Calendar

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Sep
23
Fri
JUSTICE 4 KAYLA: SUPPORT THE MOORE FAMILY IN COURT, @ Floor 17, Courtroom 6 Judge Breyer's Courtroom
Sep 23 @ 9:00 am – 11:30 am

9am: coffee and food.

10am: hearing begins. Hearing could take as little as an hour or could be longer.
More info: Facebook event: click HERE

Some details about court support tomorrow:

  • WEAR PURPLE! Or, if you have one of the black & white Justice for Kayla Moore shirts bring that plus a back up in case the judge disallows shirts with a message.
  • COMING FROM BERKELEY? A group of folks will be meeting at Downtown Berkeley BART at 8am. They’ll have a banner so you can find them to BART over together.
  • SECURITY INFO: The court has a security check. Keep that in mind and bring an ID in order to be let in. The court most likely won’t allow photo-taking or signs inside either.

 

We need YOUR presence in the courtroom to show that our communities reject the City of Berkeley’s attempts to escape accountability for Kayla’s death and the violence she faced, along with so many other people of color, trans women and disabled folks.

Though the hearing begins at 10 a.m., we are asking people to come out early so we are all allowed into the courtroom. We will be there at 9 a.m. with coffee and food, and we will be ready to make some noise.

Kayla Moore was an African American transwoman who lived in Berkeley. She lived with schizophrenia for most of her adult life and was supported by a loving family in her effort to live independently. On February 12, 2013, she was with a friend who grew concerned about her mental health and called 911 for help. Although Berkeley police were familiar with Kayla and had done status checks on her in the past, on this day, they were especially aggressive in their response. Without a legal basis, they grabbed her soon after she answered her door and engaged in a violent struggle with a panicking Kayla. They ordered Kayla’s care provider to leave the room and then proceeded to wrestle her face down on her own mattress. More cops arrived and piled on top of her. Not surprisingly, Kayla stopped breathing and was not given any assisted breathing by the police officers. She died soon after.

This fall, show up to support the Moore family as they seek to hold the city of Berkeley and the BPD accountable for the 2013 in-custody death of their loved one Kayla Moore. Let’s make it clear that the Bay Area has not forgotten Kayla Moore, that her life and memory matter and that we demand an end to racist, transphobic and ableist police violence!

Other ways to get involved:

ENDORSE at www.actionnetwork.org/forms/

OUR DEMANDS Justice-for-kayla-moore-endorse-the-demands

1 Justice for Kayla Moore! Honor her memory, tell her story, #SayHerName.

On February 12, 2013, Kayla Moore, a Black trans woman with a schizophrenia diagnosis, was in her home when a friend of hers called BPD to get help for Kayla, whose behavior seemed out-of-the-ordinary. Police arrived, but instead of offering Kayla assistance, they immediately tried to take her into custody. Although they had no legal basis for arresting her, they wrestled her onto the ground. Kayla died face down on a futon with six police officers on top of her. She was a beloved sister, daughter, loved one and friend.

2 Hold the City of Berkeley and Berkeley police accountable for killing Kayla Moore.

This fall, the Moore family is pursuing a civil suit against the City of Berkeley and the officers to blame: Gwendolyn Brown, Kenneth Tu, Brandon Smith, Brian Mathis, Timothy Gardner, Nikos Kastmiler and Amber Philips. Let’s pack the courtroom on October 17th to let Berkeley know that we remember Kayla and demand recognition and accountability.

3 Police must not be first responders to mental health crises.

We need community, not cops! We call on the City of Berkeley to cut 1/3rd of the police budget to account for the 35% of police calls that are mental health-related. Instead, redirect these city dollars and fully fund community-run mental health care, including a 24/7 civilian-run crisis response.

