NEWS

Post date: Mon, 05/03/2021 - 06:40

Screenshot of Representative Eleanor Holmes Norton during a webinar on April 24 to build political support for the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Here she is announcing her bill HR-2850, the “Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act.” Photo by Ellen Thomas, used with her permission.

By Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas
Co-Chairs, DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

May 2021

WILPF US was one of 70 peace-related organizations who co-sponsored a virtual event on April 24, 2021, to build political support within the US Congress for the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). Politicians all over the world are showing their desire for nuclear disarmament by signing the ICAN pledge (International Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons), part of which reads:

“As parliamentarians, we pledge to work for the signature and ratification of this landmark treaty by our respective countries, as we consider the abolition of nuclear weapons to be a global public good of the highest order and an essential step to promote the security and well-being of all peoples."

Please read the rest of this article to discover a quick way to write to your congressperson to request they sign the ICAN pledge and co-sponsor the new HR-2850 act to abolish US nuclear weapons. It won’t take much time but your calls and letters make a difference in moving these important issues forward!

What You Can Do to Build Support for the TPNW & HR-2850

The TPNW, also known as the “Nuclear Ban“ treaty, went into effect on January 22 of this year. Everything to do with nuclear weapons is now illegal in 54 countries, and that number will continue to rise. In countries where governments are not yet ready to sign this treaty, their elected officials are pressuring them to do so. For example, over 250 parliamentarians in Italy have signed the ICAN Pledge; nearly 200 in Germany; over 100 in Australia; and almost every member of the Scottish Parliament. So far, ten members of the US Congress have signed the ICAN Legislative Pledge. We must get more signatures to show the federal administration the will of the people through their elected representatives.

Here is the up-to-date list of US pledge signers at the federal, state and local levels. These 10 congressional signers are more likely to sponsor Eleanor Holmes-Norton’s newly introduced act the “Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act" (HR-2850), and those who co-sponsored Ms. Norton’s bill last session are most likely to sign the pledge. So if you are one of their constituents, please make sure you write them emails as described below. It’s also important to reach out to members of members of the Progressive Caucus.

To be inspired to contact your elected representatives about the ICAN pledge and HR-2850, please watch the recording of the April 24 event. During this video you will hear Beatrice Fihn, Executive Director of ICAN, three parliamentarians from Austria, Scotland and Belgium; Rep. Rashida Tlaib (MI 13th Congressional District), Rep. Jamie Raskin (MD 8th Congressional District) who’ve signed the pledge, and if you skip to the 32nd minute, you will see Rep. Holmes Norton announcing she would be introducing her “Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act" (HR-2850) into the 117th Congress on Monday, April 26 (which coincidentally was the 35th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster).

WILPF US has been advocating for the Norton Act for some decades. You can find its text here plus a link to an online letter to congressional representatives asking them to co-sponsor this act. It has been referred to the House Foreign Affairs and Armed Services Committees, but will not get onto their agendas for discussion if it does not have at least 30 co-sponsors.

To be inspired to petition your town’s mayor to sign the ICAN pledge, skip to minute 46 in the recording of the April 24 event to hear Mayor Nicole LaChapelle of Easthampton, MA, speak about why she signed the pledge.

To find an easy tool for asking your representative to sign the ICAN pledge go to this website: www.nuclearban.us/nationalmap/ and type in your zip code in the little window at the top right corner of the USA map. The step-by-step instructions for how to navigate to your rep’s website and copy and paste the provided draft letter into their email system are given below the map. You can also watch this process at 1 hour and 36 minutes into the video recording of the 24th April event.

It is best if you revise the draft letter somewhat. Information you can use to write those revisions are provided in the window you reach on the map. Please be sure to add your request that they sponsor HR-2850!

Please forward the link to this eNEWS article to your local friends and relatives and ask them to also write to their representatives. Congress members receive thousands of emails a week and they pay more attention when they see hundreds with the same request.

Your Bonus for Reading to the End of this eNEWS Article: GDAMS

In an April eNEWS article, "New Guides for Taking Action on Reducing US Military Budget",  you were informed about the Global Days of Action on Military Spending (GDAMS) between April 10 to May 17. Here is the April 26 GDAMS press release summarizing the latest data on global military spending and the demands of 170 civil society organizations, including several WILPF sections, that governments drastically reduce their military expenditure and make human security-oriented sectors, such as health and the environment, the priority of public policies and budgets.

