Calendar

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Feb
10
Mon
Europe’s Green New Deal @ 223 Moses Hall, UC Berkeley
Feb 10 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm

Europe aspires to be the first climate-neutral continent by 2050.  To achieve this, the European Commission has proposed the European Green Deal, a package of measures that should enable European citizens and businesses to benefit from the sustainable green transition.  Key policies range from ambitiously cutting emissions, to investing in cutting-edge research and innovation, to preserving Europe’s natural environment.

This presentation by Jean-Eric Paquet, Director-General of Research and Innovation of the European Commission, will address the centrality of research and innovation.  According to the event description, the Green Deal is “expected to be a new EU growth strategy.”  But, we wonder, is infinite growth really desirable and can it be decoupled from social inequity and environmental destruction?  Is there a post-growth alternative?  These are questions that attendees could raise in the Q & A.

 Institute of European StudiesClimate Readiness InstituteInstitute of Governmental StudiesDept. of Environmental Science, Policy, and Mgmt. (ESPM)Center for Responsible Business

 by February 9.

 MENGHINI@BERKELEY.EDU

 

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POSTPONED: Tell SF City Hall: No More Business with Concentration Camp Profiteers! @ SF City Hall Steps (Polk St. Side)
Feb 10 @ 4:30 pm – 5:30 pm

POSTPONED. NOT HAPPENING ON THIS DATE.

San Francisco is supposed to be a sanctuary city for immigrants; but it also gives sanctuary to corporations that have contracts with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

Corporations like Salesforce, Amazon and Google profit from deportation and detention; yet City Hall continues to give them contracts while mouthing support for immigrants. Fortunately, the Immigrants’ Rights Commission is taking the first step to ending these contracts and has asked the City Controller to issue a report highlighting which companies that have City contracts continue to profit off detention and deportation.

Come join us as we highlight this Corporate Hall of Shame and demand that the City stop doing business with deportation and detention profiteers!

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Feb
11
Tue
Trans Mountain Pipeline Webinar @ Online
Feb 11 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Every Tuesday at 5pm from February 11th to March 3rd, we have an opportunity to learn from impacted communities all along the Trans Mountain pipeline route.  Click here to RSVP for the free webinar series, “From Wellhead to Tidewater.”

On March 3rd, Isabella Zizi of Idle No More SF,  Stand.Earth, and the Protect the Bay Coalition will speaking about the impacts of the Trans Mountain pipeline and tankers in California: the plan to dredge San Francisco Bay to make room for more fully loaded tankers, the impacts of the refinery expansion, and what resistance looks like where she lives.

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Idle No More: Equity & Direct Action on Climate @ University of San Francisco Del Santo Reading Room, Lone Mountain
Feb 11 @ 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Indigenous and community leaders will speak on the connections linking oil projects, climate impacts, and indigenous rights, and in particular the connections between Canadian tar sands oil, the proposed expansion of the Trans Mountain Pipeline, and the proposed dredging of San Francisco Bay to bring large tankers of tar sands oil to Phillips 66 refinery in Rodeo.  The speakers—Pennie Opal Pant, Isabella Zizi, and Andrés Soto—will share strategies to stop these destructive projects, protect frontline communities, and protect the sacred system of life.

The event is free and open to the public.

Speakers:

  • Pennie Opal Plant, Yaqui/Choctaw/Cherokee, Idle No more SF Bay and Movements Rights
  • Isabella Zizi, Arikara/Northern Cheyenne/Muskogee Creek, Idle No More SF Bay and Stand.earth
  • Andrés Soto, Otomi, Communities for a Better Environment

Sponsors:  USF Master of Science in Environmental Management (MSEM), USF Dept. of Environmental Science (ENVS), USF Environmental Studies (ENVA), USF Leo T. McCarthy Center

Reception: 6:00 PM, Panel: 6:30 PM, Discussion: 7:30 PM

 

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Feb
12
Wed
“The Homeless Crisis: What Way Forward?” @ Allen Temple Baptist Church, Family Life Center, 2nd Floor
Feb 12 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm

BBBON Presents Meeting + Potluck on “The Homeless Crisis: What Way Forward?”