4 End the BPD’s violent attacks, criminalization and profiling of people who are Black, Brown, disabled and/or trans.

When Berkeley police showed up at Kayla’s apartment and saw that she was a Black trans woman with schizophrenia, they approached her not as a person to care for but rather as a criminal — despite the fact that she had done absolutely nothing wrong. The officers then used extreme force to try to arrest her for a warrant that was not even in her name. Tragically, we are outraged but not surprised by the BPD’s behavior. After all, we live in a city where 32% of those whom the police stop are Black, despite only 8% of the city population being Black. We live in a country where over 25% of people killed by the police in 2015 were mentally ill. And we live in a country where, in a nationwide study, 38% of Black transgender and gender non-conforming respondents who had interacted with the police reported being harassed by them. The City of Berkeley cannot allow the BPD’s racism, ableism and transmisogyny to continue to have violent — and in Kayla’s case, deadly — results.

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Mexican Human Rights Defenders Speak Out @ UC Berkeley Multicultural Center
Sep 23 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Alejandro Ramos, Morelos y Pavón Human Rights Center, Guerrero, Mexico
Gerardo Espinoza, Fray Matías Human Rights Center, Chiapas, Mexico
Sagnicthe Salazar, Xicano Moratorium Coalition
Cat Brooks, Anti Police-Terror Project
Moderator: Rev. Debbie Lee, Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity

From the Bay Area to Mexico, police act with impunity against local communities and migrants. The ‘drug war’ that has incarcerated millions in the United States has killed 150,000 people and forcibly disappeared another 27,000 in Mexico since 2007. In both countries, spurred by Washington’s policies, immigration agents detain and deport Central Americans fleeing violence back to situations of acute danger. But movements are organizing across borders to defend communities against state violence.

This forum is a rare chance for dialogue and learning from human rights struggles from Oakland to Guerrero. Human rights defenders will bring fresh testimony and discuss what we can do.

This is part of a national speaking tour by the two Mexican activists, which includes visits to Washington, DC (Sept 25-28), Denver (Sept 28-Oct 1), San Diego (Oct 1-5), and Nogales, AZ (Oct 7-10).

This is a two part event. An in-depth presentation by Alejandro Ramos and Gerardo Espinoza will take place the following day: https://www.facebook.com/events/973337199458431/

Sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee and Global Exchange. Event is free of charge, but donations will be requested to support Mexican human rights work

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Art of Living Yoga Course at ABC4J @ Alan Blueford Center for Justice
Sep 23 @ 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Hurt people hurt people.
Healed people heal people.
Because we believe this to be true, our main mission at The Alan Blueford Center for Justice is to help heal the commUnity❤️
Much gratitude to Pratiksha Ahuja from The Art of Living for bringing this healing opportunity to the commUnity❤️

We invite you to our first Art of Living Yoga course in Oakland, CA. Please feel free to share this flyer and info below. The course is open to all. No prerequisites required.

“A weekend immersion – Art of Living Yoga”
Art of Living Yoga Workshops offer a holistic experience that beautifully blends Postures, Breath-work, Meditation, Ayurveda talk, and wisdom from classic yoga texts such as Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras. This combination profoundly elevates the quality of yoga practice.

Don’t miss this unique opportunity to experience and uncover the Yogi in you!

Who can attend: “Open to all levels”
Dates: September 23-25
Time: Weekday: 6:30-9:00 PM, Weekend: 9:00 AM – 12:30 PM
Address: 2424 Telegraph Avenue, Oakland, CA
Register: http://tinyurl.com/artoflivingyoga

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Solitary Man: My Visit to Pelican Bay State Prison. A Play. @ Berkeley Arts Festival
Sep 23 @ 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm

Charlie Hinton & Bill Crossman
Directed by Mark Kenward


Charlie created Solitary Man based on letters and visits with prisoners in Pelican Bay SHU/solitary confinement. The show takes place in November, 2014, a year after the largest prisoner hunger strike in history. Pianist Bill Crossman will improvise music throughout the performance. Afterwards, we will have an update about Pelican Bay and the “security/welfare” checks that are waking up prisoners every 30 minutes in solitary confinement units throughout CA.

