Calendar

9896
Oct
8
Tue
OCCUPY FORUM PRESENTS “The Struggle for Free Speech at CCNY, 1931-42″ with Carol Smith @ Global Exchange, 2nd floor, near 16th St. BART
Oct 8 @ 1:00 am – 3:00 am

Presentation will include police surveillance photos, cartoons and graphics documenting the student and faculty activism at the City College of NY spawned by the Depression and the rise of fascism in Europe. This activism brought repeated crackdowns by the administration and culminated in the dismissal of 50 CCNY faculty & staff — the largest academic purge in US history.

52936
Rally to Save Albany Bulb! MARCH and CAMPOUT on Solano Avenue! @ Albany City Hall
Oct 8 @ 1:00 am – 6:45 am

Party/Street Party

The City of Albany plans on evicting the residents of the Albany Bulb sometime this month. The Albany Bulb is home to over sixty residents who have made the Bulb a home and a community like nothing else in the Bay Area. If evicted, the residents of the Bulb will have no where to go but the streets of Albany, a city with next to no support for its homeless.

Rally at the Albany City Council this Monday at 6:00pm! At 6:30 we will participate in the public comments meeting and make sure everyone in Albany knows about the Bulb and what’s at stake.

Afterwards there will be a march down Solano Ave. for an overnight camp out and demonstration.

Show your solidarity, lets save the Bulb!
Bring camping gear and tents!

Learn more at:

Share the Bulb.
Facebook event & RSVP.
Notice on IndyBay.

52945
Oct
9
Wed
Speak Out for Lynne Stewart @ Diane Feinstein's San Francisco Office
Oct 9 @ 12:00 am – 1:30 am

Lynne Stewart’s burthday is October 8th and rallies, vigils and speak outs will be held throughout the country. In the Bay Area, we will gather at 5 p.m. and speak out from 5:30 – 6:30 p.m. outside the offices of Senator Dianne Feinstein, Market and Montgomery in San Francisco. Our goal continues to be to win compassionate release for our fellow Guild member, who is suffering from cancer and turning 74 years old. Senator Feinstein has a unique role to play as a member of the Judiciary Committee.

There are two things you can do. (1) Join us on October 8th to call on Feinstein to exert pressure over the Department of Justice and Bureau of Prisons to release Lynne Stewart and accelerate compassionate release for all people in federal prisons. And (2) click here to add your name to the new petition to free Lynne Stewart.

Sponsored by the National Lawyer’s Guild.

52695
Unity Rally to Stop Attacks on BART Workers @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Oct 9 @ 12:00 am – 2:00 am

No Concessions for BART workers! Fight union-busting! Stop Scabbing! BART managers want to provoke a strike when the 60-day “cooling off period” ends at midnight on Oct. 10 and blame it on the transit unions. Thousands of other Bay Area workers are working without a contract.

All out on Oct. 10! BART is threatening to run scab trains and unleash cops to protect strikebreakers. We can’t allow this vicious anti-labor attack to prevail in the San Francisco Bay Area, a union stronghold!

Defend George Figueroa, former ATU strike coordinator. Demand the DA drop bogus misdemeanor charges of falsifying a police report: Full Amnesty for Brother Figueroa!

Fight the attacks on working people — cut transit fares; restore bus service and all other programs the community needs to survive; good jobs at living wages for all!

Stop the victimization of the black and brown community, especially the police murders of black and brown youth!

Stop letting them play divide and conquer! Come to a labor and community rally to stop the attacks on BART workers, labor, and the community. No More Austerity Cuts! Unity Rally organized by ATU Local 1555 & endorsed by SF Labor Council

For info visit www.atu1555.org or www.transportworkers.org

Facebook event & RSVP.

52869
The Prisoner-led Movement to End Solitary Confinement Continues! @ State Capitol
Oct 9 @ 6:30 pm – Oct 10 @ 12:00 am

All Out to Sacramento Wednesday October 9!

11:30 am: Opening Rally
1:00-3:30 pm: California Public Safety Hearings on Solitary Confinement & Human Rights
4:00 pm: Closing Rally

During their historic 60-day hunger strike, California prisoners were able to endure incredible violence from prison administrators and garner international support for their cause. As a result, on October 9, California’s Public Safety Committee will hold the first of several promised hearings to address and take action around solitary confinement and human rights abuses in California prisons. Former prisoners, loved ones, lawyers, experts and advocates will testify before the legislature and rally with the people.