BBBON GA flyer 2-12-20

What Way Forward?
Join Block By Block Organizing Network for their February general assembly. Come listen and discuss recent strategies and movements with local activists/leaders who fight for the unhoused. Let’s bring our input and our hearts together. The time is now!!
TIME: 5:30 PM Potluck Supper (please bring a dish to share). 6:30 PM Program.
Parking available in parking lot or street.
PANELISTS:
  • Candice Elder, CEO and ED, East Oakland Collective
  • James Vann, Moderator of Homeless Advocacy Working Group, Oakland Tenants Union, Co-Founder of BBBON
  • Carroll Fife, Director, Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment on Moms 4 Housing Impact and Building the Movement
  • Lou Rigali, Member of BBBON’s Economic Development Committee and Housing Advocacy Working Group on ADUs in the fight against homelessness
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Feb
13
Thu
Court Support, Militarized Police and Moms 4 Housing @ Wiley Manuel Courthouse
Feb 13 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am

“The Alameda County Sheriffs have not taken responsibility for their grossly exaggerated use of force in the pre-dawn eviction of Black women and children in Oakland. They are still holding arrest charges over the heads of 2 mothers and 2 supporters.

Join us all to stand with the moms and demand transparency, accountability and that all pending charges be dropped immediately.”

Also, if you haven’t signed this petition (and for more background info), go to: https://www.change.org/p/alameda-county-sheriff-gregory-ahern-hold-the-sheriff-accountable-protect-moms-babies-from-tanks?signed=true
Petition � Hold Them Accountable – Protect Moms & Babies from Tanks, AR-15s, and Tactical Troops � Change.org

NO TANKS, AR15s or TACTICAL TROOPS TO EVICT MOMS & BABIES! For years, the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office (ACSO) has been the source of questionable, if not criminal behavior.

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Oakland Police Commission @ Oakland City Hall
Feb 13 @ 5:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Agenda.

Items of particular interest:

  • Election of Char
  • Use of Force Ad Hoc Cmte
  • Draft Ordinance on Militarized Police Equipment
  • Process for Drafting Policy

Many of you witnessed or saw images of the Moms4Housing visionary action for the right to housing and the Alameda County Sheriff Office’s warrior deployment of assault weapons, a tank and battering ram in response to peaceful protest in Oakland. The event demonstrated more clearly than ever the need to push back on police use of military equipment in our communities.

The Oakland Police Commission will be considering the proposed ordinance for civilian control over the acquisition and use of militarized equipment by OPD. A key point on the agenda is how this ordinance can impact agencies like the Alameda County sheriff that deploy in Oakland. The Moms will be making comments, and we invite you to come and also make a public comment.

When sheriff deputies deploy to evict someone, they do so as an officer of the court, and are not required to consult with OPD. Our proposed ordinance applies to military equipment deployed by outside agencies in Oakland that are called in through “mutual aid” agreements. We are proposing additional language to the ordinance to ensure OPD doesn’t cooperate with the sheriff’s unfettered use of military equipment and require OPD to notify the police commission and city council if they know of such deployments. (see attached)

The Police Commission likely won’t vote on a recommendation next Thursday, but we want them to know clearly how the community feels about ANY deployment of war-like gear and weaponry in Oakland.

Please be there, Thur. Feb. 13, at 6:30 pm, Oakland City Hall, City Council chambers. Sign up to make a comment at the beginning of the meeting in “Open Forum”, when the agenda comes up, or both. 

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Bay Area Skeptics Talk – Big Data @ La Peña Cultural Center
Feb 13 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Bay Area Skeptics Talk
This critical thinking-focused organization meets Every Second Thursday of the month with a different topic and guest speaker for every conversational meeting. This month’s topic: Big Data: What it is, how its used, where it’s headed by Mike Olson
T

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Feb
15
Sat
Volunteer on the Planting Justice Farm
Feb 15 @ 10:00 am – 2:00 pm

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Register here to work either in East Oakland or El Sobrante:

https://plantingjustice.org/work-with-us/individuals

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NUDE VALENTINE’S DAY PARADE @ Jane Warner Plaza
Feb 15 @ 11:00 am – 3:00 pm

Nothing could be more ignorant and hypocritical than criminalizing the human body in a city that is named after a preacher who preached in the nude.

In early 2013 a law was passed in San Francisco that is commonly called “the nudity ban”. According to this law you can go to jail for a year for merely taking off your clothes on a warm summer day. (That’s if you do it 3 times in a year. If it is your first or second time you get a $100 fine.)

Nothing could be more hypocritical than criminalizing God’s creation – the human body.

Criminalizing genitals is no different from criminalizing flowers – they are plant’s genitals. Imagine if flowers had to be covered. Imagine if plants got thrown in jail for blooming and showing their flowers.

