Calendar

9896
Oct
17
Tue
Palestine: Chat with peacemakers and experts @ Online
Oct 17 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm


RSVP now!

With 2.3 million people trapped in Gaza, under fire from Israel’s relentless bombing – including suffocating illegal white phosphorus, peace activists worldwide are demanding a ceasefire to stop the unfolding human catastrophe and lift the blockade barring food, medicine, water and electricity to the Palestinians in Gaza.

After 75 years of occupation and the recent Hamas attacks in Israel, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken flew to Tel Aviv to profess ironclad support and billions of dollars more for apartheid Israel as it imposes lethal collective punishment – a violation of international law – on the people of of Gaza, 50% of whom are children.

Our guests will offer a counter-narrative that affirms the Palestinian desire for liberation, addresses the root causes of the violence and issues a call to action.

Special Guest Co-Host:

Nour is CODEPINK’s Palestine and Iran Campaigner. She graduated from DePaul University with a bachelor’s degree in International Studies in June 2022. Nour has been advocating for Palestinian liberation for over 5 years, including organizing within her university. She also organizes around related issues, such as abolition.

Featured Guests:

Hassan El-Tayyab is the Legislative Director for Middle East policy at the Friends Committee on National Legislation. Hassan leads FCNL’s work calling for a ceasefire in Gaza and an end to the bloodshed in the Middle East. In addition to advocating for Palestinian human rights, Hassan works to end U.S. military complicity in the Saudi-led war on Yemen and advance diplomacy with Iran. Prior to joining FCNL, Hassan served as the co-director of the national advocacy group Just Foreign Policy, where he worked to reassert Congressional war authority and promote human rights in the Middle East and Latin America. His passion for foreign affairs is rooted in his desire to make life safer for people in the Middle East, including his extended family in Jordan, Palestine, and Yemen.

Huwaida Arraf is a Palestinian American activist and civil rights attorney who co-founded the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), a Palestinian-led organization using non-violent protests and international pressure to support Palestinians.  A former candidate for US Congress representing Michigan’s 10th congressional district, Huwaida specializes in international human rights and humanitarian law, as well as domestic US civil rights litigation. A Hebrew-speaking Palestinian Christian, Huwaida spent time living on an Israeli kibbutz before rejecting coexistence efforts in favor of advocating for Palestinian resistance. The daughter of two Palestinian Christian parents  her mother came from Beit Sahour in the West Bank, and her father was a Palestinian citizen of Israel  she was born in Detroit shortly after her parents immigrated to the United States. She majored in Arabic studies, Judaic studies and political science at the University of Michigan.

Noura Khouri is Palestinian living in Oakland/Ohlone land and has worked for the past two decades as a human rights activist, campaign strategist and community organizer. Noura lived and worked in occupied Palestine with the International Solidarity Movement and other human rights organizations including Badil Refugee and Residency Center, Al-Haq and Holy Land Trust. She currently works as a preschool teacher, and serves as an Al-Awda Palestine Right to Return Coalition, National Committee Member, Green Party, Intl Delegate and part of Beloved Community Circles – where she conspires to destroy walls and build bridges of solidarity.

RSVP now!

75966
Oct
18
Wed
Briefing on CA’s Climate Accountability Lawsuit @ Online
Oct 18 @ 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm

Don’t forget to register in advance!

Join the California Attorney General’s Office for a deep-dive conversation about California’s climate accountability lawsuit against Big Oil companies, hosted by the Center for Climate Integrity, the Center for Biological Diversity, and Corporate Accountability.  Please register here.

On September 15th, California filed a major climate accountability lawsuit against Chevron, Exxon, Shell, ConocoPhillips, BP, and the American Petroleum Institute, making it the eighth state and largest economy to sue fossil fuel giants for their climate deception.

“Oil and gas companies have privately known the truth for decades—that the burning of fossil fuels leads to climate change—but have fed us lies and mistruths to further their record-breaking profits at the expense of our environment,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said.

From increasingly severe wildfire seasons to extreme heat and droughts, California’s worsening climate conditions have been fueled by Big Oil’s pollution and efforts to deceive the public. This lawsuit seeks to enjoin the deceptive practices and create an abatement fund for climate adaptation projects, which would help protect residents by ensuring that polluters, not communities, pay for the damages they knowingly caused.