These Public Safety hearings provide a key opportunity for us to take the next steps toward ending solitary confinement. Mobilize, rally and continue to stand in solidarity with the Hunger Strikers! Continue the fight to win their demands!

“We will be with the prisoners in the courts, in the legislature, and out in the community. We will use every venue available to us, until the torture is ended.”

Bring signs and art to make the rallies visually stunning! Self-care and community-care: Bring a lawn chair if you want to rest at the rally and some water/snacks to stay healthy.

Need a ride? Have a car and can offer rides? Please RSVP to Tynan@curbprisonspending.org by Monday, October 7.

Carpools will leave from MacArthur BART in Oakland at 9:30am on Wednesday.

More info. Original Notice.

52884
Support Richmond eminent domain Wednesday October 9 @ Oakland City Hall/Oscar Grant Plaza
Oct 9 @ 11:00 pm – Oct 10 @ 12:30 am

Support Richmond eminent domain Wednesday October 9

Join the demonstration in Oakland to support the Richmond local principal reduction program, called by ACCE/Home Defenders League with the endorsement of Strike Debt Bay Area.  Richmond has offered to restore financial stability to hundreds of homeowners by buying their distressed mortgages and negotiating new loans at fair market value–or seizing the mortgages by eminent domain if necessary.  The banks holding these mortgages ignored the offers, Wells Fargo and other banks filed a law suit (dismissed for the time being) and Wall Street withheld purchasing a city bond.  Wall Street is fighting back–and so are we!  Show your opposition to the 1% and your support for Richmond’s creative campaign to protect homeowners.  The demonstration will also push the Oakland City Council to make a strong statement to the banks that will express Oakland’s support for Richmond.

For more background information on the Richmond campaign see http://strikedebt.org/em-dom-richmond/

52875
The Egyptian Crisis: A Personal Account and a Report Back. @ 120 Latimer Hall
Oct 9 @ 11:00 pm – Oct 10 @ 12:30 am

Almost three years have passed since the events that led to the ousting of Hosni Mubarak after 30 years of autocratic rule. In her talk, Shimaa Helmy, a young human rights activist, will give a first-hand account of the unfolding crisis in Egypt, the state of human rights and media activists, and will offer some insight into what is next for Egypt.

The event is hosted by: HASS Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society.
Event cosponsors: Center for African Studies and Center for Middle Eastern Studies at UC Berkeley

Facebook event & RSVP. Flyer available in comments.

52890
Oct
10
Thu
Low Wage Capitalism by Fred Goldstein: A Class. @ Workers World Offices, Oakland
Oct 10 @ 1:30 am – 3:30 am

What the new globalized, high-tech imperialism means for the class struggle in the U.S.

Facebook event & RSVP.

52891
Chalkupy!! Chalkupy Celebrates the 2nd Anniversary of the Occupy Oakland Encampment. @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Oct 10 @ 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm

This beautiful poster by Sandy Sanders will be Chalkupied! 2nd Anniversary activities will commence an hour later.

 photo oo-2nd-anniversary-color-v2_zpsd2ff1813.jpg
52933
2nd Anniversary of the Occupy Oakland encampment @ Oscar Grant Plaza amphitheater
Oct 10 @ 9:00 pm – Oct 11 @ 5:00 am

What’s Up?.

Come join comrades. Talk. Reflect. Enjoy. Music. Speakers. Food will be served, and movies will be shown as soon as it gets dark. Other activities as they develop!

Read an article with more details on the Anniversary Party here.

Theme.

Solidarity with the 60 day California Prisoners’ Hunger Strike and the 60 hour Solidarity Fast by two OO participants, opposition to solitary confinement, privatization of prisons and the rest of our commons.

Schedule.

2:00 PM – 4:00 PM. Music by Rocker T, JuJu, Street Black, TMac and possibly others.

4:00 PM: Keynote speakers:

Sarah Shourd, kidnapped and in solitary confinement in Iran before Occupy began, and who spoke to Occupy Oakland days after the encampment started.

Fred Hampton Jr. (either in person or via speaker phone) – See more at:

4:40 PM – 5:00 PM: Other speakers, including Occupy Oakland’s own Laleh and activist lawyer Dan Siegel with an update on Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity happenings.

5:00 PM – 6:00 PM: Reports by activist groups in an around Oakland. 3:00 minutes per group spokesperson, or
more if the number of reports to be given allows.

