NEWS

Post date: Wed, 09/02/2020 - 07:57

Operating since the 1990s, the Women, Money & Democracy (W$D) Issue Committee educates and activates on issues of unchecked corporate power and big money as a threat to self-governance, individual rights, and free speech in the US and around the world.  

Our work gives women a voice in creating a democracy that works for all Americans and an economy based on the values we hold but are constantly told we can't afford. (Funny how there's always money for more war.)

In W$D you'll find

  • Women like you, who want system change and are willing to work for it.
  • A path to leadership for introducing projects and strategies.
  • Organizing tools and the chance to create them.
  • Strategies to engage the public.
  • Short and long term projects that invite your participation and leadership.

WHO WE ARE

The W$D Committee includes WILPF members from across the US, united in their commitment towards the goal of this committee and the larger goals of WILPF US.

We envision a vibrant participatory democracy where the common good of the people is prioritized above profiteering and consolidation of power.  

HOW WE WORK

Using an informal feminist model of democratic leadership, we meet monthly on the 3rd Tuesday of each month at 8:30 pm ET/7:30 pm C/5:30 pm PT

To learn more about how we work or to join us, contact our current Chair Marybeth Gardam: mbgardamATgmail.com.

COMMITTEE PRIORITIES

  • Educate and raise awareness about the threat to democracy from run-away inequality, economic injustice, and the consolidation of money and power in the top 1% of our country.  
  • Raise practical solutions that can protect a vibrant democracy and ensure that the voice and values of the people guide our government. Our US solutions must be determined without the influence of huge US donors and dark money from foreign countries.  
  • Create an awareness among women about their role in our rigged economy. 
  • Lift up feminist solutions for system change from the bottom up; work to put pressure on our federal representatives. 
  • Prioritize leadership and training among WILPF members, through a feminist model of democratic leadership. The work of our committee towards system change is informal but serious.    

CURRENT PROJECTS
Jump right in!

Advocate for System Change through PUBLIC BANKING

Creating an economy that works for ALL Americans starts with breaking ties with transnational too-big-to-fail Wall Street banks and the gamblers who run them.  Public banking offers communities a chance to keep local money invested in local projects, sheltering ordinary Americans from economic collapse and the financial disasters that follow.  

Confront CORRUPTION: 
Drain the swamp from the bottom up

Learn about the Anti-Corruption Act.

Host a community watch party to view the film, THE LAUNDROMAT, an entertaining dramatization of corporate fraud and tax evasion that victimizes ordinary Americans and enriches criminals. 

Get all the tools you’ll need to schedule the virtual film viewing, organize a community Zoom call to discuss the film. Discussion questions enrich the dialogue and educational resources help you learn more about the underbelly of this transnational corruption that threatens our democracy.  

Download Discussion Questions here.

Sign up here for anti-corruption organizing right from your own desktop.

It’s unlikely that either political party will be able to separate itself from ‘the swamp’, so our ally RepresentUS offers recommendations for a state-by-state solution to corruption and ideas for monitoring corruption in your community.  

Learn more with these three videos: 

1. UnBreaking America: How to make the government work for US again 

2. How to FIX American’s Corrupt Political System

3. The Strategy to End Corruption
 

Network For Feminist Economic System Change

Money traditionally talks in a male voice, but all along it’s been women who keep the economy going.  

It’s time we understood the moving parts that are intentionally complicated and how women like you are creating solutions that work in communities across America. 

We’ll help you organize a women’s group in your community to read and discuss 
SCREWNOMICS: How Our Economy Works Against Women and Real Ways to Make Lasting Change
by WILPF member and W$D partner Rickey Gard Diamond.   

Learn more about Screwnomics.

For discussion questions and facilitator tips to make your group successful and organize locally for real change, contact us at mbgardamATgmail.com.

At An Economy Of Our Own (AEOO)connect to dynamic women making real change and finding solutions. You’ll find blog posts, articles, and webinars.  

Check out our AEOO’s “Women Unscrewing Screwnomicscolumns at Ms. magazine, online

DEMOCRATIZE OUR MONEY: 
Whoever Controls Our Money Controls Democracy, the Global Economy and the Power to Change the System.

Learn how money works, where it comes from, how it’s distributed and why it’s based on YOUR DEBT. The Federal Reserve is a PRIVATE profit-making enterprise owned by Wall Street and transnational commercial banks, not part of the US government.   

Learn what that means for funding the PEOPLE’s projects, like national healthcare, affordable housing, public education, and infrastructure.  

Watch this 20-minute video, “A Solution to the Crisis

CORPORATE PERSONHOOD:
The Legal Fiction that Corporations Are People 

How did our government become a swamp?  

How do we untangle the knot of special interests, corruption and law?

Resources

 

Post date: Fri, 08/07/2020 - 08:06
Timeline

75th Anniversaries of the United Nations and the Atomic Bomb

Click here to view our interactive timeline, the beginning of which is shown in the image above

Few of us alive remember back 75 years, so it’s valuable, in this unprecedented time, to look back at the year 1945.

It was a year of shifting from the violence that had set men in uniform to kill each other in numbers never before seen to the new and distant violence of nuclear weapons.  It was a year which rearranged power on the planet, and so it was a year that – for a time – allowed the hope to appear, that connections and organizations can be built amongst us so that this will never happen again!

To remind us of the nature and meaning of those momentous events, we offer this Timeline of 1945 – the year of the creation of the UN, and the year the US dropped two atomic bombs on civilians in Japan.  Please read about the developments leading to these two events, and send us your thoughts and reactions. We include additional events and can add more if you find we have neglected something important.  History is alive, if we make it so! 