 

75960
Stop the Santa Rita Jail Expansion! @ Restore Oakland
Oct 18 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm
sm_stopsantaritajailexpansion.jpg Alameda County is plotting to build an $80M “mental health” jail expansion – pulling more public funding out of vital community resources and pouring it into a system that cages, traumatizes, and too often leaves our loved ones to die. We are mobilizing against this proposed expansion and demanding divestment, diversion, and decarceration!!

Join us at Restore Oakland for a teach-in and community-building space. We will shed light on the realities of the proposed jail expansion, hear from folks who have been impacted by the current system, and collectively vision the care and safety that we all deserve. Dinner will be served!

RSVP here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/community-call-in-stop-the-jail-expansion-tickets-717983958347

https://linktr.ee/restoreoakland

https://www.instagram.com/p/CyO9aeESncA/

75945
Oakland Privacy: Fighting Against the Surveillance State @ Online
Oct 18 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Please email contact@oaklandprivacy.org a few days before the meeting to get up-to-date location information or obtain Zoom meeting access info.

(THE JANUARY 17TH MEETING, 2024 WAS MOVED TO JANUARY 24TH)


Join Oakland Privacy to organize against the surveillance state, police militarization and ICE, and to advocate for privacy, surveillance regulation of both corporations and the state, and government transparency, around the Bay and nationwide.

op-logo.2.1We fight against spy drones, facial recognition, tracking equipment, police body camera secrecy, anti-transparency laws and requirements for “backdoors” to cellphones; we oppose “pre-crime” and “thought-crime,” —  to list just a few invasions of our privacy by all levels of Government, and attempts to hide what government officials, employees and agencies are doing.

We draft and push for privacy legislation for City Councils, at the County level, and in Sacramento. We advocate in op-eds and in the streets. We stand in solidarity with Black Lives Matter and believe no one is illegal.

Check out some of what we worked on in 2022, 2021, 2020 and 2019.

Oakland Privacy originally came together in 2013 to fight against the Domain Awareness Center, Oakland’s citywide networked mass surveillance hub. OP was instrumental in stopping the DAC from becoming a city-wide spying network.  We helped fight and in 2018 helped win the fight against Urban Shield.

Our major projects currently include local legislation to regulate state surveillance (we got the strongest surveillance regulation ordinance in the country passed in Oakland!), supporting and opposing state legislation as appropriate, battling mass surveillance in the form of facial recognition and other analytics, mass aerial surveillance, ubiquitous license plate readers,  and street surveillance, and fighting to ensure local governments adhere to State privacy and transparency regulations.

On September 12th, 2019 we were presented with a Barlow Award by the Electronic Frontier Foundation for our work, and on March 16th, 2021 s James Madison Freedom of Information Award by the Northern California Society of Professional Journalists.

If you are interested in joining the Oakland Privacy email listserv, coming to a meeting, or have questions, send an email to:

contact@oaklandprivacy.org


Check out our website: http://oaklandprivacy.org/

Follow us on twitter: @oaklandprivacy, and/or on Mastodon at https://mastodon.social/@oaklandprivacy

75062
APTP General Meeting @ Online
Oct 18 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Register.

Anti Police-Terror Project is a Black-led, multi-racial, intergenerational coalition that seeks to build a replicable and sustainable model to eradicate police terror in communities of color. We support families surviving police terror in their fight for justice, documenting police abuses and connecting impacted families and community members with resources, legal referrals, and opportunities for healing.

Donate

75655
Oct
19
Thu
Film Premiere: FINDING THE MONEY @ Roxie Theater
Oct 19 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

the Bay Area premiere of FINDING THE MONEY as the Closing Night Film for the Green Film Festival of SF.

Can a new economic theory revolutionize our ability to tackle the climate crisis?

An underdog group of economists is on a mission to instigate a paradigm shift by flipping our understanding of the national debt — and the nature of money — upside down.