6:00 PM – 7:30 PM. Food, camaraderie, enjoying the evening.

7:30 PM. Movies! (Some new Occupy Oakland videos, other titles TBA)

—–

View archived images of our original occupation flyers! Here’s one:

 photo original-oo-oct-10-people_zps17d2a680.jpg

52465
Oct
11
Fri
Meetup to support BART Strikers if the BART Strike happens. @ West Oakland Bart
Oct 11 @ 1:00 pm – Oct 12 @ 1:00 am

BART workers could go out on strike at 12:01 AM Friday, October 11th. BART management may attempt to run BART trains between West Oakland and Embarcadero.

Sponsored by the Transit Workers Support Committee.

52946
Oct
12
Sat
Bum’s Paradise Screening and Action Against Sierra Club’s Pro Albany Bulb Eviction Policy @ Sierra Club offices
Oct 12 @ 1:30 am – 4:30 am

On Friday at 6:30 pm we will be screening “Bum’s Paradise”, a documentary about the Albany Bulb, outside the Sierra Club’s bi-monthly “Green Friday” event. The Sierra Club is pushing a project on the land that would result in the eviction of the Bulb’s 60+ residents. Our screening will demonstrate to the Sierra Club that there is public support for the continued existence of the Bulb.

Food will be provided but bring blankets, folding chairs, mats, and warm clothing to stay warm!

“Bums’ Paradise is a 53-minute documentary that depicts the lives of the men and women who lived in the ten-year-old Albany Landfill community prior to their eviction. It follows them through the eviction and documents them one month after the eviction. The film emphasizes their concepts of community as well as the amazing art that they created. Instead of being a documentary about homelessness, Bums’ Paradise considers the question: What if the homeless — the indigent, the bums — told their own stories?”

http://www.bumsparadise.com/synopsis_new.html
http://sharethebulb.org/

52997
March Against Monsanto. March Across the Golden Gate. @ Golden Gate Bridge Plaza
Oct 12 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Come to the Plaza at 11 am … park below … carpool … take the bus … bike … get dropped off … whatever way you can get there come join us!

More info & RSVP.

52885
Oct
13
Sun
CopBlock: Police Accountability Tour Stop. @ 16th St. Bart
Oct 13 @ 4:00 am – 6:45 am

The Police Accountability Tour, on the road from mid-August until December, will maximize police accountability by facilitating connections and collaboration among those who know that badges don’t grant extra rights, and through skill sharing and the capturing and dissemination of relevant content.
This tour will help further connect individuals involved with Cop Block, Cop Watch, and Peaceful Streets groups as well as all police-watching groups and people around the world, so we can together advance a reality free from institutionalized violence.

On Saturday, Oct. 12th we’ll have a meetup and patrol in the Mission area of San Francisco. If you’re around you should come on out! There will be a good crew present, lots of good information and ideas shared throughout the night, and almost certainly there will emerge some solid connections and working relationships.

n Saturday, Oct. 19th two short documentaries will be screened at New Parkway Theater – Manufacturing Guilt: A Short Film on the Innocence of Mumia Abu-Jamal
 and The Battle for Oscar Grant Plaza: OPD’s War Against Occupy Oakland.

Check back here for exact location of meetup.

More info.

Berkeley Cop Watch.

52895
Come out on SUNDAY to the Gill Tract Farm for a Community Field Day!
Oct 13 @ 5:00 pm – 11:00 pm

Come out on SUNDAY to the Gill Tract Farm

for a Community Field Day!

THIS SUNDAY:  Oct 13th, 10am-4pm.

For the first time, a community event is being planned between the College of Natural Resources and a coalition of community groups (which includes Occupy the Farm), to discuss what we’d like to see happen on the Gill Tract!  1.5 Acres has been allocated for the project, so come check it out and let’s brainstorm!

 

SCHEDULE

10:00 Opening Ceremony

10:10 Welcome!

  • Glenda Humiston,USDA Rural Development California State Director
  • Keith Gilless, Dean, UC Berkeley College of Natural Resources
  • Daniel Cardozo, Community Farmer-Researcher & Albany Farm Alliance member
  • Miguel Altieri, Professor, Department of Environmental, Science, Policy, and Management, UC Berkeley

10:20 Intro to Community Agroecology Research Project (Professor Miguel Altieri)

10:30-12:00 Ongoing Workshops & Activities

12:00-1:00 Lunch – With vegetables from the Gill Tract Farm!

