NEWS

Post date: Thu, 10/27/2022 - 07:55
Dorothy Van Soest

by Dorothy Van Soest 
Lifelong WILPF member and former WILPF Liaison to the Poor People’s Campaign 

November 2022

Making thinkers out of fighters and fighters out of thinkers.
           —
General Baker

“Isn’t it wonderful,” a Poor People’s Campaign activist friend of mine excitedly proclaimed on September 14, 2022, after reading that day’s New York Times article announcing that child poverty had plunged 59 percent from 1993 to 2019, from 28% (19.4 million children) to 11% (8.4 million children). 

“How do we explain the discrepancy,” I said, “between that data and what our Poor People’s Campaign fact sheet says, that 52.1% of children under the age of 18 are poor or low-income (38.5 million children), and that more than half of our country’s children do not know if they will have a place to sleep, nutritious meals, and safe communities?” My friend looked stricken. “If I told people that, I think most of them would believe a New York Times article before they’d believe me,” she said. 

Fortunately, the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival has commissioned studies and issued reports that shine a light on the reality of what it means to live in poverty in the United States. My friend and I turned to the PPC report, The Souls of Poor Folk, for facts, figures, and the faces of those most impacted by systemic poverty, racism, and militarism. Here are some of the talking points we found that have informed our organizing efforts:

  • Articles such as the one in The New York Times have value because they illustrate that “federal safety net” programs have proven effective in reducing poverty overall, which shows that poverty is not inevitable but rather a policy decision. They serve to confirm that when there’s a will, government can find enough money to help lift people out of poverty. 
  • When the woefully out of date federal poverty line is used, it does not accurately capture either the numbers or the conditions of people living in poverty. The most often used federal poverty line (FPL) is not grounded in the reality of what it takes to survive in today’s economy. For example, in 2016 the FPL quantified poverty for a single person younger than age 65 as having an annual income of $12,486 or less. For a single person above 65, it is $11,511, and for a household of two adults and two children it is $24,339. Using the FPL as the Official Poverty Measure (OPM), more than 95 million Americans (nearly 30 percent of the total population) are either in poverty or considered “low-income” (living below twice the poverty line). 
  • The Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM), on the other hand, is a more accurate measure of poverty conditions since it takes into account federal assistance resources, such as refundable tax credits, as well as critical out-of-pocket expenses for food, clothing, housing, and utilities and it also takes into account geographic differences in costs of living. When the SPM is used, the number of poor people living in poverty rises to 140 million people (43.5 percent), which is the number the PPC uses.
  • Sometimes the information, even when using the FPL, can be misleading in other ways. Compared to 1968, for example, today’s official poverty rate is virtually unchanged. And because our population has grown by more than 122 million people in these years, this means that there are 15 million more poor people today than there were 50 years ago. Further, “deep poverty,” defined as having income below half the federal poverty level, has risen from 3.7 percent in 1975 (earliest available) to 5.8 percent in 2016. 
  • Federal programs can and have worked well for poor families; e.g., the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), previously known as “food stamps,” the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC); and the Child Tax Credit. Not only do such programs keep families out of poverty and increase food security, the benefits provided form a crucial foundation for better economic and physical health.

Poor People's CampaignOther empirically-based studies commissioned and reported on by the Poor People’s Campaign – such as the Poor People’s Pandemic Report, Poor People’s Moral Budget, Unleashing the Power of Poor and Low-Income Americans – similarly help us ground our organizing and activism efforts in critical thinking. They dispute the enduring narrative that poverty is the fault of the poor by demonstrating that what Dr. King called the “Triplets of Evil” – systemic racism, poverty, and the war economy and militarism – have deepened since 1968 due to structural and systemic reasons, rather than individual failures. They also dispute the myth that there is not enough for all of us to survive and thrive by making a clear case that the richest nation in the world has sufficient resources to ensure dignified lives for all its people. They show that the problem is a matter of priorities, as more and more of our wealth flows into the pockets of a small but powerful few and into our bloated Pentagon budget.