FINDING THE MONEY follows Stephanie Kelton on a journey through the controversial Modern Money Theory or “MMT”, as Kelton provocatively asserts the National Debt Clock that ticks ominously upwards in New York City is not actually a debt for us taxpayers at all, nor a burden for our grandchildren to pay back. Instead, Kelton describes the national debt as simply a record of the number of dollars created by the US federal government (the issuer of the US dollar) currently being held in our pockets, as assets, by the rest of us.

MMT bursts into the mainstream media, with journalists asking, “Have we been thinking about how the government spends money, all wrong?”

But top economists and politicians from across the political spectrum condemn the theory as “voodoo economics”, “crazy” and “a crackpot theory”. FINDING THE MONEY traces the conflict all the way back to the story we tell about money, injecting new hope and empowering democracies around the world to tackle the biggest challenges of the 21st century: from climate change to inequality.

Co-presented by the Berkeley Film Foundation, DocLands, and Filmmakers Collaborative SF

75970
Idea Makers – Caste Anti-Discrimination Veto @ David Brower Center
Oct 19 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

A captivating conversation that delves deep into the impact of this veto while examining how caste continues to impact people living in the South Asian diaspora and how the ongoing fight to eradicate caste apartheid intertwines with other civil rights movements in the U.S.

Berkeleyside’s Supriya Yelimeli will guide this discussion with journalist Sonia Paul, state Senator Aisha Wahab and Equality Labs founder Thenmozhi Soundararajan to understand the contemporary context of caste, Dalit activism and civil rights in America.
Last chance for discounted early bird tickets is Friday Oct. 13
Get your early-bird tickets for Idea Makers!

Doors open at 6 p.m. and the program will start promptly at 6:30 p.m.
Thenmozhi Soundararajan’s The Trauma of Caste will be available for purchase.

75892
Screening: FINDING THE MONEY @ Roxie Theater
Oct 19 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Our hometown CA *Bay Area premiere*! FINDING THE MONEY will be featured as the Closing Night Film of the Green Film Festival of San Francisco.

A major event Co-Presented by DocLands, Berkeley Film Foundation, and Filmmakers Collaborative SF.

Filmmakers in attendance for reception.

Tickets on sale Now!

Can a new economic theory revolutionize our ability to tackle the climate crisis?

An underdog group of economists is on a mission to instigate a paradigm shift, by flipping our understanding of the national debt — and the nature of money — upside down.

With a ‘debt ceiling’ debate and threat of default taking over headlines for the past six months in the US, many people find themselves asking – what is the national debt anyways? And why would the issuer of the US dollar ever need to borrow US dollars in the first place? With the enormous challenges of climate change and humanely caring for people on the horizon, the biggest obstacle presented is usually the question: ‘But how will we pay for it?” and “Where will we find the money?” According to Stephanie Kelton, face of the new economic theory known as “Modern Monetary Theory” or MMT, those aren’t the right questions to be asking a currency issuing nation. She asserts ‘Finding the money’ to pay for public priorities is never actually the problem — but real constraints are — namely real resources, labor, and inflation.

MMT bursts into the mainstream media, with journalists asking, “Have we been thinking about how the government spends money, all wrong?”

Top economists and politicians from across the political spectrum condemn the theory as “voodoo economics”, “crazy” and “a crackpot theory”. FINDING THE MONEY traces the conflict all the way back to the story we tell about money, injecting new hope and empowering democracies to tackle the biggest challenges of the 21st century and build the world we can envision.

Co-presented by the Berkeley Film Foundation, Doclands, and The Film Collaborative 

MORE DETAILS
75654
Berkeleyside Idea Makers – Caste Discrimination @ David Brower Center
Oct 19 @ 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm

Our live series, Berkeleyside Idea Makers, returns Oct. 19 with a powerful conversation with influential leaders who are driving change for equity.

In 2001, Dalit activism and caste discrimination in the U.S. were thrust into the spotlight when a Berkeley landlord was convicted of sex trafficking young Dalit women from India. Over two decades later, Assembly Bill 403 — prohibiting caste discrimination in California — is making its way through the legislative process.

Join us for a captivating conversation that delves deep into the core of this important bill while examining how caste continues to impact people living in the South Asian diaspora and how the ongoing fight to eradicate caste apartheid intertwines with other civil rights movements in the U.S.