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) monitors developments in military expenditure worldwide and maintains the most comprehensive, consistent, and extensive publicly available data source on military expenditure. The annual update of the SIPRI Military Expenditure Database is now accessible at www.sipri.org .

While you are in the letter-writing mood please use the above information to write to your Congress members regarding cutting the US defense budget, as suggested in our Call For Peace resource guide #12, which you will find here.

Thank you for taking any or all of these steps to build support for the TPNW and the new Norton Act.

 

 

Post date: Mon, 05/03/2021 - 06:33

By the Congress Program Committee (CONPRO)

Got something to say? Something to show? Something to contribute? The first WILPF US virtual Congress offers a unique and unprecedented opportunity to reach out to as many people as we can.

Our 34th Triennial Congress WOMEN, POWER, and SOCIAL JUSTICE: Building from Strength! will be held August 13-15 & 20-22 with in-between weekday evening meetings.

Our Congress Program Committee (CONPRO) invites proposals for: roundtables, panel discussions, interviews, branch presentations, and entertainment (music, art, theater, and your creativity!). May 31st is the deadline and here are the guidelines and the proposal submission form.

We are letting the world know where we STAND! So far, we have received submissions on meeting women’s economic challenges and stopping the military recruitment of young people, ideas around important indigenous issues, challenging UN Food Systems Summit, ending global violence against women, hearing voices from the Americas, what does social justice mean?  and much more.

Please submit a proposal and help make the 2021 Congress fulfill our mission for a “radical democracy”!

If you have any questions for the CONPRO Team, contact congresscoordinator@wilpfus.org.

Post date: Mon, 05/03/2021 - 06:07

An unidentified Palestinian mother and daughter protest Jewish settlements in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem on Feb. 11, 2011. Photo credit: Ryan Rodrick Beiler / Shutterstock.com.

By Odile Hugonot Haber
Co-chair, Middle East Peace & Justice Action Committee

May 2021

On April 15, 2021, Representative Betty McCollum (D-Minn) introduced H.R. 2590: Defending the Human Rights of Palestinian Children and Families Living Under Israeli Military Occupation Act, building upon legislation she introduced previously to promote the human rights and safety of Palestinian children. Your help is needed now to get this important bill passed!

Israel has ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which states in article 37(a) that ‘‘no child shall be subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.” Yet “The Government of Israel and its military detains around 500 to 700 Palestinian children between the ages of 12 and 17 each year and prosecutes them before a military court system that lacks basic and fundamental guarantees of due process in violation of international standards.” Some children are put under solitary confinement.

In the West Bank, there are 3 million inhabitants, and 45% are children under 18. Gaza is under a different jurisdiction and governed by Hamas.

This proposed legislation prohibits Israel from using U.S. taxpayer dollars in the Occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem for: the military detention, abuse, or ill-treatment of Palestinian children in Israeli military detention; to support the seizure and destruction of Palestinian property and homes in violation of international humanitarian law; or, to extend any assistance or support for Israel’s unilateral annexation of Palestinian territory in violation of international humanitarian law.

Four Steps You Can Take to Help Palestinian Children

Here are four things you can do immediately to press for an end to the unjust and blatantly cruel mistreatment of children and families living under Israeli military occupation:

1. The first thing to do is to read the Bill. Here is the full text of bill H.R. 2590.

2. The second thing is to find out if your representative has co-signed the text. You can find a list of representatives that have already cosponsored the bill here.

  • If YES: Thank him/her.
  • If NO: Forward the text to them (find their email online through the Find Your Representative tool)
  • Or call their office, inform them that you would like to request that they cosign and why (explain).

3. Make petitions for members of your branch and your community to sign then send a copy to your representative; try to get 50/100 people to sign. Use the list from the petition to build your branches by mailing those who signed flyers or emailing something about WILPF US

4. Schedule a Zoom appointment with your representative and make a Zoom group in which you can speak about your concern. If they have Jewish concerns, tell them that both Jewish Voice for Peace (700.000 strong, 70 chapters) and J Street are supporting this bill!

Thank you for caring and for doing the work!

 

Post date: Mon, 05/03/2021 - 06:02

This is one of many peace posters made by students in the 1980s and 90s that will be on exhibit in May 2021 in Montrose, NY, sponsored by Westchester WILPF.

