Calendar

9896
Sep
12
Sun
Green Sunday:  Housing is a Human Right  @ Online
Sep 12 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Struggles involving housing issues in Oakland — The policies and organizing involve a multitude of matters from gentrification and the Howard Terminal project, to renters rights and a wave of potential evictions, to ‘affordability’ and homelessness.  This is a major point of contention within the labor council and a wide range of community/ housing organizations in the East Bay. Come to a discussion with one of the key activists and political advocates around the right to housing, focusing on Oakland.

Carroll Fife is the Oakland City Council member representing District 3 and a director of the  Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE), Oakland.  She was a founding member of Moms for Housing and is in the leadership of the Oakland NAACP. Carroll has a distinguished track record on anti-racist and other social justice organizing with the Anti Police-Terror Project (APTP), Oakland Justice Coalition and a wide range of activist campaigns.

There will also be a speaker from the Asian Pacific Environmental Network, a well known activist grouping heavily involved in struggles around gentrification in Oakland, including the Howard Terminal project.

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
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82620271999?pwd=S3ZwUklteGI5YjJsMEtMSnJXRzU3UT09

Meeting ID: 826 2027 1999
Passcode: 2020

One tap mobile
+16699009128,,82620271999#,,,,,,0#,,2020# US (San Jose)
+13462487799,,82620271999#,,,,,,0#,,2020# US (Houston)

Dial by your location
+1 669 900 9128 US (San Jose)
+1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)
+1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)
+1 646 558 8656 US (New York)
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington D.C)
+1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)

Meeting ID: 826 2027 1999
Passcode: 2020
Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kgrlxBN1m

PLANET PEOPLE PEACE
before profit!
[]

69304
Progressive Law Day – NLG @ Hastings College or online
Sep 12 @ 5:13 pm – 6:13 pm

Progressive Law Day _twitter_ 8-25 _1_

Progressive Law Day is a free half-day conference, historically organized and led by law student members of the National Lawyers Guild, San Francisco Bay Area Chapter, and open to law students, legal workers, lawyers, activists, and anyone interested in learning about radical lawyering and legal work.

Progressive Law Day 2021 will be held in partnership with UC Hastings College of the Law, on the Hastings campus at 200 McAllister Ave in San Francisco. Lunch will be provided for all attendees. Registration is open for both in-person and virtual attendance for all workshops and panels. While we’re optimistic about hosting this event in-person for the fall, we are prepared to fully transition this event to virtual-only in the event of circumstances beyond our control.

69327
Sep
14
Tue
20 Years After 9/11: Lessons in Solidarity
Sep 14 @ 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm

Register below to receive the calendar invite and link to the event.

e4782ca6-42a9-4382-8283-0474eb21e5c5

WHAT: A teach-in to mark the 20th anniversary of 9/11 and its aftermath, hosted by Building Movement Project and SolidarityIs

WHO: Members of the Solidarity Summits, a group of leaders who have been exploring the connections between different social movements

WHY: To gain insights around deepening connections, being co-conspirators, and building towards co-liberation

69281
Sep
15
Wed
Fire and Fury, Throwing a Monkey Wrench at Big Tech @ Online
Sep 15 @ 9:00 am – 5:00 pm

Register

Hear from activist and community leaders on what matters most as it relates to surveillance, war and peace.

About this event

9:00 to 9:30 AM Welcome, Program overview Vahid Razavi Director of Ethics In Technology

A technology Veteran of Silicon Valley. Vahid has founded, advised and worked in senior management roles in Silicon Valley. He has published two books, The Age of Nepotism and Ethics In Tech and Lack Thereof. As a lifelong activist and humanitarian he has published hundreds of articles and videos on various social issues including tech industry and social injustice.

He has previously worked for companies such as Amazon Web Services, Fast Search, Exodus Communications, Qwest Communications, and was the founder of the Cloud Computing Company BizCloud.

9:30 to 9:40 AM ,Doctor Martin Todd Allen

Rev. Martin Todd Allen is an Associate Minister at the Church for the Fellowship of All Peoples.

He is scheduled to graduate with a Doctor of Ministry(DMin) at the Pacific School of Religion May 2020. His DMin project trains congregations to demand and demonstrate eco-socialist alternatives to global capitalism.

Previously, Rev. Allen worked as a prison, hospital and military Chaplain and currently works as a hospice chaplain in the South Bay.

In addition, he serves on the board of directors of The Human Agenda.

