NEWS

Post date: Mon, 09/07/2020 - 06:28

September 2020

WILPF US Promotes Call for Peace

By Eileen Kurkoski and Darien DeLu

WILPF is promoting radical ideas again! In August, the Board voted to agree with the Program Committee’s decision and support the Call for Peace proposal. The Call is for two major initiatives: a permanent extension of the UN’s Global Ceasefire and a 50% cut in total military spending (both the "official" budgets and "behind the curtain" money), moving the money to diverse human needs.  

The Ceasefire campaign connects to the second part of our national "solidarity season" action. (See more on the Ceasefire, including a timeline of important events, in this Resource Guide – UN Global Ceasefire).  

With the spending cut/money move, WILPF is supporting the Poor People's Moral Budget, which proposes to move funds from a $350 billion (50%) cut of carefully selected items in the Department of Defense budget. Our WILPF position goes further, with 50% cuts of other selected military spending, under other projects and departments, plus a 50% cut in unbudgeted – unaccounted for! military spending.

The selected cuts will be tracked down with careful research, leading to a total that could be close to a trillion dollars – funds to be applied to the Green New Deal and other greatly needed projects. More next month.


Advancing Human Rights Meetings Will Determine Next Steps

On Thursday, October 1, the Advancing Human Rights Issue Committee continues its regular meeting schedule – the first Thursday of the month. Join us! If you haven’t joined in our meetings in the last few months, please be sure to pre-register here.

We’ll be determining next steps, based on member interest, in the several areas of work we have before us:

Of course advancing human rights covers numerous topics. If you want to encourage activities in another area, join us and speak up! We meet Thursdays at 5 pm PDT / 7 pm CDT / 8 pm EDT.

For more information (or if you can’t make it to the scheduled meeting), contact AHR at AHRChair@wilpfus.org.


What if WE Could Fund What We Need with Local Investments Kept Local?

By the Women, Money & Democracy Committee

The Women, Money & Democracy Committee is finalizing a toolkit to help YOU advance local projects you care most about. 

Public Banking has been gaining support around the country, particularly in California. And the W$D team is working hard to connect activists with a ‘primer’ that consolidates information from many sources to explain how public banking works. Understanding how we could PAY for important transitions to a more sustainable world can help us answer the nay-sayers who insist we must work from a false narrative of scarcity and austerity that only punishes the poor.

Innovative investment could help fund the Green New Deal, locally-owned water plant modernization, new bridges and roads, as well as investments in healthcare and education. It can offer small businesses and students low interest loans that keep them going. It can help fund low income housing, land trusts, public transportation services, and all the things we’re told we can’t afford. 

This booklet includes handouts and talking points to help you begin the dialogue in your own community…and offers connections to current public banking initiatives in states across the country.  

If you’d like to help edit this early draft, contact the committee at mbgardam@gmail.com. Look for the finished toolkit before the end of 2020! 

 

 

Post date: Mon, 09/07/2020 - 06:17

Left: Burlington WILPF members Jean Hopkins, Marguerite Adelman, and Jane Hendley, together with Molly Gray, candidate for Vermont’s Lt. Governor, at an August 26 Women’s Suffrage Centennial event. Photo credit: Robert Ackland. Right: Pittsburgh Branch member Susan Smith at protest to ban nuclear weapons held on August 6. 

September 2020

Burlington (VT) Branch Honors Suffragists

By Marguerite Adelman
Burlington Branch

For the past year, WILPF Burlington has been an active member of the Vermont Suffrage Centennial Alliance. Since the planned August parade for Montpelier celebrating the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment could not be held due to COVID-19, WILPF Burlington did not want to see August 26th go by with no recognition of this important day.

So our WILPF branch took the lead in planning an hour of speeches on suffrage, voting rights, women's equality, and more, featuring 13 speakers in front of Burlington’s City Hall. The event was featured on a number of television stations and is available for viewing at this public access link.