Through 2020 we take you on a revealing journey:

  • What forces were acting behind the formation of the UN?
  • Who and what influenced the leaders of the USA to drop the nuclear bombs?
  • Why does all this matter and what is WILPF doing about it?  What could WILPF be doing about it?

We arranged for experts on the UN and on the effects of A-bombs to talk with us in our monthly webinar series during 2020.

You can access more information by clicking on the webinar date in the list below.  You can also find the recordings at the WILPF US Disarm Committee’s YouTube Channel.  

Resources Specific to the US Nuclear Bombings of Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and New Mexico in 1945:

Working for a Nuclear Free Future!

Resources

On Facebook:  

  • WILPF US (Read about Disarm/End Wars issues and events. Posts by administrators only.)
  • WILPF SMART!  (All WILPF members can join this group to post events and news to the "Social Media Action Response Team" blog.)
  • NucNews (Follow this page for news from around the world about everything nuclear.)
  • Eye On Congress (Stay informed on news about federal and state legislation.  Share info via comments on posts or messages.)

Other Resources:

Meetings of the Disarm/End Wars Committee are usually on the second and last Sunday of every month at 4:30 pm PT, 5:30 pm MT, 6:30 pm CT, 7:30 pm Eastern time.  You can register for the calls via Maestro.  Be sure also to notify the Co-Chairs of Disarm/End Wars Committee - Robin Lloyd, Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas – at disarmchair(at)wilpfus.org

 

 

 

Post date: Tue, 07/28/2020 - 14:42

The Advancing Human Rights Committee worked with Development Chair Marybeth Gardam to design this Facebook post for Juneteenth 2020.
 

August 2020

Get Creative & Help Appeal for Online Support!

By the WILPF US Development Committee

Are you a whiz on Instagram, Twitter, or Facebook? Do you enjoy being creative in your activism? Are you interested in learning the platform Canva and helping to design appealing social media posts and graphics?

The WILPF US Development Committee is looking for your help. We are hoping to appeal more consistently to the public for online support, using a calendar of timeline events suggested by the national issue committees.

Holidays and commemorations that mark peacemaking efforts, international cooperation, and human rights resonate with our local and national projects and tie to WILPF’s program work. By using these dates, you can help create a schedule of posts that can be prepared ahead and scheduled for publication on several social media ‘channels’.   

“We have a reasonable and growing presence on Facebook,” notes Development Chair Marybeth Gardam, “but we are just barely visible on Twitter and we have yet to dip our toes into Instagram.”

“As an example of what we would like to be doing,” Gardam explains, “the Advancing Human Rights (AHR) Committee developed a list of calendar dates that intersect with the theme of human rights. They worked with me to create a JUNETEENTH post for Facebook, using a new creative graphic platform Canva.”

“I’m just learning Canva, but it’s kind of fun to be creative,” Gardam says. “The three AHR chairs helped suggest the quote and select the graphic. That made my work a lot easier!”

If every issue committee could suggest 5-10 events a year that tie to their work (and we hope they do!), there would be a lot more Canva-creating to do.  

Development is looking for eager VOLUNTEERS to help with some of that creative organizing from the safety of your computer desk. Get creative and do good at the same time!   

Contact Marybeth Gardam at mbgardam@gmail.com to learn more or sign up!

 


Honoring Civil Rights Icons John Lewis and C.T. Vivian

By Valarie Young
Co-chair, Advancing Human Rights (AHR) and Working Toward Racial Justice

“If not us, then who?
If not now, then when?”

John Lewis

In less than 100 days, the future of our democracy will be in the hands of the American people as we vote in our general election. We must unite and make sure our voices will be heard.

Our country lost two civil rights icons in less than 24 hours recently, Rep. John Lewis and Rev. C.T. Vivian, both of whom died on July 17, 2020. The AHR Issues Committee pays homage to Lewis and Vivian, leaders for human and civil rights who dedicated their lives for equality and the right to vote in the United States. If it had not been for these two men, and other activists who shared their courage and dedication, the civil rights movement would never have had the power it did.

The struggle for human and civil rights continues. Right to vote laws must extend across the nation, and apply equally to all voters.

John Robert Lewis, Georgia Congressman Who Advocated “Good Trouble”

John Robert Lewis, who dedicated his life to advancing human and civil rights, died at the age of 80. Read this detailed, impressive obituary in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. He served in the United States House of Representatives for Georgia’s 5th Congressional District from 1987-2020 and spent nearly four decades championing the causes of marginalized communities.

Never one to rest on past victories, he continued to speak and listen to young people throughout his life. Consider this quote on youth climate activists released in September 2019:

“These young people are saying we all have a right to know what is in the air we breathe, in the water we drink, and the food we eat. It is our responsibility to leave this planet cleaner and greener. That must be our legacy."

Watch this Note to Self Video: (7 minutes): Georgia Congressman John Lewis was born and raised on a cotton farm outside Troy, Alabama. He later became one of the most prominent leaders of the civil rights movement. In this ongoing series, Note to Self, Lewis recalls getting into what he famously calls “good trouble.”

C.T. Vivian, Champion of Nonviolence

The Rev. C.T. Vivian, civil rights leader and champion of nonviolent action, died at the age of 95.

Read his obituary on NPR, which explains that in spite of suffering multiple beatings during his protest activities, including his notorious showdown with Dallas County Sheriff James G. Clark, “he held fast to one principle: ‘In no way would we allow nonviolence to be destroyed by violence.’” He continued to have a long and distinguished career of standing up against oppression and seeking justice for all.

One of Vivian’s famous quotes is, “You are made by the struggles you choose.”

