NEWS

Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 11:36

Dec 13, 2021, Poor People’s Campaign, Ana Santoya (center). Credit: Ana Santoyo

By Tina Shelton
WILPF Greater Philadelphia Branch

April 2022

In recent months, the Greater Philadelphia Branch has been active in the community, participating in the Poor People’s Rally in Washington D.C. on December 13 and showing up for Democracy at one of the street actions on the anniversary of the January 6 attack on the US Capitol.

Jan 6, 2022, Rally for Democracy, Tina Shelton. Credit: Pam Magidson.

In addition, we joined with peace groups in Philadelphia to say “No to NATO, No to war with Russia.” Our members have joined webinars, lobbying on zoom, getting educated, and reaching out to others to build coalitions.

March 6, 2022, Marlena Santoya speaking at the “No War with Ukraine” rally on Independence Mall. Credit: Pam Albright

We wanted to highlight a few significant events happening around us:

  • Cherril Spencer was featured on a webinar hosted by Divest Philly from the War Machine on March 29. Check out the webinar on YouTube: Abolishing Nuclear Weapons Globally & Locally
  • The life of Nan Freeman, one of the first United Farm Workers martyred 50 years ago, was commemorated in Sarasota, Florida, on April 2. We are grateful to Pam Albright for witnessing with Nan and keeping her memory alive.
  • Finally, we are excited to join the Poor People’s Campaign “MORE” tour in Philadelphia on April 25!

Let’s transform the war economy into a peace economy!

 

Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 10:59

By Judy Adams
WILPF Peninsula Palo Alto

April 2022

Our small Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA WILPF branch organizes silent sidewalk vigils at a busy intersection near the Stanford campus every Friday, from noon to 1. We planned to focus on Black History month in February, but on February 4, we made our major focus the war in Ukraine. Our weekly vigils are outside a large shopping center at lunch hour, with lots of restaurants, across from a local high school, facing an entrance to Stanford, and usually heavy traffic, pedestrians, and bicycles. All our hand-written signs are 2-sided, so they do double duty as we walk the sidewalks and cross at the corners. Drivers in both directions see a message, increasing our effect, even if we have a small number of protestors. We also posted flyers around the corner and in the nearby business district, urging peace in Ukraine. As the conflict escalated, we added other flyers and publicity to say “NO to NATO expansion.” We display WILPF’s message against nuclear weapons at all our vigils, with a QR code leading to the WILPF petition supporting the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear weapons and flyers/handbills that some people take. Our vigils continued with the two themes through February. 

March came, and we continued with our small vigils but increased our presence every day from February 1 through the 7, not just Fridays, with volunteers from our coalition groups. One day a woman in full Ukraine flag colors (as I was), waving a large Ukraine flag as she joined the vigil, raised my spirits, and increased the supportive honks of the cars and bells from the passing bicycles. She was a Russian from Moscow, standing for peace with Ukraine. As we walked the corner together, she held her phone up as she spoke with friends in Russia who heard the honks for Peace from the traffic. Another day I was challenged by a man who asked if I was Ukrainian, and when I said no, he asked me how I was against Russia when America invaded Mexico, killed people, and took land for our own… and we did the same in Texas. I had to acknowledge that violence, but I said it must be “NO MORE!”

As we planned the March 6 Global Day of Action for Peace in Ukraine, we designed a flyer that we distributed around the community and listed on calendars and with our coalition of peace and justice activists. Our first sponsor was the local Raging Action Grannies, and they agreed to our silent vigil at our usual corner. They usually performed songs with re-written lyrics but they hadn’t been singing since COVID. This time, they stood together in their traditional costumes, “speaking” through their signs, joined to our astonishment, on the 6th, with more than 130 plus other vigilers who answered the call for peace and the call for nuclear disarmament. We also demonstrated in support of WILPF’s national partner, the Poor Peoples Campaign, against poverty, racism, and militarism that was devastating Ukraine. We also worked with our faith community, Multifaith Voices for Peace & Justice, who followed our noon vigil with their evening vigil, with many returning to the same corner where they demonstrated at noon with us– adding more signs and refreshed energies.

We ended with prayers for peace. The peace community rose to the call for peace. What started with a few WILPF members standing on the sidewalk every week turned into the combined assembly of over 260 people peacefully assembled that day and evening, and some have returned on our Fridays.