May 2021

Westchester Branch Sponsors Peace Poster Exhibit in May

By Linda Conte
Westchester (NY) Branch

An exhibit of posters created by Westchester students on the topic of “Imagining a Peaceful World” will be on display in May at the Hendrick Hudson Library on 185 Kings Ferry Road, Montrose, NY, which is planning to reopen in May. 

The posters were inspired by a contest sponsored by the Westchester branch of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) in the 1980s and 90s, and include elementary, middle, and high school entries from all over Westchester County.

View a slideshow of some of the posters that will be on display.

Our effort to revitalize the Westchester Branch was delayed by the COVID pandemic but renewed efforts are underway. We hope that new peace projects can be resumed for the next school year.

For further information, please email westchesterwilpf@gmail.com.

Monterey Branch Public Banking Event on May 6: You’re Invited!

Please join the Monterey County Branch on Thursday, May 6, 6:30-7:30 pm (PST) for a virtual event, “Public banking? Is it viable for our Central Coast area?”

Randa Solick, an active member of the Santa Cruz branch of WILPF and a member of People for Public Banking Central Coast (PPBCC) will explain how public banks operate and the benefits to local governments and taxpayers. Tyller Williamson, Monterey City Council member and part of the local public banking task force, will discuss the viability study for a Central Coast, five-county, regional public bank.

Register HERE to obtain the Zoom link.

Organized for Monterey County WILPF by Lynn Hamilton and Janet Wilson.  Please join us!

 

Post date: Wed, 04/21/2021 - 07:25
Black Lives Matter

 

Even with this conviction, #GeorgeFloyd is still dead.

The conviction on all three counts of murder may provide some “Painful earned justice,” yet what is done is irreversible.

Although we may hope this conviction leads to even more accountability, the fact remains that before this trial completed, another black life was killed in Minneapolis, #RIPDaunteWright.

In the United States, all people of color are regularly profiled, disrespected, inhumanly treated, beaten and murdered with impunity. Since the inception of this country, the pandemic of institutionalized racist violence has infected police departments in each community, with accountability being far too rare.

WILPF US calls on its members to support the movement to #DefundThePolice — shifting funds to peaceful human-services, affirming that #BlackLivesMatter. 

“All Lives” will never matter until “Black Lives Matter.”

#JusticeForGeorgeFloyd

Darien De Lu
President
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, US Section

 

 

Post date: Wed, 04/14/2021 - 07:55

Move the MoneyWILPF US Continues Our Call for Peace Campaign

Our Call for Peace Campaign, described in the March 2021 eNews, has two demands: to the United Nations Security Council, to extend the current global ceasefire, and to the US Congress, to cut all military spending by 50% and move the money to fund human needs.

We have prepared four resource guides on why we must reduce the US’s bloated military budget and where that saved money could be used to benefit human needs; they provide you with background information and actions that you can take from your home.

Image Credit: From Global Campaign on Military Spending GCOMS. Image used under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

Guide #5: “Your Tax Dollars at Work in the Middle East”

This is a guide to US military expenditures in the Middle East and North Africa region. You will be astounded by how many billions of your tax dollars go to supply expensive weapons to countries such as Morocco and Saudi Arabia. Learn what these dollars could accomplish if redirected toward constructive rather than destructive purposes and how you can work to accomplish this goal of moving the money. Read Guide #5 here.

Guide #8: “National Military Spending and Your Town”

This guide explains how to find out the dollar amount collected from your community’s taxpayers that is going into the US military and what it could have been otherwise spent on that benefits your town. This guide also shows you how to visibly share this information in your town. Read Guide #8 here.

Guide #9: “Moving money out of the military budget into programs to benefit poor people”

This guide uses the Moral Budget of the Poor People’s Campaign and their Jubilee Policy Platform to show how to move $350 billion from the military budget into programs benefitting the poor. Read Guide #9 here.

Guide #12: “Letters to Leaders and Resolutions about Treaties and Reducing the Military Budget”

This guide features examples of letters to be completed by WILPF members on these topics: asking for reductions in military spending; support for pertinent federal bills, and adherence to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). There are sample letters to be sent to the US President, all members of our US Congress, state and city legislators. It also includes sample resolutions for city councils to pass calling for support of the TPNW and reductions in the so-called defense budget. Read Guide #12 here.