WILPF members Marguerite Adelman, Robin Lloyd, Jean Hopkins, Robert Ackland, and Peggy Luhrs all spoke during this exciting, non-partisan event that featured women candidates for office and women in office, as well as other well-known leaders in our state. We even had voting information and voter registration available.


Pittsburgh Remembers Hiroshima with Ban Nuclear Weapons Protest

By Susan Smith
WILPF Pittsburgh

Peg Cammarata and Mary KingWILPF Pittsburgh and Remembering Hiroshima, Imaging Peace gathered (at a distance with masks) along the street to encourage passers-by to support the ban on all nuclear weapons. The protest happened on August 6, the day 75 years ago that the US dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Passing drivers honked their support. 

Photo: Pittsburgh Branch members Peg Cammarata (left) and Mary King (right). 

In addition, on August 5 these two organizations sponsored a watch party for “The Beginning of the End of Nuclear Weapons” which tells the history of the UN treaty to ban nuclear weapons into international law and the role of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN). After the movie, at 8:15 a.m. Japanese time, Pittsburghers talked to people in Japan to remember the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Our contact in Kobe, Japan, was Professor Ronni Alexander (sister of a member of Remembering Hiroshima, Imaging Peace), and some students also participated. About 30 people were on the call, including participants from Guam, Mexico, Japan, and the United States.

This annual event was modified to be fully online this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

For more information, see https://www.rememberinghiroshima.org and https://www.facebook.com/WILPFPittsburgh

 


Check Out Peninsula/Palo Alto Videos on Vimeo

The Peninsula/Palo Alto, California WILPF branch now has three videos on Vimeo with easy access by the public. Be sure to turn your volume up for the selections.

When you select the Paper Cranes video first (our Solidarity project for the 75th Anniversary of Hiroshima/Nagasaki, the Menlo Park art installation of over 1,000 paper cranes), the other two will automatically follow. Or select an individual video.

Please tell your friends and neighbors about the videos!

  1. Paper Cranes Menlo Park August 2020:  https://vimeo.com/452923974
    The art gallery outside of which we installed over 1,000 paper peace cranes made by volunteers (Art Ventures) has arranged for our branch to co-sponsor a competition to design a sculpture that relates to the peace cranes. Towards the end of September, Menlo College has arranged an outdoor Sculpture Fair where we will hand out some of the paper cranes from our installation. The gallery director founded the Menlo Park Public Art nonprofit so it will give good publicity to WILPF.
  2. WILPF Peninsula/Palo Alto 2015 Centennial Exhibit talk by Millee Livingston: https://vimeo.com/201380126
  3. Listen to Women for a Change: https://vimeo.com/147970792 
     

 

Post date: Mon, 09/07/2020 - 06:05

By Cindy Domingo
Co-chair, Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee

September 2020

We hope you will join WILPF’s Cuba and the Bolivarian Issues Committee and US Women and Cuba Collaboration in celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Federation of Cuban Women (FMC), and our work in solidarity with their organization. The Zoom webinar will be held on Sunday, September 20, 2020 at 2:30 – 4:00 pm (PT); 5:30 – 7:00 pm (ET). View the full event flyer here.

The FMC’s members are composed of 4 million women and girls over the age of 14 years. Under this organization’s guidance, women and girls have made remarkable achievements towards equality in Cuban society. Guest speakers include Ambassador Ana Silvia Rodriguez, Cuban Ambassador to the United Nations, and Gretel Marante Rossett from the FMC. Please register at this Zoom link.

The FMC was established in 1960 under the new revolutionary government with Vilma Espin as its president. It is her face that is embodied in the FMC logo and, though she passed in 2007, she remains the “forever” president of the FMC. Espin served in the mountains as part of the July 26th movement prior to 1960 and eventually married former Cuban President Raul Castro, the brother of Fidel Castro. As a result of Espin and the FMC’s role, in 2017 Cuba ranked third in the world for having the highest percentage of women members of parliament while the US ranked 80th. Women have free healthcare, including reproductive healthcare, and they account for nearly 60% of the country’s students. Over 65% of Cuban women have graduated from institutions of higher education.  