This video provides a brief outline of his remarkable career. His Oral History was recorded in March 29, 2011 by Taylor Branch. 

Next month’s AHR update will include tributes to Ella Baker, the “Mother of the Civil Rights Movement,” and Fannie Lou Hamer, who worked tirelessly to secure voting rights for African Americans. 

 


Global Ceasefire Passed Unanimously!

By Joan Goddard
WILPF US Program Committee

On July 1, the United Nations Security Council unanimously passed a legally binding resolution to enact a 90-day Global Ceasefire. The US previously voted against the Global Ceasefire.

The UN resolution focuses on responding to the COVID-19 pandemic, emphasizing countries in need. However, excluded from the cease fire are all military operations against Al-Qaida, ISIL, and other groups designated terrorist by the Security Council.

Extending the global ceasefire and defunding the military would be major steps toward an enduring peace. In the US alone, counting all of the funding sources, the Department of Defense budget totals $1.25 trillion-dollar a year (see this article in The Nation: America's Defense Budget Is Bigger Than You Think). Just a 50% reduction in these US “defense” expenditures would make over half a trillion dollars a year available for funding the Green New Deal, public health care coverage, and social benefit work on the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Watch next month’s eNews for more on progressive alternatives to military expenditures and total dollar costs and other effects of the US military.

 


Middle East Committee Wants to Build Bridges Not Walls

By Barbara Taft
Co-chair, Middle East Committee

“Bridges Not Walls” is a new Middle East Committee campaign showing how we’re all interconnected.

Israel’s Separation Wall is a physical barrier making it easier for Palestinians and Israelis to view one another negatively. The bridges enabling them to see each other as human have disappeared, preventing contact.

The U.S./Mexico border wall creates the same de-humanization, encouraging negative stereotypes. When walls prevent human contact, we stop looking one another in the eye and responding to cries with human touch and care. We miss that touch now with COVID-19. Differences are amplified when we’re separated. Separation is rooted in the “divide and conquer” concept.

Let’s tear down artificial walls, physical and psychological, and see what we share in terms of our humanity. Let’s build bridges to connect us all. Over the next three years, our goal is to find these connecting bridges, learn the issues, causes, dreams, and goals of others and work together.

More information to come on the Middle East Committee's webpage and in future eNews articles!

 


August 13th ONE WILPF Call: Voter Suppression during COVID-19  

By the ONE WILPF Call Team

How can you anticipate and recognize potential voter suppression going on in your state and city? What can you do about it in a time of pandemic? How can you maintain social distancing and still get the message to vulnerable communities about getting out to vote?  

The next ONE WILPF Call on August 13, 2020, focuses on recognizing and addressing voter suppression in this time of COVID-19.  

Speakers Molly McGrath, Advocacy Director from the Wisconsin ACLU and Chris Carson, outgoing national President of the League of Women Voters, will give us the tactics and responses they're advocating, and we'll be planning a September Solidarity Action in response.  Join the call at 7 pm eastern/6 pm central/5 pm mountain/4 pm pacific.

Register here.

This is a Maestro Call... you phone in using your phone and also follow along on your computer screen. Once you register you'll receive an email with the call-in number and PIN number, and a link to the visual interface/social webinar. You'll receive a reminder 2 hours before the call, coming from michael@teamgood.org.   

 

 

Post date: Tue, 07/28/2020 - 14:20

Tear gas from BORTAC and fires at Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse during the 2020 George Floyd protests in Portland, Oregon, 22 July 2020. Photo credit: Tedder. Available for editorial use under Creative Commons license.

By Joan Goddard, Program Committee Chair 
Michael Ippolito, WILPF US Member

August 2020

Unable to manage the pandemic and the continuing national protests after George Floyd's murder, the presidential administration of the United States is resorting to illegal tactics, sending federal agents in unidentifiable uniforms to detain and assault protestors and others standing up for human rights. 

In Portland, secret federal police are abducting citizens, and they and local police continue to gas and attack with batons and projectile devices hundreds of nonviolent demonstrators. In response, the Portland "Moms" stand up bravely to the violence of the local and federal officers. WILPF stands together with the Moms, veterans, and others standing up for civil rights.

While governors and mayors object to these federal invasions, the acting Director of Homeland Security, Chad Wolf, ignores them.

The tactics of the federal forces in Portland – violence, the use of military weapons and gases banned in war by the Geneva Conventions, and concealment of their identity – have attracted public attention and condemnation. However, the militarization and heavy arming of civilian law enforcement is not new. Also, in cities starved for federal funds to meet human needs, some mayors are ready to welcome the presence of federal officers to “assist” local police, despite the questionable tactics.

The process of checks and balances appears broken during these brazenly criminal actions, which resemble the acts of Nazi “Brown Shirts” and Mussolini’s “Black Shirts” 75 years ago before and during World War II. WILPF says no to neo-fascism and authoritarianism!

It is a small step that 22 senators united to try to stop this presidential overreach. However, we are in an election year; we cannot tolerate any governmental actions that could lead to suppression of voter turnout for the elections.

With the violent deployment of combative and camouflaged federal agents against demonstrators, the US government seems to have brought to its own people the wars and interventions waged so readily by the US from over 800 US military bases around the world.

WILPF opposes militarism at home and abroad: #DefundthePolice and #DefundtheMiltary! In Portland and other cities, police increasingly are using the military model. It’s past time for the police to be trained with diverse tools and skills to handle situations entirely differently, no longer viewing citizens as "the enemy". Remembering the lessons of history, we know it is up to each of us to hold the line for respect for human decency and basic human rights. 