And what about animals? Imagine having to put underwear on your dog and worrying that if your dog rips it off it will be thrown in jail.

How come we have less rights than dogs and flowers?

It’s time to legalize humans!

NUDE LOVE PARADE will start on Saturday, February 15th at 11 am in Jane Warner Plaza. We start marching at noon (hopefully). We will loop around a bunch and end up at Haight and Stanyan.

The parade is fully permitted by the SFPD, no one will get arrested nor cited.

Come join us! We want to see you naked.

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Active Hope: How Will We Survive? @ Fellowship Hall
Feb 15 @ 4:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Come join Codepink and friends in a two-day exploration of Active Hope.  There will be thought-provoking speakers, rousing entertainment, activism updates, information tables, and great eats and socializing.

The featured speakers are:

  • Joanna Macy, author and teacher, scholar of Buddhism, systems thinking and deep ecology, and a veteran of six decades of activism.
  • Harvey Wasserman, author, journalist, democracy activist, advocate for renewable energy, and a strategist and organizer in the anti-nuclear movement in the United States for over 30 years. 

Entertainment by Emma’s Revolution.

 

Homemade organic pies  –  impeach, apple, berry, gluten-free cheesecake, vegan chocolate mousse, and wine and tea

Hosted by Active Hope Events

Co-hosts:  BFUU Social Justice, Codepink Women for Peace, Extinction Rebellion, BARC (Barkers Agitating for Reactor Closures), Public Bank, Poor People’s Campaign

Facebook Info

Tickets by Eventbrite

WHEN

Saturday, February 15, 4:00 – 9:00 PM

4:00 PM – “Election Integrity in 2020” with Harvey Wasserman

6:00 PM – Potluck Dinner

6:30 PM –  “The Nuclear Obsession: Can We be Free at Last?” with Joanna Macy;  “Shut Diablo Canyon Nuke in 2020, ” Panel Discussion with Harvey Wasserman, Linda Seeley, John Geesman,  and Cynthia Papermaster

Sunday, February 16, 7 PM

“History of the U.S. in 54 Minutes” with Harvey Wasserman

 

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Feb
16
Sun
Feed the Hood 14 @ EOYDC
Feb 16 @ 7:00 am – 12:00 pm

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Feed the Hood 14: Bag Lunch and Hygiene Kit Preparation and Distribution

Join us for another opportunity to Feed the Hood– giving back to our unhoused brothers and sisters across Oakland by preparing and distributing bag lunches and hygiene kits. This Feed the Hood is in partnership with Black Joy Parade and sponsored by Abbott.

**Event is family friendly (kids of all ages welcome to attend with their parent(s) or guardian).
**Coffee/tea and continental breakfast will be served for volunteers.
**Venue is wheelchair accessible.

For more info, including itinerary, visit eastoaklandcollective.com/feedthehood.

For questions, large donations and group volunteer opportunities (10+ people) contact us at feedthehood@eastoaklandcollective.com.

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Film Screening: The Feeling of Being Watched. @ New Parkway
Feb 16 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm

Join a pilot screening presented by Minema, your pass to the most relevant media events in the city.

A Tribeca, Hot Docs, and POV documentary, The Feeling of Being Watched is a groundbreaking film on government surveillance. In the Chicago suburb where journalist Assia Boundaoui grew up, most residents in her Muslim immigrant neighborhood believe they are under surveillance. Assia investigates and uncovers FBI documents about “Operation Vulgar Betrayal,” one of the largest pre-9/11 counterterrorism probes conducted on domestic soil, right in Assia’s hometown.

Guided post-screening conversation to follow.

Find out more about the film: http://www.feelingofbeingwatched.com/
More on Minema: https://www.minema.space/

This event is supported by Stanford University.

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Screening Of “Fukushima Speaks” By Journalist and Videographer Toshikuni Doi‘ @ Downtown Bereley Public Library
Feb 16 @ 1:30 pm – 4:30 pm

FUKUSHIMA SPEAKS’ EXPLORES LIVES OF SURVIVORS

On Sunday, February 16, No Nukes Action will host the Bay Area premiere of “Fukushima Speaks,” a compelling feature-length documentary by award-winning director and independent journalist Toshikuni Doi.

“It is not enough for a journalist to report facts and news of what is happening, but rather it is the journalist’s duty to expose the ‘human’ underneath it all,” Doi stated. “If we fail to shed light on [universal themes]and just succeed in reporting on facts and news, to the audience, it will come across as just a matter that is happening somewhere far away, unrelated to them.”