1:00-2:00 Storytelling Circle – “Where We’ve Been” and “Visions for the Future”
With storytellers from our community: Hank Herrera, Dig Deep Farms; Miguel Altieri, UC Berkeley Professor, Agroecology; Jeff Romm UC Berkeley Professor, Environmental Science, Policy & Management; Alexa Hauser, Albany Farm Alliance; Keith Gilless, Dean, UCB College of Natural Resources; Joy Moore, Garden Teacher and Community Food Activist

2:00-4:00 Community Forum & Breakout Groups
Visions for the Future: Share your ideas about how the Gill Tract can serve the community as a center for education and research and connect with others who share your vision.

ACTIVITIES

Plot 1   Draw and color with children of all ages.  Walk through the rows and talk about the different vegetables that are planted, then draw and color what we see!
Plot 2   Bob for apples and guided plot tours
Plot 3   Read about the abundance of food produced on this plot sinceAugust 10th.
Plot 4   Harvest squash and cucumbers for today’s salad andlearn how 
to save the seeds.
Plot 5   Wander and searchthrough our plot in search of answers to clues. “Nature” prizes for completing your lottery/bingo card
Plot 6   Plant a patch of narrow leaf milkweed as a Monarch butterfly way station (habitat) +giveaway of seeds and information
Plot 7   Dig in the soil and identify plants, both loved and misunderstood.
Plot 8   Plant rainbow seedlings to take away, adorn scarecrows, and paint signs
Plot 9   Scavenge & hunt for all ages
Plot 10  Dye natural fabrics and yarns with flower dyes. Stamppaper with handcut vegetable stamps. Identify – unusual and useful plants

Area A: 10:30-12:00
Kid’s Activity: Dig for Worms and Other Critters!
UC Cooperative Extension, Alameda
Kids and families CAN touch the soils and learn about worm anatomy and soils ecology together, and the role those decomposers play in healthy plant growth.  

WORKSHOPS

Phat Beets Table: 10:30-12:00
Kimchi making Workshop
Phat Beets Produce 
Make, taste and take home your own small jar of kimchi to watch ferment!

Big Circle: 10:30-11:15
Encouraging Pollinator Habitat and Conservation in Home Gardens
Professor Claire Kremen, Hillary Sardinas (grad student), Emily Kearney (grad student), Leithen M’gonigle (post doc), Kerry Cutler (lab manager) from the Dept. of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, UC Berkeley.  Appreciate the importance of pollinators for food security; Discover some of the diversity of pollinators in our area; Learn how to support bee populations in your garden, through creating both nesting and floral resources for a variety of bees; Learn to make an Osmia colony in your backyard.

Little Circle 2: 10:30-12:00
Native California bees are everywhere, just look around your garden!
Professor Gordon Frankie, Dept. of Environmental Science, Policy and Management

Little Circle 1: 11:00-12:00
Participatory Mapping Project
Adam Calo, PhD Student in Dept. of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, UC Berkeley
See how Local Ground—an innovative mapping technology– can be utilized as a visioning tool to capture diverse perspectives on what the Gill Tract means to them & how it could be used in the future.

Welcome Table: 11:30-12:00
Codornices Creek Walk!
Amy Merrill, Senior Riparian Ecologist, Stillwater Sciences
Explore Codornices Creek to discover what lives in urban creeks and their potential for restoration.

SOGA space: 11:00-12:00
Seed Babies Workshop
The Berkeley Student Organic Gardening Association (SOGA) 
Make balls of seeds, clay, and soil that you can throw into empty plots of land to encourage life. The technique originated in the 1970’s when the Guerilla Gardening Movement threw balloons filled with tomato seeds and fertilizer into empty city lots to beautify the streets. We will make clay capsules with moisture in them to encourage germination after landing. Come learn how to make your own seed baby with clay, compost, and other materials.  You can take one home for your own garden, or maybe use it as a form of protest to beautify our Bay Area landscape.

Area A, 11am-12:00
Soil Sampling
Professor of Agroecology, Miguel Altieri  
Take soil samples of the Area A for analysis of basic nutrient levels, pH and lead levels. Help spread lime and also sow winter cover crops that will help enhance organic matter levels necessary for spring 2014 plantings.

