Calendar

9896
Jan
10
Thu
Our struggles are connected: Update from the US-Mexico Border @ Asian Resource Gallery
Jan 10 @ 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm

* Live from the Border: Pedro Ríos from the American Friends Service Committee Border Program, San Diego, will speak via Skype on the current struggle for rights of the Migrant Caravan at the Tijuana-San Ysidro border wall.

* Catherine Tactaquin, from the National Network for Immigrant & Refugee Rights (NNIRR) on the current struggles for the rights of migrants and refugees.

* Art and poetry to help us further connect the struggles of our communities across borders.

Come see the art on display at the Asian Resource Center Gallery:
“GRAFFIKA URBANA” | Prints by Noel Rodriguez from Mexico City
“PRESENTE! Defend Puerto Rico” | Puerto Rican Photographers

At the Asian Resource Center’s lobby gallery two timely exhibits portray the humanity of two nations – Mexico and Puerto Rico, currently disparaged in the mass media and besieged by governments’ mismanaged response to societal and natural disasters.

In “GRAFFIKA URBANA” printmaker Noel Rodriguez focuses on the hustle and bustle of Mexico City, one of the most crowded cities in the world, now undergoing a major challenge to the political corruption and drug trafficking that the State is commonly known for. Issues of revamping trade agreements and xenophobic immigration policies with Mexico have obsessed the Trump Administration’s agenda and directly impact communities here.

“PRESENTE!”, a small exhibit of photographs from Puerto Rico speaks to the resilience of local residents, both rural and urban, in the face of economic crises and the feeble

* * *

Sponsored by East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation East Side Arts Alliance
Chiapas Support Committee
Class Conscious Photographers
National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights

For more information on the exhibitions & reception/report-back
Call Greg Morozumi (510) 533-6629

65465
SF Public Bank Coalition set to launch @ The Women's Bldg
Jan 10 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

The San Francisco Public Bank Coalition is gearing up for action! Their goal is to pressure the SF Board of Supervisors to author a charter amendment on the November 2019 ballot establishing the framework for a public bank. This framework will include mission, principles, and a governance structure.

The Coalition is planning a launch party for January 10. There’ll be music, food, presentations, and strategizing about how to move SF’s money from Wall Street to OUR streets. You’re invited!

The People Vs. Wall Street

65409
Beer and Roses DSA Labor Social @ Blind Tiger
Jan 10 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Join East Bay DSA’s Labor Committee for their regular Beer and Roses Social!

Hang out with other members who are interested in the labor movement, hear about what’s happening in the East Bay DSA Labor Committee, and learn how you can get involved!

65470
Beer and Roses DSA Labor Social @ Blind Tiger
Jan 10 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Join East Bay DSA’s Labor Committee for their regular Beer and Roses Social!

Hang out with other members who are interested in the labor movement, hear about what’s happening in the East Bay DSA Labor Committee, and learn how you can get involved!

 

65416
Jan
11
Fri
Film “Codename Jenny” + meet the filmmakers @ Longhaul
Jan 11 @ 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm

Directed by Schwarzer Hahn (Germany) – 108 minutes – in theaters soon https://vimeo.com/251190328
So you think you’re a radical activist. But do you have any idea what your parents were up to when they were your age?

Join us for a screening of the new film from by Schwarzer Hahn, a radical film collective from Berlin, Germany. Post-film discussion with the filmmakers about independent filmmaking and radical activism in today’s world.

Climate change, refugees locked up in detention camps, endless wars and the rise of the far right – enough shit to get angry about. But apart from a few half-arsed protests, nothing happens. Jenny and her friends decide to take action. But as the state starts coming down on the group, Jenny’s dad is confronted with his own militant past and has to take sides. The meaning of code name “Jenny” becomes ever more blurred. Where is the line between resistance and terrorism?

Subversive. Feminist. Anarchistic. Cross-generational. CODENAME: JENNY is a film about two generations and their activism.

65477
Jan
12
Sat
East Bay Red for Ed Rally @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Jan 12 @ 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm

Rally to Fund Public Education Now! Join 1,000s of other teachers in letting the incoming governor and legislature know that we are demanding a new day for California students and educators, including:
– Closing the Prop 13 loophole so commercial property owners pay their fair share of property taxes going to public education.