As #StalwartsforPeace, we #StandTogether. We will continue to #StandUp against the culture of militarization. It is #UptoUs.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 07/28/2020 - 10:24

The graphic has been made available to all 41 WILPF branches to use on banners, lawn signs, or flyers. The Solidarity Event Planning Team has already customized the graphic for 13 branches with branch name and contact info. and can do so for more branches. Follow the instructions in the July 3rd email sent to all branch contacts.

By Cherrill Spencer and Margaret Pecoraro
Co-team Coordinators of the Ceasefire/75th Solidarity Event Planning Team

August 2020

As we described in our July eNews article, “Launching Our 2020 Solidarity Event Season,” we are embarking on a solidarity season lasting from August 6th to September 21st which is focusing on these three themes:

  • the Global Ceasefire request by the UN Secretary General, 
  • the 75th anniversaries of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, 
  • the founding of the United Nations in 1945.

Our planning team, coordinated by Cherrill Spencer (Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA  branch,  cherrill.m.spencer (at) gmail.com) and Margaret Pecoraro (Tucson, AZ branch) have prepared sixteen (!) resource guides and sent them to all 41 branch contacts by email. And we have more guides we are still working on. Our first six guides were all about how to use the ~1000 peace cranes, handmade for us in Japan, that each branch received back in June from our headquarters. These delicate origami birds remind us of the fragility of life and urge us to share in a commitment to abolish nuclear weapons.

At least eight of our branches have already created public displays of these cranes, in the windows of shops, on cafe tables, on statues, and in trees: Burlington, VT; Corvallis, OR; Des Moines, IA; East Bay, CA; Fresno, CA; Greater Phoenix, AZ; Humboldt, CA, and Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA. Here is a photo of a shop window display of peace cranes arranged by our Corvallis, OR branch taken by WILPF member Leah Bolger.

Resource Guides to Help Branches Organize Activities

For the benefit of members who are not associated with a branch and would like to use some of the resource guides they have been placed in four pdf files which you can reach by clicking on their file titles:

The second set of six resource guides the solidarity planning team has assembled were designed to help branches plan, organize, and carry out activities concerning the 75th anniversaries of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings and for branch members to use that awareness and knowledge to advocate in their local community for nuclear disarmament.

Hibakusha
This film by David Rothauser is one of the many films, books, readings, songs, and other media listed in one of the resource guides.

As most of us and our communities continue to shelter-in-place, we are turning to arranging online activities and these resource guides have many ideas for pertinent films to watch online, informative articles to read online, songs to sing (with others during a Zoom event, for example), websites to visit where you can read hibakusha stories (hibakusha are survivors of the H&N bombings), and so on.

An activity that can be carried out individually is to fast for disarmament. A detailed guide about the international peace fast will be sent to branch contacts soon, but here are some broad guidelines that will help you decide if you will take part. The organizers of the International Peace Fast ask that those who sign up as fasters follow these broad guidelines:

  1. Make a sincere commitment that’s intentionally directed at ending nuclear weaponry;
  2. Publicize your branch’s fast – through news releases & social media – and the fact that people around the world are fasting for disarmament;
  3. Alter your diet in a notable way (notable to the peace faster, maybe not to others), such as:
    – not eating between certain hours that one would ordinarily be doing (e.g. fasting from food – not water – between 10am and 4pm, at least one day);

    – cutting out at least one staple (carbs, flesh/meats, caffeine, etc.) from your diet;
    – doing one of the above for at least one day between August 6 and 9.
  4. If a branch member chooses to fast for several days then other branch members can offer moral support via phone calls and visits following local COVID-19 rules.

Examples of Branch Activities, August 6-9

Some of our branches would have had outdoor ceremonies with lots of attendees to commemorate the bombings and to demonstrate against nuclear weapons, and on account of the pandemic they have instead arranged online events with knowledgeable speakers, reflections, and suggestions such as lighting candles in your driveway. So far, we’ve heard from three branches who will have outdoor activities with reduced attendance: In Fresno, California WILPFers will gather at the Peace Garden of California State University, Fresno, at 8 am PDT on August 6 to observe a camphor tree planting, the tree is related to a tree that survived the Hiroshima bombing. In Des Moines, Iowa at 10:58 am CDT on August 6, WILPFers will gather around the Japanese Bell of Peace and Friendship near the Iowa State Capitol to hear speeches from their mayor and others, to strike the bell 75 times, and sing with their Raging Grannies. In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, our WILPF branch will join with other peace organizations at 8 pm CDT on August 6 on the Bradford Beach for a candlelight vigil.

Our WILPF branches that are co-sponsoring online events include Monterey County, CA (see article in this eNews); Humboldt County, CA, and our Tucson, AZ branch have kindly invited ANY WILPFer who wishes to join them in a ZOOMed gathering at 10 am PDT on August 6 to write to debdivya@gmail.com for the ZOOM link. This branch has held interesting Hiroshima commemorations for many years (they provided our resource guide #5 full of readings, poems, and songs for this occasion) and they will be lighting candles, showing off their peace cranes, reading Hibakusha stories, and singing some nuclear disarmament songs. That evening at 8 pm EDT they are co-sponsoring an online event replacing a large demonstration that would have happened outside the Los Alamos National Lab in New Mexico. This website has all the details: https://paceebene.org/hiroshimaday2020.