Watch for additional resource guides, coming out soon. The members of the team producing these guides for your informed activism include Dianne Blais, Deetje Boler, Vicki Elson, Odile Hugonot-Haber, Michael Ippolito, Robin Lloyd, Linda Cataldo Modica, Margaret Pecoraro, Barbara Taft, Ellen Thomas,  Marge Van Cleef, and the writers of this item, Cherrill Spencer, Coordinator of Resource Preparation Team for the Call for Peace Campaign, and Nancy Price.

Post date: Thu, 04/08/2021 - 10:51

Federal Reserve System symbol on hundred dollar bill / Shutterstock.com.

By Marybeth Gardam
Chair, Women, Money & Democracy Committee

April 2021

Talk to anyone about the Federal Reserve System and watch their eyes glaze over. Tell them we need to dismantle the Fed and democratize our money and they may write you off as a hopeless nutter.

But no, we’re not wearing tin foil hats when we share these ideas! More and more economists are agreeing that our money system is corrupt and built on oppressive debt that keeps us chained. The WILPF US Women, Money & Democracy Committee has been studying these realities and joining with allies on possible solutions.

How the Federal Reserve System Works

Most people believe that the Federal Reserve is a government agency that keeps all the money they print in a vault at Fort Knox, and when we borrow money or our banks do, that money gets somehow transferred to where it’s needed for investment, capital expense spending, or government program expenses (like all that pricey weaponry and unusable nuclear weapons we maintain at a cost of billions each year). It’s what we’ve been told since we were children. My dad worked for the Federal Reserve, and that’s what I thought they did!

Well, the truth is a lot more interesting, and as usual it’s important to ‘follow the money.’ But the money doesn’t lead to Fort Knox like you thought!

The Federal Reserve System is made up of twelve branch banks, the most powerful by far being the New York Federal Reserve. New York is also where all those wolves of Wall Street live and work, and where the New York Stock Exchange rules the economic world. Even though its presidential appointments help it to pose as a government entity, the Fed is independent, owned by the largest and most powerful transnational banks  and investment firms. (See also These Are the Banks that Own the New York Fed). Their interest is entirely in profits…theirs, not yours or our government’s.

While your dollar features signatures of the US Treasury Secretary, up top in small print it says: A Federal Reserve Note. So the US Treasury and the US Mint don’t issue ‘our money.’ ‘Our money’ is not stored at Fort Knox. Our money is created by a simple bank credit accounting keystroke that only happens when someone borrows money.

All those student loans, the mortgage on your house, the business loan that kept your employer competitive, or the insurance company that borrows against its policy payments to advertise…all those loans and trillions more create dollars more efficiently than the printers ever could. When you borrow money, it becomes a liability for you, but it is an asset for the financial corporation that made the loan to you. THAT is how the majority of our ‘currency’ comes into existence. No one works for it. But everyone pays for it.

Creative Solutions for Democratizing Our Money

The Alliance for Just Money (AJM) is campaigning hard to reform (“democratize”) our money system and they have some pretty creative ideas about how it might work.  Watch a short video called "A Solution to the Crisis - Just Money Now!" 

A lot of those ideas are gaining traction with major economists, including Joseph Huber and Michael Kumhof.     

The WILPF US Women, Money & Democracy Committee (W$D) has been studying the AJM materials and learning how money really is created out of thin air. The government creates money by borrowing from those ‘too-big-to-fail’ transnational banks, thanks to a law passed in 1913. These are the kind of entangling alliances and pay-to-play dynamics that are at work whenever our government decides to repeatedly bail out those big banks and investment bully boys. But is this really the way we want our government to work? Is it the way we want our money controlled?

If you are interested in learning more about the work of Women, Money & Democracy Committee, contact us to be invited to our monthly Zoom calls. We’re talking about policy and how it affects the lives of women like you and your families. Public banking is one solution we’re working on, but we’re also examining a lot more.

You can view some of the amazing hopeful solutions women are creating to counter the injustice of our current economic system by watching the recordings of the “Zooms of Our Own” webinars that W$D co-sponsors with An Economy of Our Own.

As chair of the W$D committee, I put it this way:

We’re trying to normalize the idea that money doesn’t have to be built on debt, and that money needn’t be scarce or so divisive.

I also want to stress how important these issues are for women. Women are at the heart of economics, but we often get left out of the decisions that most affect our lives and our financial futures. In W$D and working with An Economy of Our Own, we’re learning together how to make sense of it all, and what kinds of reforms could transform the economy into one where the things and values we care most about have real substantive value.

