Calendar

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Dec
1
Sun

Town Hall Meeting on Hong Kong @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Dec 1 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Sunday Morning at the Marxist Library

Town Hall Meeting on Hong Kong (China)

Sen Marco Rubio (R-FL) and Rep Jim McGovern (D-MA) are sponsoring the “Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019,” but many believe that the U.S. should not be interfering in the internal affairs of China. After a brief introduction by ICSS member Eugene E Ruyle, Emeritus Professor of Anthropology and Asian Studies at Cal State Long Beach, and perhaps a few additional speakers, we will have an open discussion of the issue with all opinions welcome.

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Dec
2
Mon
Pack the 9th Circuit! Stop Trump’s Asylum Ban @ US Ninth Circuit, Courtroom 1, 3rd Floor, Rm 338
Dec 2 @ 8:30 am – 11:00 am

Please spread the word and join us on Monday in San Francisco at the 9th Circuit Court, which will hear arguments in our case to block Trump’s asylum transit ban.

Repeatedly in recent months, Bay Area community members have packed federal courts to oppose Trump’s attempts to block people from seeking protection in the U.S. We hope you’ll join us again.

WHEN: Plan to arrive before 9am, when the judges begin proceedings for the morning. Let’s gather afterward in solidarity as well.

After multiple victories to halt the new rule, in September the Supreme Court temporarily sided with Trump while the 9th Circuit considers East Bay Sanctuary Covenant v. William Barr, thus blocking folks who must transit through a third country from seeking asylum in the United States.

As you all know, the policy is part of a larger effort to effectively end the ability of immigrants of color to seek protection in the United States. We must continue to fight against this atrocious program and organize for just solutions instead.

Hope to see you on Monday.

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Dec
3
Tue
No Coal Ordinance – Richmond City Council @ Richmond City Council
Dec 3 @ 6:30 pm – 10:00 pm

This is it! Join us when the Richmond City Council will finally vote on the Richmond Coal Ordinance.   The ordinance would phase out the storage and handling of coal and petroleum coke (pet coke) over a three year period.

Doors open at 6:00 PM.

We expect many people to show up in opposition, as happened at the Planning Commission hearing, so get there early. Faced with a rowdy show of force, the commission voted to delay approval of the ordinance. We need to show the council members that there are even more people who support passing the ordinance without delay and transitioning the terminal to cleaner commodities that won’t endanger the health of residents and workers.

Richmond residents and workers are encouraged to testify about health impacts, visible dust, and other concerns.  If you are willing to speak, please email action@sunflower-alliance.org for information about this process.

No Coal in Richmond has collected more than 2,000 signatures on a letter to the City Council urging them to act to end coal and petroleum coke handling and storage at the Levin-Richmond Terminal. Richmond already suffers from the areas’s highest levels of asthma and other health problems caused by bad air quality.

Time to get coal out of Richmond!

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Dec
4
Wed
Pop Up Care Village @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Dec 4 @ 11:00 am – 3:00 pm

Oakland – For the unhoused neighbors and residents who are needing services in Oakland, there will be a “Pop Up Care Village” on Wednesday, December 4, 2019, from 11:00AM to 3:00PM that will be delivering mobile hygene & critical services to those who are in need.

The Pop Up Care Village includes free food, clothing, showers, haircuts, acupuncture, art & music, animal care, mental health services, social services, medical services, legal aid, and harm reduction.

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Stop Criminalizing Homelessness: Special Oakland City Council Life Enrichment Committee @ Oakland City Hall
Dec 4 @ 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm

The Life enrichment committee has agreed to host a special meeting to focus on homelessness that will include voices and reflect the work of unhoused leaders and advocates in the trenches day in day out.

we will breaking down the roots and scope of crisis, evaluate the current approaches and present real, cost effective solutions, new approaches to service providing, and crisis informed models of rapid rehousing.

we are hoping the audit of all things related to homeless will also be presented at this meeting.