As the Poor People’s Campaign and its reports continually remind us, the most pressing problems of our time must be tackled together and not separately. Attacks on voting rights are connected to attacks on basic needs like water, health care, and living wages. Our pursuit of wars abroad is connected to domestic problems, including the gutting of public services, the decline in government accountability, and the poisoning of our water and air. If we are to tackle all these interconnected problems and bring about change in our national priorities, we need to do so as both thinkers and fighters. 

 

Post date: Thu, 10/27/2022 - 06:45

Marjorie Atkinson, 100 years old, adds her sign to the Santa Cruz branch action. Photo used with Marjorie’s permission.
 

by Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas        
Co-chairs, DISARM Committee

November 2022

WILPF US is a member of the "Defuse Nuclear War" coalition and our members all over the US enthusiastically took part in pickets outside the home offices of their congressional representatives to urge them to advocate for six actions, each of which will decrease the risk of a nuclear war: End the Policy of “First Use”; Rejoin Nuclear Weapons Treaties the U.S. Pulled Out Of; Take U.S. Nuclear Weapons Off Hair-Trigger Alert; Get Rid of ICBMs (land-based nuclear missiles); Support Congressional Action to Avert Nuclear War (H.R 1185); Move the Money to Human Needs, Not War.  

Here are the seven cities (listed in reverse alphabetical order) where our WILPF members took action during October 14-16, 2022:

Washington, DC

Dianne Blais and Phoebe Sorgen of our Jane Addams Branch (members-at-large) joined the picket against President Joe Biden in front of the White House on October 14.

Dianne Blais and Phoebe Sorgen
Board Secretary Dianne Blais (left) and life member Phoebe Sorgen demonstrate in front of the White House. Photo taken on Dianne’s phone.

Saint Louis, Missouri

Lynn Sableman Lynn Sableman of the St. Louis, MO, branch reports: “Senators Josh Hawley and Roy Blunt were not in their offices at the Eagleton Courthouse in St. Louis on October 16. This was a very windy day and place. This was the debut of the Anti-Nuclear Weapons Pop-Up Folk Art exhibit. The Nuclear War Plan quilt was blown to pieces but I can fix it. The cube of the Daily Gamble was suspended from a canvas tent structure and spun and swayed in the wind in an eye-catching way. It was met with interest. We stood on the corner with signs we made the previous day. “

Photo: Lynn Sableman with her Nuclear War Plan quilt (showing trajectories of ICBMs). Photo taken with Lynn’s direction.

 

Santa Cruz, California

The Santa Cruz branch had two pickets, on October 14 at Congressman Jimmy Panetta’s office, and on the 16th branch members demonstrated against nuclear weapons at the Santa Cruz Clock Tower.

Santa Cruz branch members
Santa Cruz branch members say No to Nukes at the Santa Cruz Clock Tower. Photo by D. Nunns, used with her permission.

San Francisco, California

There were 50 or more anti-nuclear war activists picketing Senators Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla on October 14 in San Francisco, including WILPFer Betty Traynor. They met with and delivered letters to aides for each senator. The picketing was spirited; they marched between the offices with their signs and chanted.

peace groups in San Francisco
Large group of picketers from various peace groups in San Francisco, including Betty Traynor from WILPF. Photo by professional photographer Leon Kunstenaar, used with his permission.

Palo Alto, California
    
You can read a separate eNews article about the two pickets by the Peninsula/Palo Alto (California) branch.

Detroit, Michigan

Laura Dewey of the Detroit branch joined a demonstration against the war in Ukraine and nuclear weapons in central Detroit on October 16th.

Laura Dewey
WILPFer Laura Dewey holds the right end of the pro-TPNW banner at an October 16 demo in Detroit. Photo taken at Laura’s request.

Burlington, Vermont

Members of the Burlington branch of WILPF and Upper Valley Affinity Group VT joined with a dozen peace activists from around the state in front of Representative Peter Welch’s office and then moved to a nearby intersection to catch the October 14th afternoon traffic.

Since Welch’s office was shut, they left messages and taped the recently drafted “Vermonter’s Vision for a New Foreign Policy” to his door. One message was: “We call on you, Representative Welch, in your more expansive role as Senator, to speak out not only for the peace loving residents of Vermont, but for the poor and suffering women and men around the world whose lives are being ruined, and their children traumatized, by the violence and cruelty they see perpetuated from all sides. IT IS TIME TO GET TO THE PEACE TABLE!”