Berkeleyside’s Supriya Yelimeli will guide this dynamic discussion with journalist Sonia Paul, state Senator Aisha Wahab and Equality Labs founder Thenmozhi Soundararajan to understand the contemporary context of caste, Dalit activism and civil rights in America.

This event will take place at the David Brower Center. Doors open at 6 p.m. and the program will start promptly at 6:30 p.m. Berkeleyside would like to thank Red Oak Realty and Kaiser Permanente for their generous sponsorship support of Idea Makers.

Prepare to be enlightened, engaged and inspired.

More about our guests:

Senator Aisha Wahab: Born in New York City, to Afghan refugees pursuing the American Dream, Aisha Wahab was placed in foster care when tragedy struck her family before she could tie her own shoes. Senator Wahab prioritizes policies that impact the lives of seniors, women, and children; addressing housing affordability, civic engagement, education, and economic inequality. She served as a Hayward Councilmember, Chair of the Alameda County Human Relations Commission, Women’s March organizer, and a non-profit Board Member for several Bay Area organizations. She was also selected as a member of the White House Roundtable of Afghan-American Leaders. She received her B.A. from San Jose State University and an MBA from CSU East Bay, and is currently California State Senator for District 10.

Thenmozhi Soundararajan is a Dalit American artist, theorist, and activist who works on the issues of race, caste and gender equity. She is the Executive Director of Equality Labs and the author of The Trauma of Caste. She is a co-founder of the Californians for Caste Equity Coalition which brought hundreds of organizations and thousands of Californians together to work on the historic bill SB403 to end caste discrimination.

Sonia Paul teaches audio storytelling at Solano State Prison with KALW’s Uncuffed, a training program and podcast based in California prisons. As an independent journalist, writer and producer, she specializes in investigating how power hierarchies and transnational issues impact state systems and individual and community identity. Her stories have published widely, in outlets like WIRED, Mother Jones, Harper’s, National Geographic, 70 Million and the BBC World Service. Sonia has received several grants and fellowships to support her work, including from the Periplus Writing Collective, AAJA, SAJA, International Women’s Media Foundation, Economic Hardship Reporting Project, Religion News Foundation, Fund for Investigative Journalism and Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism. Previously based in Japan and India, Sonia is a Bay Area native. She lives in Oakland.

Supriya Yelimeli is a housing and homelessness reporter for Berkeleyside and joined the staff in May 2020 after contributing reporting since 2018 as a freelance writer. Yelimeli grew up in Fremont and has written for outlets across the Bay Area and Southern California, including as a breaking news reporter for Bay City News, and a contributor at Mission Local, NBC Los Angeles and the Pacific Coast Business Times. Yelimeli earned her undergraduate degree at UC Santa Barbara where she was Editor-in-Chief of the Daily Nexus. She’s always reachable by Twitter and email for tips, criticism and all other feedback.

Berkeleyside thanks Red Oak Realty and Kaiser Permanente for their generous sponsorship support of Idea Makers.

75695
Oct
20
Fri
Report On 50th Anniversary Of Chilean Coup With Chilean American UTPE Member Lisa Milos @ Labor Education Project On AFL-CIO Operations
Oct 20 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

This is the 50th anniversary of the US and AFL-CIO supported coup in Chile in 1973. The repression and privatization that the coup and Pinochet brought still torments the people and country.

Join Elisabeth Milos, a Chilean American and member of CWA UPTE UCSF as well as LEPAIO who will be reporting on her trip to Chile on September 11th. She will also show video from her trip.

The Labor Education Project on The AFL-CIO International Operations LEPAIO was formed to educate US trade unionists and workers about the role of the AFL-CIO around the world. The AFL-CIO is receiving over $75 million for the operations of the Solidarity Center which has is in 62 countries around the world and has been engaged in supporting pro-corporate unions and backing US coups and interventions.

LEPAIO
https://aflcio-int.education
info [at] aflcio-int.education
Co-sponsored by KPOO WorkWeek

75946
Oct
21
Sat
Mme Mildred Aristide: Speaking on Haiti @ First Presbyterian Church of Oakland
Oct 21 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

The Haiti Emergency Relief Fund and Haiti Action Committee invite those who are able to attend the event : We are honored to have Mme Mildred Aristide as guest speaker.