To view more pictures of the March 6 vigil, click here

Can we change the course of the war? We will persevere. As we continue our work for peace and justice as WILPFers and partners with the Poor People’s Campaign, we seek instruction and inspiration in these times. We began April by joining our nearest sister branch in San Jose. We organized an April 4 community reading by Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s speech, “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence” (April 4th, 1967), exactly one year before he was assassinated. The challenge we face now, as then, is how to “wage peace.” The reading by community members will be recorded, edited, and then made available on the San Jose WILPF YouTube channel soon after the readings. Our gratitude to Rowan Fairgrove of the San Jose branch for her contributions to our partnership.
 

Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 10:45

By Leni Villagomez Reeves

April 2022

Cuba finished writing and approving, by referendum, a new constitution in 2019. Now, Cuba is creating a legal code that details the rights set forth in the new constitution. The previous Cuban constitution was written in 1975. It was an advanced document for its time, especially regarding women’s rights, but it included prevalent assumptions about heteronormativity and patriarchal authoritarian family structure.
    
In the new constitution, the most controversial area was marriage rights for anyone other than heterosexual couples. This version was adopted: “All persons have the right to establish a family… Marriage is a social and juridical (legal) institution. It is one of the forms by which families can organize. It is founded in the free consent and the equality of rights, obligations, and legal capabilities of the two spouses.”

All the Rights for All the Families

Mi Familia es Muy OriginalThe Families Code is the name of this set of laws. Codigo de Las Familias, in Spanish — a recognition of plurality —  families, rather than a single model. This proposed set of laws has over 400 articles, protecting the rights of all people to form a family without discrimination, updating the legal definitions with inclusive models, establishing the right to a family life free from violence, and centering values of love, affection, solidarity, and responsibility.

Yes, it will recognize same-sex marriage. “Marriage is the voluntary union of two people on the basis of affection, love, and mutual respect.” Now let’s consider other aspects of what is truly revolutionary in the proposed new Families Code of Cuba, currently in the process of consultation with the people.

Real Consultation with the People

That’s part of what’s revolutionary — a serious consultation process involving about 78,000 meetings in electoral precincts in every neighborhood. The new laws establish rights not recognized until now in the legal system. The process pushes the limits of the possible both in organization and in conception. People have to work through revolutionary changes. In May, Cuba’s Parliament, the Asamblea de Poder Popular, will approve a new version of the text with inputs from the public consultation. After that, the Families Code goes to a popular referendum.

Getting it Right

The process of consultation and referendum is true participatory democracy. A variety of opinions enriches the discussion. It works best when there is no manipulation of people’s fears and prejudices by those who either wish to promote their own beliefs or wish to destabilize Cuba. Some of those in opposition have attempted to pick out  sensitive issues and then pervert the dialogue by distorting these issues. A Cuban saying is “La mentira tiene patas cortas” — lies have short legs — but social media, especially when used by professional manipulators, has given some lies long strides. Here are some lies or distortions contrasted with reality:

Falsehood: Parental authority is replaced by parental responsibility, which means parents will lose control of their children or legal rights to them.
Reality: The Families Code replaces the term authority with the term responsibility, but this does not remove parental rights. Parents retain all rights and responsibilities, except in sharply defined circumstances where a parent is harming the child, as in physical or sexual abuse. The State does not take over any parental authority.

Falsehood: The State is going to take over the children. The slogan associated with this myth: Children belong to their parents, not the state.
Reality: Children belong with their family and in that sense of “belong to their family,” there is no dispute or change in the law, but they are not possessions in the sense of “I can do whatever I want with him - or more often her - because she’s mine.” Parents must care for and protect their children. Only if they fail to do so must the state intervene in the best interests of the child. 

Falsehood: Courts will be able to allow the marriage of minors without parental consent.
Reality: Just the opposite. The current set of laws allows parents and guardians to consent to marriage of girls at 14, boys at 16 under exceptional circumstances. The new Families Code prohibits the marriage of minors (under 18). Not with the consent of parents. Not by court order. Not at all.

Falsehood: The concept of progressive autonomy for children will allow children to make inappropriate decisions. (The religious right often focuses on fears of children making decisions about gender identity.) Reality: Sex change for minors isn’t allowed. Whether or not we disagree with this model, Cuba does not allow minors to make major decisions involving surgery or hormone treatment before legal adulthood at 18. And progressive autonomy means that children have rights and that they can exercise these rights according to their level of maturity, assuming new decision-making powers appropriate to their development. At the same time, parents continue to make decisions for the child in accord with the child’s highest interests, considering the child’s character and preferences, during the process of maturation.