– Pressuring the State to assume a greater share of the funding for federally mandated services for students with special needs.

-Promoting policies that provide educators with the salaries and conditions needed to provide students with the best possible education.

Brought to you by The East Bay Coalition for Public Education, comprised of local CTA chapters, including Alameda Education Association, Albany Teachers Association, Castro Valley Teachers Association, Dublin Teachers Association, Emery Teachers Association, Fremont Unified District Teachers Association, Hayward Education Association, New Haven Teachers Association, Newark Teachers Association, Oakland Education Association, San Leandro Teachers Association, San Lorenzo Education Association and San Ramon Valley Teachers Association.

65414
DAVID JABER: OUR HISTORIC MOMENT BOOK TALK @ Ecology Center
Jan 12 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Imagine. A vision of thriving communities across the globe.  So much has been known of aspects of this vision for 20 years, 50 years, and even centuries. Why have we not made more progress?

Our Historic Moment offers a vision for the world, in both book and video form, that is rooted in The Natural Step and the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals, weaving together renewable resource use, ecological health, radical inclusivity and equity.  Our Historic Moment explores the barriers to greater progress that we’ve encountered to date to achieving this vision, and it offers solutions for positive change, looking at the most strategic places to apply our efforts. At heart, Our Historic Moment encourages big picture thinking, and encourages us to see our roles within the greater framework.”

Please join us and contribute to the discussion!

65459
Jan
13
Sun
Interfaith Prayers for Healing @ Bahai Center
Jan 13 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm

Monthly interfaith prayer meeting, held on second Sundays, dedicated to healing.

The Bahá’í community of Oakland is organizing this gathering for the community to connect, share prayers, writings and poems from all spiritual traditions, reflect and recharge and build coalitions interested in healing.

Come share prayers, quotes, poems, and favorite passages from your scriptures with us. Simple breakfast will be served.

Doors open: 10:00 AM
Refreshments served: 10:00-10:30 AM
Prayers: 10:30-11:30 AM
Discussion and socializing: 11:30 AM – 12:00 PM

“Thy name is my healing, O my God, and remembrance of Thee is my remedy. Nearness to Thee is my hope, and love for Thee is my companion. Thy mercy to me is my healing and my succor in both this world and the world to come. Thou, verily, art the All-Bountiful, the All-Knowing, the All-Wise.” ~ Bahá’u’lláh

“Remember the saying: ‘Of all pilgrimages the greatest is to relieve the sorrow-laden heart.'” ~ ‘Abdu’l-Bahá

65341
Liberation Psychology And The Refugee Question @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Jan 13 @ 10:30 am – 12:30 pm

With Both Marx And Jesus: Liberation Psychology And The Refugee Question – Reflections By Adrianne Aron

Derived from Liberation Theology and developed by a Jesuit priest in El Salvador, liberation psychology became the most effective of all methodologies for helping Central American refugees fleeing from state terrorism wrought by U.S. imperialism. The Catholic bishops’ “preferential option for the poor” that guided the radical religious movement of the 1970s and ‘80s in Latin America paved the way for psychology to break its attachments to the elites and bourgeois elements it had always served in places like El Salvador and Honduras (and the United States), and begin for the first time to try to understand the psychological effects of oppression. (Martín-Baró, the founder of liberation psychology, asks: What does “motivation” look like from the point of view of a woman who sells fruit in the marketplace?)

 

As people began fleeing the extreme violence in Central America and were seeking political asylum in the United States, liberation psychology provided a way for North American psychologists to put a political and historical context around the “disorders” of the traumatized refugees, and to interpret their psychological conditions to both the judges of immigration court who were hearing their asylum cases, and to the suffering individuals themselves, who felt they were losing their minds. In North American psychology this was a significant departure from the dominant paradigms of behaviorism (which unabashedly holds conformity to the mean as the desirable achievement of “normal”), and Freudian psychology, which attributes pathology to personal and interpersonal conditions but does not consider structural conditions such as capitalist social organization as contributors to breakdowns in mental health. (Fanon is not widely known in the U.S.) With liberation psychology, North American psychologists could use their professional interviewing skills to win the trust of traumatized clients, and their credentials and academic skills to win the respect of doubting judges. Most significantly, they could use their own sense of justice – and a wish to promote justice – to to inform their psychological work, whether their basis for this commitment was in religion, Marxism, or any ethical standard whatsoever.