9:40 to 10:00 AM Brett Wilkins, Ethics In Tech Board Member

Brett Wilkins is a San Francisco-based independent writer and activist whose work focuses on issues of war and peace and human rights. His articles have recently appeared in print and online publications including Asia Times, The Jakarta Post, Common Dreams, Counterpunch, Antiwar.com, Mondoweiss, Socialist Viewpoint, TeleSur and Venezuela Analysis. Brett is a member of Collective 20 and is editor-at-large for US news at Toronto-based Digital Journal, as well as a board member of the nonprofit advocacy group Ethics In Tech.

10:00 AM to 10:10 AM Doctor Karen Melander Magoon, Poetry

Karen Melander graduated from Indiana University in Music and received her Masters Degree from Boston University. She spent two decades in Europe singing on the major stages of Germany and Austria. Her children, Aaron and Bridget, were born in the Loire Valley of France and in Berlin, Germany. In October, 2008, she received her Doctor of Ministry from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, through San Francisco Theological Seminary and Starr King School for the Ministry.

10:10 Am to 10:20 Stretch break

10:20 to 10:40 Tauriq Jenkins

Tauriq Jenkins is a Convenor of the Anti-Repression Working Group of the C19 People’s Coalition and an accredited monitor for the South African Human Rights Commission. As chair of the AIXARRA Restorative Justice Forum, based at the Centre for African Studies University of Cape Town, he convenes the commissions on Sacred Human Remains, Land and C19. He is the High Commissioner of the Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin Traditional Indegenous Council and involved in various civic, heritage and environmental structures including the Observatory Civic Association, Two Rivers Urban Park Association, and the Civic for Action in Public Participation. He holds an MFA, School of the Arts, Columbia University, and an alumnus of the International Fellows Program, School of International Public Affairs, Columbia University.

10:40 to 11:00 Albert Fox

Albert Fox Cahn is the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project’s ( S.T.O.P.’s) founder and executive director, and he is also a fellow at Yale Law School’s Information Society Project, Ashoka, N.Y.U Law School’s Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy, and the Day One Project. As a lawyer, technologist, writer, and interfaith activist, Mr. Cahn began S.T.O.P. in the belief that emerging surveillance technologies pose an unprecedented threat to civil rights and the promise of a free society.

Mr. Cahn is a frequent commentator on civil rights, privacy, and technology matters. He is a contributor to the New York Times, Boston Globe, Guardian, WIRED, Slate, NBC Think, Newsweek, and dozens of other publications. He has lectured at Harvard Law School, New York University School of Law, Columbia University, and Dartmouth College. Mr. Cahn previously served as an associate at Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, where he advised Fortune 50 companies on technology policy, antitrust law, and consumer privacy.

11:05 to 11:15 Break

11:15 to 11:35 Tracy Rosenberg, Oakland Privacy and Media Alliance

Tracy Rosenberg is the co-coordinator and advocacy director at Oakland Privacy, a citizens’ coalition that works regionally to defend the right to privacy and enhance public transparency and oversight regarding the use of surveillance techniques and equipment. As experts on municipal privacy reform, OP has written use policies and impact reports for a variety of surveillance technologies, conducted research and investigations, and developed frameworks for the implementation of equipment with respect for civil rights, privacy protections and community control. oaklandprivacy.org Rosenberg is also the director of Media Alliance, a 45 year old Northern California democratic communications advocacy nonprofit. Https://media-alliance.org

11:35 to 11:55 AJ Rice

AJ Rice is a privacy advocate and the Founder & CEO of Privo Mobile – a tech startup making a dumb phone for modern times, designed for kids. AJ is a privacy ambassador for PDX Privacy – a non-profit focused on advocating for privacy and increasing transparency on the use of surveillance in the Portland area. AJ is also author of the privacy blog Private Matters.

12:00 to 12:40 Panel Discussion on Privacy and Civil Liberties withTracy, Albert, AJ and Vahid

12:40 to 1:00 Mike Rufo Advisor to Ethics In Tech, Music and Talk

1:00 to 1:30 break

1:30 to 1:50 Ray Acheson Wilpf.org/ Stop Killer Robots

Ray Acheson is the Director of Reaching Critical Will. They provide analysis, research, and advocacy across a range of disarmament issues from an antimilitarist feminist perspective. Ray represents WILPF on the steering committees of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), the Campaign to Stop Killer Robots, and the International Network on Explosive Weapons. They also work to challenge the international arms trade, war profiteering, and the patriarchal and racist structures of war and armed violence. Ray has an Honours BA in Peace and Conflict Studies from the University of Toronto and an MA in Politics from The New School for Social Research and is currently a Visiting Research Collaborator at Princeton University. Ray previously worked for the Institute for Defense and Disarmament Studies. They are a 2018 UN Women Metro-NY “Champion of Change” and recipient of a 2020 Nuclear Free Future Award.