The webinar speakers will talk about the leading role Cuban women are playing in the fight against COVID-19, including doing research to finding a vaccine, treating patients at the Cuban clinics and hospitals, and serving on the medical brigades dispatched to over 35 countries to battle the pandemic. WILPF has been sending delegations to Cuba for almost three decades and continues to work to lift the 60-year-old US blockade against Cuba. Visit our webpage to see what you can do to lift the blockade and participate in the Saving Lives Campaign that is calling for US-Cuba-Canada cooperation to fight COVID-19.

 

Post date: Mon, 09/07/2020 - 05:47

Huge explosion in Gaza. Editorial credit: Gershberg Yuri / Shutterstock.com.

By Tura Campanella-Cook, Ellen Rosser, and Odile Hugonot Haber 
For the Middle East Committee

September 2020

The WILPF-US Middle East Committee Gaza Declaration:
 
As our own presidential elections approach, we are anxious that elections be fair and free of outside influence. We would not want the outcome of an election challenged or to be collectively punished for the outcome. This is what happened in 2007 when Israel enforced an air, sea, and land blockade on Gaza following the election of a Hamas government. That election was deemed fair and democratic by international election observers such as The Carter Center, but Israel and the US disapproved. The world community has decried the harsh economic and humanitarian impacts of the blockade, but with US backing, Israel maintains the blockade and periodically bombs Gaza with impunity.
 
Gaza has been under daily fire from Israeli bombs for more than two weeks in retaliation for what the press calls “incendiary balloons” or “rockets” launched from Gaza into Israel. Rocket or balloon versus many ton-size bombs: what would be an appropriate response in war, and what does international law – or your conscience and heart – have to say about collective punishment of an imprisoned civilian population?
 
To help us visualize, consider that Manhattan (22.8 square miles including Central Park) has a population density of 71,000 per square mile, 14% of whom are children under the age of 18. The Gaza strip  (140 square miles) has a population density of 124,000 per square mile, 60% of whom are children under 18 years of age [2019 population estimates from US Census and UNRWA respectively]. Gaza youth have suffered intensely with disfiguring injuries, persistent trauma, or death. Many have known life only under siege with their homes, hospitals, schools, and water treatment facilities destroyed by repeated Israeli bombings, frequent blackout periods without electricity, and rising unemployment – 45.5% as of March, before the impacts of COVID-19.
 
Yet again the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom-US calls urgently for an international conference on Palestine to end current attacks on Gaza. Multinational negotiations must be resumed to end the Israeli occupation, and come to pragmatic and principled agreements for both Palestinian and Israeli security and self-determination. No one is safe until everyone is safe.

In addition, the peace treaty should designate the Middle East region as a Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone as has been discussed previously by Iran and Egypt. Israel, which is the only Middle East nation possessing nuclear weapons, has not been a party to these talks. Between 1967 and 2006, Nuclear Free Zones have been established successfully in Latin America, the South Pacific, Southeast Asia, Africa, and Central Asia.

Actions: Please call your representatives in the US Congress and at the United Nations, to implore them to bring attention to Gaza and find some solutions to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.


 

Post date: Sat, 09/05/2020 - 09:44

By Ellen Thomas and Robin Lloyd
Co-chairs, Disarm Committee

September 2020

As you probably know by now, the Disarm Committee has been having a series of monthly Zoom meeting webinars tied to the 75th anniversaries of the United Nations and of the development and use of nuclear weapons. These are listed on the Disarm page and the recordings are available on the WILPF US Disarm Committee YouTube channel.  

Two More 75th Anniversary Webinars Sept. 20 & Oct. 22

There are two more 75th Anniversary Timeline webinars scheduled: 

  • September 20 - Alice Slater, on the board of World Beyond War and several nuclear abolition organizations, explores “Obstacles to Nuclear Abolition:  Telling the Truth About the Relationship between the US and Russia.” (September 21 is the UN International Day of Peace and September 26 is the UN International Day for the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons - come prepared to share what you or your branch may be doing for these days!) 
  • Alice Slater and Ray AchesonOctober 22 - Ray Acheson, the Director of Reaching Critical Will, International WILPF’s disarmament program, speaks about WILPF’s active role in disarmament efforts before and since October 24, 1945, the date the United Nations was founded.