Suggested Donation $5-10, no one turned away

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Sep
24
Sat
Making SFPD Accountable: A Community Conversation @ San Francisco Main Public Library, Koret Auditorium
Sep 24 @ 10:00 am – 2:00 pm

Sponsored by: San Franciscans for Police Accountability.

The evidence is clear: San Francisco Police Department is badly broken, operates without effective oversight and is in need of transformational reform. The Blue Ribbon Panel on Police Transparency and Accountability composed of independent volunteer judges and attorneys has thoroughly studied SFPD and made thoughtful recommendations for change. But unless San Franciscans speak out, SFPD will continue to embarrass our City and harm our citizens while these recommendations gatherdust.

On September 24, 2016, you are invited to learn more about the Blue Ribbon Panel’s recommendations for reforming SFPD and groups working on police accountability. Our Community Conversation will engage citizens and unite voices to ensure that change occurs.

PROGRAM
• 10:00 TO 10:15 AM: Welcome & Mixer
• 10:15 to 11:00 AM: Family Stories; Making the Problem Real
• 11:00 to 1:00 pm: Overview of the Blue Ribbon Panel Report and the current state of SFPD, Lawyers, Judges, Activists, Experts Panel Discussion, Q&A
• 1:00 PM: Bag lunch & Beverages served, networking with Volunteer Organizations
• 2:00 PM: End of Community Conversation

CONFIRMED PANELISTS
• John Crew, ACLU Police Practices expert
• Anand Subramanian, Blue Ribbon Panel Executive Director

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Making SFPD Accountable: A Community Conversation @ San Francisco Main Public Library, Koret Auditorium
Sep 24 @ 10:00 am – 2:00 pm

Sponsored by

San Franciscans for Police Accountability

 

The evidence is clear: San Francisco Police Department is badly broken, operates without effective oversight and is in need of transformational reform. The Blue Ribbon Panel on Police Transparency and Accountability  composed of independent volunteer judges and attorneys has thoroughly studied SFPD and made thoughtful recommendations for change. But unless San Franciscans speak out, SFPD will continue to embarrass our City and harm our citizens while these recommendations gather dust.

On September 24, 2016, you are invited to learn more about the Blue Ribbon Panel’s recommendations for reforming SFPD and groups working on police accountability. Our Community Conversation will engage citizens and unite voices to ensure that change occurs.

PROGRAM

  • 10:00 TO 10:15 AM: Welcome & Mixer
  • 10:15 to 11:00 AM: Family Stories; Making the Problem Real
  • 11:00 to 1:00 pm: Overview of the Blue Ribbon Panel Report and the current state of SFPD, Lawyers, Judges, Activists, Experts Panel Discussion, Q&A
  • 1:00 PM: Bag lunch & Beverages served, networking with Volunteer Organizations
  • 2:00 PM: End of Community Conversation

CONFIRMED PANELISTS

  • John Crew, ACLU Police Practices expert
  • Anand Subramanian, Blue Ribbon Panel Executive Director
  • Adriana Camerena, lawyer, Justice for Alex Nieto Coalition activist

 

Contact: David Carlos Salaverry 415 426-90738 or Karen Fleshman 917 686-2041

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Afrikatown’s Hood Healing Day @ Qilombo
Sep 24 @ 11:00 am – 7:00 pm

Healing is sacred liberation. Some of us use ancient spiritual tools, some of us create our own rituals and ceremonies, and some of us use whatever is around us to transform.

Envision a space where communities can converge! Where healers of color from different ethnicities, different physical and mental health abilities, & different relationships to the Creator and land can join their communities. Think of Afrikatown’s Hood Healing Day as a space where you can invite the people you love the most (blood or chosen families) to be in remembrance of our strength, our sorrows, our resistance and our resiliency.

Come to get those aches rubbed out, to talk to spiritual guides, to re-energize, to sit in on workshops, to soak your feet, to dance or to rest.

This will be a space for children, Elders, families and the general community! We are putting a focus on deepening the spaces and accommodations that often get neglected or forgotten. We remain a space that prioritizes Afrikans, other Indigenous peoples, migrants of color, women of color, those with visible or invisible dis/abilities, and our sacred trans sisters!