Falsehood: Surrogate pregnancy legalization means women can carry a pregnancy for pay.
Reality: Surrogate pregnancy is legalized, but it must be done for love.

Falsehood: People of the same sex can marry, and that’s a bad idea.  
Reality: People can marry whom they choose, and that’s a great idea.

The Opposition

On one side of the discussion is an organized conservative political force centered around evangelical churches, many of them with strong ties to the conservative evangelical churches and political movements in the US, which help finance them.  They insist on their presumed biblical mandates on marriage, but it’s far more than that; there’s a marked authoritarian and patriarchal attitude regarding all family structures.  They want to have “custody over” rather than “responsibility for” children, with children regarded as possessions within the family structure. They want to keep the option of physical and psychological violence within the family. 

 

The Coalition of Those For Inclusivity and Justice

It’s important to note that this is “not all churches.”  A liberation theology ecumenical religious movement in Cuba is also represented in this discussion, part of the coalition  advocating for diversity, rights, and dignity, upholding this Families Code as a document consistent with a biblical message of full dignity and rights for all.

They are part of a broad coalition of organizations and activists for diversity, inclusiveness, feminism, a dismantling of patriarchy, and a redefinition of family, with  the widening of the concept of family beyond consanguinity to open it to relationships that are built on love, affection, and solidarity. This view promotes equity and justice as root values and extends additional legal rights and autonomy to the elderly, to children, and people with incapacities and disabilities. 

The Cuban Revolution, acting with integrity, cannot bargain away the rights of any sector of the people to conform to popular or religious prejudice.  Back when the California Fair Housing Act was being considered in 1959, some white people used to  think and say that a good argument against laws prohibiting discrimination was  “You can’t legislate how people feel.”  The answer is that you certainly can legislate how they act. Cuba is uniquely trying to educate in the process of legislating, but All The Rights for All The Families is ultimately not negotiable.
 

Post date: Thu, 03/03/2022 - 07:17

Click here for a PDF of this statement.

March 1, 2022

We demand that Russia cease its invasion of Ukraine, and that all sides enforce a cease fire, including NATO countries and other countries preparing to send weapons to Ukraine.

In this extremely volatile situation, we in WILPF are reminded of our foremothers, who, in 1915, responding to the breakdown of security systems between nations and the onset of World War I, joined together with women from opposing sides to demand mediation of the conflict.

Now we do so again. The situation in Ukraine and on the international scene shows us that, once again, war cannot and will never be a solution for peace and stability. In these times, the most sensible thing we in WILPF can do is to build international solidarity – to come together and channel all our individual voices into one collective, loud and decisive voice that calls for an end to militarization and war-mongering.

We in WILPF know that the people will suffer, as they always do, when the so-called great global powers wage war. This is intolerable.  During a recent meeting of the UN Security Council, discussing the Russia – Ukraine situation, Martin Kimani, the Ambassador from Kenya, recounted an African saying: 

“Our internal divisions and fragilities were weaponized on the altar of geopolitical rivalry. It confirmed the truth of the African saying that recognizes when elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers.”

We deplore the impacts of militarism that degrade the environment in numerous ways, affect women and children disproportionally (including an increase in domestic violence) and trample widely on human rights.

We in our WILPF US Section recognize that the NATO expansion, begun in the late 1990s, was essential to the US scheme for a “unipolar” world. NATO expansion is contributing to the crisis today, starkly contrasting with Mikhail Gorbachev’s vision for the demilitarization of “a common house of Europe”, made safe for human rights.

Disarm Committee's Background Statement Regarding Russia and Ukraine
June 2022 
Click here »

 

For further information, contact: disarmchair@wilpfus.org 
 “No more wars! Not now, not ever again!”

 

Post date: Tue, 03/01/2022 - 15:23

By Emily Keel
WILPF liaison to the PPC

March 2022

On February 16, our solidarity committee for the WILPF Poor People's Campaign rally hosted a virtual meeting well attended by WILPF and featuring Rev Liz Theoharis, co-chair of the PPC, and Noam Back, our liaison from the campaign. Branch members from across the nation gathered, eager to hear the logistics of getting to Washington DC on June 18. We will represent WILPF in this campaign to unite people to challenge the evils of systemic racism, poverty, the war economy, ecological devastation, and the distorted moral narrative of religious nationalism.