The Disarm/End Wars Committee plans to continue monthly webinars, beginning with UN Human Rights Day (December 10), when the focus will be AFRICOM. We are in the process of reaching out to Black Alliance for Peace and to WILPF International for speakers.

Please share YOUR suggestions for issues and speakers for 2021! 

And let us know if you want to join the WILPF US Disarm Committee twice-a-month conference calls (second and last Sundays, 4:30 pm Pacific time, 7:30 pm Eastern time)!

WILPF US Social Media Training Webinars You Can Learn From

There are two Zoom and one TikTok training that have been uploaded to the WILPF US Zoom meetings YouTube channel:

Zoom training for WILPF US, by Michael Ippolito

Zoom for Organizers with Steven Staples

TikTok training for WILPF US by Michael Ippolito

Other Webinars Worth Watching

There were so many great webinars in August that it was hard to see them all! Here are a few; please send us links to others that you think people should see!

Nagasaki Day: message from a-bomb survivor Terumi Tanaka
https://vimeo.com/445932753

The Beginning of the End of Nuclear Weapons, Documentary Film & Discussion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dhn_SNKCWM&feature=youtu.be&t=96.

Climate Emergency and Nuclear War: What are the Connections?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1rSQ9vjKFg

#StillHere - 75 Years of Shared Nuclear Legacy (August 6 and 9)
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3zKS54-BuOlMRdyHZ76SWA

From Hiroshima to a Healthy Tomorrow: Embracing Our Common Humanity - Livermore Lab virtual rally, with speakers and music, August 6, 2020
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9MDuU9XhuEM

Decision to Bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki - Four historians who have written extensively on the decision to drop the atomic bombs
https://www.c-span.org/video/?474477-1/decision-bomb-hiroshima-nagasaki  

The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
https://www.armscontrol.org/events/2020-08/webinar-treaty-prohibition-nuclear-weapons-nuclear-nonproliferation-treaty 

Paradise VR - Ever wondered what a nuclear explosion would feel like? (film of first hydrogen bomb)
https://www.youtube.com 

The Tenth NPT Review Conference: Effective Measures of Nuclear Disarmament (UN Webinar)
https://video.un-arm.org

 

 

 

Post date: Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:49

Jane Addams (second from left, behind the letter P), with other American peace delegates, on the deck of a ship heading to the International Congress of Women held at The Hague in 1915. George Grantham Bain Collection / Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

September 2020

If any WILPF member would like to join the Jane Addams (JA) branch they should contact Dianne Blais at dianneblais@aol.com. Dianne is the new convener of the JA branch.

The JA branch, named after WILPF’s illustrious founder, is a way that at-large members – anyone who is not a member of a local branch – can experience the benefits of being part of a WILPF branch. JA members work together virtually on projects and actions.

The JA branch will be having a “Movie Night” to watch We Are Many on Monday, September 21 at 8 pm EDT / 5 pm PDT. (Details will be in an upcoming eAlert.) Then, on Thursday, September 24 at 8 EDT / 5 pm PDT, we’ll meet on a Zoom call to cover a range of topics including event planning.  Also, for all of us who wish to consider the value of the resistance to George W’s Iraq war, to discuss the We Are Many film.

We hope to utilize the package assembled by the Women, Money & Democracy Committee and hold another film viewing of The Laundromat on a future date this fall.

Because the JA branch has members throughout the US, out of necessity it has to meet via Zoom and communicate electronically. This means you generally won’t have to leave your house to be involved. Now, during this wretched pandemic is a good time to join us!

Post date: Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:42

By Darien De Lu
President, WILPF US

September 2020

In August 2021, WILPFers across the US will share one significant benefit of the pandemic. Yes – for all of their many negatives, these strange, stressful, and isolating times have also offered us a few benefits. If you, in the last few months, have seized the opportunity to transcend distance – participating virtually in some conference, presentation, concert, or play, happening somewhere hundreds or thousands of miles away, you know what I mean. We’ve all had to confront negatives of COVID-19; now very many of us can take advantage of this one positive aspect and join in the 2021 national WILPF Congress – the most egalitarian Congress ever!