Live music: Tarika Lewis and Destiny Muhammad, Francisco Herrera
      Speakers: Pierre Labossiere and Walter Riley
Peace and more Peace in Haiti and in our fragile world.
Sister Maureen

 

 

76084
Strike Debt Bay Area Book Group: Jackson Rising Redux: Building the Future in the Present. @ Online
Oct 21 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Email strike.debt.bay.area@gmail.com a few days beforehand for the online invite.

For our October meeting we are reading Parts 5 and 6 of Jackson Rising Redux: Building the Future in the Present. (PM Press, Amazon).  For our  November  meeting  we  are reading  Parts  7,  8 and  the  Afterwords.

Mississippi is the poorest state in the US, with the highest percentage of Black people and a history of vicious racial terror. Black resistance at a time of global health, economic, and climate crisis is the backdrop and context for the drama captured in this new and revised collection of essays. Cooperation Jackson, founded in 2014 in Mississippi’s capital to develop an economically uplifting democratic “solidarity economy,” is anchored by a network of worker-owned, self-managed cooperative enterprises. The organization developed in the context of the historic election of radical Mayor Chokwe Lumumba, lifetime human rights attorney. Subsequent to Lumumba’s passing less than one year after assuming office, the network developed projects both inside and outside of the formal political arena. In 2020, Cooperation Jackson became the center for national and international coalition efforts, bringing together progressive peoples from diverse trade union, youth, church, and cultural movements. This long-anticipated anthology details the foundations behind those successful campaigns. It unveils new and ongoing strategies and methods being pursued by the movement for grassroots-centered Black community control and self-determination, inspiring partnership and emulation across the globe.

Strike Debt Bay Area hosts this non-technical book group discussion monthly on new and radical economic thinking. Previous readings have included Doughnut EconomicsLimitsBanking on the PeopleCapital and Its Discontents, How to Be an Anti-Capitalist in the 21st Century, The Deficit Myth,  Revenge Capitalism, the Edge of Chaos blog symposium , Re-enchanting the World: Feminism and the Politics of the Commons, The Optimist’s TelescopeMission Economy: A Moonshot Guide to Changing Capitalism, Exploring Degrowth, The Origin of Wealth, Mine!, The Dawn of Everything  A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things, Beyond Money, Less is More,  Cannibal Capitalism,  Debt, the First 5000 Years , Poverty, By America,, and End Times.

75643
Is Non-Monogamy a Green Party family Value? @ Online
Oct 21 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

The Oakland Greens Virtual Town Hall
Can non-monogamy be a family value? — Join the discussion — The Green Party has many Consensual Ethical Non-Monogamous (CENM) members. When the Oakland Greens added CENM language to promotional graphics and merchandise, it sparked a lively debate. Check our YouTube channel for those discussions. That debate gave way to having the discussion for one of our townhalls. So for our final VTH event of the year, we will discuss the idea of whether CENM is a Green Party family value. Our special guest for this event has over twenty years’ experience living this ideal. Join our regular panel as we deep dive into another progressive issue. Go to oaklandgreens.org/events, Eventbrite Oakland Greens, or Facebook Oakland Greens. For any questions email contact@oaklandgreens.org or oaklandgreenparty@gmail.com

Vicente has been CENM since 1999. CENM directly navigated Vicente through their life journey to the social justice movement. Vicente’s experience includes working with the Bay Area’s Midnight Special Law Collective of the National Lawyers Guild (NLG) for five years, and the Prevention of Trafficking project for the Oakland Greens since 2019. They also have conducted a Radical Love workshop on prejudice within the Poly/Kink community and organized a sex worker union. Since 2012, Vicente has been the Event Producer for the Oakland Greens.

Please register by tonight (Friday), via Eventbrite, herehttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-oakland-greens-vth-october-is-non-monogamy-a-green-party-family-value-tickets-560051859187?aff=ebdssbdestsearch

76082
Oct
22
Sun
Families Stand Up For Kids in Gaza! @ Splash Pad Park
Oct 22 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

One million children in Gaza are being bombed and cut off from food and clean water. Over a thousand have already been killed. Bay Area kids, families, and friends say: NO MORE. We call for an immediate ceasefire and humanitarian aid for Gazan kids.