Prior to 2017, Oakland City Hall only had $250,000 per year to spend on Homeless Services.

Since 2017, volunteers with HAWG Homeless Advocacy Working Group have spent countless hours successfully advocating for more than $56 million to be spent towards ending the outrageous homeless crisis. more than $30 million has already been spent on ineffective approaches that harm more than help curbside residents. and while the millions were wastefully spent, homelessness has doubled in Oakland in the past two years. The Mayor’s anti-homeless Encampment Management Team led by Assistant to the Administrator Joe De Vries is responsible for the mismanagement of funds and the city’s inhumane treatment of our unhoused brothers sister’s.

For the past two years, City Council has attempted to work with advocates and directed Joe and the Encampment Management Team to try a variety of effective and cost effective approaches. 99% of the time Joe and his time have ignored City Council and continue to use millions to harm, traumatize and kick down our people on the streets.

Enough is enough.

Join The Village in Oakland #feedthepeople, The East Oakland Collective @Love and Justice in the Streets at the Life Enrichment Committee to speak truth to power, listen to real solutions, understand what’s really going on with the money.

please sign up to speak even if you are not going to speak, so yo can give you time to another speaker who needs more time. if you decide to speak, here’s some points to help you when you speak:

– over the past two years, you have survived and/or witnessed the cruel and inhumane treatment of The City government to Oakland’s unhoused.
– In the past two years the Joe DeVries and his team have spent more than $30 million dollars towards “solving” homelessness. But during those two years homelessness doubled in Oakland, and dozens of unhoused residents who used the city’s programs are back on the streets. WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MONEY?

We Demand:
1. An immediate end to evictions of curbside communities, demolitions of homes and towing of vehicles people live in or store belongings in.

2. An immediate end to the destruction of curbside residents’ personal property and survival gear.

3. As the City Council directed the Mayor and her Administration two years ago, two parcels of public land in each district be identified and used for sanctuaries for curbside communities.

4. Immediately upgrade all curbside communities with adequate portapotties, trash services, clean drinking water, solar power and upgrades to self-built homes.

5. Due to his anti-homeless tendencies, his absuse of power, his complete disregard of the humanity and right of curbside residents, his mismanagement of millions of dollars to go towards solutions to homelessness, an immediate dismissal of Assistant to the Administrator Joe De Vries. Due to his deep anti-homeless biases and arbitrary decisions that impact the lives and well being of Oakland’s unhoused, he cannot lead the approaches to solve this crisis.

6. The immediate implementation of City Councilwoman Nikki Fortunato Bas’ reccomendations to align all The City’s approaches to homelessness with a human rights lense.

7. No more fundraising for or building any more Tuff Sheds. These programs are a waste of money and not effective to meet the scale of the homeless state of emergency or the actual needs of curbside residents.

8. An end to market rate and above market rate development. The City must turn its attention to the neglected deeply affordable housing development goals in the next year.

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20th Anniversary of the Shutdown of the World World Trade Organization (WTO) @ Greenlining Institute
Dec 4 @ 5:30 pm – 8:30 pm

On November 30, 1999, more than 40,000 activists spanning organized labor, climate justice, migrant justice, indigenous organizing, the peace movement, and the global justice movement, joined forces to disrupt the trade negotiations scheduled to take place at the WTO conference in Seattle. Inspired by mass mobilizations across Asia, Africa, and Latin America against neoliberal policies developed by the WTO and similar financial institutions, the takeover of downtown Seattle re-energized the fight against neoliberalism and strengthened international alliances.

Twenty years later, in the context of an intensified neoliberal offensive by the same institutions and revived resistance against them in countries such as Ecuador, Chile, Lebanon, and Haiti, this panel discussion will help us analyze the events and organizing that led up to Seattle, take stock of the movements and alliances that grew out of that mobilization, and draw lessons from the past two decades that will set our movements up for more decisive wins.