Plot 7: 11:15-12:00.
Urban Ag 101
Joy Moore- Garden teacher and Community Food Activist
The further back we can look the further ahead we will see! This soil, this land is sacred as is all soil, all land! The future of urban agriculture is not new – it is a reflection of the past; or at least it should be. We are gathered here today to discuss what the future might be, what we may envision and realize will happen here on this soil, on this land. We must trust that the seeds we plant today in this soil, on this land may grow to be the future!

Big Circle, 11:15-12:00
Cultivating Resilience in the Law: Policy Initiatives and Innovative Strategies for Just Local Economies 
Chris Tittle, Sustainable Economies Law Center
Our food system is not well served by today’s predominant food business models, which incentivize growth, shareholder profit maximization, absentee ownership, and exploitation of land and people. Converse with the Sustainable Economies Law Center about creative strategies for creating local wealth and community ownership, including food policy initiatives that remove legal barriers and models for community-owned food enterprise.

Master Gardener’s Booth, All Day
Master Gardeners – Plant Doctor Booth
Get Help from a Trained Master Gardener from the UC Cooperative Extension Alameda/Master Gardener Program!
Alameda County Master Gardeners help gardeners by answering questions about plants and plant/garden problems and extending the information they have learned through community events and projects, including seminars, demonstration workshops and newspaper articles.  Volunteers answer gardening questions on a plant doctor hotline, through email, at local farmers markets, at our three demonstration gardens, and at various community events such as the Alameda County Fair.

UC CalFresh Nutrition Education Booth
MyPlate, Fruits & Vegetables, and Physical Activity
UC CalFresh – All Day

 
53005
Occupy the Farm: Family Day and Community Forum at the Gill Tract. @ Gill Tract (Jackson & Ahlone entrance)
Oct 13 @ 5:00 pm – 11:00 pm

10:00 AM – Open Field. Play, Check out workshops.

12:00 Noon – Lunch & bakeoff.

1:00 PM – Storytelling.

2:00 PM – Community Forum. Share ideas for next season’s projects.

Facebook page and color poster.

52632
Oct
14
Mon
Using Eminent Domain to Prevent Foreclosures in Richmond: A Talk by Mike Parker. @ Niebyl-Proctor Library
Oct 14 @ 12:00 am – 1:30 am

Mike Parker will give an overview of the innovative program, “Richmond CARES”, which was proposed by Richmond’s Green Mayor Gayle McLaughlin to use the City’s power of eminent domain to benefit underwater homeowners.

Mike Parker is an organizer with Richmond Progressive Alliance. He is the editor of RPA’s website and newsletter. RPA works with the Mayor and Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE) in the program to stop blight, keep neighborhoods stable, stop foreclosures, and increase community wealth.

Topics to be discussed include:
– What is Richmond CARES?
– Who will Richmond CARES help?
– How likely is it that the program will expand to help more people over time?
– Will the City be buying homes?
– How does this actually work?
– Can the homeowner “flip” the home?
– How will this affect home values in the community?
– Isn’t the value of a mortgage the same as the value of the home that secures it?
– How will the City pay for this program?
– Will the program operators and funders make money off this program?
– What about the charges that this is a Wall Street scheme to “take another bite out of Richmond”?
– Will the City make money off this program?
– Is the City’s plan unfair to the current investors who own the loans?
– Are pension funds helped or hurt by the program?
– Is there any risk to City?
– Will people who go through this program have to pay income tax on the loan reduction?
– Could this program cause the cost of mortgage lending to go up in Richmond?
– Will this program hurt the City’s credit rating and its ability to buy, sell or refinance bonds?
– What is a Joint Powers Authority?

– Is this a legal use of eminent domain?
Numerous top legal scholars and law firms confirm that it is legal, yes. The public purpose of reducing foreclosure and blight is clear, and eminent domain has in fact been used in many cases to acquire “intangible” property including financial instruments. See these articles for more on this topic:
Washington Post “Is Richmond’s mortgage seizure scheme even legal?”
New York Fed’s Current Issues in Economics and Finance “Paying Paul and Robbing No One”
Stanford Journal of Law, Business, and Finance “It Takes a Village”

– Who is most opposed to Richmond CARES and why?
Essentially the battle is between the interests of real estate speculators, and the interest of Richmond residents who want to keep their neighborhoods stable, keep people in their own homes instead of forcing them to rent, and stop the spread of blight.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
Richmond CARES http://www.richmondcares.com
Save Richmond Homes http://www.saverichmondhomes.org
Richmond ACCE (Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment) http://calorganize.org E-mail contracosta@calorganize.org or call 415-377-9037