 

Post date: Thu, 04/08/2021 - 10:30

By the Congress Program Committee

April 2021

You know by now about the WILPF US 34th Triennial Congress 2021 – a virtual community gathering for WOMEN, POWER, and SOCIAL JUSTICE: Building from Strength!

Our first virtual Congress will be held August 13-15 & 20-22 with in-between weekday evening meetings.

The Congress Program Committee (CONPRO) invites all branches, including Jane Addams members-at-large and Issue Committees, to submit an initial proposal for presentations (panels, interviews), “how to” workshops, and cultural events (Raging Grannies, art works, poetry and storytelling). Please fill out this Google form and submit before MAY 31, 2021.

To help you complete your proposals, here are proposal guidelines and a sample proposal.

IMPORTANT: If the presentation(s) are to be videotaped, we have an editor for them. After the video is shown, we would prefer to have the participants to be live on Zoom for a Q&A.

In order to include a larger variety of presentations, we have broken down the time segments to include: 2-hour roundtables; 1 hour 15 minutes; or 30-45 minute interviews – all of which will include Q&A time. In addition, we will build in time for conversations among ourselves, time to get to know other members, and to share our analyses.

The Congress Program Committee has already contacted branches to discern what their interests are and will be reviewing recent surveys of members to help make decisions about narrowing down the applications. The most important ingredient will be the relevancy and the urgency of the topics/issues that are most important to WILPF US, both nationally and internationally.

We look forward to having a more inclusive audience than ever before – no travel, no hotel, no baggage!

ALL are welcomed to our virtual journey.

The CONPRO includes the Fresno Branch hosts – Janet Slagter, Leni Villagomez Reeves, Beverly Fitzpatrick, Karina Renee Lopez – and Robin Lloyd (Vermont), Laura Dewey (Detroit), along with Mary Hanson Harrison (Congress Coordinator). 

If you have any questions for the CONPRO Team, contact congresscoordinator@wilpfus.org.

Post date: Thu, 04/08/2021 - 09:00

What could we do with $74B taken from the Pentagon’s budget? Graphic used with permission from the National Priorities Project at the Institute for Policy Studies.

Cherrill Spencer
Coordinator of Resource Preparation Team for the Call for Peace Campaign
Nancy Price
Team Member

April 2021

WILPF US continues our Call for Peace Campaign which we described in February 2021 and March 2021 eNews articles. We promised you some resource guides on why we must reduce the United States’ bloated military budget and where that saved money could be used to benefit human need. Now we have four new guides for you with background information and actions that you can take.

Your First Action to Get the Money Moving!

Under the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) process, every year both chambers of Congress begin early in the year to discuss the military budget and any differences must be reconciled before the final vote and the President signs the bill. Now they are already hard at work on Fiscal Year 2022. For this reason, our most efficient action to influence the amount of money projected to be spent on wars, military equipment, and weapons is through our congressional representatives.

Already groups of representatives and senators tried to get the Pentagon’s 2021 budget reduced by 10% by introducing amendments to the fiscal year 2021 NDAA. When these amendments came to a vote last July 2020, 23 Senators and 93 Representatives voted to cut the budget (not enough to pass the amendments). This level of support would have been unthinkable a few years ago – a testament to the power of the peace movement and grassroots advocacy. But we WILPFers need to do more!

A “House Defense Spending Reduction Caucus” emerged from this July 2020 effort, and we must get more US House representatives to join its 50 members (as of March 16, 2020) so the caucus will wield more influence. This attachment explains how to find out if your congressperson has already joined this caucus and what to do if they have not.

The caucus sent a letter to President Biden on March 16 and here are a few quotes from that letter, which you could use in corresponding with your congressperson or senators:

  • “Our federal budget is a statement of our national values, and part of undoing the damage of the last four years is re-evaluating our spending priorities as a nation. That re-evaluation should begin with the Department of Defense. Hundreds of billions of dollars now directed to the military would have greater return if invested in diplomacy, humanitarian aid, global public health, sustainability initiatives, and basic research.
  • We could cut the Pentagon budget by more than ten percent and still spend more than the next ten largest militaries combined.
  • We must end the forever wars, heal our veterans, and re-orient towards a holistic conception of national security that centers public health, climate change, and human rights.”