Confirmed speakers include:
Colin Rajah, International Coordinator of the Civil Society Action Committee
Sharon Lungo, Former Executive Director of the Ruckus Society
Bill Fletcher Jr., Former president of TransAfrica Forum

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Black Software: The Internet, Racial Justice, from the AfroNet to Black Lives Matter @ City Lights Bookstore
Dec 4 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Black Software: The Internet, Racial Justice, from the AfroNet to Black Lives Matter

 

Charlton D. McIlwain in conversation with E. David Ellington

Activists, pundits, politicians, and the press frequently proclaim today’s digitally mediated racial justice activism the new civil rights movement. As Charlton D. McIlwain shows in this book, the story of racial justice movement organizing online is much longer and varied than most people know. In fact, it spans nearly five decades and involves a varied group of engineers, entrepreneurs, hobbyists, journalists, and activists. But this is a history that is virtually unknown even in our current age of Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Black Lives Matter.

Beginning with the simultaneous rise of civil rights and computer revolutions in the 1960s, McIlwain, for the first time, chronicles the long relationship between African Americans, computing technology, and the Internet. In turn, he argues that the forgotten figures who worked to make black politics central to the Internet’s birth and evolution paved the way for today’s explosion of racial justice activism. From the 1960s to present, the book examines how computing technology has been used to neutralize the threat that black people pose to the existing racial order, but also how black people seized these new computing tools to build community, wealth, and wage a war for racial justice.Through archival sources and the voices of many of those who lived and made this history, Black Software centralizes African Americans’ role in the Internet’s creation and evolution, illuminating both the limits and possibilities for using digital technology to push for racial justice in the United States and across the globe.

Charlton D. McIlwain is Vice Provost of Faculty Engagement & Development at New York University, and Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication at NYU’s Steinhardt School. He is also the Founder of the Center for Critical Race & Digital Studies, and the co-author of Race Appeal: How Candidates Invoke Race in U.S. Political Campaigns, winner of the 2012 APSA Ralph Bunche Award.

E. David Ellington is Founder & Executive Chairman of the Silicon Valley Blockchain Society (SVBS). SVBS is a global, invite-only, private, member-driven ecosystem supporting blockchain and cryptocurrency related projects across industries and for social impact. SVBS members are active investors primarily in technology. They collectively represent more than $1.5 Trillion in investment capital.  The SVBS mission is three words: “Fund the Revolution.”

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Legacy of Past and Present Anti-War Actions: Strategies to Consider for the Future @ UC Berkeley, Barrows Hall 126
Dec 4 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

 

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Seattle/WTO Shutdown: 20th Anniversary @ Quezada Center
Dec 4 @ 7:30 pm – 9:30 pm

Turtle-and-cop_380-Battle-of-SeattleOn November 30, 1999 the World Trade Organization was prevented from meeting in Seattle by unprecedented phalanxes of self-organized protesters who filled the streets, tied up key intersections, blockaded the convention center, and used video and the internet in ways they’d never been used before. Bay Area activists were in the middle of it all, and veterans of that experience will revisit that moment to help us rethink this moment. With Anuradha Mittal, David Solnit, Eddie Yuen, and Starhawk.

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Dec
5
Thu
Art-Build with Artist David Solnit, CA Poor People’s Campaign @ Bridge Storage and Art Space
Dec 5 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Californians will organize the San Francisco tour stop as part of this nine-month, 22-state ‘We Must Do MORE Tour: Mobilizing, Organizing, Registering, Educating’; building towards a Mass Poor People’s Assembly and Moral March on Washington on June 20th, 2020.

Richmond, California— Join the Poor People’s Campaign for Art-Build featuring local Bay Area artist David Solnit at David Solnit’s studio. At the Art- Build community members will create colorful banners and signs for our upcoming We Must Do MORE Tour: Mobilizing, Organizing, Registering, Educating visit in Oakland and San Francisco on Wednesday, December 11, 2019.