1:50 to 2:10 VFP Adrienne Kinne

Adrienne Kinne, President, Veterans for Peace Board of Directors

2:10 to 2:30 CodePink Carley Towne

Carley Towne is National Co-Director of CODEPINK and leads the Divest from War and Defund the Pentagon programs.

Carley graduated from the University of California, San Diego with a degree in Critical Gender Studies and Political Science. She’s now happy to organize and live in Los Angeles.

2:30 to 2:40 7th Inning-stretch

2:40 to 3:20 Peace Discussion Adrienne Kinne , Vahid Razavi

3:20 to 3:30 Cristina Deptula Ethics in Tech Board Member

Cristina Deptula has been involved in human rights-related activism from an early age, starting with her membership in her high school’s Amnesty International and Students for a Free Tibet groups. Since then, she’s remained active within various movements, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the digital privacy-related Restore the Fourth. She is committed to helping build a more just and inclusive world for people of all ages, ethnic backgrounds, abilities, genders and other categories and a world where the tech world acts in service of people living their best lives.

3:40 to 3:50 Break

3:50 to 4:30 Comedy TBD

4:30 Final thoughts- Vahid Razavi

69282
Sep
16
Thu
Policing and Prisons
Sep 16 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

logoAs we mark the 50th anniversary of the Attica Prison Uprising, we take a moment to reflect upon the ways that policing exists within prisons, the impact, and how conditions can be addressed.

Register

69322
OAKLAND POLICE COMMISSION @ Online
Sep 16 @ 5:30 pm – 9:30 pm

To observe the meeting by video conference, please click on this link:
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83722596537 at the noticed meeting time.

Agenda items of possible interest:

  • Vote to Ratify DGO K-03 Use of Force Policy.
  • Community Policing Policy revision
69329
Sep
17
Fri
Author Reading, Book Launch Party: Blessed Disillusionment: Letting Go of What Cannot Save Us, Turning to What Can – Michael Goldstein @ Outdoors at a private residence near Mills College in Oakland. Address on registration page.
Sep 17 @ 4:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Admission is free, but you must RSVP here

Are you ready for a politics that goes beyond asking those beholden to the wrong people to do the right thing?

Hint: that snippet from the Declaration of Independence at the bottom of the book’s cover reads, “Whenever any form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or abolish it.” (More on the book’s content at https://www.amazon.com/Blessed-Disillusionment-Letting-Cannot-Turning/dp/0578978318.)

On the 10th anniversary of Occupy Wall Street (and the 172nd of Harriet Tubman’s escape from slavery), come hear author Michael Goldstein read from Blessed Disillusionment: Letting Go of What Cannot Save Us, Turning to What Can.

And see why Cornel West, author/teacher/activist Joanna Macy, veteran Longshore Workers’ activist Clarence Thomas, KPFA & KPOO host Avotcja, East Point Peace Academy founder Kazu Haga, and others are endorsing the book

Meet the author. Ask him your questions.  Enjoy the end of your week with complimentary finger food and nonalcoholic beverages and—with an online purchase of the book or eBook—free wine (over 21; another thank-you gift for youth).

If you can’t come, please consider 1) sharing this event and 2) buying the book or ebook on Amazon (sorry!) on Friday, the launch day, which will increase its visibility among those who can make good use of it.

“Goldstein offers a way to radically change our economic and political systems for the benefit of everyone—including the ecosystems that support life.”

— Molly Brown, ecopsychologist, teacher, co-author of “Coming Back to Life”

69331
The Black Panther Party Legacy @ Online
Sep 17 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Image

69308
Sep
18
Sat
Rose Foundation Virtual Film Fest
Sep 18 all-day

2021 VIRTUAL FILM FEST

 

Celebrate the power of grassroots activism and community resilience with the Rose Foundation! 2021 Film Festival will run from September 1-21.

Watch a curated selection of short and feature-length films showcasing the power of grassroots activism. Join the live event on September 18th, including an exciting collection of shorts, youth-led film Q&A, and a toast to the grassroots.

Visit Event Website >>

Cost: $25

We hope our 2021 Film Fest trailer gets you excited for our biggest collection of films yet, featuring over 25 independent shorts and feature-length productions.

Learn more about our 2021 film lineup and watch some trailers here. Then buy your ticket to access all these films between September 1 – 21!

Buy your tickets today to get full access to the Film Fest and your fun and festive Film Fest Party Kit, while supplies last.

Ticket Info

Ticket purchase includes access to the Themed Film Segments and the Live Event, plus an extra special “Film Fest Party Kit” while supplies last.