Yes, our 2021 Congress, originally planned to be in California, will instead be on your computer or smart phone. With the help of the dedicated Congress Program Committee, our tech staff, and the Congress Coordinator (to be hired – see below!), the Congress will be a dynamic virtual event! We look forward to many of the aspects of our usual Congresses: an opening night reception (with shifting breakout rooms, so that you can have small-group conversations to get to know other WILPFers), plenary session presentations (in which everyone present can hear!), cultural events, and workshops. Especially, we look forward to featuring a range of branch-produced events

What will be missing? Of course, the reception will have to be BYOB, but maybe you can treat yourself to something special, since you’ll save so much due to no travel costs! And we’ll miss out on the temptation to try to fit so much into each day, because we’ll be starting later and ending earlier, in order to accommodate those in time zones from the east coast to the west. (My apologies to our Hawai’i members, yet you, too, are likely to find the schedule somewhat friendly.)  Similarly, we’ll avoid “weekend overload”; as a virtual Congress we can extend over two weekends, without unthinkable accommodations and meal expenses! We may even offer a few mid-week bonus sessions, to keep us in touch and on track.

With the lack of geographical restrictions, the Congress is excited to incorporate the women and power of branches and at-large members for individual program elements. Our branches and individual members are a rich and diverse resource, and we’ll have the opportunity to highlight them, with regional focuses. Our forward-looking theme is WOMEN, POWER, and SOCIAL JUSTICE: Building from Strength. That theme connects to an upcoming national WILPF initiative, which will provide special assistance to a pilot group of branches, to identify their strengths in order to build their community of branch membership and activism.

This Congress will be about branches – and about all of us. We want you – especially those of you who haven’t been able to experience a Congress before! No travel costs, no housing costs, no high catered-meal costs – no problems due to dietary restrictions or a snoring roommate! – and the registration cost will be lower than usual. This is your chance to be inspired by your fellow WILPFers from across the country!

Perhaps you have some extra qualifications, so that you might want a special role in this Congress – a paid role? We’re looking for applicants for the Congress Coordinator position, which is part-time until about two weeks before the Congress. See this draft job description, and please contact me if you – or someone you know – could use more information: President@wilpfus.org.

Also, I’d be glad to hear from anyone who has questions or suggestions for the Congress. Watch for more details and plans, coming in future months!

 

Post date: Fri, 09/04/2020 - 12:35

The peace symbol made with small peace cranes, a display made by Sacramento WILPFer Sabreena Britt. Photo taken by Sabreena Britt and used with her permission.

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

September 2020

Nineteen of our WILPF branches organized one or more activities to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the A-bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. This was the main theme for the first part of our “CEASEFIRE/75th” solidarity season; spurred on by the 12 resource guides our solidarity planning team produced these branches carried out ten different types of activities between the 3rd  and 9th of August. This eNews article will just be a brief summary of what our branches did. I have prepared a more detailed overview of these branch activities, it has been distributed to the branch contacts by email, if you’d like your own copy please write to Cherrill Spencer at this email address: cherrill.m.spencer@gmail.com.

This photo, captioned “Boston WILPFers show one of the educational lawn signs they included in a walking 1945 timeline exhibit outside the Newton, MA, public library,” describes an “outdoor, educational” type of activity. Boston WILPFer Eileen Kurkoski “borrowed” the information in ten of the dates in the online 1945 timeline that three other WILPFers had created (which many of you will have visited here) and placed the photo and text from those 10 dates on 10 lawn sign posters, which she arranged in a walking timeline in the lawn outside her local library. Each poster has strings of peace cranes hanging from them, and at the end of the exhibit, you could pick up a crane pin and a card telling you where to sign our petition supporting the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and the hibakusha appeal. Eileen has already received requests from other libraries to show this exhibit; it can be shown on an inside wall, too, and Eileen will send you the pdf files if you’d like to display this educational exhibit in your local library or community hall. Kudos to Eileen for this innovative solidarity activity.