David Solnit is a climate justice, global justice, Anti-war, arts, and direct-action organizer, an author, a puppeteer, and a trainer from the Bay Area. He is co-founder of Courage to Resist, co-author of Army of None. He is co-founder of Art and Revolution, using culture, art, giant puppets and theater in mass mobilizations, for popular education and as an organizing tool.

At the March and Mass Meeting, we will hear from people directly impacted by systemic racism, poverty, ecological devastation, militarism and the war economy, and the corrupt moral narrative. We will also hear from Rev. Barber and Rev. Theoharis, Co-Chairs of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival.

This nine-month, 22-state tour is the lead-up to the Mass Poor People’s Assembly & Moral March on Washington, where thousands of poor people and moral agents will gather at the nation’s capital on June 20, 2020 to demand the implementation of our Moral Agenda and call all people of conscience to engage in deeply moral civic engagement and voting that uplifts the needs of the most impacted–poor and low-wealth people, the sick, immigrants, workers, people with disabilities, and the LGBTQIA+ community

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SILVIA FEDERICI: Witches, Witch-Hunting and Women @ St. Johns Presbyterian Church
Dec 5 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

 

Hosted by Sasha Lilley

“Silvia Federici’s new book offers a brilliant analysis and forceful denunciation of the violence directed toward women and their communities. Her focus moves between women criminalized as witches both at the dawn of capitalism and in contemporary globalization.”  —Massimo DeAngelis, Professor of Political Economy, University of East London

We are witnessing a new surge of interpersonal and institutional violence against women, including new witch hunts. This surge of violence has occurred alongside a global expansion of capitalism. In this new work, revisiting some of the main themes of Caliban and the Witch, Silvia Federici examines the root causes of these developments and outlines the consequences for the women affected and their communities. All too like the witch hunts in sixteenth and seventeenth-century Europe and the “New World,” this contemporary war on women is a structural element of various new forms of capitalist accumulation. These processes are founded on the destruction of people’s most basic means of reproduction. What we discover behind today’s violence against women are processes of enclosure, land dispossession, and the remolding of women’s reproductive activities and subjectivity. As well as an investigation into the causes of this new violence, the book is also a feminist call to arms. Federici’s work provides new ways of understanding the methods in which women are resisting victimization. She offers a powerful reminder that reconstructing the memory of the past is crucial for the struggles of the present.

“ It is good to think with Silvia Federici, whose clarity of analysis and passionate vision come through in essays that chronicle enclosure and dispossession, witch-hunting and other assaults against women, in the present no less than the past. It is even better to act armed with her insights.” — Eileen Boris, Professor of Feminist Studies, U.C.S.B.

Silvia Federici is a feminist writer, teacher and militant. In 1972 she was cofounder of the International Feminist Collective that launched the Wages for Housework campaign  internationally. Her previous books include: Wages Against Housework, Revolution at Point Zero: Housework, Reproduction and Feminist Struggle, and Re-enchanting the World: Feminism and the Politics of the Commons

Sasha Lilley is the editor of Capital and Its Discontents: Conversations with Radical Thinkers in a Time of Tumult. She is also a contributor to the Turbulence Collective’s What Would it Mean to Win?, and a  co-founder and host of the Pacifica Radio program Against the Grain

advance tickets: $12: brownpapertickets.com :: T: 800-838-3006  or Pegasus Books (3 sites), Books Inc (Berkeley), Moe’s, Walden Pond Bookstore, East Bay Books, Mrs. Dalloway’s Books, $15 door, benefits KPFA Radio 94.1FM

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Dec
6
Fri
Bay Area Climate Strike and Resiliency Village – SF
Dec 6 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm

On the day of the next global climate strike, join the Sunrise Movement, Youth vs. Apocalypse, and others for a Resilience Village and mass march to divest from destruction and invest a Green New Deal.

Details available soon.

More info as it becomes available — and sign up here 

After you have signed up, you will receive more details about the march shortly.