Can’t make the Live Event on 9/18? Buy a ticket, and we’ll send you a recording of the Live Event so you won’t miss a thing!

69285
Care Village @ Marcus Garvey Park
Sep 18 @ 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm

A black and white flyer with large black cursive text in the center reading “care village pop-up.” Surrounding the center text are small illustrations paired with text. Starting at the top left going clockwise the words “wound care” is paired with an image of a first-aid kit, “fresh cooked food, coffee, and pantry items” with a bowl of hot food and a spoon, “basic veterinary care and pet food” it’s a cat and dog, “cop watch training” with a pad of paper, “clothing and outdoor gear” with a rolled up sleeping bag and a pair of socks, “showers” with a shower head spray water, “harm reduction supplies” with a syringe and a vial, and “haircuts” with a pair of scissors. The bottom quarter of the flyer is black with white text reading “Saturday, September 18, 1-4pm at Marcus Garvey Park (Martin Luther King Jr. Way and 36th, across from Eli’s Bar.) All services and items provided for free for those in need.” Rogers and Rosewater and West Oakland Punks with Lunch logos are in the bottom right.

69332
Net Zero Carbon Emissions: A Beginner’s Guide to An Imperialist Fraud @ Revolution Books
Sep 18 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Presentation and discussion: Net Zero Carbon Emissions: A Beginner’s Guide to An Imperialist Fraud

We confront a planet on fire, and a global system of capitalism-imperialism that has done nothing to stop climate change except inject more and more carbon into the air. “Net zero” is NOT the answer, why this is so, and why revolution is what we need.

69316
Sep
19
Sun
Stop the giveaway of City College (CCSF) @ Online
Sep 19 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

unnamedCity College of San Francisco (CCSF) has been under attack for nearly a decade as part of the attempts to privatize public education. But faculty, staff, students and community members have been able to stave off the attempts to decertify the college and lay off full time faculty.

Join CCSF activists who will discuss strategies to ensure that the college is able to maintain and expand courses and programs that working class residents depend on. Share your thoughts in the discussion that will follow and join in the fight.

  http://tinyurl.com/FSP-Sept19Mtg 

69323
Sep
20
Mon
Faith Voices Call: Citizenship For All @ Online
Sep 20 @ 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

cd0854c2-5688-4479-bd0f-db5900f9f251Join the Interfaith Immigration Coalition for a webinar, “Faith Voices Call: Citizenship For All!” where you will receive updates on Congress’s budget reconciliation process, who could get covered by the path to citizenship that has been included in the budget resolution, and how you can take action NOW to get citizenship for all across the finish line.

69324
Sep
21
Tue
The Right to a Speedy Trial @ Hallof (In)Justice
Sep 21 @ 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm

69341
Hoodwinked in the Hothouse: COP26 Webinar @ Online
Sep 21 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

RSVP here for the zoom link.

We are fast moving into the UN Climate Conference COP 26, where the implementation of the Paris Agreement will be negotiated.  At Glasgow, participating climate justice advocacy groups and social movements will have to overcome a complex array of corporate climate schemes.  Their challenge will be to push lawmakers away from these false solutions and towards a Just Transition framework for tackling the climate crisis.

A number of neoliberal policy agendas and unproven, corporate technofixes — from Net Zero Emissions and Carbon Capture to Nature-based Solutions — continue to subsidize the expansion of fossil fuel industries, while further impacting communities on the frontlines of climate chaos.

Join an international panel of climate justice organizers and frontline community leaders in a discussion about the multi-billion dollar climate investments promoted by the fossil fuel industries and disaster capitalists.  This panel builds on the momentum created by the most recent edition of Hoodwinked in the Houthouse (Third edition), co-created by the coalition of organizations constituting the ClimateFalseSolutions.org collective, listed below.

The speakers are:

Eriel Deranger,       Indigenous Climate Action
Jacqui Patterson,  Chisholm Legacy Project
Moñeka De Oro,     Micronesia Climate Justice Alliance
Tom Goldtooth,      Indigenous Environment Network

69343
Sep
22
Wed
The Future of Roe v. Wade @ Online
Sep 22 @ 9:00 am – 10:00 am

Register

The Supreme Court’s recent decision to allow Texas’s law banning abortions after six weeks was a frontal attack on the constitutional rights of women’s and a very clear sign that the current court may disregard the longstanding precedent of Roe v. Wade.

If Roe goes, abortion will immediately become illegal in 10 states. (As of November, Oklahoma will make it 11.) As in the years immediately preceding Roe, when a few states had already liberalized their laws, the US will be a house divided. But otherwise, post-Roe won’t be like pre-Roe. In one way that will be all to the good: When it comes to illegal abortion, pills are much safer than coat hangers and knitting needles or a visit to an underground “doctor.”