WILPF US has joined with 165 other anti-nuclear organizations to form a coalition to amplify our common nuclear disarmament voice in order to reach a much wider public on this 75th Anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. The coalition has a very informative website and will be hosting two 9-hour-long livestreaming virtual gatherings on August 6 and 9, which will include several WILPF events. You can find the detailed schedule at: www.hiroshimanagasaki75.org/events. For example, the Tucson Raging Grannies will be singing at 4:55 pm EDT on the 9th and our DISARM Committee’s webinar featuring hibakusha Dr Hideko Tamura will be shown at 6 pm EDT on the 9th. To find other WILPF events go here: www.hiroshimanagasaki75.org/local-events

So our solidarity season is off to a fine start and thanks to our many branches who are taking part. Our planning team will be in touch with the branch contacts again with a new set of resource guides to help your branch plan some activities after August 9 that will focus on the Global Ceasefire request by the UN Secretary General; the founding of the UN in 1945 and its current work; arms control treaties; and connecting militarism to the COVID-19 pandemic, racial injustices, the warming climate, and ecological devastation.

 

 

 

 

Post date: Tue, 07/28/2020 - 10:18

The annual Remembrance and Peace Lantern Ceremony at Lovers Point Cove in Pacific Grove is not safe to hold this year, so Monterey County WILPF and partner organizations are hosting a series of Saturday events and an online community candlelight vigil to mark the 75th Anniversary of the Hiroshima/Nagasaki nuclear attacks. Photo from the Monterey Peace and Justice Center website, used with permission.

 

By Catherine Crockett  
Member, Monterey Branch of WILPF US and President, Monterey Peace and Justice Center 

August 2020

On this 75th anniversary of the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom – Monterey County Branch, the Peace Coalition of Monterey County, and other partner organizations are raising public awareness by hosting a series of free, virtual events throughout the month of August to amplify the voices of the Hibakusha, the remaining survivors of the 1945 bombing, in their earnest desire that “no one else should suffer as we have.”

Our 16th Annual Remembrance and Peace Lantern Ceremony is traditionally held at Lovers Point Cove in Pacific Grove, however the outdoor event has been canceled due to COVID-19 concerns.

Still Here: Marking 75 Years of Nuclear Weapons and Survivors

This August 6th and 9th (2020) mark the 75th anniversaries of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In that time the nuclear threat has grown and waned but now we are again moving in the wrong direction. To help push for better policies and less nuclear risk, the Peace Coalition of Monterey County and a host of local partner organizations are marking the anniversary with a series of events each Saturday in August. The events are varied and informative, and include speakers that will be known to many of you, including WILPF’s own Joyce Vandevere. 

All virtual events are free and will be livestreamed on Zoom. Registration for each event is required to obtain the “join” details. The virtual events will be simulcast on the Monterey Peace and Justice Center YouTube channel. All WILPFers are welcome to register for the events – you don’t need to live in Monterey County. You will reach the registration for each individual event when you click on the links below, or you can click on individual “Register” buttons next to each event under the Calendar of Events here.

Saturday, August 1, 6 pm – 8 pm:  Japanese Americans, Hibakusha, and Nuclear Weapons:  Linking Past and Present, by David Yamada, Larry Oda, and Arlington "Arly" La Mica.

Saturday, August 8, 7 pm – 9 pm: 75th Annual Hiroshima-Nagasaki Remembrance and Virtual Peace Lantern Ceremony, with opening invocation by Reverend Jay Shinseki, the Story of Sadako Sasaki and the Thousand Cranes presented by Larry Oda,  Arlington “Arly” La Mica as Keynote Speaker, Invocation for the Peace Lantern Ceremony by Carole Erickson, and Beverly Bean as emcee. A video retrospective of past Hiroshima-Nagasaki Remembrance events at Lovers Point Cove in Pacific Grove, California, produced by Wes White, will be shown.

Saturday, August 15, 3 pm – 5 pm: Alternative Facts: The Lies of Executive Order 9066 and Community Conversation. Documentary film and panel discussion. Panelists: Gary Fujii, Sandy Lydon, and Larry Oda.  Moderator: JT Mason. This event is presented by Whites for Racial Equity, the National Coalition Building Institute (NCBI) Monterey County, and the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) Monterey Peninsula.

Saturday, August 22, 3 pm – 5 pm:  Recognition & Healing Through Art: Two Artists in Conversation, with Jerry Takigawa and Joe Aki Ouye.

Saturday, August 29, 3 pm – 5 pm: The Beginning of the End of Nuclear Weapons, Film and Discussion, with Joyce Vandevere of Monterey County WILPF, and Dr. Sharat G. Lin.

Thursday, August 6, 8:08 pm, Shine a Light for Peace & Justice - Community Candlelight VigilA Community-wide Candlelight Vigil will begin on Thursday, August 6 after sunset.

Participate by placing an LED cancel on your porch, driveway, or in a street-facing window each night, starting August 6th through September 21st, International Day of Peace. For details about free LED candle distribution locations, email Lynn Hamilton at lynnhmltn@gmail.com.

We are part of a national coalition of over 165 organizations working together specifically to highlight the voices of various affected communities this year – from the Hibakusha who survived the blasts in Japan, to downwind communities, nuclear workers, uranium workers, military personnel, and their families who were exposed to harmful and sometimes deadly levels of ionizing radiation and other toxins.

The stories of these survivors are not often heard, but they struggle with the effects to this day – decades after the atomic blasts. Now they have a whole new issue to contend with as the United States Congress considers providing funds for nuclear weapon testing to start again after a 28-year moratorium. This threat of renewed testing, the continued need to support survivors, and the inadequacy of current policy to address the risk posed by these weapons will be the predominant themes this year as the groups gather to mark 75 years of the nuclear weapons era, and to worry about where we will be 75 years from now. 