Duncan Nichols, Catherine Back, and Robin Lloyd
Vermonters Duncan Nichols, Catherine Back, and our Robin Lloyd tape messages to their representative’s office door. Photo taken on Robin’s phone.

Boston, Massachusetts

WILPFer Eileen Kurkoski joined other peace activists to picket outside Representative Jake Auchencloss’ office building in “metro” Boston. He came out to speak with them. Massachusetts Peace Action organized this October 14 picket.

MA Peace Action
Susan Mirsky of MA Peace Action hands demands to Rep Jake Auchencloss with WILPFer Eileen Kurkoski to his right. Picture taken by Jake’s assistant with Eileen’s camera.

An Ongoing Campaign

The DISARM/End Wars co-chairs thank all the WILPFers who took part in the Defuse Nuclear War actions in mid-October. This is the beginning of an ongoing campaign to get our politicians to move towards nuclear weapons abolition. See this 9-minute interview with Norman Solomon, initiator of the campaign, on Democracy Now.

If you would like to join the DISARM issue committee please write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org.

 

Post date: Thu, 10/27/2022 - 06:19
Cotorro, Havana

Children drawing at a community project in Cotorro, Havana, in 2014. The project includes arts and music opportunities for kids and a social service component for older and impaired adults. Photo by Leni Villagomez Reeves.
 

by Leni Villagomez Reeves
Co-Chair, Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Committee

November 2022

The UN says “the US Blockade of Cuba is a crime that has to end.”

You may say, “Wait a minute – the UN General Assembly vote on the blockade this year takes place on November 2 & 3, and the deadline for this issue of the WILPF eNews was October 21. How can you possibly know?”

Of course it will pass. The only question is: will any countries other than the US and Israel vote against this resolution?

Ever since the resolution was first introduced in 1992, UN member states have annually approved it by an overwhelming margin. In the most recent vote, 184 countries voted that the blockade must end, and two voted to maintain it; there were only three abstentions.

On November 3, 2022, there will again be a UN Vote in the General Assembly on the resolution “Necessity of ending the economic, commercial and financial blockade imposed by the United States of America against Cuba."

This resolution criticizes the United States for its economic embargo of Cuba, saying the embargo violates the UN Charter and international law, and calls for the embargo to be repealed.

For 30 years the US has been ignoring the almost unanimous vote of the UN General Assembly.

Of course the US will ignore the vote in spite of the fact that even its closest NATO allies recognize the blockade as a violation of international law, as unilateral economic coercive actions that amount to an act of war, effectively waging siege warfare against a country that represents no threat to the United States.

Siege Warfare against Cuba

House in Havana
I saw this child’s drawing, calling for a vote against the blockade, on a house in Havana in November 2017.

Apparently, the US has not given up on the desire to create shortages and suffering in an attempt to promote dissatisfaction in Cuba. It’s not actually an “embargo” because that would mean the US simply refuses to trade with Cuba. It’s a unilateral extra-territorial economic coercive measure whereby the US threatens and punishes enterprises in all countries it can reach, if they attempt to trade with Cuba. Some of the most egregious efforts are:

  • Pressuring the Bank of Ireland to stop handling Cuba’s accounts at a time when Cuban medical volunteers were in West Africa fighting Ebola. It was many weeks before Cuba could figure out an alternative method of getting these funds to these volunteers, even for living expenses.
  • As COVID began damaging and killing people worldwide, the US corporation Vyaire Medical purchased IMT Medical and Acutronic, makers of ventilators, then announced that they would cut all commercial links with Cuba, so that Cuba could no longer purchase ventilators.
  • Again, at the start of the COVID Pandemic, Jack Ma, a Chinese entrepreneur and founder of Alibaba, sent a donation of masks, rapid diagnostic kits, and ventilators to 24 Latin American countries. The shipment to Cuba was blocked by the US, who threatened the shipping company with sanctions under the Helms-Burton Law, which establishes an economic, commercial and financial blockade against Cuba. The shipment never arrived.
  • Most recently the cryptocurrency company Bittrex has been fined 29 million dollars for allowing bitcoin transactions in Cuba and other countries.