Rev Liz told us that June 18 in DC is “not a day but a declaration of the power that poor and low-income people are building to be able to shift priorities and structures to be around the needs and demands of the 140 million poor and low wealth people–people whose lives and livelihoods are at stake and do not need to be.”  “We must come forward with power and shine a light on what is possible and what is necessary.”  

In order to support this moral agenda and campaign for justice, we ask that you make plans to attend the June 18 rally and march on DC and to the polls. We will give you more information about securing a ride with a bus near you, reducing the capacity for this event to be safer from COVID. The campaign is addressing safety issues with public health advisors. We will gather all WILPF members in one location outside and march in unity with our banners and signs because, as Rev Liz said, “If we truly want peace, we do have to work for justice.” See this 3-minute video of WILPF branches' participation with the PPC from the past. Let's make it a momentous gathering for all of us on June 18.

Please visit the PPC website and RSVP for the June 18 event. On the website, you can find your state committee. Sign up to learn more about what your state is doing, support them with a donation, and attend an event in person or virtually. Make sure to follow the campaign on Facebook. There are abundant resources to meet the needs of the poor, and we march to summon the political will to do so!

You may contact Emily Keel for more information at ekkeel@protonmail.com

 

 

Post date: Mon, 02/28/2022 - 07:50

 

Demand a Diplomatic Solution to the Conflict in Ukraine
The DISARM Committee urges all members to demand a diplomatic solution to the conflict in Ukraine. You can find a campaign toolkit to use that includes a brief call for action, key messages, social media posts, stories, and banner designs. Learn more.

Reducing Gun Violence and Increasing Mental Health Support
The Detroit Branch and co-sponsors hosting a two-part interactive workshop called “Beyond Oxford: Dialoguing Across Differences,” in which dialogue skills will be enhanced for more productive and civil public discourse. Be prepared to interact and learn from each other. Learn more.

Racial Reckonings
The Cape Cod Branch invites everyone to attend an International Women’s Day program, Racial Reckonings. The Zoom program is on March 8 from 7:30 - 9 p.m. (EST). To attend, please register in advance by clicking here.

WILPF Discussion Listserv Invites Subscribers in March
Do you feel strongly about something and want to tell someone what you think? Especially someone in WILPF US who probably agrees at least somewhat with you? WILPF US is working on setting up a Discussion listserv for subscribers! Learn more. 

US Cuba Conference Featuring Federation of Cuban Women United Nations Delegation 
WILPF’s Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee and US Women and Cuba Collaboration are participating on two panels with the Federation of Cuban Women’s Delegation to the United Nations 66th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women. The panels are part of a two-day national conference being held in Manhattan, New York, on March 19 and 20 at The Peoples’ Forum. To register and for more information on the conference and the panels, please visit iucnc.org.

March is Women’s History Month!
Women's History MonthMarch celebrates Women’s History Month! This month celebrates the contributions women have made to the United States and recognizes the specific achievements women have made over the course of American history in a variety of fields. Join us in uplifting WILPF members by sharing what brought them to WILPF US! #WILPFUS #TellYourStory   
Click here to submit your story and picture.

 

 

LeadHERShip Workshop
Monday, March 21, 2022 
LeaderHERshipIn honor of Women’s History Month, the Building Branches from the Inside Out Initiative is offering a special session on leadership development. This session will be facilitated by Inside Out Field Facilitator, Nikki Abeleda, MSW.  WILPF Branch Members will have the opportunity to develop leadership skills, deepen your appreciation for each branch member’s leadership/work styles, understand the need for a variety of work styles, and learn qualities to develop to be stronger leaders. You will be able to connect with other branch members and learn more about the Inside Out Initiative! Learn more.

 

 

 

Post date: Mon, 02/28/2022 - 07:36

Credit: Image is from taken from the WILPF International Toolkit for their “In Solidarity with Ukraine No More Wars” campaign.

By Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas
DISARM Issue Committee co-chairs

March 2022    

As we write this eNews article on February 25, the invading Russian army is attacking Kyiv, the capital city of Ukraine, with missiles, tanks, and cyber disruptions. We cannot predict the situation by the time this eNews article is published, but, whatever has happened, we are sure WILPF members must continue to speak out against military actions to solve conflicts. 

We urge all members to take nonviolent action to promote peace, disarmament, and diplomacy as solutions to this crisis. We embrace the recent call from WILPF International:  

“The most sensible thing we can do at this juncture is to build international solidarities – to come together and channel all our individual voices into one collective, loud and decisive voice that calls for an end to militarization and war-mongering.” 

