Calendar

9896
Nov
9
Thu
Hunger Strike Support at BOS Public Protections Hearing
Nov 9 @ 9:00 am – 12:00 pm
The community will mobilize on November 9th to support Prisoners United at a Public Protections Hearing at 1221 Oak Street in Downtown Oakland at 10am. There will be a rally outside the building at 9am to bring awareness to the cruel and unusual punishment and inhumane living conditions, due to arbitrary classification reviews and the torturous practice of solitary confinement.
sm_hunger-strike-support-at-bos.jpg
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Oppose the Trump Tax Scam, Indivisible-style @ I80 Pedestrian Overpass
Nov 9 @ 4:30 pm – 7:30 pm

Join your Berkeley neighbors on the 80/580 freeway overpass to announce to Thursday Rush Hour traffic that you aren’t fooled by the Trump Tax Scam, and they shouldn’t be either.

RSVP.

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Bay Area Brilliance: Centering Black Women as Agents of Change @ New Parkway Theater
Nov 9 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Join Bay Area social visionaries Alicia Garza, Nwamaka Agbo, Mia Birdsong, and Sen. Holly Mitchell (D-Calif.) for a conversation with Professor Brittney Cooper, author of Beyond Respectability: The Intellectual Thought of Race Women about centering the narratives, wisdom, and leadership of Black women as essential to charting a better future for us all.

Addressing the crowd at the Women’s March on Washington, civil rights activist and scholar Angela Davis said, “We recognize that we are collective agents of history and that history cannot be deleted like web pages.” While the March asserted the power of collective representation in mounting resistance, persistent blindspots compromise the institutions working to maintain it.

In May, for example, a group of Black women civic and political leaders enumerated the leadership that Black women are taking to mobilize voters, run for office, and organize communities without support from, or key representation within, the Democratic National Committee. “There’s too much at stake,” reads the letter to DNC chairman Tom Perez, “to ignore Black women.”

In her latest book, Beyond Respectability: The Intellectual Thought of Race Women, Cooper documents the development of African American women as public intellectuals and the evolution of their thought leadership from the end of the 1800s through the Black Power era of the 1970s. Her book provides critical insights and inspiration for recognizing and prioritizing Black women as agents in history and of our future. Join us for a conversation on the imperative to center the leadership of Black women within institutions of power and influence to achieve a society that benefits us all.

We will start from the historical perspective taken in Professor Cooper’s new book and then elevate contemporary examples of where the leadership of Black women are shaping narratives and strategies in electoral politics, media, and institutional design.

This event will be co-hosted by New America’s Family Centered Social Policy Program and New America CA.

Copies of Beyond Respectability: The Intellectual Thought of Race Women will be available for purchase by credit card or check.

Livestreaming of this event will be hosted on this page. Join the conversation online with #TrustBlackWomen and @NewAmericaFCSP.

Speakers:

Brittney Cooper@ProfessorCrunk
Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies and Africana Studies, Rutgers University
Author, Beyond Respectability: The Intellectual Thought of Race Women

Alicia Garza@aliciagarza
Co-Founder, Black Lives Matter
Special Projects Director, National Domestic Workers Alliance

Nwamaka Agbo@AmakaAgbo
Senior Fellow, Movement Strategy Center
Restorative Economics Consultant

Sen. Holly Mitchell (D-Calif.)@HollyJMitchell
California State Senator, 30th District

Moderator:

Mia Birdsong@miabirdsong
Fellow, New America CA

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Nov
11
Sat
Single-Payer Canvass, North Oakland – DSA
Nov 11 @ 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm
  • RSVP for address

    The campaign for single-payer healthcare is gaining momentum, but we still have a lot of work to do. Only by going door-to-door in every neighborhood in every district can we build a movement large enough to overwhelm the money that the private insurance companies will throw against it.

    By talking to our neighbors about how joining the campaign for single-payer healthcare can benefit them and the people they know, we also strengthen our capacity to articulate the daily anxieties and traumas inflicted on all of us by capitalism into a socialist agenda to dismantle the perverse system of capitalism.