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Youth-Led Climate Strike at Blackrock, SF @ Blackrock HQ
Dec 6 @ 10:00 am – 1:00 pm

The youth are leading us back to the streets! On December 6th, Youth vs. Apocalypse and other groups are organizing actions as part of the next global climate strike. In San Francisco, activists will occupy BlackRock’s SF headquarters, demanding that the corporation divest from fossil fuels, the destruction of the Amazon Rainforest, and private prisons that hold migrant youth and adults. An Oakland component of this action has been postponed until January. Youth and adults are both welcome to get involved. Learn more and sign up to support the actions!

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Moms 4 Housing – Fight the Eviction Notice!
Dec 6 @ 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Text “Save Moms House” to (510) 800-7810 to join the text alert system so you can throw down! #SaveMomsHouse #EvictTheSpeculators

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Latin America in Rebellion: What’s Next for Chile and Colombia? @ PLACE
Dec 6 @ 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Around the world, people are rising up and mobilizing in record numbers against repressive regimes, for democratic rights, and rebelling against the neoliberal austerity measures implemented during the ongoing crises of capitalism.

The Chilean rebellion began when young people protested against a public transportation fare, which grew into a general strike on October 24th and 25th coalescing all the accumulated grievances against the government, and later into periods of generalized insurrection. These mass demonstrations have been met by brutal repression.

In Colombia on November 21, there was an historic national strike bringing out thousands of people protesting against President Duque’s ‘Paquetazo’ – reforms that increase labor precarity, attack the public pension system, and a series of measures to reduce taxes on employers and increase them for workers.

Join Workers’ Voice at PLACE on Friday, Dec. 6th from 5-8pm for a panel discussion to analyze the causes of the crises, understand the debates in the movements, and identify ways we can express our solidarity from the US! Refreshments will be served.

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From Democracy to Freedom @ Omni Commons
Dec 6 @ 6:00 pm – 10:00 pm

 

Democracy is the most universal political ideal of our time. From the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea to Occupy Wall Street and the autonomous region of Rojava, practically every government and popular movement calls itself democratic. Today, the far right has also appropriated the rhetoric of direct democracy, while a wave of populism has swept demagogues like Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro into power.

What is democracy, precisely? How does the rhetoric of democracy serve various agendas? Is there a difference between democracy and self-determination? Are there other ways to describe what we are doing together when we make decisions?

Drawing on From Democracy to Freedom, the latest book from the CrimethInc. collective, we will explore these questions and more. Join us for a lively discussion!

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Without Apology: The Abortion Struggle Now @ East Bay Book Sellers
Dec 6 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

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Dec
7
Sat
East Bay Alternative Book and Zine Fest 2019 @ Omni Commons
Dec 7 @ 11:00 am – 5:00 pm

The East Bay Alternative Book and Zine Fest is back at the Omni Commons in Oakland for it’s tenth anniversary!

Vendor list and workshops TBA!

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BASTARD (Anarchist) Conference 2019 @ Longhaul
Dec 7 @ 3:00 pm – 9:00 pm

For nearly twenty years participants in the Berkeley Anarchist Study Group have been organizing the BASTARD Conference: afternoons of presentations & conversations about the beautiful idea of anarchy. This year our presenters are:

– Wolfi Landstreicher (Apio Ludd)
– Big Katt
– Jason McQuinn
– Nev Ferox
– John Henri Nolette

Saturday December 7th
3pm-9pm
The Long Haul
3124 Shattuck Ave, Berkeley
Free, though donations for The Long Haul are GREATLY appreciated

No meal break this year, instead we’re hoping to do a potlatch! bring something tasty to share in case folks get hungry.

Come join us for an afternoon of cursed theory, delirious rants, and degenerate discourse with the wild-eyed wretches of the study group. Any questions, email birdsoffire@riseup.net

Study group meets every Tuesday from 7-9pm (note the new time!) at The Long Haul. Readings and other info at sfbay-anarchists.org

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Green Strategy: The Path to Fundamental Transformation. @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Dec 7 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

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