 

Suggested reading: Writings for a Liberation Psychology: Essays of Ignacio Martín-Baró (Aron and Corne, Eds., Harvard University Press, 1994, 1996)
Human Rights and Wrongs (by Adrianne Aron, Sunshot Press, 2018)

Adrianne Aron is a bilingual liberation psychologist in Berkeley. Her psychological evaluation of a persecuted Salvadoran student leader in 1985 opened the possibility for Central Americans to win asylum in the U.S. (at a time when 98% of all Salvadoran applications, and 99% of Guatemalan applications, were being denied). Human Rights and Wrongs, winner of the Sunshot Nonfiction Prize, is being nominated for the PEN/Galbraith Award
Info:  www.adriannearon.com

65434
Green Sunday: Visions of Unity @ Niebyl Proctor Library
Jan 13 @ 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm

Visions of Unity panel: 5:00 – 6:30 pm

Keynote Speaker: Gayle McLaughlin, former two-term mayor of Richmond.  Gayle is also co-founder and interim chair of the California Progressive Alliance (https://californiaprogressivealliance.org), whose Founding Convention will be held on March 30, 2019.

Panelists to join Gayle and the attendees discussing their visions of progressive coalitions:
Shawn McDougal, Community Democracy Project
Marsha Feinland, Peace and Freedom Party
Jack McShane, East Bay Democratic Socialists of America
Dan Siegel, Oakland Justice Coalition

Moderated by:  NONI SESSION!  Executive Director of the East Bay Permanent Real Estate Cooperative & former 2016 Oakland City Council candidate

SPONSOR: Green Sundays are a series of free programs & discussions sponsored by the Green Party of Alameda County. They are usually held on the 2nd Sunday of each month. The monthly business meeting of the County Council of the Green Party of Alameda County follows at 6:45 pm.  Council meetings are always open to anyone who is interested.

65478
Jan
14
Mon
Ending Urban Shield “As It Is Currently Constituted” – Penultimate Task Force Meeting @ Alameda County Administration Bldg
Jan 14 @ 3:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Thursday’s 1/10/19 meeting was not the final task force meeting after all. They will meet again on Monday January 14 from 3 to 8pm and then again on January 22 from 9-11am. The process of running through a long set of potential recommendations is about halfway completed.

=====

Meeting of the Alameda County Board of Supervisors’ Ad Hoc Committee on Urban Area Security Initiative, charged with reconstituting and rethinking Urban Shield.

The committee was established by the Board of Supervisors in March 2018 in response to sustained community concerns about Urban Shield, which is funded in part by UASI grants from the Department of Homeland Security, and coordinated by the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office.

The Board of Supervisors decided in March, 2018 that 2018 would be the last year the county would approve Urban Shield, as currently constituted, and asked the Ad Hoc Committee to make recommendations to the Board on the UASI-funded emergency preparedness training and exercise in 2019 and beyond.

More information.

Agendas and materials for each meeting are posted at http://www.acgov.org/board/calendarcom.htm

65494
Jan
15
Tue
Rally to Kick Off Earth Strike @ Oscar Grant Plaza
Jan 15 @ 5:30 pm – 8:30 pm

EarthStrike is an international campaign calling for a global general strike for climate action next September 27. This Oakland rally will be one of many around the world, the first day of events in the campaign leading up the EarthStrike.