In another way, though, post-Roe will be much worse than pre-Roe, as Nation columnist Katha Pollitt recently wrote. During the entire century or more that abortion was illegal in the United States, hardly any women went to prison for ending their pregnancies. They were subpoenaed, humiliated and harassed, but they were not themselves put on trial. Unless there was a death or serious injury, few providers were arrested. This time around will be different. When abortion was illegal, there was no organized, aggressive antiabortion movement with a wing of violent fanatics.

What is the future of Roe and how best can abortion rights be defended? Join the conversation with Pollitt, The Nation’s “Subject to Debate” columnist well-known for her wit as well as her incisive, long-standing defense of reproductive rights and investigative reporter Amy LittlefieldThe Nation’s new abortion access correspondent.

Tickets are $10. All proceeds directly support The Nation’s journalism. We hope you will join us! There will be ample time devoted to audience questions and conversation. All ticket-holders will also be sent a link to the recording the following day. If you have any questions, please email us at events@thenation.com.

69325
CAMPAIGN PLANNING: SETTING GOALS AND IDENTIFYING TARGETS – ACLU Northern CA @ Online
Sep 22 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm

aclu

It can be hard to go from a vision of how the world should to be to winnable goals. In this session, we’ll talk about ways to create goals that build up towards a long term vision and fundamentally shift power to the people so that wins become lasting change. We’ll also go over tools that help you identify the key power-holders along the way that can give you what you want.

This is part of a series where we will cover different tools and skills community organizers need to build winning

69326
Afghanistan Support @ Online
Sep 22 @ 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm

If you are looking for ways to support our local Afghan community in Alameda County, check out this upcoming conversation

69336
DeSaulnier’s “New Energy Economy” Town Hall @ Online
Sep 22 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Join an important town hall on the “New Energy Economy and Contra Costa”  sponsored by Congressman Mark DeSaulnier, author of H.R. 1817, Protecting Workers for a Clean Future Act.  You don’t have to be a resident of District 11 to attend.  The Representative will share his perspective on the impacts of transitioning away from dirty energy in Contra Costa and the East Bay, and his “efforts in Congress to support the workforce so that no one gets left behind as we move to a clean energy future.”

RSVP here to submit a question before 3:00 p.m. PT on Wednesday, September 22.

Please ask Congressman DeSaulnier to discuss his position on:

  • The proposed conversion to “renewable” diesel refining by Phillips 66 and Marathon,
  • Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage provisions in the Build Back Better Act,
  • Massive subsidies for the fossil fuel industry in the Build Back Better Act,
  • The Fossil Free Finance Act introduced in Congress this week that requires the Federal Reserve to hold big banks accountable for financing fossil fuels.

69344
Freedom to Discriminate: How Realtors Conspired to Segregate Housing and Divide America @ Online
Sep 22 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm

Drawing on confidential documents from leaders of the real estate industry, Gene Slater reveals how realtors systematically created and justified residential segregation.

To defend all-white neighborhoods against the civil rights movement, realtors put the right to discriminate at the center of individual liberty, effectively redefining and weaponizing “freedom” and providing a roadmap for conservatives nationally. This far-reaching strategy reached its peak when realtors successfully campaigned for a California constitutional amendment that would permanently prohibit fair housing. In the process they created the script of color-blind freedom that polarizes America on issue after issue today.

Slater reveals how California and its powerful realtors would shape segregation for years to come. He shows why one of the first all-white neighborhoods was created in Berkeley, why the state was the perfect place for Ronald Reagan’s political ascension, and how Reagan’s early career—drawing on the realtors’ arguments—would lay the groundwork for current conservative narratives.

A landmark history told with supreme narrative skill, Freedom to Discriminate traces the increasingly aggressive ways realtors justified their practices, and how America’s divides and current debates are rooted in the history of segregated neighborhoods. Slater makes a case that shatters preconceptions about American segregation, connecting seemingly disparate features of the nation’s history in a new and galvanizing way.

Gene Slater has served as senior advisor on housing for federal, state, and local agencies for over forty years. He cofounded and chairs CSG Advisors, which has been one of the nation’s leading advisors on affordable housing for decades. He has advised on housing issues in thirty states. His projects have received numerous national awards, and in the aftermath of the financial crisis in 2009 he helped design the program by which the United States Treasury financed homes for 110,000 first-time buyers. He received degrees from Columbia, MIT, and Stanford, as well as a mid-career fellowship from Harvard. He has lived and worked in New York, Boston, rural Wisconsin, Chicago, and the San Francisco Bay Area, where he currently resides.

69242