Take a look at WILPF International’s “Call to Action,” published on February 14. The campaign toolkit they have prepared for our use includes a brief call for action, key messages, social media posts, stories, and banner designs.

Sunday, March 6, has been identified by an international coalition of peace groups as the day for activists all over the world to get out on their hometown’s streets to protest against war and militarism, using the illegal Russian invasion of the sovereign nation of Ukraine as the common theme. We urge WILPF members to join with your local anti-war  and anti-nuclear weapons groups to hold non-violent demonstrations in visible places where you live.

WILPF is a partner organization with the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), and we join them and many other anti-war and anti-nuclear weapons organizations in condemning the invasion of Ukraine by Russian military forces. The ICAN statement, issued on February 24, can be read here.

Here is an extract from ICAN’s statement: “This is a direct violation of international law and puts civilians at incredible risk. In addition to an illegal invasion, Putin threatened this morning to respond to any interference with ‘consequences that you never have had before in your history,’ which really means that he’s threatening to use nuclear weapons.”

We appreciate these sentiments from “The Campaign for Peace Disarmament and Common Security” as they condemn Russia’s military aggression against Ukraine:

“There are no military solutions to either the Ukraine or European-wide crises, only a political solution based on the common security principle that security cannot be achieved against one’s rival, but only with that rival. Nations must not seek to strengthen their security at the expense of the security of other states.  Work for peace and justice.”

The actions you can personally take to raise your voice against any further escalation of the war that is happening in Ukraine on February 25 were listed in our February 1 eAlert and are still valid actions to take.

We expect that an official WILPF US public statement on the situation in Ukraine will be issued by the time this eNews is distributed; please read it for an analysis of the root causes of this war and how it will disproportionately affect the women and children of Ukraine.

Please submit your questions about this article to disarmchair@wilpfus.org.
 

Post date: Mon, 02/28/2022 - 07:28

By Judith Sheldon
Detroit Branch

March 2022

In immediate response to the Oxford High School shooting and the steadily increasing number of children impacted by domestic gun tragedies, the Detroit Branch hosted an online forum on reducing gun violence on January 27, 2022.  

The panelists included Jayanti Gupta from the youth advocacy group March for Your Lives Michigan and National; Leslie Adadow, an experienced school social worker; and Barbara L. Jones, Community Dispute Resolution Specialist with the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies at Wayne State University. Speakers were Michigan State Senator Rosemary Baylor and U.S. Representative Elissa Slotkin.  

The discussion was moderated by Laura Dewey, Detroit Branch President, and focused on reducing gun violence, increasing the number of social workers in schools, and supporting legislation to create safe storage.

Both Senator Bayer and Representative Slotkin are sponsoring bills for the safe storage of all firearms, and they are supporters of “red flag” laws as well. They were clear that their efforts to support safe storage are not connected to Second Amendment issues.

One of the panelists, Jayanti, has friends who attend Oxford High School. She spoke passionately about the shooting that occurred on November 30, 2021, in which four students were shot dead by a 15-year-old sophomore. His parents had illegally purchased a gun for him a few days prior. “If there ever was clear evidence of a nation in crisis and an utter failure to contain gun violence, this is it,” she said. She went on to talk about the mental health support and gun control that’s urgently needed. By doing nothing, she said, “our politicians are signing our death warrants.” 

Leslie spoke about the dire lack of mental health supports in schools and outlined the policies needed to address mental health problems. Barbara emphasized the need for connecting with people and organizations and deep communication with those we may disagree with to change the human condition.

Each of the 124 attendees received a follow-up Resource Flyer with suggestions for further learning and drafts of letters to elected officials and school administrators calling for, respectively, safe gun storage laws and more mental health workers in schools.  

A video of the event can be viewed here.

The Detroit Branch and co-sponsors are following up this event with a two-part interactive workshop called “Beyond Oxford: Dialoguing Across Differences,” in which dialogue skills will be enhanced for more productive and civil public discourse. On March 24 and 31, each hour-long session will be facilitated by Barbara L. Jones, who served on the forum. It is not necessary to have attended the “After Oxford” forum to attend the cost-free “Dialoguing Across Differences” workshop. Register for parts 1 and 2 here.

Please share with your friends and be prepared to interact and learn from each other. We hope to see you there!

For more information or to get the Resource Flyer, contact wilpfdetroit@att.net.

