican-American family living in East Los Angeles.  The Avila family. Two brothers, Raymond and Chuco, on opposite sides of the spectrum, along with their hard-working mother, will face their greatest challenge when the younger brother, Chuco, is seduced by the gangster lifestyle while seeking acceptance and a sense of identity. As Raymond’s relationship with his girlfriend deepens, he takes steps toward building himself a future. But all that is thrown into jeopardy when tragedy strikes and a gang war erupts.

For the past four decades, the film has been held in such high regard for its cultural importance that in 2017, “Boulevard Nights” was inducted into the National Film Registry, which recognizes films of “cultural, historical or aesthetic significance.” It was the first major studio film to heavily represent low-riding culture, a distinct and significant part of the Latinx experience.

The film stars Richard Yñiguez (Raymond Avila), Danny De La Paz (Chuco Avila), and Betty Carvalho (Mrs. Avila).

After film discussion led by Miguel Molina of Flashpoints and La Onda Bajita.

67123
Climate Emergency: The Future Is in Our Hands @ South Berkeley Senior Center
Sep 28 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Climate scientists have warned us that we are facing a planetary emergency which threatens the survival of most species on the planet.  But the world’s most powerful governments and corporations insist on staying the same catastrophic course.

Their only concern is to continue accumulating profit.  Our only hope is to organize to overturn their entire system of destruction.  The future of our planet and our species is in our hands.  Join Speak Out Now for a presentation and discussion about how we can begin to confront this emergency.

 

 

67029
Sep
29
Sun
CHELSEA MANNING AND JULIAN ASSANGE ARE OUR WORKING CLASS HEROES.THEIR FIGHT IS OUR FIGHT @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Sep 29 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

 

THE
Program:
Guest artist musical introduction

speakers :-
Gerald Smith – Organizer for Oscar Grant Committee and Mumia Ab Jamal

Steve Zeltzer- Host of WORK WEEK KPFA and Labor Fest SF and Labor Video Project. Organizer for many spirited demos at Federal Building, Brittish, ,Austrialian and Equadorian consulates in support of Chelsea and Julian.

Cecile Pineda -Poet Actress Code Pink

Ricardo Ortiz- Past and founding member of Frente Socialism de Puerto Rico Collaborator Labor Fest SF.

5th Speaker TBA.

Our Aim in this forum is to continue and deepen the discussion on how Chelsea and Julian have helped build more awareness of who the real enemy is and who are our real friends and how important Chelsea and Julian are to our survival.
. We can do this by our speakers presenting their analyses of how very important they truly are .

After the presentation, special guest music interlude, followed by audience participation: 2 minutes each, questions and/or comments on furthering the struggle.

67099
Santa Rita Jail Support @ Lake Merritt BART
Sep 29 @ 4:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Join APTP in offering hot food, drinks, snacks, and solidarity to releasees and visitors at Santa Rita Jail!

Let us know you’ll be there by sending us a text at (510) 686-3284.

Prisons function to repress, warehouse and extract labor from primarily those of us who are Black or poor. We believe that solidarity is a weapon of resistance, and that we must respond to the basic needs of our community while also confronting state terror.

In honor of Dujuan Armstrong Jr. who entered Santa Rita Jail for a weekend sentence and never came home, APTP is providing material support and direct care to folks at Santa Rita Jail as a small but meaningful way to address the harm caused by incarceration in our community. We do not positively engage with the racist pigs who work at the jail, as they are willing agents of the state that criminalizes and incarcerates us.

We’d love to see you there! Meet APTP outside of the Lake Merritt BART Station at 4pm – we’ll drive out to the jail together from there. All are welcome, no experience required.

67147
Film Showing “The Wanted 18”: Solidarity & Autonomy @ Omni Commons
Sep 29 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm

The Film “The Wanted 18”

Through a clever mix of stop motion animation and interviews, The Wanted 18 recreates an astonishing true story:

The Israeli army’s pursuit of 18 cows, whose independent milk production on a Palestinian collective farm was declared “a threat to the national security of the state of Israel.”

In response to the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, a group of people from the town of Beit Sahour decide to buy 18 cows and produce their own milk as a co-operative. Their venture is so successful that the collective farm becomes a landmark, and the cows local celebrities–until the Israeli army takes note and declares that the farm is an illegal security threat.

Consequently, the dairy is forced to go underground, the cows continuing to produce their “Intifada milk” with the Israeli army in relentless pursuit.

Recreating the story of the “wanted 18” from the perspectives of the Beit Sahour activists, Israeli military officials, and the cows, Palestinian artist Amer Shomali and veteran Canadian director Paul Cowan create an enchanting, inspirational tribute to the ingenuity and power of grassroots activism. (The film is 75 minutes long)

Discussion:
Palestinian activist Leena Dallasheh has been active in the struggle for freedom and justice in Palestine for many years. She will share about her experience in this struggle and about her time in the Zapatista Caracol of Oventic this summer. Ms. Dallasheh will present some thoughts about the the common challenges indigenous people experience in both places, the commonalities between the Zapatista and Palestinian struggles, and the potential of solidarity work between the two.

Members of the Chiapas Support Committee will share information about Zapatista autonomy.

Requested Donation: $5-$10 (Sliding scale. No one turned away for lack of funds.)

For more information:
www.chiapas-support.org

67100
Film & Discussion: Offside @ Revolution Books
Sep 29 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Offside is a 2006 film directed by Jafar Panahi. If you are a woman, you are forbidden from watching a soccer game in a stadium in Iran. Offside is the story of a group of women who decided to go anyway.
Offside is a work of fiction, but on Sept. 9, 2019, an Iranian woman, 29-year-old Sahar Khodayari, a soccer fan died. She had been arrested in March for “appearing in public without a hijab” when she attempted to enter the stadium “dressed as a man” to see a game. When she learned she could face 6 months in jail, she set herself on fire and died two weeks later. She is known as #BlueGirl and her death has sparked an international outcry demanding that the ban be overturned.

67159
Oakland Greens: Free Dinner and a Movie Night – Pan’s Labyrinth (Sept), Even the Rain (Oct) @ It's Your Move
Sep 29 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

67122
Oct
1
Tue
DSA Socialist Night School: Harlan County, U.S.A @ East Bay Community Space
Oct 1 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Join the East Bay Democratic Socialist of America for a screening of the groundbreaking 1976 strike film, Harlan County U.S.A.

In this academy-award-winning documentary, viewers are transported to the front lines of the class struggle as militant striking coal miners and their families in Southeastern Kentucky go to battle against their tyrannical bosses.

Even today, workers in Harlan County are fighting back. This summer, miners employed at the Blackjewel Mine camped out on the railroad tracks to demand their stolen wages. https://www.labornotes.org/2019/07/kentucky-miners-are-camped-out-railroad-tracks-blocking-coal-train-demanding-their-stolen

ABOUT SOCIALIST NIGHT SCHOOL
Socialist Night School is a rolling open course that provides opportunities for East Bay DSA members to ground their political work in the rich theoretical and historical traditions of the socialist left.

Classes are down-to-earth, inclusive spaces that give East Bay comrades a chance to grow their politics together, regardless of background knowledge or affiliation. You don’t have to have been to a night school before and you don’t have to RSVP to join us! You don’t even have to be a member of East Bay DSA—everyone is welcome.

 

 

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