Hibakusha Appeal Position Letter:  https://www.hiroshimanagasaki75.org/hibakusha-appeal

Organized and sponsored by:

Japanese American Citizens League of Monterey Peninsula
Monterey Peace and Justice Center
Monterey Peninsula Friends Meeting (Quakers)
National Coalition Building Institute- Monterey County (NCBI)
Peace Coalition of Monterey County
Veterans for Peace, Chapter #46
Whites for Racial Equity
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Monterey County Branch

Online event page: tinyurl.com/Aug-2020-Remembrance

75th Anniversary Hiroshima-Nagasaki:  https://www.hiroshimanagasaki75.org/

 

 

Post date: Tue, 07/28/2020 - 10:07

This 1947 map shows the dotted line of a projected pipeline route of TAPLINE. It would eventually terminate in southern Lebanon, following the CIA’s first coup in 1949 overthrowing Syrian president Shukri al-Quwatly, who objected to its routing through Syria.  Photo credit: Chelsea Green Publishing, used with permission.

By Charlotte Dennett
For the Earth Democracy Issue Committee

August 2020

Death has a way of awakening the consciousness of those confronting it. Today, veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are beginning to face the ultimate question: did we sacrifice American blood and treasure for oil?

Leaders of two veterans’ groups, VoteVets and the more conservative Concerned Veterans for America, have joined forces to press for changes in war authorization measures by Congress and an examination of “why we are in endless wars.” This desire to challenge the increased power that has been given to the executive branch to wage wars has made for some strange bedfellows in Washington, DC, with veterans and congressional representatives on all sides of the political spectrum calling for more transparency with regard to US military involvement.

This is a significant development, to even consider reducing military involvement, and it comes as polling shows there is greater support among the American public to decrease military spending (especially on nuclear weapons) and direct the funds instead toward much-needed domestic programs and services.

Persistent Grassroots Organizers Claim Recent Victories 

Consider also some recent, earth-shaking news: indigenous and black leaders celebrated major victories in struggles against two giant oil pipelines which, they have claimed for years, could bring endless environmental harm – even death – to their sacred lands and peoples.

On July 6, a federal judge ordered the shutdown of Energy Transfer’s Dakota Access Pipeline long fought against by the Standing Rock Sioux and their allied water protectors in North Dakota. That same week, Dominion and Duke Energy announced cancelation of the Atlantic Pipeline which was to cross West Virginia, Virginia, and North Carolina. According to a spokesman for Dominion, this move occurred as the result of “legal uncertainty that overhangs large-scale energy and industrial infrastructure development in the United States.” Let’s thank our Earth Democracy WILPF activists in North Carolina, Lib Hutchby and John Wagner, who for years worked to defeat this project.

Coupled with the Supreme Court’s rejection—the same week—of a Trump Administration effort to proceed with the long-delayed Keystone XL oil pipeline to transport oil from Canada to Nebraska, the New York Times ran a story titled: “Is This the End of New Pipelines? According to the article, defeats of three pipeline projects “reflect increasingly sophisticated legal challenges, shifting economics and growing demands by states to fight climate change,” as well as stronger grassroots opposition. 

Hovering over all of this is the scourge of climate change, causing worldwide protests against the fossil fuel industry, which has brought us extreme weather events that impact vulnerable communities of color and the poor worldwide.

A Daughter’s Quest 

The Crash of Flight 3804In my new book, The Crash of Flight 3804: A Lost Spy, A Daughter’s Quest and the Deadly Politics of the Great Game for Oil, I began to make these links while investigating the pipeline-related death of my father. Daniel Dennett was America’s sole master spy in the Middle East (for the Central Intelligence Group, predecessor of the CIA) when his plane crashed following a top secret mission to Saudi Arabia. This was way back in 1947, when I was only six weeks old, but it has relevance to today.

My father’s mission was to determine the route of the Trans-Arabian oil pipeline. (TAPLINE — See map above.) In the mid-1940s, the United States was just emerging as a major world power due to the exclusive American concession to develop Saudi Arabia’s vast oil riches. At the heart of this development was the greatly-anticipated construction of this 1,000-mile pipeline across the Arabian Peninsula delivering Saudi Arabia’s oil to a terminal point slated to be on the eastern Mediterranean, in either Palestine or Lebanon. From there it would be shipped to Europe, its oil a major factor in the Marshall Plan and postwar recovery.

In my research, I discovered an article in the New York Times dated March 2, 1947, entitled “PIPELINE FOR U.S. ADDS TO MIDDLE EAST ISSUES; Oil Concessions Raise Questions Involving Position of Russia.” Written two weeks before the plane crash, it was my first introduction to the intrigues shaping what would become the deadly politics of the Great Game for Oil.

Pipe Dreams and Nightmares

With 12 pipeline maps in my book, I illustrate how endless wars in the Middle East and Asia, starting with George W. Bush’s invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003, are in reality pipeline wars. Which, to my mind, raised yet another question: can we make the link between pipeline wars in the Middle East and pipeline struggles (not yet full-fledged wars) in the United States? And again, the answer is yes. The connecting link is the struggle to control and profit from energy, and the determination on the part of the fossil fuel companies to protect (as my father wrote in 1947) “the oil at all costs.” 

My father died two years before that overriding mission took its first dangerous toll: In 1949, the CIA overthrew Syria’s democratically elected President Shukry al Quwatly, who resisted TAPLINE transiting through Syria because of Syrian opposition to the new state of Israel. The army chief who replaced him gave TAPLINE the go ahead, and the pipeline passed through the Golan Heights and ended up in Lebanon.