Four years in the making, Doi has created a heart-wrenching look into the lives of Japanese residents whose lives were devastated by the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster. Haunting images and video footage of the aftermath are reinforced by 14 personal stories of despair, guilt, and outrage.

“I lost the cornerstone of my life,” Yoko Watanabe, a self-evacuee, said in her interview. “I was determined to bury myself in Katsurao village. That was taken away from me. The reason to live, volunteering, everything was taken away from me in a flash. Now I don’t know anymore what I live for. I wonder if I am really needed in this life, and I don’t know anymore.”

The suffering of Fukushima survivors continues to this day. While the mourning of lost life is obvious, the film also explores the dire realities that are often overlooked: the loss of livelihoods due to the contamination of land and ocean, the life-threatening risks caused by radiation exposure, the emotional turmoil of families being torn apart by the decision to stay or evacuate, and the discrimination that residents now face because they are from Fukushima.

Another self-evacuee, Hikaru Hoshi, expressed indignation: “They want to blame it on us and say it was our responsibility. Whether to leave or stay…. I do not allow them to shift the burden of the accident of enormous scale to individual choices/individual responsibilities…. We lived in an area that needed to be evacuated right away. That fact was concealed from us, and some of us left on our own, or like me, some did not have time to think it through but left anyway. I felt outraged that this country was putting us against each other. The root of the matter lies somewhere else.”

Doi pointed out the urgency of releasing this documentary in 2018: “Eight years since the accident, ‘Fukushima’ is being made into the thing of the past,” he said. “As more people focus on the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, the victims are silenced and their suffering is hidden away behind the news of ‘revitalization.’ However, the wounds of the victims whose lives have been destroyed by the accident are still raw.”

English subtitles for the documentary were translated and edited by event organizer Tsukuru Lauritzen with the help of fellow activists in Los Angeles.

“I contacted the director and heard that the English subtitles won’t be ready ’til 2020,” Lauritzen recalled. “I asked him if there is any way that I could take over the translation. Looking back on it, it was an insane idea, but I was compelled to take it on, because these 14 voices begged to be heard.”

About the Filmmaker

Toshikuni Doi, born in 1953, is a Japanese independent journalist. He has published numerous articles in many first-class journals and has made scores of documentary films for news programs. He also has many books published in Japan.

Since 1985, he has visited the occupied territories many times and almost lived there for months, extensively reporting from Palestinian villages and refugee camps. He also has covered Asia, notably atomic bomb victims in Korea who were in Hiroshima or Nagasaki in 1945, Korean women who were forced to become sex workers/slaves by the Japanese army, and street children in Thailand and Vietnam.

Since April 2003, he has visited Iraq under occupation four times, focusing on civilian victims of war, women’s rights and prisoners’ mistreatment, or torture.

This event is free but donations for the filmmaker are accepted

Sponsored by No Nukes Action
http://nonukesaction.wordpress.com/

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UC Santa Cruz Wildcat Strike: A Presentation @ Tamarack
Feb 16 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

This Sunday in Oakland, join members of @DSACommunists and Black Rose Bay Area, who will discuss the historic, ongoing wildcat strike by graduate workers at UC Santa Cruz. #UCSCstrike

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Prison Truth @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Feb 16 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Revolutionary journalism and Prisoner Human Rights Movement

… freedom of the press … is an embodiment of freedom….Freedom is so much the essence of the human that even its opponents realize it … No human fights freedom; they fight at most the freedom of others. Every kind of freedom has therefore always existed, only at one time as a special privilege, at another time as a universal right. Karl Marx

A new book, Prison Truth, “The Story of the San Quentin News” by William J. Drummond (UC Press, 2020) tells of prisoners’ self-transformation through journalism, even under prison’s censorship. Does Prison Truth itself suffer from this self-censorship? Is there a deeper truth, a new humanism, within prisoners themselves?

The most visible manifestation of such a new humanism emerged in the torturous hell-hole of perpetual solitary confinement in Pelican Bay. Their successful mass hunger strikes (2011-13), based on their Agreement to End Hostilities, undermined gang-based identification of prisoners fomented by the prison authorities. The strikes brought an end to indeterminate solitary confinement and “changed the face of race relations” in prison according to strike representative, Sitawa Nantambu Jamaa (see reverse side). That struggle continues against the ongoing abuse of “confidential information” which creates discord and racial animosity between prisoners.