    If you that sounds like the kind of structure you want to help build, come out to one of our district canvassing events. You can be an experienced canvasser or totally new to canvassing. Training, lunch, and materials will be provided.

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East Bay Homes Not Jails @ Omni Commons
Nov 11 @ 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Monthly meeting and Mutual Aid Skill Shares.

Oct 14: Common Home Repair.

Nov 11: Dumpster Diving in the Bay

THE Dec 9 EVENT:  Researching Properties, HAS BEEN CANCELLED.

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Nov
13
Mon
AntiFa: The History and Theory of Anti-Fascism @ 3335 Dwinelle Hall, UC Berkeley
Nov 13 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

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Get trained to protect Alameda County from ICE!
Nov 13 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

ACILEP Immigration Legal Observer Training in Berkeley

The Alameda County Immigration Legal and Education Partnership (ACILEP) invites you to join our team of volunteer responders to resist the raids and deportations!

Many folks who live and/or work in Alameda County are interested in supporting our undocumented community members and their families. A major need for our community is to have trained communitiy members that can be activated to show up and respond to ICE presence in Berkeley and throughout Alameda County, serve as legal observers, and support the family and community of the loved one being targeted by ICE action.

The more people we have trained by ACILEP, the more power we have as a sanctuary city to protect our community members from ICE raids.

At this training—taught by a team from ACILEP—you will:

  • Learn how to verify ICE activity
  • Learn how to be a legal observer in order to protect our communities from ICE
  • Get Know Your Rights training in regards to interactions with law enforcement
  • Practice role-playing scenarios* so that you have practical experience to draw from

(*Theater of the Oppressed assistance provided by Starr King School for the Ministry)

Alameda County Immigration Legal & Education Partnership (ACILEP) is a partnership of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration, California Immigrant Youth Justice Alliance, Causa Justa Just Cause, the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity, Mujeres Unidas y Activas, Oakland Community Organizations, Street Level Health, the Vietnamese American Community Center of the East Bay, Centro Legal de la Raza, and the Alameda County Public Defender’s Office

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Occupy Forum: Food and Water Watch @ Unite Here Local 2
Nov 13 @ 6:45 pm – 9:00 pm
OccupyForum presents
Information, discussion & community! Monday Night Forum!!

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

FOOD AND WATER WATCH\
Adam Scow

From Food and Water Watch’s website:

“Food & Water Watch champions healthy food and clean water for all. We stand up to corporations that put profits before people, and advocate for a democracy that improves people’s lives and protects our environment.

The problems we’re facing are immense, but not insurmountable. Around the world, activists have pushed back against corporate influence at the UN and the World Water Forum. And here at home, working hand in hand with grassroots allies, we’ve stopped privatizations of our water systems, halted the use of arsenic in chicken production, and built pressure to ban fracking. While we’ll never have the financial resources to compete on a playing field lined with corporate money, we do have considerable people power. By raising our voices together, we can create real and lasting change.

Adam Scow is the California Director at Food & Water Watch. Adam oversees the California organizing program, which tackles some of California’s greatest challenges to the long-term health of its water, energy and food. Adam has guided several successful statewide and local campaigns towards protecting California’s water as a public resource and is an often-cited expert on California water and food issues in national media publications including the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and the Washington Post. He previously researched California farm and water policy in Washington, D.C. He can be reached at ascow(at)fwwatch.org.

https://secure.foodandwaterwatch.org/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=2283

https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org

https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/our-impact

 Time will be allotted for announcements.
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The Catalan Chessboard: An Anarchist Perspective @ Longhaul, 2 blocks from Ashby BART
Nov 13 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm

A Catalan activist from Barcelona will give background information about the Catalan fight of independence from Spain. He will show some recent video footage and speak about the history of the struggle and the latest developments: the referendum, the resulting Spanish police repression, peoples’ self-organization, imposition of new elections – it is a big chessboard with many players and agendas. How do Catalan anarchists position themselves in this fight while holding ideas of abolishing nation states?