The United States carries out siege warfare against Cuba. The US pressures other governments, banking institutions and companies throughout the world, as well as pursuing obsessively any sources of hard currency transactions for Cuba. The intention is to cause an economic collapse. This is considered an act of war by international law.

‘To Bring about Hunger, Desperation, and Overthrow of Government’

Here is the infamous Mallory memo from April 6 1960, written by Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs Lester Mallory. It states the original, unchanging, unvarnished reasons for the decision to blockade Cuba:

The only foreseeable means of alienating internal
support is through disenchantment and disaffection based on
economic dissatisfaction and hardship.

It follows that every possible means should be undertaken promptly
to weaken the economic life of Cuba.
If such a policy is adopted,
it should be the result of a positive decision which would call forth
a line of action which, while as adroit and inconspicuous as possible
makes the greatest inroads in denying money and supplies to Cuba,
to decrease monetary and real wages, to bring about hunger, desperation,
and overthrow of government,

When US government sources say that the welfare of the Cuban people is a concern and that their motivation is to protect human rights, no one believes this cynical and dishonest pretext.

What best illustrates the real motivations of the US government is its conduct during the COVID-19 pandemic. When the international community called for compassion and cooperation, the US decided to take advantage of the opportunity to strengthen the blockade, adding 243 additional measures by executive action, making it more difficult for Cuba to obtain medicines, medical equipment and supplies, and materials for the production of vaccines and medicines. The additional blockade measures put in place by Trump have been maintained by the Biden administration, in spite of campaign promises to the contrary.

Cuba Does Not Belong on the US List of State Sponsors of Terrorism

Santa Clara, Cuba
I photographed this cartoon which was painted on a wall in Santa Clara, Cuba, in 2010.

As Trump was leaving office, his regime placed Cuba on the US List of State Sponsors of Terrorism, which creates even greater difficulties for transactions and financing.

The pretexts for this? Assata Shakur, for one. Cuba supports the elected government of Venezuela. After the Havana peace talks between the Colombian government and rebels failed, they followed the international agreements regarding all negotiating parties, even the ELN. Assata Shakur was granted asylum in 1984 as a US political prisoner after COINTELPRO persecution and prosecution.

Rather than being evidence of “terrorism,” these are evidence of the ethical nature of Cuba. A more pragmatic, less idealistic state would have treated Shakur and the ELN representatives as bargaining chips, and it is greatly to Cuba’s credit that even under the extreme conditions created by the pandemic, natural disasters like Hurricane Ian, and the blockade, they have refused to make deals with their lives.

 

Post date: Thu, 10/27/2022 - 06:05

Rep. Eshoo’s constituents stand outside her office. Her field representative Nicholas Hargis and WILPFer Cherrill Spencer exchange letters about nuclear weapons. Photo taken with Spencer’s camera.

by Judy Adams and Cherrill Spencer
Members of the Peninsula/Palo Alto Branch

November 2022

“This weekend will mark the 60th anniversary of the start of the Cuban Missile Crisis – widely regarded as the closest the world has ever come to nuclear war, until this year.
    
The possible risk of nuclear war has risen sharply in recent months, and we are members of a coalition of nearly 100 organizations who have come together to educate the public and call on elected officials to de-escalate tensions between the nuclear superpowers.”

Thus starts the letter the Peninsula/Palo Alto branch handed to Congresswoman Anna Eshoo’s office as we picketed there on October 14, 2022.

The purpose of these nationwide pickets was to get our congressional reps to do something about the enormous amounts of money being spent on nuclear weapons and to reduce our reliance on them. To that end in our letter to Rep Eshoo we asked her to do three things:

  • co-sponsor H.Res.1185 to show her support of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and pressure our State and Defense Departments to honor our obligation to disarm under article 6 of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty which we ratified in 1969
  • co-sponsor the People Over Pentagon Act H.R. 8040, to reduce the amount authorized to be appropriated for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2023 (& future FY)
  • co-sponsor H.R. 2850, the Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act 

Judy Adams
Photo: Peninsula/Palo Alto WILPFer Judy Adams stands with our vigil’s signs, used by picketers later. Photo credit: Becky Fischbach, used with permission. 