We’ll explore the contrast between the practice of revolutionary journalism shaped by freedom as human essence and freedom as a “special privilege” in press freedom under censorship.

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The Frontlines of the Chilean Revolution (Film Screening & Discussion) @ La Pena
Feb 16 @ 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm

Join us for a film screening of On the Frontlines of the Chilean Revolution, followed by a discussion with Vee Bravo and Rodstarz, Chilean activists and media makers documenting the nations social crisis. Featuring a special performance by Rodstarz of Rebel Díaz!

Doors open at 7:30 pm / Event starts at 8pm

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Feb
18
Tue
Socialist Night School: The Socialist Feminist Case for Bernie Sanders @ East Bay Community Space
Feb 18 @ 7:00 pm – 9:30 pm

Isn’t Bernie just another old, white man? Shouldn’t feminists instead support one of the smart, competent women on the primary ticket?

These are valid questions, but whether we’re talking about the environment, healthcare and reproductive rights, immigration, or strengthening unions, Bernie’s policies are fundamentally feminist ones. His program addresses not only issues of gender, but tackles all of the intersecting oppressions that exist under capitalism. No other candidate can make that claim.

Join East Bay DSA’s Socialist Night School on Tuesday, Feb. 18 for a panel a discussion featuring reproductive rights organizer and East Bay DSA Steering Committee member Allie Lahey, Kaiser RN Luci Riley, and OEA member and organizer Vilma Serrano for discussion of why “leaning in” is not an effective strategy for winning the 2020 election, and how a President Sanders can help improve the lives of all women. East Bay DSA organizer and SEIU 1021 member Ashley Payne moderates.

This event is the final installment in our four-part series on Bernie 2020, capitalism, and democratic socialism. We will discuss what is absent from some Marxists’ analyses of capitalism: social reproduction and the many ways labor — waged or unwaged — is divided along lines of gender, race, and class.

See the assigned readings here: https://www.eastbaydsa.org/night-school/

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Feb
19
Wed
End Oil Extraction in California @ State Capitol (meet at 1003 L St, Sacramento, CA 95814)
Feb 19 @ 8:30 am – 10:00 am

Can you join us in Sacramento on Wednesday, February 19th for a mass rally and banner drop to let Gavin Newsom know that we’re fed up?

Jp, the date has been set.

On February 19, Governor Newsom will deliver his second State of the State speech in Sacramento. He’ll tackle a lot of important issues – but with the climate crisis unfolding all around us, we need him to prioritize ending California’s oil problem.�

We must show up in force to make it clear that Californians are watching and that any plan that allows fossil fuel production in California to continue is unacceptable. The bigger the crowd, the stronger our message will be!

On his big day, Gavin is going to be looking at the press to gauge the reactions to his speech. When he sees a photo of us outside the Capitol with beautiful art and the full power of this movement on display  – he’ll knoow that we mean business and that inaction on our demands will have political consequences.

As the Governor of a major oil producing state, Governor Newsom has an opportunity to stand up to an oil industry that – for decades – has polluted Californian communities and destroyed our climate future. But he won’t act unless we demand it.

Join 350.org and the Last Chance Alliance outside of the Governor’s State of the State in Sacramento on February 19, as we rally to urge Newsom to phase out oil extraction in California.

At the event, we’ll hear from climate and environmental justice activists from around the region and rally outside the State of the State demanding climate justice.

Our demands to Newsom are simple:

  1. Stop new fossil fuel projects by issuing no new permits.
  2. Drop existing oil production by announcing a phase-out of existing production.
  3. Roll out setback limits that create a 2,500-foot health-and-safety buffer zone between fossil-fuel infrastructure and homes, schools and other sensitive sites.

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A Public Conversation on Privacy – Panel at Twitter @ Twitter
Feb 19 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm

February’s Privacy Lab, hosted by Twitter, will be a panel on the topic of: A Public Conversation on #Privacy. Panelists will discuss why taking a global approach to privacy matters, and what the future of privacy-first product development looks like.

Panelists include:

  • Damien Kieran, Global Data Protection Officer, Twitter
  • Lea Kissner, Chief Privacy Officer, Humu
  • Jules Polonetsky, CEO, Future of Privacy Forum

Please note that Twitter requires an ID for building entry and will receive a list of guests who have RSVPd for the event. Check-in will be open until 6:15 at the latest.

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