This rally is hosted by EarthStike Cali, which is promoting this list of demands:

• Municipalize and wind down all fossil fuel extraction.
• End all pipeline projects, especially those that exploit native land.
• End corporate money and Super PACs that fund fossil fuel expansion.
• End the construction of new oil wells and the practice of fracking.
• Create a tax on industrial carbon emitters with all tax revenue funding renewable energy subsidies.
• Transition to 100% renewable energy by 2035.
• Sign the Paris Climate Accords.
• End subsidies to oil and natural gas companies.
• Regulate large scale agriculture to reduce methane emissions, limit hazardous runoff, and preserve biodiversity.
• Mindfully manage potable water resources, and the inclusion of rainwater into irrigation and waste systems.
• Aid communities displaced by climate disasters with a focus on rebuilding renewable infrastructure, including providing state-level aid to Puerto Rico for natural disasters.
• End all subsidies to meat with further research and development on addressing dairy and other animal agriculture related environmental concerns.
• Redirect automaker subsidies towards building and maintaining green public transportation. Repeal the Taft-Hartley Act

 

Info/RSVP

65468
Socialist Night School: Martin Luther King, Jr.: Democratic Socialist @ East Bay Community Space
Jan 15 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

East Bay DSA Night School returns for the 2019 winter session with a class on the life and thought of Martin Luther King Jr.

Every year, in January and April, we commemorate the extraordinary career of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. There is probably no figure in recent American history whose memory is more distorted, whose message is more sanitized, whose powerful words are more drained of content than King. A closer investigation shows that King was far more radical, especially on matters of labor, poverty, and economic justice, than we remember.

Please join us for a discussion on the radical thought of Martin Luther King, Jr.: anti-imperialist, anti-capitalist, and dare we say, democratic socialist.

Accessibility: Wheelchair-accessible entrance and restrooms

Required Readings

See the readings that we’ll be discussing after a brief introduction from our members.

65486
Jan
17
Thu
ALAMEDA COUNTY CLEAN SLATE CLINIC @ Public Defender's Office
Jan 17 @ 9:00 am – 11:00 am

JOINT WALK‐IN CLINICS with Public Defender and EBCLC

*Please bring your statewide CA DOJ RAP sheet
if you have it or we can give information at clinic*

We may be able to help with:
 Dismissal of Conviction – PC 1203.4
 Felony Reduction / Prop 47 and 64 Relief
 Early Termination of Probation
 Certificate of Rehabilitation
 Sealing Arrest Record – Factual Innocence
 Juvenile Record Sealing
 Post-Conviction Relief for Immigrants and
Survivors of Human Trafficking
 Employment denials due to criminal background
reports
 Occupational Licensing Denials(DSS, Security
Guard)
 Voting Rights, Jury Service Rights

65379
The Iron Wall – film and discussion with Dalit Baum, Ph.D. @ Mount Diablo Peace and Justice Center
Jan 17 @ 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm

his film (52 mins. 2006) features interviews with prominent Israeli and Palestinian peace activists and political analysts, as well as Israeli settlers and soldiers, and Palestinian farmers.

Following the screening a discussion will be held with the assistance of Dalit Baum, Ph.D., Director of Economic Activism for Palestine at the American Friends Service Committee.

Baum is the Israeli co-founder of Who Profits from the Occupation, and the Coalition of Women for Peace in Israel. She is a scholar who has taught about militarism and the global economy from a feminist perspective in Israeli and American universities. She has been active with various groups in the Israeli anti-occupation and democracy movement, including Black Laundry, Boycott from Within, Zochrot, Anarchists against the Wall and Women in Black.

Reception at 6 PM, film presentation and discussion at 7 PM
Pre-register at: http://www.ourpeacecenter.org

65488
Resisting Imperialism: Voices from the Migrant Caravan @ 518 Valencia: The Eric Quezada Center for Culture and Politics
Jan 17 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Join us  for political education that will connect the struggles of the migrant caravan at the US-Mexico border to other anti-imperialist border struggles in El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Yemen and Palestine.

We will also be fundraising to help support the needs of the migrant caravan at our border. See below for where to send your donations today.

Translation headsets will be available.

SPEAKERS
Veronica “Beby” Aguilar – Pueblo Sin Fronteras
Chris Lopez- School of America Watch, East Bay Coordinator
Pierre Labossiere – Haiti Action Committee
Ashwak Hauter, former AROC Collective member
Carlos Manuel Martinez – Ashwak and Carlos recently returned from Tijuana, after close consultation with organizations providing legal and medical support for migrants and asylum seekers.