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Nov
14
Tue
Berkeley City Council – Racial Disparity and New Civilian Police Commission
Nov 14 @ 6:00 pm – 11:00 pm

Item 24: Direct the City Manager to analyze and address disparate racial outcomes in policing and implement policy and practice reforms.
This item has been heavily revised since it was first introduced.  Please see the following link for the current proposal:
https://www.cityofberkeley.info/Clerk/City_Council/2017/11_Nov/Documents/2017-11-14_Item_24_Refer_to_the_Berkeley_Police_Department_-_Rev.aspx
Evaluation:  These proposals are positive, if somewhat vague.  They introduce concepts that will become much more developed and actionable with the forthcoming release of the PRC’s Fair and Impartial Policing report, due November 15 (see section II below).

Item 25: Referral to Police Review Commission to Write a Charter Amendment Ballot Measure
Evaluation:  There are competing versions of this measure.  It is unclear what if anything will happen on this reform item.  Two critical things to keep in mind:
1.  A charter amendment, through the ballot box, is an absolute requirement to achieve real police accountability.  Any move other than changing the city charter will be considered illegal where it conflicts with the charter.
2.  Whether or not the council refers this issue to the PRC, a charter amendment will be written, and will be on the November 2018 ballot.  Council’s support would be welcome but the people will make this happen!

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ICE Raid Hearing – Oakland City Council Public Safety Committee @ Oakland City Hall, Hearing Room 1, Oscar Grant Plaza
Nov 14 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Oakland’s Public Safety Committee will hold a public hearing on the ICE raid – with the police chief. Also likely that the surveillance equipment ordinance will go through its final pass through on that same day.

We will want numbers in the room for the ICE hearing. Tell people.  #DeportICE

—–

On August 16, HSI/ICE conducted an AM raid on the 700th block of 27th Street in West Oakland with OPD assistance. The raid was advertised (erroneously) as a search warrant for the sexual trafficking of juveniles, biut there were no actual allegations of sexual abuse, no juveniles were removed from the home and the solitary arrest was for being undocumented. The 25 year old arrestee is now in the deportation process. At an October 5th investigation and hearing that the OPD Chief did not attend, Oakland’s Privacy Commission concluded that the raid violated Oakland’s sanctuary city policy and several statements made by OPD chief Anne Kirkpatrick about the raid were false.

Video of the hearing is here. https://oaklandprivacy.org/2017/10/06/privacy-advisory-commission-investigation-of-oakland-ice-raid-concludes-violation-of-sanctuary-city-policy/

East Bay Express coverage is here:
https://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/oakland-police-chief-made-false-statements-about-ice-raid/Content?oid=9793923

City Council members Desley Brooks and Rebecca Kaplan have now set this item for a committee hearing with the OPD Chief in attendance.

Oaklanders and other Bay Area residents who want sanctuary legislation taken seriously around the Bay should attend. Public comment will be taken.

63793
the history of racist housing policies @ Oakstop
Nov 14 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm
63907
Book talk and discussion with Paul Kivel, Co-Founder of SURJ @ Wendte Hall
Nov 14 @ 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm

A book talk and discussion with Paul Kivel.

Paul is an Oakland-based social justice educator, activist, author and a co-founder of SURJ – Showing Up for Racial Justice. His newest book is “Uprooting Racism 4th Edition” which he revised and updated after last year’s election. You can learn more about Paul and his work at his website: paulkivel.com. Please join us for what is sure to be a very interesting presentation and discussion of interest to everyone in our community.

Everyone is also welcome to join us for the other Second Tuesdays programming, including cooking at 5, dinner at 6, worship at 6:45, and Black Lives Matter Vigil at 7:30. Contact vespers@uuoakland.org with questions.

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Nov
15
Wed
TEACH-IN on Health Care, Migrant Rights, Gentrification & the proposed A’s stadium at Laney @ Laney College Forum
Nov 15 @ 9:15 am – 9:00 pm

— two sessions — 9:15am-Noon & 6:15-9pm at the Laney College Forum. Both sessions will include guest speakers and breakout sessions for discussion. PLUS a mid-day rally + clubs & resources fair on the Quad starting at Noon

PREPARE & PROMOTE  Faculty: BRING YOUR CLASSES, &/or discuss the issues in class and ENCOURAGE STUDENTS TO ATTEND.