Photo credit: WILPFer Eileen Kurkoski, used with permission.

Peace Crane Displays

Menlo Park Peace CranesThe most popular type of activity our branches did was an “outdoor crane display.” These branches assembled such displays: Burlington, VT; Fresno, CA; Humboldt, CA; Minneapolis Metro, MN; Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA,  and San Jose, CA.

This photo of “Twenty-foot-tall trellis and nearby tree filled with 1,000 cranes” shows the Peninsula/Palo Alto branch’s outdoor crane display. Many of these cranes were made by local children and are larger than the ones we received from the Ehime Co-op in Japan.

Another popular crane display activity was to place them inside a bookshop window with posters explaining their significance, so passers-by could see them, even if the pandemic prevented them from entering the bookshop. These branches assembled such window displays: Corvallis, OR (see the August eNews for a photo); East Bay, CA; San Francisco, CA and Santa Cruz CA.

Photo credit: Becky Fischbach, used with permission of Peninsula/Palo Alto Branch.

Outdoor, In-Person Events

Greater Philadelphia, PA branch membersThe pandemic notwithstanding, many of our branches held solidarity events outdoors at which they could interact with the walking-by public. These branches held outdoor tabling events: Cape Cod, MA – eight different towns!; Greater Philadelphia, PA (see photo); and Santa Cruz, CA.

Some branches held outdoor rallies, marches and street demonstrations. They included: Boston, MA; Burlington, VT; Milwaukee, WI and Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA. During their outdoor event on August 6, the Des Moines, IA, branch helped to strike a large Japanese peace and friendship bell 75 times and heard a proclamation from their Mayor.

Photo: Greater Philadelphia, PA branch members staffing their outreach table in Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, on August 9, 2020. Photo credit: WILPFer Tina Shelton, used with permission

Online Solidarity Events

On account of the COVID-19 pandemic, many of our branches arranged activities and events using the World Wide Web and the Zoom platform. The silver lining in the pandemic cloud is that people all over the world could take part in these online events or watch online films at their own convenience. These branches arranged for films made by others to be shown online with discussions afterwards: Burlington, VT; Monterey County, CA; and Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA.

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 arranged for 19 hours of livestreamed events to be shown on August 6th and 9th via https://www.hiroshimanagasaki75.org/events (where they are still available to be watched). These branches provided content for this well-watched event (over 25,000 accumulated views): Monterey County, CA; Sacramento, CA; Tucson, AZ; and the Disarm Issue Committee (see their eNews article). 

Two branches held Zoom meetings to light candles, hear poems written by hibakusha, and reflect on the terrible attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Greater Phoenix, AZ, and Tucson, AZ. The latter invited any other WILPFer to join them, which I gladly did.

Inspired, I hope, by our resource guide on media outreach, these branches managed to get their local TV stations to attend their events and report on them during their news broadcast: Burlington, VT; Des Moines, IA; and Greater Philadelphia, PA. 

Twelve New Resource Guides Sent to All Branches for the Second Part of Solidarity Season

Congratulations to our many branches who put on the above described activities and I hope all our members took advantage of the many resource guides we sent out for the first part of this solidarity season.

Now it’s time to focus on a new set of topics and the solidarity planning team encourages even more branches to look through the twelve resource guides we have recently sent to you and arrange some events to inform the general  public and your congressional reps on these topics: the Global Ceasefire that was requested by the UN Secretary General and is in force until at least September 30th; the founding of the UN in 1945 and its current work, especially in disarmament matters; arms control treaties; why we don’t want nuclear weapons testing to be re-started; the connections between militarism and racism, the warming climate, environmental devastation, and the COVID-19 pandemic; how to counteract militarism; and celebrating the International Day of Peace on September 21st which is the last day of our CEASEFIRE/75th solidarity season.