We will be checking up on our Rep to offer further information on nuclear weapons and why they need to be abolished.

Part 2 of our DNW “picket line” began at noon, as those gathered outside Rep. Eshoo’s office at 11 am arrived for a second picket at our usual noon silent vigil location at a busy Palo Alto corner a short drive from Eshoo’s office. We added a few more activists from extensive publicity. Our group remained small, but it was spirited.  

While we were at Rep. Eshoo’s office, member Judy Adams, who coordinated the publicity for our WILPF/DNW event, set up the second location for our picket at our usual silent vigil location at a busy street corner across from a shopping center, public high school, and an entrance to the Stanford campus. She has organized weekly, small silent vigils at that location since 2018, when we partnered with the Poor People’s Campaign.

Judy arrayed various banners on nearby walls and fences so passing pedestrians and cars would see them. In addition she set up a table full of information about WILPF, our branch (including our vigils), copies of Peace and Freedom, the WILPF petition for the TPNW, and DNW action-demands flyers. She was a one-woman vigil as she waited for our picketers to arrive.

Palo Alto picketers To add color to our action Judy had arranged for Sharat Lin, a local peace activist who often does peace-issue programming at the San Jose Peace Center, and gives well-attended lectures in the community. He is also known (and beloved) as the Peace Dancer, performing in  his full Monarch Butterfly costume ,accompanied by music – symbolizing the migration of people seeking asylum, and the “pollination” – spreading in the world – ideas of peace and justice. He came to perform his dance to inspire us, but also to take photos and videos, such as this short video clip of his Peace Dance (38 sec).

Above photo: Palo Alto picketers at the corner of El Camino and Embarcadero in Palo Alto    Photo credit: G. Sharat Lin used with his permission

Near the end of our event, the long-awaited DNW banner arrived with our bicycle courier, WILPFer Becky Fischbach (who helps make signs and come up with slogans for our vigils). We all stood together with the Defuse Nuclear War banner, with Sharat at our side.

The banner will join our “library” for future events as we continue stand to end the nuclear era and say a resounding No to Nuclear War! in solidarity with Defuse Nuclear war and our sister WILPF branches.
 

 

Post date: Thu, 10/27/2022 - 05:55

Participants in the 2019 UN Practicum for Advocacy.

by Shilpa Pandey
Membership Chair, WILPF US

November 2022

I am reaching out to share that next year our section will be resuming our UN Practicum in Advocacy and Local to Global program after a gap of two years due to the pandemic. Start making contacts and identifying possible nominees now to participate in this unique experience!

This opportunity is to attend a practicum in advocacy at the United Nations Commission during the first week of the Status of Women (CSW) meetings. This year our CSW practicum dates will be March 6-10, 2023; the NGO CSW Forum will run through March 17.

The practicum is offered by WILPF as we have a consultative status with the UN Economic and Social Council. It is open to all undergraduate and graduate students currently enrolled in a university, college, junior college or technical college in the United States. The deadline for students to apply is January 6, 2023. 

For further details about these WILPF US programs for the UN CSW, use this link.
 

Post date: Fri, 09/30/2022 - 13:39

October 2022

Join the Interactive Panel Presentation for Domestic Violence Awareness Month on October 21

On Friday, October 21, 2022, at 8 pm EDT/ 7 CDT/ 6 MDT/ 5 PDT, the Domestic Prisoners of War Committee (WILPF US’s newest Issue Committee) will hold an introductory Panel Presentation covering how domestic violence and its surrounding issues impact peace for women in the U.S. If you would like to attend, please look for the link in an upcoming E-Blast or send an email to nomoredpows@gmail.com.