LA Times http://www.latimes.com/business/realestate/la-fi-hiltzik-20130901,0,1360275.column
The Atlantic Cities http://m.theatlanticcities.com/housing/2013/09/why-wall-street-very-very-angry-richmond-california-today/6858
Mother Jones http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2013/09/richmond-eminent-domain-wall-street-nightmare
USA Today http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2013/09/29/richmond-eminent-domain-foreclosures/2834299/
KQED Forum http://www.kqed.org/a/forum/R201308080900
PBS Newshour discussed on Daily Kos http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/09/20/1240246/-PBS-Newshour-Richmo nd-CA-Government-Uses-Eminent-Domain-to-Solve-Its-Foreclosure-Crisis#

*** Compare with: Use of Eminent Domain to grab land for the Keystone XL pipieline http://stateimpact.npr.org/texas/2012/09/28/eminent-domain-casts-its-long-shadow-over-the-texas-legislature ***

DIRECTIONS: One block north of Alcatraz on the West side of Telegraph, wheelchair accessible. Buses pass by regularly. Ashby BART is approximately 7 blocks away.

SPONSOR: Green Sundays are a series of free programs and discussions sponsored by the Green Party of Alameda County. They are held on the 2nd Sunday of each month.

52954
Oct
15
Tue
Occupy Forum: Brutal and Unequal @ Global Exchange, 2nd floor, near 16th St. BART
Oct 15 @ 1:00 am – 4:00 am

Brutal and Unequal:

Disruption, Precarity and the New Tech Boom

with Darwin Bond-Graham and Ryan Smith

“The tech sector,” said sociologist and writer Darwin Bond-Graham, “has obtained a strategic power over the rest of the economy … Flows of income and distributions of wealth have been equally transformed by the rise of the tech-centric economy, as by the rise of finance.” The ideology of the new tech boom is disruption, “a code word for forms of sabotage that benefit a few monopolizing corporations,” Bond-Graham said. A key to fighting back against disruption is to understand what it is and how it functions: Bond-Graham will use the ridesharing phenomenon as a focal point for a discussion of how the industry uses disruption to ” … extract wealth from billions of workers and consumers across the planet.”

What happens when the whiz kids of high tech concentrate on inventing ever more airtight forms of exploitation? With all of the brainpower they have to throw at the engineering puzzles of exploiting others, how can ordinary workers hope to resist this juggernaut? Ryan Smith, longtime Occupy activist, former tech employee and a member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) will discuss his experiences in workers’ struggles and working in the belly of the beast. The Wobblies are famous for “unionizing hundreds of thousands of workers previously regarded as ‘unorganizable.'” Can precarious, isolated workers benefit from IWW techniques in the coming century?

Time will be allotted for Q&A, discussion and announcements. Donations to Occupy Forum to cover costs are encouraged; no one turned away!

52986
Capitalism is Broken: Can We Workers Win Something Better. @ First Christian Church
Oct 15 @ 1:30 am – 4:00 am

Discussion sponsored by the ISO.

There are many specters haunting Oakland–from BART managers who care more about beating the union than running the trains to police harassment, from low wages and lost jobs to drug war violence. For young people looking for work, as for homeowners struggling to pay mortgages, capitalism offers only bad choices.
Democratic politicians we elect, like Republicans, pay more attention to the rich who give them money than to our real needs, while most of us don’t even theoretically have a say in how real estate developers, giant shippers and tech corporations invest the vast resources that they alone control.

But we do have power. Our labor is the source of all of their wealth. The 1% need us, and ultimately we don’t need them.

Does that mean we can make a better world? What would an alternative to capitalism look like, and how could we get there, starting from here? Please join us to share your thoughts, fears and hopes and hear the case for the project of building a socialist organization.

More info.

52900
Let’s Up the Pay, East Bay! @ Wendy's
Oct 15 @ 6:45 pm – 8:00 pm

Rally with Fast Food Workers as we hold Fast Food companies accountable!

While the fast food industry makes billions in profits, hard-working fast food workers are struggling to afford their basic needs like food, clothing and rent, and often rely on public assistance. Fast food companies rely on the fact that taxpayers will pick up the slack for their low wages. This is outrageous. Let’s hold fast food companies accountable.

52971