Contact: Laura Dewey, deweylaura@att.net

 

Post date: Mon, 02/28/2022 - 07:07

By Candace Perry
Cape Cod Branch

March 2022

The Cape Cod Branch invites everyone to attend an International Women’s Day program, Racial Reckonings. The Zoom program is on March 8 from 7:30 - 9 p.m. (EST). To attend, please register in advance by clicking here. There will be three short plays and discussions. Two of the plays, “No Surrender” and “Kinfolk,” were written by WILPF member Candace Perry, who has written several plays dealing with white privilege and the impacts of historical racial prejudice, especially in the southern United States, where she was raised. Her fellow playwright, John Dennis Anderson, is the author of “Writing Wrongs,” and also grew up in the South.

"We bring our Southern roots and a concern for our white privilege to our work. As a longtime member of the Cape Cod Branch of WILPF, I’ve learned how racism and white supremacy have impacted every part of our lives." Candace says of the plays she and John have written. The three plays were produced via Zoom. “Writing Wrongs” by Anderson, features Dorothy Mains Prince with Anderson, as himself, and deals with a 1952 allegedly racist novel. Perry’s play, “No Surrender,” about the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee, was filmed live with actors John Shuman, Patrick Riviere, and Anderson. Perry’s other play, “Kinfolk,” deals with family connections and costars Sallie Tighe, Cynthia Harrington, and Patrick Riviere.

In addition to the plays, a pre-recorded discussion led by Charles Everett Pace will be shown. Pace, a scholar and historical interpreter who portrayed Frederick Douglass, Langston Hughes, and Malcolm X, brought his insights as an anthropologist of performance and a social justice activist to the discussion. Following the pre-recorded portion, the playwrights will be joined by two of the actors, Dorothy Mains Prince and Sallie Tighe, for a live discussion. Prince and Tighe will bring their experiences as African-American women, actors, and activists to the conversation.  WILPF members will be able to participate, and we look forward to a dynamic exchange.

The pre-recorded program was originally presented on Zoom in December with funding from the Joan Patchen Fund of WILPF. The fund supports the work of WILPF branches in the use of the arts to promote social change and create a more peaceable world.  

The Cape Cod Branch is pleased to be able to extend the viewership of the plays to all of WILPF with a new virtual program on International Women’s Day. You can view the flyer for the program here.

 

 

Post date: Mon, 02/28/2022 - 06:56

By Dianne Blais
WILPF US Secretary

March 2022

A number of WILPF members have asked for a way to have national discussions with other individual WILPF members. A listserve is one way to do this. Posting to a listserv – sending an email to it – allows the listserve “subscriber” email to multiple other people (the other members/subscribers of the listserv) without having to fill in each individual email address. Additionally, a listserve can protect the privacy of the personal information about the emails of the other subscribers.  

Currently, numerous issue committees and branches utilize listservs. The WILPF-Branches listserv is set up so each branch has a liaison who gets information. The liaison then relays information to the branch members.  

Soon, WILPF members will have a way to write freely about what they're thinking and send it to other WILPF members who choose to subscribe to the listserv. A discussion listserv that any WILPF member can join seems the best way to do this. Now, a WILPF Discussion listserv is in the works; it will be up and running soon! 

Numerous factors need to be considered in setting up this Discussion listserv. They include how to:

  • Publicize and establish it;
  • Decide which Discussion listserv rules and guidelines must be followed and how these are to be enforced;
  • Work out how the listserv participants will elect listserv monitors/mediators;
  • Set up procedures for how complaints/petitions are handled; and
  • Keep info on the WILPF website about the Discussion listserv up-to-date.

A Discussion Listserv Committee has been formed to set up the listserv. The committee will meet regularly about Discussion listserv use, concerns, and procedures in the future.

Tentatively the Discussion Listserv Committee has two rules and four guidelines for Discussion listserv members/subscribers.  

The two rules are:

  1. All Discussion listserv members must be current members of WILPF US; and
  2. Because of IRS 501(c)(4)) rules, there can be no political candidate endorsements.

The four suggested guidelines that each Discussion listserv member must agree to are:     

  1. Be kind and courteous;
  2. No hate speech or bullying;
  3. Respect everyone’s privacy; and 
  4. No ad hominem attacks/personal insults.

Please consider joining the Discussion Listserv Committee (now) and the Discussion listserv (hopefully very soon). If you're not currently a WILPF member, you can join now at this webpage! Watch for an eAlert and/or an e-mail from your branch liaison to tell you when the Discussion list will start and how to join. 

Contact me at secretary@wilpfus.org to volunteer or with any questions or comments.

 

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