PLEASE READ THE FLYER AND WAIT ON NEXT WEEKS UPDATED HEALERS LIST & MODALITIES!

Interested in volunteering or offering healing? Interested in hosting a empowering workshop or helping to organize this event? Please PM Van Dellz or email info@qilombo.org.

Here’s the tenative list of what our Hood Healing Day will include! Please give suggestions or offer your gifts!

HEALING PRACTICES:
*shamanic healer + sacred life coach
*yoga *acupunture *footsoak
*reiki *somatic bodywork *massage
*divination *herbalism *healing chant
*black girl magic: hair-care

CURRENT WORKSHOPS
*rituals, remedies & readings
*Decolonial Creative Writing: Afrikan & Indigenous Resistance for Land Liberation

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Hillary Clinton’s Program for War @ Workers World
Sep 24 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

What would our prospects for continued and increased militarization and imperialist adventurism look like under a Hillary Clinton presidency? Is she the “safer” vote? Come talk about current U.S. agression abroad and what those prospects look like going forward under a Clinton presidency.

Come join our discussion. Refreshments will be served. Wheelchair accessible.

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Solidarity With the Charlotte Rebellion. @ Latham Square
Sep 24 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

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Sep
25
Sun
Sunflower Alliance General Assembly: How “No Coal in Oakland” Won @ RPA Headquarters
Sep 25 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm

no-coal-in-oakland-logo

Sunflower Alliance members who participated in the successful No Coal in Oakland campaign will discuss the ways the campaign built the power to stop the coal export terminal. Plus updates on our campaigns. We need your participation and your voice.

The Sunflower Alliance brings together individuals and organizations committed to environmental justice and the health and safety of all Bay Area communities threatened by toxic pollution and climate change. We work toward building an equitable, sustainable economy fueled by renewable energy.

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Open Circle ~ Families Fighting for Justice @ Omni Commons
Sep 25 @ 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm

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Solitary Man: My Visit to Pelican Bay State Prison. A Play. @ Berkeley Arts Festival
Sep 25 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Charlie Hinton & Bill Crossman
Directed by Mark Kenward

Charlie created Solitary Man based on letters and visits with prisoners in Pelican Bay SHU/solitary confinement. The show takes place in November, 2014, a year after the largest prisoner hunger strike in history. Pianist Bill Crossman will improvise music throughout the performance. Afterwards, we will have an update about Pelican Bay and the “security/welfare” checks that are waking up prisoners every 30 minutes in solitary confinement units throughout CA.

Suggested Donation $5-10, no one turned away

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Solving Homelessness Through Community and Collaboration: A Berkeley Mayoral Candidate Roundtable @ Northbrae Community Chur h
Sep 25 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Homelessness is on the rise in Berkeley. Beyond the immediate impact upon those persons living without shelter, it is increasingly on the minds of Berkeley residents and business-owners, and is central to voters this November.  The Berkeley Public Library, BOCA (Berkeley Organizing Congregations for Action) and Northbrae Community Church are in collaboration to host a community forum on homelessness featuring the 2016 Berkeley Mayoral candidates.
How can Berkeley best address the issues of the escalating costs of affordable housing, and the necessary support for persons who are homeless?  What policies or ordinances would candidates seek to repeal or propose?  How do they feel about sit/lie ordinances?  What role should business, development, and public agencies play in striving toward a community that meets every people’s basic needs? Is housing a human right?
Moderator Peter Leyden (former managing editor at Wired, founding director of the New Politics Institute, and founder/CEO of Reinventors) will engage the 2016 Berkeley Mayoral candidates in a roundtable conversation looking at the tools available to address Berkeley’s growing homelessness crisis. All are welcome to attend this  free event, which will be followed by a casual reception, where food will be served.