On March 24, 2021, 26 peace-oriented organizations wrote to the chairs of the various US Senate and House Committees that develop the NDAA and listed 10 proposals that would create cost savings of $80 billion (about 10% of the NDAA). For example the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) stated that reducing the nuclear triad to a total of eight submarines, 150 intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), and 1,000 warheads would save $300 million in FY 2022 and $4.3 billion from FYs 2022-2025. See this March 24th letter from Win Without War.

WILPF US’s goal is a 50% reduction in the Pentagon’s budget, which would be about $350 billion in its current FY 2021 budget. You will find how that could be achieved in our resource guide #9 below.

Four New Resource Guides to Help You

More resource guides have been prepared to provide you with hard data about the US Military Budget and what monies removed from it would be better spent on. We have a team of volunteers researching and writing more guides to inform and encourage you to take action on our Call for Peace themes from several points of view. Here are details and links to four new guides:

Guide #5: “Your Tax Dollars at Work in the Middle East   

This is a guide to US military expenditures in the Middle East and North Africa region. You will be astounded by how many billions of your tax dollars go to supply expensive weapons to countries such as Morocco and Saudi Arabia. Learn what these dollars could accomplish if redirected toward constructive rather than destructive purposes and how you can work to accomplish this goal of moving the money. Read Guide #5 here.

Guide #8: “National Military Spending and Your Town”

This guide explains how to find out the dollar amount collected from your community’s taxpayers that is going into the US military and what it could have been otherwise spent on that benefits your town. This guide also shows you how to visibly share this information in your town. Read Guide #8 here.

Guide #9: Moving money out of the military budget into programs to benefit poor people

This guide uses the Moral Budget of the Poor People’s Campaign and their Jubilee Policy Platform to show how to move $350 billions from the military budget into programs benefitting the poor. Read Guide #9 here.

Guide #12: “Letters to Leaders and Resolutions about Treaties and Reducing the Military Budget”

This guide features examples of letters to be completed by WILPF members asking for reductions in military spending, support for pertinent federal bills, and adherence to arms control treaties, to be sent to the US President, the US Secretary of Defense, all members of our US Congress, and state legislators. It also includes sample resolutions for city councils to pass calling for support of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) and reductions in the so-called defense budget. Read Guide #12 here.

Guides 6,7,10, and 11 are still being prepared and will be issued later. Many thanks to our hard-working Call for Peace resource preparation team who have done the research and writing to create these resource guides.

Global Days of Action on Military Spending (GDAMS)

Through using these resource guides to generate our actions over the next two months, WILPF US will take part in the Global Days of Action on Military Spending (GDAMS), a worldwide campaign started in 2011 with the goal to raise awareness and change the discourse regarding military spending, as a means to achieve major reductions of military expenditures in 35 countries.

The highlight of this year’s campaign takes place on Monday, April 26 when the STOCKHOLM INTERNATIONAL PEACE RESEARCH INSTITUTE (SIPRI) issues its annual yearbook on military spending in most countries in the world. SIPRI is an independent international institute dedicated to research into conflict, armaments, arms control, and disarmament. Established in 1966, SIPRI provides data, analysis, and recommendations based on open sources. The GDAMS organizers will read this very detailed 2021 yearbook and provide analyses and commentary for WILPF and partner organizations to hold press conferences and carry out a Twitter storm on April 26. We will send an eAlert out when this commentary is available.

Here are lots of hashtags we can choose from whenever we tweet about moving money from military budgets:

#MoveTheMoney #Demilitarize #GDAMS #GCOMS #HealthcareNotWarfare #MilitarySpendingCostsUsTheEarth #DivestFromWar #PeaceNotWar #WelfareNotWarfare #FundPeaceNotWar #CutMilex #BuildPeaceNotWalls #FundHumanNeeds #StopTheWarOnLife

Here is the GDAMS 2021 website full of actions occurring around the world during the GDAMS.

You can find a US in-person action near you to attend or organize one in your hometown and add it to the worldwide map of actions.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 04/08/2021 - 08:40

By Ellen Thomas

April 2021

One of the good things about being trapped at home during the COVID-19 pandemic is the opportunity to join with colleagues and learn from experts from all over the country and world, using Zoom and YouTube.

We decided to share a list of the recordings of some excellent meetings and webinars we’ve participated in during the past couple of months. As you can see, there is depth and breadth in what we have covered recently.

Recent Zoom meetings and webinars now on YouTube:

First, here is a list of the most recent Zoom meetings and webinars which you can find on the WILPF US YouTube Channel -

Other Significant Videos:

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