INTERACT & DISCUSS  HOW DOES DEVELOPMENT IMPACT OUR COMMUNITIES, and what kind of development will help PROTECT & PROMOTE our communities?

Does ‘profit’ have any legitimate role in healthcare? Is healthcare a human right? GET INFORMED & INVOLVED  What is “SINGLE-PAYER” healthcare?

How can we best PROTECT THE RIGHTS OF MIGRANT PEOPLE?

Updates on the A’s stadium proposal – and community efforts to block it!

GET INVOLVED WITH COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS!

63901
Help Pass BAAQMD Toxic Emissions Rule
Nov 15 @ 9:30 am – 12:00 pm

A new clean air regulation is coming up for approval by the Air District’s Board of Directors, and it needs our support.

Rule 11-18 aims to reduce health risks from cancer-causing toxic air pollutants like heavy metals, diesel PM and benzene.  These are emitted by industry and disproportionately impact vulnerable Bay Area communities.  The regulation will mandate extensive risk screenings and health risks assessments (HRAs), incorporating recently adopted risk management guidelines and health risk values from the state Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA).  Once data is collected and analyzed, industries emitting high levels of toxics will be required to lower them.  This will mean reduced operation, system redesign, or installation of Best Available Retrofit Control Technology for Toxics.

The regulation requires the heaviest industrial polluters, like the Bay Area’s five refineries, to reduce their risk of causing cancer from the current level of 100 cases per million, down to 10 per million.  It covers hundreds of industries—about 1,000 Bay Area facilities, including  chemical and cement plants, foundries, hospitals, landfills, crematoria, sewage treatment and power plants.  Because of the rule’s wide application, the Air District is prioritizing certain facilities to complete the HRA process and submit their mitigation proposals.  Refineries will be required to do this by 2020.  Other facilities will have longer to comply.  Once procedures for mitigation by Best Available Retrofit Control Technologies are approved, then facilities are given an additional three to six years to complete implementation.

When adopted, this regulation will be the most health-protective regulation in the nation for toxic pollutants.

One key limitation of the proposal, however, is that the Air District and OEHHA currently have no baseline for developing a HRA for refinery particulate matter (PM 2.5).  This is currently under discussion within the Air District and its Technical Advisory Council.  Our support for the 11-18 rule-making process must include strong demands for complete transparency, as well as the involvement of frontline communities in  developing a health risk assessment for PM 2.5.

In spite of the generous timeline for compliance, the affected industries—led by Bay Area refineries—will strenuously oppose adoption of the rule, citing as usual the prohibitive cost and inconvenience of meeting the new standards.  They are expected to send large numbers of advocates to the adoption hearing to plead for delay or outright opposition.  We need to encourage the Board to do the right thing in spite of heavy industry pressure.   Please join us at the hearing to voice your support!

All of the documents related to Rule 11-18 can be found here.

 

63892
A brief history of crypto @ Eli's Mile High Club
Nov 15 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

With the DOJ recently bringing back the “Going Dark” debate, and now calling for “responsible encryption,” what does the Trump administration have to say about strong crypto? Do we know yet? Do they?

If there’s anyone who might be able to figure that out, it’s Riana Pfefferkorn.

As an attorney and legal fellow, Pfefferkorn is at the forefront of trying to make sense of new technology, surveillance policy and the thorny legal questions that emerge. She’ll explain how this problem emerged, and what the FBI has already done about it over the last decade.

Join Ars Technica editors Cyrus Farivar and Annalee Newitz in conversation with Riana at the next Ars Technica Live on November 15 at Eli’s Mile High Club in Oakland.

There will be plenty of time for audience questions, too. Doors are at 7 PM and the event starts around 7:30. Tickets are free, but please do RSVP with Eventbrite so you’re guaranteed a spot.

Riana Pfefferkorn is the Cryptography Fellow at the Stanford Center for Internet and Society. Her work focuses on investigating and analyzing the U.S. government’s policy and practices for forcing decryption and/or influencing crypto-related design of online platforms and services, devices, and products, both via technical means and through the courts and legislatures.