Announcement: A New WILPF Branch Forms in Kentucky-Indiana 
By Julie Segal

A new Kentucky-Indiana branch is forming! This new branch is spearheaded by Julie Segal, a former national membership coordinator at WILPF US during the mid-1970s.  If you know of anyone from the region who is interested in potentially joining, encourage them to connect with us and be on our list of those notified about the late November Zoom meeting. Anyone interested can send their name, street address, contact phone number, and email address to jdsegal@earthlink.net
 

 

Post date: Fri, 09/30/2022 - 13:35

by Marguerite Adelman 
WILPF Burlington Branch and Earth Democracy Committee

October 2022

Forever chemicals, or PFAS, have monopolized the news in the last year— especially since the EPA lowered its lifetime advisory limits for two of the most common PFAS to almost 0 parts per trillion (PPT), and is considering classifying them as hazardous substances. 

Would you like to learn more about Perfluoroalkyl and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) and their impact? Marguerite Adelman of WILPF Burlington has designed a free Zoom program for WILPF branches across the country that would like to understand this complex issue as it relates to their state and community. 

The workshop will include:

●    detailed information about PFAS in your state and specific location 
●    how to use the Military Poisons website to conduct research 
●    laws and legislation about PFAS in your state and nationally 
●    actions that can be taken at the local, state, and national level to restrict PFAS
●    ways to reduce personal risk from PFAS contamination

Each one-hour workshop will be tailored to your location and offered at a time that is convenient for you and your WILPF members. An additional thirty minutes or hour can be added, dedicated to questions and discussion.

All resources and materials developed through WILPF US mini-grants and the WILPF US Earth Democracy committee will be shared with participating WILPF branches, including PFAS information sheets, grant proposals, sample letters to the editor, and more. 

Contact Marguerite at PFASinfo@wilpfus.org to request a free Zoom workshop.
 

Post date: Fri, 09/30/2022 - 13:31

WILPFers in the Madison, Wisconsin WILPF branch demonstrate for peace in Ukraine, September 12, 2022. Photo provided by WILPF Madison WI branch, used with their permission.

by Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas
co-chairs of DISARM/END WARS Issue Committee

October 2022

Before we ask WILPFers to take action in October against nuclear weapons, we must thank the several WILPF branches who took action in mid-September to press their congressional representatives to stop authorizing more weapons for Ukraine, and urged President Biden to assist peace negotiations between Russia and Ukraine.

Now, we have a new request for WILPFers to reach out once again and ask your legislators to help lower the risk of any exchange of nuclear weapons. While the possibility of nuclear war has increased sharply this year, very few members of the House and Senate have risen to the occasion by speaking out or publicly urging measures to de-escalate tensions between nuclear powers and seriously revive negotiations for nuclear-weapons treaties and disarmament measures.

As described in the Defuse Nuclear War calendar, picket lines will be set up on Friday, October 14, outside senators’ and congresspersons’ local offices to demand they pay attention to abating the very real threat posed by nuclear weapons.

WILPF US, via our DISARM/End Wars issue committee, is a member of a coalition of anti-nuclear weapons groups called Defuse Nuclear War. Our activities from October 14 through 16, spanning the 60th anniversary of the start of the Cuban Missile Crisis, will present an opportunity for concerned individuals and groups to visibly convey their concerns. Emphasis will be on actions that the US government should take now to reduce the present-day risks of nuclear war.  This website lists the nine states where picket lines have already been organized.  You can join one, or set one up in your hometown.

WILPF branches exist in 13 states that have not yet organized an action outside a Congressional rep’s home office, so it would be good if you would organize one, in collaboration with local chapters of other members of the coalition such as CODEPINK or Veterans for Peace or Peace Action if possible.

Defuse Nuclear WarWrite to info@rootsaction.org for guidance and suggestions on how to set up a new picket line.

The website defusenuclearwar.org has talking points and sample letters to the editor for you to use around October 14 – especially if you are unable to organize a picket line near you. To find out more about an existing picket line fill in this google doc.

There are two other happenings during October– a national livestream with knowledgeable speakers on Sunday, October 2 at 2 pm EDT; we also encourage you to set up an event in your community on Sunday, October 16 to engage the public about the dangers of nuclear weapons in a way that makes most strategic sense in your area. The Roots Action team will assist you in getting “Say NO to Nukes” signs for your picket line printed at your nearest Federal Express office, for free. Write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org to find out how.

When we add WILPF’s voices to other national anti-war groups, we have a greater effect. For inspiration, you can read about the wider impact of the mid-September Peace In Ukraine actions here.