Join us for a family-friendly action with street mural painting, drumming, interactive activities, and more. All are welcome!

Can you volunteer at the action or help hold banners on nearby freeway overpasses? Sign up here! https://forms.gle/43Wzq5MUSdta3kXD9

76091
Group Discussion on the Crisis in Gaza @ Online
Oct 22 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

ZOOM LINK
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81133350622?pwd=dUUyUWppbWt6djVTaElISUhocXpSUT09


Open discussion.

Palestinian-American Professor Rashid Khalidi has described Gaza as “a pressure cooker” that “had to explode.”   Israeli holocaust scholar Raz Segal has decried Israel’s assault on Gaza as “a textbook case of genocide.”

The Palestinian military action in Gaza this week shows that “the colonial powers can no longer believe they can force people to live under the conditions Israel has subjected Palestinians to and expect no retaliation of the oppressed” says Khalidi.  The Palestinian rebellion is a historic development in the Palestinian struggle that also signals a paradigm shift in the world situation.

After brief presentations, ICSS will host an open discussion on this topic. Bring your comments and questions.

For background, see:

21-minute video, “Why is there a Gaza ‘Strip’ at all?” by Israeli peace activist Miko Peled whose father was once the Israeli general in charge of Gaza.

https://www.patreon.com/posts/why-is-there-at-90906351?utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link

CGTN (Chinese) correspondent breaks down in tears while reporting in Gaza � YouTube

What’s the Israel-Palestine conflict about? A simple guide

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/10/9/whats-the-israel-palestine-conflict-about-a-simple-guide

Meeting ID: 811 3335 0622
Passcode: ICSS2717rs

Dial by your location
+1 669 444 9171 US
+1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdVC04xvn9

76086
Occupy Oakland General Assembly @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Oct 22 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm

NOTE: During the Plague Year of 2020 GA will be held every week or two on Zoom. To find out the exact time a date get on the Occupy Oakland email list my sending an email to:

occupyoakland-subscribe@lists.riseup.net

 

The Occupy Oakland General Assembly meets every Sunday at 4 PM at Oscar Grant Plaza amphitheater at 14th Street & Broadway near the steps of City Hall. If for some reason the amphitheater is being used otherwise and/or OGP itself is inaccessible, we will meet at Kaiser Park, right next to the statues, on 19th St. between San Pablo and Telegraph. If it is raining (as in RAINING, not just misting) at 4:00 PM we meet in the basement of the Omni Collective, 4799 Shattuck Ave., Oakland. (Note: we tend to meet at 3:00 PM during the cooler months from November to early March after Daylights Savings Time.)

On every ‘last Sunday’ we meet a little earlier at 3 PM to have a community potluck to which all are welcome.

OO General Assembly has met on a continuous basis for over six years, since October 2011! Our General Assembly is a participatory gathering of Oakland community members and beyond, where everyone who shows up is treated equally. Our Assembly and the process we have collectively cultivated strives to reach agreement while building community.

At the GA committees, caucuses, and loosely associated groups whose representatives come voluntarily report on past and future actions, with discussion. We encourage everyone participating in the Occupy Oakland GA to be part of at least one associated group, but it is by no means a requirement. If you like, just come and hear all the organizing being done! Occupy Oakland encourages political activity that is decentralized and welcomes diverse voices and actions into the movement.

General Assembly Standard Agenda

Welcome & Introductions
Reports from Committees, Caucuses, & Independent Organizations
Announcements
(Optional) Discussion Topic

Occupy Oakland activities and contact info for some Bay Area Groups with past or present Occupy Oakland members.