If you have not received any of the above resource guides from your branch contact or you are a member-at-large and would like to receive any or all of the new guides by email, write to cherrill.m.spencer@gmail.com and specify which guide by topic.

Post date: Fri, 09/04/2020 - 11:17

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

By the Women, Money & Democracy Committee.

September 2020

How can a VIRTUAL Community MOVIE NIGHT build your branch and actually help reclaim our democracy? WILPF’s W$D Committee can help make this an easy packaged event for you.

First of all, you need to know that the term “laundromat” is being used by regulatory, criminal investigative teams, and investigative reporters to describe the kinds of white collar billion dollar money-laundering and bogus investment scams being perpetrated on the public by transnational cartels.   

Second, the problem has become so rampant, as described in the Panama Papers, that it’s beginning to threaten our very democracy, along with the financial security of millions of unsuspecting dupes. The whole sordid complicated mess of entangled alliances, corporate greed, and underworld bullies is addressed in this docudrama.

The film The Laundromat is available on Netflix and stars Meryl Streep, Antonio Banderas, and a long list of character actors whose faces you’ll recognize. It’s entertaining AND informative.  But how can it create real change?  

The LaundromatThe Women, Money & Democracy Committee is asking branches, individual members and the public to participate in a virtual national MOVIE NIGHT to view the film together, using a new app that Netflix makes available: NetflixPARTY. Then, a few days later, all participants will attend a national Zoom call to talk about the revelations the film described, and what kinds of ACTIONS you could organize locally to follow the money and help drain the swamp, thus helping to protect our democracy.

The W$D Committee has created a whole PACKAGE to make this event easy for you to organize, and successful in your community. The date for the national Watch Party event and national Zoom Discussion have not been set yet, but is being planned for this Fall.  Registering early gives you some input into date selection! 

Contact us to find out how you or your branch can sign up, and how easy it will be to organize.   

Sign Up for Our LAUNDROMAT WATCHPARTY PACKAGE

When you sign up for our “Laundromat Watchparty Package,” you’ll get: 

  • A sample digital invitation to send to friends, family, co-workers, faith community members, and your branch lists.  
  • Specific easy-to-follow directions about how those folks can access the film, and the date we set for the Watch Party.   
  • Technical Assistance, to walk you through the process.
  • Specific directions for how your invitees can register for the Zoom discussion. 
  • Discussion Questions to help facilitate independent discussions in your community.
  • Suggestions for further ACTION that can help address the issues of international, national and local fraud.
  • Resources for exploring: 
    • more about how ‘laundromats’ work, 
    • the brave international journalists exposing these scams at great personal risk,
    • the legislative efforts to regulate and eliminate offshore shell corporate fraud and tax evasion,
    • American efforts to follow the money and dismantle the cartel through local legislative advocacy. 

“Our hope is that using this modern youth-oriented means of entertainment will attract new potential members to WILPF, and interest them in the work of our committee,” explains W$D Chair Marybeth Gardam. “It’s dynamic, recreational, and action-oriented too!”

Contact us now to learn how you can participate.

 

Post date: Thu, 09/03/2020 - 09:30

September 2020

We Are Many is a documentary tribute to movement building, telling the story behind the 2003 anti-Iraq War protests – the largest demonstration in history – and how this worldwide demonstration inspired the next generation of activists.

As peaceful protests continue to erupt across the world, this film’s message resonates more deeply than ever.

On International Peace Day, Monday, September 21, this online event will feature exclusive music performances, a screening of We Are Many, and a Q&A panel discussion – including director Amir Amirani, cast members, and leaders from key activist organizations.

Monday, September 21, 2020
5 pm PT / 8 pm ET (NY)

General admission for this special We Are Many presentation is $12; Student/Senior admission is $7.

The premiere will be livestreamed online, with WILPF US as one of many ‘virtual hosts.’ We’ll send out a personalized ticket link via an eAlert, and WILPF US will receive a 40% share of the net profit from the WILPF US ticket sales (when made through our personalized link).

Please save the date and watch for the eAlert with the link. We’ll most likely also post it to our website homepage.

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