Lastly, at the end of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty review conference we wrote another press release in collaboration with CODEPINK and Nuclear Ban US. Read it here.

Thank you from your DISARM/End Wars Committee. Send any questions to disarmchair@wilpfus.org.

 

Post date: Fri, 09/30/2022 - 13:11

by Nancy Price 
Earth Democracy Committee 

October 2022 

On Tuesday, September 20, soon after 9 am, Nancy Price, Lib Hutchby and Keval Kaur Khalsa who drove from the Chapel Hill Branch in North Carolina, joined Board Member Dianne Blais from Fairfax, Virginia, and Pat Elder from Maryland at Federal Plaza for the first annual event to demand EPA accountability for environmental contamination that has sickened our children, families, wildlife, and environments. This event was organized by SAFE: Scientists, Activists and Families for SAFE Environments. We were delighted, too, that Pat Elder introduced us to Lucy Murphy of the new DC Branch. 

After rousing speeches, the tall bright yellow letters that spell out EPA DO YOUR JOB were spread across Pennsylvania Avenue (yes, stopping traffic while police looked on and then moved us along) and then rolled a few blocks to the EPA headquarters at Federal Plaza. Here many photos of children who had been sick or died of cancer were placed at the foot of the letters, along with clusters of white carnations. 

Please take a look at videos, photos and comments on the SAFE Facebook page here and at the website here. Be sure to read the stories under The Advocates and Sick Schools—how biological agents, toxic poisons, and nuclear radiation threaten our children and grandchildren in their schools.
 

Post date: Fri, 09/30/2022 - 13:07

by Sue Hilton, Humboldt, CA Branch; Mary Foster, Jane Addams Branch; Samantha Turner, Southern Piedmont Branch, NC; Robin Lloyd, Burlington Branch; Gloria McMillan, Tucson Branch

October 2022

We're a small group of WILPF members of European-descent from around the country, talking and thinking about how to help make WILPF US a more anti-racist organization. We're interested in taking up Darien's suggestion in her "WILPF Opportunities'' piece sent to the branches listserv in August: “...we're looking for those who want to work within WILPF US as part of a committee to focus on the ‘inner work’ of developing our own organizational interventions and supports against racism and for diversity and inclusion inside WILPF US”. We invite you to join us.

We were upset about the recent board memo, sent as an e-Alert, which did not recognize the Black Liberation Caucus as an official part of WILPF. We feel that having a space where people who have been historically oppressed can speak with each other separately from people with relative privilege is an important part of becoming an anti-racist/anti-oppression organization, and we'd like to work on figuring out how such spaces can exist within WILPF.

Sometimes this is called a safe space for racial transformation. Some advantages of such a space, as outlined by JustLead Washington's publication "Caucuses as a Racial Justice Strategy", include
 

  • Offering a retreat from continuous scrutiny and an antidote to white-dominated spaces
  • Creating a brave space to talk about and address experiences of racism
  • Creating an alternative power base or “counter-space” for BIPOC, within white spaces 
  • Building relationships and support through holding courageous and difficult conversations 

This work is not easy, but it is essential to real peace. Some of us are part of ongoing work linked with the UN Decade for People of African Descent, and reparations. Many of us celebrated the UN's International Day of Peace in our local communities on September 21. As WILPF President Sylvie Jacqueline Ndongmo said about the International Day of Peace this year: ”This year's theme— End Racism, Build Peace— echoes the urgent need to address the intersectionality of conflict and racism and to acknowledge the efforts made around the world toward ending conflict and promoting inclusive peace, without discrimination. It also gives us an opportunity to reinforce our commitment to becoming an anti-racist organization.”  

At this time, our ad-hoc group is not a formal committee; it is more of an informal working group. We invite any other WILPF members who are serious about learning and doing anti-racist work to be part of this process. We're currently meeting on the third Thursday of each month at 8 pm EST, but that may be adjusted.  

Join us on Zoom on Thursday, October 22 at 8pm EST/5pm PST. Please contact Samantha Turner at samanthacltppc@gmail.com for the link to participate. 
 

 

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