Occupy Oakland Web Committee: (web@occupyoakland.org)
Strike Debt Bay Area : strikedebtbayarea.tumblr.com
Berkeley Post Office Defenders:http://berkeleypostofficedefenders.wordpress.com/
Alan Blueford Center 4 Justice:https://www.facebook.com/ABC4JUSTICE
Oakland Privacy Working Group:https://oaklandprivacy.wordpress.com
Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity: prisonerhungerstrikesolidarity.wordpress.com/
Bay Area AntiRepression: antirepression@occupyoakland.org
Biblioteca Popular: http://tinyurl.com/mdlzshy
Interfaith Tent: www.facebook.com/InterfaithTent
Port Truckers Solidarity: oaklandporttruckers.wordpress.com
Bay Area Intifada: bayareaintifada.wordpress.com
Transport Workers Solidarity: www.transportworkers.org
Fresh Juice Party (aka Chalkupy) freshjuiceparty.com/chalkupy-gallery
Sudo Room: https://sudoroom.org
Omni Collective: https://omnicommons.org/
First They Came for the Homeless: https://www.facebook.com/pages/First-they-came-for-the-homeless/253882908111999
Sunflower Alliance: http://www.sunflower-alliance.org/
Bay Area Public School: http://thepublicschool.org/bay-area

San Francisco based groups:
Occupy Bay Area United: www.obau.org
Occupy Forum: (see OBAU above)
San Francisco Projection Department: http://tinyurl.com/kpvb3rv

64398
Oct
25
Wed
“Beyond Bars” : new documentary on Chesa Boudin @ Koret Auditorium, SF Public Library
Oct 25 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

The Intercept is hosting the San Francisco premiiere of Brave New Films’s new documentary on Chesa Boudin

“Beyond Bars”� traces Boudin’s childhood with members of the Weather Underground all the way to his controversial tenure as San Francisco’s district attorney � exposing thee punitive and traumatic impact of mass incarceration on children, families, and communities.

The screening will be followed by a panel discussion featuring Boudin, The Intercept political reporter Akela Lacy, Brave New Films president and director Robert Greenwald, and featured film guests Gloria Berry and Joseph Bell Jr.

Admission is free, but tickets are limited� — and as a loyal reader and supporter of The Intercept, we’re extending a special invitation to be there.

Secure your FREE tickets to join us in San Francisco on Wednesday, October 25 at 5 p.m. PT.

The Intercept’s fiscal sponsor is First Look Institute, a 501(c)(3) charitable organization (tax ID number 80-0951255).

75879
Oct
28
Sat
Extinction Rebellion US Open House @ Online
Oct 28 @ 11:00 am – 1:00 pm

In a world that seems increasingly incomprehensible and out of control, let’s find meaning in our connections with each other and in collective action. Join the XRUS Open House  and get involved with a mid-November action to protect the Earth from corporate greed.

XRUS Open House Hosted by Media/Messaging & Art Working Group

This Open House will focus on the work of the Media & Messaging and Art Working Group. It will include reports and reflection on recent XR actions and regional break out rooms to discuss the following topics:

  1. How can XRUS media and messaging best support chapter activity?
  2. What do you expect from XRUS media and messaging?
  3. What would you like to see in a national newsletter?

We will then have a discussion about activist mediawork, beginning with a brief presentation about XR Chicago’s experience with media and messaging.

The Open House is expected to last 90 minutes.

Please register here

76354
Oct
29
Sun
The Contining Crisis in Gaza @ Online
Oct 29 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm


Speaker: Nora Barrows-Friedman

The crisis in Gaza has not improved since last week. We have invited Nora Barrows-Friedman of The Electoric Intifada to lead our discussion.

Our speaker, Nora Barrows-Friedman is a journalist, editor, radio broadcaster, musician, and mother. Since 2012 she has served as associate editor and audio production director for The Electronic Intifada, an independent publication focused on Palestinian issues. She is the author of In Our Power: US Students Organize for Justice in Palestine (Just World Books, 2014).

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81133350622?pwd=dUUyUWppbWt6djVTaElISUhocXpSUT09

Meeting ID: 811 3335 0622
Passcode: ICSS2717rs

Dial by your location
+1 669 444 9171 US
+1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kdVC04xvn9

76358
Gill Tract Harvest Fest @ Gill Tract Community Farm
Oct 29 @ 11:00 am – 4:00 pm

 

Harvest fest 2023 UCGTCF - flyer_sponsors.1 (2).png

76231