Four years later, in 1953, the CIA overthrew another democratically-elected nationalist: Iran’s Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh, who had nationalized Iran’s oil, and replaced him with the Shah of Iran, who opened up Iran’s oil to a consortium of Western oil companies dominated by British Petroleum (BP). Ultimately the overthrow of the Shah in 1979 led to the current regime in Iran.


Competing pipeline schemes in Syria are believed to have caused the civil war. Map created by John Van Hoesen. Used with permission of Chelsea Green Publishing.

In 2011, the CIA stepped up its efforts to undermine the Syrian regime of Bashar al Assad after he rejected a natural gas pipeline favored by the US and its allies that was to originate in Qatar and pass through Syria. Assad’s plan for an alternate “Islamic pipeline” carrying natural gas from Iran through Syria to Europe was the last straw for the West, and the beginning of the Syrian civil war.

Charlotte DennettView this YouTube video
 "Have American Diplomacy and Intelligence Been Corrupted by Money, Oil and Power?"
Charlotte’s lively, riveting, and informative conversation with former diplomat Ann Wright and former CIA analyst Ray McGovern, hosted by Chelsea Green, publisher of her book. This video includes many maps and new information on oil wars in regard to the US/Saudi war on Yemen and Israel’s war on Gaza and the West Bank.

Can We Learn From History?

These are just some of the costs of the deadly Great Game for Oil. As my book shows,  protection of oil “at all costs” goes back to 1911 when Churchill, then First Lord of the Admiralty, converted the British navy’s reliance on coal (of which Britain had plenty) to a more efficient oil (of which Britain had none). He predicted Britain would have to fight on a “sea of troubles” to secure oil, and seizing Iraq during WW I became a “First Class war Aim.” Once secured, the oil needed a pipeline outlet on the Mediterranean Sea.

In 1917, Britain formally favored a Jewish homeland in Palestine with the Balfour Declaration. By 1933, the pipeline terminated in friendly, pro-European territory: Haifa, Palestine which by 1948 would be Israel, now the most heavily-armed pro-Western oil protector in the world. 

You may contact Charlotte at chardennettlaw@gmail.com or by phone 802-881-1872.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 07/28/2020 - 08:22

By Ellen Thomas
Co-chair, Disarm Committee

August 2020

There are now three 75th Anniversary Timeline webinars available on the new WILPF US Disarm Committee YouTube channel:  

On May 17, Martha Hennessey of the Kings Bay Plowshares, her attorney Bill Quigley, and John LaForge of Nukewatch, discussed the history of the “Necessity Defense.” 

On June 28, Phyllis Bennis and Blanche Wiesen Cook spoke about the founding of the United Nations and the uphill battle to democratize it.  

On July 13, Tina Cordova and Joni Arends spoke about the July 16, 1945, Trinity nuclear bomb test, the unsuccessful struggle of New Mexico downwinders to get relief under the RECA Act, and about the current radioactive waste issues in New Mexico.

Each of these webinars can also be found under the relevant date on the Timeline.

There are also four other videos on this channel so far: 1) a discussion of the WILPF US 75th Anniversary Timeline to be broadcast globally during the August 6 and 9 continuous livestream events launched by HiroshimaNagasaki75.org; 2) a “Zoom for Organizers” for WILPF, by Steven Staples; 3) an interview of Bruce Gagnon of Global Network to Keep Space for Peace; and 4) an historic video about DC Initiative 37 of 1993, which led to Eleanor Holmes Norton’s “Nuclear Disarmament and Economic Conversion Act of 1994,” the first rendition of what is now HR-2419.

Upcoming 75th Anniversary Timeline Webinars:

On Sunday, August 9, 2020 – 5:55 pm* EDT - Atomic bomb survivor Dr. Hideko Tamura Snider, author of "One Sunny Day" and founder of One Sunny Day Initiatives, will speak of her childhood experience of the Hiroshima bombing, and life before and after. We’re excited that the first half hour of this webinar will be broadcast internationally by the #HiroshimaNagasaki75 coalition during August 6 and 9 streaming of recorded and live videos from activists around the country and the world. (*PLEASE JOIN OUR ZOOM WEBINAR AT 5:55pm, so we can have the audience in place by the time the livestream starts at 6pm EDT.*)

Ray AchesonOn Sunday, September 20 - 6:00 pm EDT - Alice Slater will speak about “Obstacles to Nuclear Abolition: Telling the Truth About the Relationship between the US and Russia.” Alice serves on the Board of World BEYOND War, and is a UN NGO Representative of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. She is on the Board of the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space, the Global Council of Abolition 2000, and on the Advisory Board of Nuclear Ban US, supporting the mission of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons. She’s also a member of WILPF US who consistently provides vital information about nuclear weapons to WILPF members. (Photo by David Field:  June 17, 2017, Ray Acheson celebrates the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons outside the UN)

On Thursday, October 22 – 5:00 pm EDT - Ray Acheson, Director of Reaching Critical Will, will speak about her experiences and insights as WILPF International’s amazing NGO Representative to the United Nations, working for human rights, peace, and disarmament.  

Be sure to check out these webinars, past and future! Come back often! And let everyone know they can find the recordings on YouTube at WILPF US Disarm Committee channel!

To learn more, contact disarmchair@wilpfus.org

Post date: Tue, 07/28/2020 - 08:07

Publicity still for the 2019 film The Laundromat, directed by Steven Soderbergh, production companies: Netflix and Anonymous Content.
 

By Marybeth Gardam
Chair, Women, Money & Democracy (W$D) Committee

August 2020

The Women, Money & Democracy (W$D) Committee of WILPF US (formerly the Corporations v Democracy Issue Committee) is asking members to engage in some social activism this summer and fall. Holding a movie watch party and Zoom discussion is easy, fun, and offers a way to engage new potential activists. Even in the midst of pandemic, it’s possible to reach out!  