 

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Community Democracy Project: 4th Sundays are 4 Sci-Fi @ Omni Commons
Sep 25 @ 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm

Every Sunday The Community Democracy Project and our supporters gather to imagine a society that functions differently. We organize and strategize to make Participatory Budgeting a reality in Oakland through a voter initiative that uplifts and values the voices of the most marginalized.

Beginning August 28th every 4th Sunday will be dedicated to a work of Science Fiction that inspires us. We’re very excited to blast off with the short story, Bloodchild by Octavia Butler. Read (attached in the comments!) and join us to share your insight and inspiration.

Future works may include but are not limited to: novels, articles, episodes and films!

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Sep
26
Mon
Idle No More Calls Us to Stand Up to Phillips 66
Sep 26 @ 7:00 am – 10:00 am

The Conoco Phillips 66 Refinery in Rodeo has once again poisoned Bay Area water and air.  After a tanker spill this week in San Pablo Bay, over 100 people have gone to the hospital and untold numbers of relatives in the area have been affected.  We are standing together to say that it is time to leave fossil fuels in the ground!

We will begin at Lone Tree Point and walk to the Conoco Phillips 66 Refinery (P66) on San Pablo Ave. in Rodeo.

The EPA has listed P66 as the state’s number one toxic polluter.  This is from NBC Bay Area on September 22:

“The NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit searched through Environmental Protection Agency records and found the Phillips 66 refinery in Rodeo did not comply with federal standards for the disposal of solid and hazardous waste for the past three years. An inspection report from March reveals the refinery was operating in significant violation, which is the agency’s most serious designation, and shows the refinery poses a severe level of environmental threat.”  (Source: Coast Guard Locates Oil Sheens in San Pablo Bay After Odor Sickens Vallejo Residents)

The cities of Rodeo and Vallejo, which were most affected by the spill, are two communities along our refinery corridor fighting to protect and defend our waters.  They are like those in the Dakotas, defending our inland fresh waters, in Louisiana and the disappearing Gulf coast, and other communities along our endangered coastlines.  We say say NO to refinery expansions, crude-by-rail and destructive, failing pipelines, and the continued destruction of Mother Earth.

We stand together with all of the Defenders and Protectors around the world who have drawn the line and are resisting actions that harm the water, air, soil and Mother Earth!

RSVP Facebook

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Fossil-Free Bay Area @ SPUR
Sep 26 @ 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm

California has the most ambitious climate policy framework in the world, and the Bay Area has the resources, political temperament and innovative spirit to demonstrate how to work toward eliminating fossil fuel use. But is that spirit enough to go fossil-free? SPUR’s latest report lays out an agenda for the region to transition to a high-efficiency, 100% renewable energy system that will create a model for other urban regions while improving climate resiliency.

+ Laura Tam / SPUR
+ Sarah Jo Szambelan / SPUR

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Help Film a Yes on Measure JJ (Protect Oakland Renters) Commercial. @ Gazebo on Lake Merritt, near Bellevue & Grand
Sep 26 @ 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm

A “Yes on Measure JJ (Protect Oakland Renters)” commercial will be filmed on Monday, 9/26.  We’re inviting all supporters to come join in the finale — at 5:30 pm at the Gazebo on Lake Merritt — find it on the map: Lake Merritt Gazebo area.

NOTE: Everyone is welcome in their daily casual wear, but please no logos, organization shirts or jerseys, because getting formal approval for those to appear on television is a long process.

Please let Becki or Gabby know if you will be able to join at becki@cjjc.org or gabriella@telegraphpr.com !

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Occupy Forum: The Presidential Debates: Mega-events? High Stakes? Or BULLSHIT? @ Global Exchange, 2nd floor
Sep 26 @ 6:00 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
The Presidential Debates: Mega-events? High Stakes? Or BULLSHIT?
At OccupyForum, we don’t really have the stomach to watch the Clinton-Trump debate, although lurid curiosity may get the better of us for a few minutes. After we turn it off in disgust and despair, we may instead turn to something Ralph Nader is putting together called Breaking Through Power.