Make donations to:
Al Otro Lado: https://alotrolado.org/take-action/donate/
and
Enclave Caracol through “Cash App” using @enclavecaracol@gmail.com

Enclave Caracol, an autonomous project in Tijuana, organizes material support for the caravan and coordinates with Al Otro Lado, an NGO that provides free legal support to asylum-seekers and coordinates volunteer efforts on the ground.

65480
Book Launch with TONY PLATT : Beyond These Walls @ Books, Inc
Jan 17 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Tony Platt, Distinguished Affiliated Scholar at the Center for the Study of Law & Society, UC Berkeley, discusses his groundbreaking new work, Beyond These Walls: Rethinking Crime and Punishment in the United States.

Beyond These Walls is an ambitious and far-ranging exploration that tracks the legacy of crime and imprisonment in the United States, from the historical roots of the American criminal justice system to our modern state of over-incarceration, and offers a bold vision for a new future. Author Tony Platt, a recognized authority in the field of criminal justice, challenges the way we think about how and why millions of people are tracked, arrested, incarcerated, catalogued, and regulated in the United States.

Beyond These Walls traces the disturbing history of punishment and social control, revealing how the criminal justice system attempts to enforce and justify inequalities associated with class, race, gender, and sexuality. Prisons and police departments are central to this process, but other institutions – from immigration and welfare to educational and public health agencies – are equally complicit.

Platt argues that international and national politics shape perceptions of danger and determine the policies of local criminal justice agencies, while private policing and global corporations are deeply and undemocratically involved in the business of homeland security.

Finally, Beyond These Walls demonstrates why efforts to reform criminal justice agencies have often expanded rather than contracted the net of social control. Drawing upon a long tradition of popular resistance, Platt concludes with a strategic vision of what it will take to achieve justice for all in this era of authoritarian disorder.

65424
Restore Our Rights – Panel Discussion @ Booth Auditorium
Jan 17 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Panel Discussion & Strategy Session

*No food or drink allowed in the Auditorium. Thank you!

Join us for a discussion and strategy session—building on recent victories in Florida and Louisiana—on felony disenfranchisement, jury service, running for political office, and other rights we need restored in California.

Speakers include:

Desmond MeadeFlorida Rights Restoration Coalition (FRRC)—spearheaded the campaign to pass Amendment 4 that will restore the rights of 1.4 million Floridians with felony convictions on January 8, 2019.

Norris HendersonVoice of the Experienced—New Orleans (VOTE-NOLA)—campaigned to successfully pass Amendment 2, requiring Louisiana juries to have unanimous verdicts. Currently, Oregon is the only state in the U.S. with Jim Crow non-unanimous jury verdicts.

Taina Vargas-EdmondInitiate Justice—campaigning to restore voting rights for all Californians, regardless of conviction or incarceration status.

Dauras CyprianAll of Us or None—leading AOUON’s “Let Me Vote” campaign, currently on parole and thus ineligible to vote.

The discussion will be moderated by Aminah Elster—after spending over 15 years incarcerated in California prisons, Aminah is currently on parole and thus ineligible to vote. Aminah is the 2018 Elder Freeman Policy Fellow and a current student at UC Berkeley.

65475
Jan
18
Fri
Sensible Cinema Presents: Film Premiere Eyes Of Mississippi @ Unitarian Universalist Center
Jan 18 @ 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm

Sensible Cinema presents the West Coast Premiere of the award winning
documentary Eyes Of Mississippi by filmmaker Ellen Ann Fentress the
story of the impact of one relatively unknown reporter Bill Minor.
The film will show how the impact of one reporter determined to call
out racism and government during the Civil Rights Movement of –
the South carries uncanny resonance in the nation today .

There will be a panel discussion after the screening with the filmmaker
Ellen Ann Fentress moderated by Professor James Taylor of the University
of San Francisco.

65489
Film Showing: Roma @ Revolution Books
Jan 18 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

Roma is a film of breathtaking beauty. Cleo, an indigenous woman from Oaxaca, is the heart of the film as the nanny and domestic worker for a middle class family in Mexico City. Set in the early 70’s, a time of student rebellion and government repression. Oscar winner Alfonso Cuaron wrote, directed and filmed this masterpiece, winner of the 2019 Golden Globes for Best Foreign Film and Best Director.

65490