We’re asking members and branches to set a “movie night” and invite their members, neighbors, co-workers, and friends to view the film The Laundromat on Netflix. This film combines the education you would get from a documentary on financial fraud with a story line that captures the audience, and it includes a great cast.

Within the following week, schedule a Zoom discussion that invites everyone who watched the film to meet and talk about what they learned, how the film made them feel, and how they might decide to address the issue of corporate fraud and government complicity. Zoom accounts are free, but you might want to take advantage of someone you know who has a paid account, so the discussion can last a bit longer than the free 45-minute version of Zoom.  

Toolkit Available to Help You

We’re developing a TOOLKIT for making the most out of your Laundromat Watch Party, including:

  • Scheduling the Viewing and Discussion
  • Sample Invitation 
  • Strategic Outreach – Fine-tuning your invitations list!
  • Where to Find the Film
  • How to Do a Zoom Call
  • Talking Points 
  • Next Steps for Action  

To get the whole package, contact us at mbgardam@gmail.com.   

Why Watch This Film?  

Its cast is pretty impressive: Meryl Streep, Antonio Banderas, and a collection of really wonderful character actors you’ll recognize from other roles.  

The story is entertaining AND there’s a lot of educational background about the way offshore shell corporations operate. Read A.O. Scott's review in the New York Times.

Connect the Dots. Understanding how corporate fraud and government complicity affects real people and their savings is a great way to understand how to dismantle all that power.       

Why Watch This Film with WILPF?

We’re stronger together. If we can think together about how corporate fraud and government complicity affects we the people, maybe we can unify around some strategies to address the issues locally and nationally.

WILPF has been working on corporate power issues for a long time. Our Women, Money & Democracy Committee is recommending this film as a way to introduce the subject and share personal stories of how financial misadventures hurt people we love. We’ll provide some solid next steps too, so your movie night won’t be just a one-off action. You can build on it!  

It’s a great way to involve folks who haven’t been active for a while. Or reach out to people who are not yet engaged with WILPF but who care about economic justice.  

Any WILPF Member Can Participate

At-large members don’t need to sit this out!

You can easily invite friends to your own virtual watch party and use the toolkit we offer to make your follow-up Zoom call a success.   

Pass the popcorn, invite your friends and neighbors, and engage in social activism from home!

 

 

Post date: Tue, 07/28/2020 - 06:29
Nagasaki Bomb Survivor

In this June 30, 2015 photo, Sumiteru Taniguchi, a survivor of the 1945 atomic bombing of Nagasaki, shows a photo of himself taken in 1945. Taniguchi devoted his life to seeking to abolish nuclear weapons after he was burned severely in the 1945 attack. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, file)
 

By Robin Lloyd
Co-chair, Disarm Committee

August 2020

Sumiteru Taniguchi’s The Atomic Bomb on my Back: A Life Story of Survival and Activism will be released on August 9, 2020 by Rootstock Publishing. This is an important book to read as we approach the 75th anniversary of the dropping of nuclear bombs on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This book tells the back story of a hibakusha – the Japanese word for atomic survivor. When I say ‘back story’ I mean this literally, since it was Sumiteru Taniguchi’s back that bore the fury of the heat assault from the Nagasaki bomb. It became even more of a 'back story' when a young American photographer took his picture lying on his stomach on a gurney with his back crimson with the skin burned off. It took time for the photo to 'go viral’, but when it did, Taniguchi hesitantly became the poster boy for the hibakusha movement.

Most testimonies that I have heard from survivors speaking at peace conferences describe the agony of their encounter with the bomb, and the years of suffering that followed, but few enter into the politics and rage that motivated their movement. Taniguchi describes the primal anger he felt that something so monstrous had been developed and experimented on him and the Japanese people. He also voices deep disappointment that his government did not acknowledge their suffering.

He explains that hibakusha organizations petitioned and rallied and pleaded with the Japanese government to provide compensation to the victims. One problem was that in the postwar settlement between the US and Japan, the Japanese government had waived its claims for compensation from the US.

Over time, the bomb was seen as an illegal weapon and thus relief measures could be sought in the courts. But the Japanese government could claim ‘we didn’t drop the bombs, why should we pay damages to you?’ Finally a Tokyo District Count ruling acknowledged the illegality of the A bombings as well as the Japanese government’s responsibility for the war.

Taniguchi spoke at many peace conferences during his lifetime of activism. I travelled to Japan in a peace delegation to attend the 40th anniversary of the A and H bomb conference of 1985. There I learned that the whole nuclear fuel cycle spreads devastation at every point: among the indigenous people who are hired to mine uranium, to the people in assembly plants, to the military overseeing the testing, and finally to the Pacific Islanders who have endured the explosions on their islands.

This testimony by Taniguchi gives a clearheaded but passionate account of the struggle maintained by the hibakusha, individually and in their organizations, insisting that their concerns be heard by the public. He ends, “I will continue to speak out for the elimination of nuclear weapons with all the strength of life left in me.” Though he died of cancer in 2017, he did speak out until the end of his days, and this book continues to enable his words to be heard even though he is no longer with us.

Now that this book is translated into English, with a powerful introduction by Peter Kuznick, I hope his message will spread to a new and receptive audience.

The Atomic Bomb on My BackWILPFers and friends 
By ordering directly from the publisher, you can get a 20% reduction in price by writing in the code WILPF20. Rootstock Publishing, 27 Main Street, Suite 6, Montpelier VT 05602 USA www.rootstockpublishing.com 802-839-0371.

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