On September 26th through September 29th in Washington DC, Nader presides over a “civic marathon.” Panels, speakers and the public will discuss ways to overcome apathy and build civic skills, shift power from corporations to the people, DC Statehood, tort law and the civil justice system, and more.
 “To have a democratic society that brings out the best in its citizens, people have to show up to vote, to attend city council meetings, rallies, marches, and other serious gatherings that reflect the public interest. They also need to support progressive candidates and run for office.

Whether it is empowering consumers, getting corporate money out of politics, knowing the safeguards for whistleblowing or building public opinion behind your proposals, advocates who are among the best in the country are ready to share their experience and enthusiasm with you at the Breaking Through Power conference.”  Ralph Nader

Below, find the speakers and subjects from the first day that we’ll be viewing. Together we’ll decide which to watch and discuss.

Join us at OccupyForum for an evening  of absurdity ameliorated by Ralph Nader’s unflagging optimism in the face of insanity!

Announcements will follow.
Donations to OccupyForum to cover our costs are encouraged; no one turned away!

 
Breaking Through Power  (from the website)
Visit breakingthroughpower.org to see the conference speakers people who long ago decided they were going to dedicate their time and talent to make our country responsive to the necessities and aspirations of its people.

 

The First Day – September 26th – is about building civic skills ls and breaking through apathy. You can see David Freeman talk from his experience of advising presidents, governors, and running four big public utilities, including the vast Tennessee Valley Authority, wisely lay out a practical path to economical renewable energy with environmental respect.

 

Whether you see yourself as a dissatisfied voter, a civically-minded teacher, a curious student, a fed up consumer, a dismayed taxpayer, or if you are looking for ways to make your community better, you’ll come away with knowledge, tools for action, and connections with others who want to make a difference.

 

Have you been ripped off? Hear Oliver Hall of the Center for Competitive Democracy talk about using small claims court or the people’s courts. They are located everywhere.

 

Thinking about a community-based business? Listen to the nation’s expert, Neil Seldman, from the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, talk about how community business is revolutionary.

 

Want to engage with the safe, nutritious food movement? You’ll be shown the way by the leading safe food advocate who has done it for 45 years, Dr. Michael Jacobson.

 

Let’s say you’re a teacher and you want to convey civic skills to your students and motivate them to overcome their apathy and work for needed change. You couldn’t have a better day’s retreat. There is even a talk on the civic engagement of business leaders by Mitch Rofsky, who founded the delightfully pro-consumer motor club called the Better World Club.

 

The Second Day is a huge eye-opener and brain-filler. Did you know that “We the People” actually own the greatest wealth in our country? I’m referring to the vast public lands, onshore and offshore, the research and development, funded by taxpayers, that enabled today’s new industries, the huge capital amassed in the form of pension and mutual funds and individual shareholdings. But corporations control their uses and reap the profits, abetted by their influence over Congress and government officials in Washington. Imagine if we took back reasonable control over those assets that we already own. A society beyond our optimistic dreams would emerge, assuming that we provided “eternal vigilance.”

Well, that’s what Day Two is all about – our savings, our natural resources, and our other “commons” being shaped to fit your needs and those of your descendants.

Day Three responds to people’s interest in ways to start new citizen groups by the heads of groups each exhibiting a different model. The afternoon is devoted to D.C. statehood – the New Columbia to replace the Washington D.C. colony and abolish the servitude that blocks the residents of our nation’s capital from having voting representatives in Congress.

Day Four, held at historic Constitution Hall, celebrates the two great liberation movements that provide us with self-actuating freedoms to have our day in court and make contracts fair. Naturally, the big corporations are irritated by challenges to their overreaching, so over the decades they have weakened the law of torts – the remedies for wrongful injuries – and nd perfected the anti-consumer, one-sided, fine-printed contracts that await you when you enter into the marketplace of goods and services. Our rights to fair contracts and to use tort law are under constant attack from the promoters of crony capitalism. Attend the Breaking Through Power Conference and learn what you can do to defend yourself.
You’ll be engrossed by advocates who have represented successfully people like you and scholars who can clearly demonstrate what is at stake when we decide to strengthen the fundamental freedoms to use tort law.