Prior to joining Stanford, Riana was an associate in the Internet Strategy & Litigation group at the law firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, where she worked on online privacy, Internet intermediary liability, consumer protection, copyright, trademark, and trade secrets and was actively involved in the firm’s pro bono program. Before that, Riana clerked for the Honorable Bruce J. McGiverin of the U.S. District Court for the District of Puerto Rico.

Cyrus Farivar and Annalee Newitz are Ars Technica’s Senior Business Editor and the Senior Tech Culture Editor, respectively. Ars Technica Live is a monthly series spotlighting people who are working at the cutting edge of technology, science, and culture. It’s held the third Wednesday of every month at Eli’s.

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Nov
16
Thu
Single Payer Social With DSA @ Moxy
Nov 16 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Single-Payer Social, South Berkeley

 

In addition to canvasses, a critical part of each canvassing district’s monthly organizing are the social events, which create a more casual space to talk about the fight to decommodify healthcare. Come meet the wonderful comrades and neighbors in your district and socialize about socialism over a beer or some food.

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The People’s Study Group: Capitalism and Housing @ Omni Commons
Nov 16 @ 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm

The People’s Study group is a grassroots effort to reclaim Black and Brown peoples’ struggles against capitalism and create a collective analysis of our current situation. We will be exploring texts from past and current revolutionary movements and thinkers.

We live in the Bay Area, a region affected by skyrocketing costs of living and stagnant wages and opportunities.

A revolutionary social movement has to take into account the relationship between housing and capitalism; as anti-capitalists we have to dissect its devastating impact on working class communities of Color.

Talking about social change means talking about solutions; we want to struggle over how we think we can accomplish change in our community.

We will bring a short booklet that night to read and discuss. Reading in advance is not required but feel free to take a look beforehand:goo.gl/qhtgJH

We are also open to suggestions regarding other readings we could study.

The People’s Study Group is a new project of some residents of the Fruitvale District. We are not a large organization and will be asking for donations to cover the cost of the space.

If y’all have questions you can reach us at peoplesstudygroup@gmail.com

We are excited to talk and get stuff done!

63891
Building Solidarity Against Militarization @ EastSide Arts Alliance
Nov 16 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

A Panel on Political Prisoners and Incarceration from Palestine, the US and the Philippines, with Sahar Francis of Addameer (the Palestinian Prisoner Support & Human Rights Association)

The full panel will include speakers from:
Addameer
Critical Resistance
Freedom Archives
Ella Baker Center for Human Rights
AnakBayan- East Bay
Malcom X Grassroots Movement

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Nov
18
Sat
Benefit for Survivors of Human Trafficking In India: A Screening of SOLD @ Fellowship Hall
Nov 18 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm

Blossomy Project Benefit for Survivors of Human Trafficking In India:
A Screening of SOLD and a performance by Kristi Williamson of Spoken Word Mystic Poetry, Song and Movement

soldBlossomy Project is a Berkeley based 501(c)3 working with trafficking survivors since 2004 in India and in 2016 expanded its reach to vulnerable communities in Thailand! The focus of Blossomy Project is empowerment through self expression.

Our programs include dance therapy, art therapy, music therapy and photography.
SOLD is a narrative film based on the true story of Lakshmi’s trafficking from rural Nepal to a brothel in Kolkata, India and highlights the brutality of child trafficking and the resilience of the human spirit. www.soldthemovie.com

Blossomy kristiKristi Williamson is brilliant performer who is passionate about archetypal exploration through cultural dance forms and ritual theater and will be presenting a piece that embodies her experiences working with survivors in India. Kristi has been working with Blossomy Project in Kolkata at a shelter home with over 100 girls since 2014 leading a one month workshop in partnership with the Tamalpa Art Corps program.
This event is generously being sponsored by BFUU and all proceeds go to benefit the empowerment of trafficking survivors and those vulnerable to human trafficking.

Lulu Dharma jewelry and tote bags will be on sale at the event for half price www.luludharma.com
Lite fare will be on offer. Free popcorn! $5 Raffle Tickets!
$20 minimum suggested donation at the door. More Information: www.blossomy.org

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