Consider these four days as the Super Bowl of Civic Action that can equip you to seek justice and protect yourself from wrongful impacts on your living condition.”, 28, 29 SEPTEMBER 2016

Featured Speakers

 

 

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Sep
27
Tue
Justice 4 Mario Woods Coalition Press Conference @ DA's Office
Sep 27 @ 12:00 pm – 2:30 pm
Join the Justice 4 Mario Woods Coalition
NOON Press Conference To DEMAND that DA Gascon charge Killer Cops with Murder!
And then at 1:30 Steps of City Hall, 2pm Inside City Hall, 2nd Floor
For the Board of Supervisors Vote
on the Blue Ribbon Panel Report on Police Misconduct in San Francisco.

It is unfathomable that as we see other cops being charged across the country for their heinous murders of black and brown people – we in San Francisco still await a SINGLE charge or action from our District Attorney. Not only has DA Gascon not charged anyone in the on-camera execution-style killing of Mario Woods – this DA has not EVER filed charges for ANY of the egregious killings of black and brown people that this city has seen.

The DA’s own Blue Ribbon Panel has found damning evidence of violence, corruption, racism, homophobia within SFPD – leading to these murders – and the Chief of Police has resigned in shame over his bloody reign of terror – and STILL Gascon has not acted. Join us! To demand District Attorney George Gascon CHARGE Killer Police! Then Join Us at City Hall to demand the Supervisors vote on the Blue Ribbon Report.

Justice for all victims of police violence
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH
Twitter: @Justice4MWNow
Instagram: @Justice4MarioWoodsNow
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Oakland Worker Coop Ordinance @ Oakland City Hall
Sep 27 @ 1:30 pm – 3:30 pm

Oakland Worker Coop Ordinance Community & Economic Development Committee Hearing

We’re sending out a call to action for those interested in building just and resilient economies in the Bay Area! This is your chance to come out, have your voice heard, and tell Oakland City Council that we demand an economy that supports the growth of worker owned businesses! A coalition of organizations and community members have been working for over two years to get us to this point, and we need your support to get us past the finish line! This is the first ordinance to give preference to worker coops in city contracting and procurement, and would require the City of Oakland to prioritize business conversions to worker coops by tracking legacy businesses and providing succession planning support (including sale to workers as an option)!

In order for the Oakland Worker Cooperative Incentives for Growth Ordinance to be adopted, it will first be heard by Oakland City Council’s Community & Economic Development Committee on Tuesday, September 27th, and then (with your support!) the ordinance will move to a the full City Council for a final vote one week later, on Tuesday, October 4th. That means there will be two opportunities for you to come out and support the creation of economic democracy at Oakland City Hall!

Please join us and our coalition partners at the Community & Economic Development Committee Hearing to make sure the Oakland Worker Cooperative Incentives for Growth Ordinance passes through committee and goes straight to the full city council the following week!

Final City Council Vote on Oakland Worker Coop Ordinance

At 5:00pm on Tuesday, October 4th, please join us and our coalition partners as we advocate for final passage of the Oakland Worker Cooperative Incentives for Growth Ordinance!


We need your bodies and voices in the room to demonstrate that Oakland supports this policy! RSVP to both or either events above and you’ll receive more info on how you can make your voice heard! We’ve done it before! Let’s do it again!

Once this ordinance is adopted, Oakland will be the first city in the US to adopt this type of support for worker cooperatives, becoming a national leader in the movement for cooperative economies. Show Oakland City Council that our communities demand economic development that empowers residents and creates resilient communities! Help Oakland build on the momentum that is sweeping the country as cities including New York, Austin, Minneapolis, Rochester, Berkeley, and other city governments prioritize the development of inclusive, just, and cooperative economies!

In Solidarity and Cooperation,

Ricardo S. Nuñez

http://www.theselc.org/

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