NEWS

Post date: Mon, 06/28/2021 - 12:29

President Biden’s proposed budget for FY2022 has an increase in military spending over 2021. Pie chart courtesy of the National Priorities Project.

By Cherrill Spencer
Co-chair of the DISARM/END WARS Issue Committee

July 2021

The President’s proposed discretionary budget for the next fiscal year, which is being debated by Congress, disappointingly asks for even more money for the military – $756 billion – than is being spent this year. And a recent report by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons on a year’s cycle of spending reveals the flow of money from governments to companies making nuclear weapons to lobbyists and think tanks. So we must continue our WILPF campaigns to defund the Pentagon. Please read on to find out how YOU can help.

Please volunteer to be a lead activist in your state to advocate for H.R. 2850

In our June eNEWS article "Congressional Pressure Necessary to #defund the ICBM Modernization Program and #movethemoney to Peace Programs!" we described our Disarm Legislative Action Campaign to move forward two significant pieces of weapons-cutting legislation that are stuck in committees of the 117th Congress. We’ve decided to ask you and members of several other peace organizations working with us to continue phoning our targeted Congressional Representatives to ask them to co-sponsor HR-2850 and HR-2227, past our original endpoint of June 30. You will use the list of reps, background information, and call script linked to in the June eNews article.

We are working with Nuclear Ban US (www.nuclearban.us) to encourage more activists to make these important phone calls and we are looking for volunteers to be a lead activist in each state. Lead activists will find other activists to increase the number of phone calls about HR-2850. Write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org if you want to become a lead activist in your state (more populous states like California can have more than one lead activist).

Write emails to support HR-2227: Sample letter and nuclear weapons spending info available

We know that congresspeople prefer to hear from their own constituents about topics of importance to the constituent, so we have a sample letter on page 7 of this Call for Peace resource guide #12 for you to copy, revise and send to your rep asking them to co-sponsor HR-2227.

If you would like to add further information on nuclear weapons spending to use in your letters, ICAN's new report “Complicit: 2020 Global Nuclear Weapons Spending” unveils one year of the cycle of spending on nuclear weapons from countries to defense contractors to lobbyists and think tanks and back again.

In 2020, the report estimates that nine countries spent $72.6 billion on nuclear weapons, $27.7 billion of which went to a dozen defense contractors to build nuclear weapons. Those contractors then spent $117 million lobbying policy makers and up to $10 million funding think tanks writing about nuclear weapons to ensure they can continue to line their pockets with nuclear weapon contracts for years to come. The exchange of money and influence, from countries to companies to lobbyists and think tanks, sustains and maintains a global arsenal of catastrophically destructive weapons.

Please read this detailed report (or at least its executive summary) at: www.icanw.org/2020_global_nuclear_weapons_spending_complicit to find your favorite piece of data to include in your letter to your representative.

Breaking the Nuclear Weapons Complicity Cycle

Complicity CycleWe must break this nuclear weapons complicity cycle by pressuring the nuclear weapons manufacturers to switch to other products

Our collaborating organization Nuclear Ban US has assembled a host of useful materials for activists to use to pressure the 30 companies who make nuclear weapons for the US government – with our tax money – to desist. Visit their website and look around it to find sample op-eds, letters to corporations, links to wealth advisors who will help you divest your nest-egg from nuclear weapons companies, and so on. You can find these helpful resources at: treatyawareness.us/pressuring-the-nuclear-weapons-profiteers/ and treatyawareness.us/pressuring-the-profiteers-links-for-the-chat/

Caption: Summary of the nuclear weapons complicity cycle. Courtesy of ICANW.org

Commemorate the 76th anniversary of the Hiroshima & Nagasaki bombings

Last August many WILPF branches held events and engaged in activities to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the A-bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. We hope many WILPFers will continue this sad tradition on the 6th and 9th of August this year, as a way of reminding ourselves why we work so hard to abolish nuclear weapons. See last year's solidarity event information. And here are resource materials from last year that can help you plan for activities this year. And if you still have your peace cranes all branches received last year (here’s a video on how to fold a crane) you could consider joining a global effort called #CranesForOurFuture: The Hiroshima Organization for Global Peace and Nuclear Threat Initiative invites you to join with leaders, cultural influencers, and families around the world in crafting origami peace cranes. The CranesForOurFuture Campaign will be announced mid-July and will culminate with partners sharing pictures of their cranes on social media, along with your wishes for a brighter future, on August 6-9, the Peace Weekend between the Hiroshima and Nagasaki anniversaries. Sign up for this campaign here.

 

 

Post date: Mon, 06/28/2021 - 11:44

All of the Kings Bay Plowshares 7 were convicted and imprisoned for their nonviolent action at the largest nuclear submarine base in the world on April 4, 2018. Photo from kingsbayplowshares7.org, used with permission.

By Randa Solick
WILPF Santa Cruz

July 2021

Seven Catholic plowshares activists entered Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base in St. Mary’s, Georgia, on April 4, 2018. Kings Bay is the largest nuclear submarine base in the world, with six ballistic missile subs and two guided missile subs based there.

The seven chose to act on the 50th anniversary of the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who devoted his life to addressing what he called the “triple evils of militarism, racism, and materialism.” Carrying hammers and baby bottles of their own blood, the seven attempted to convert weapons of mass destruction. They hoped to call attention to the ways in which nuclear weapons kill every day, by their mere existence and maintenance. This was the latest of 100 similar actions around the world beginning in 1980 in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.

The Kings Bay Plowshares 7 were all convicted and imprisoned.

Go to www.kingsbayplowshares7.org to see details about their lives and motivations, donate, sign the petition to drop the charges against them, or join a local action.

These Catholic Workers would very much appreciate letters from us while they’re imprisoned:

Mark Colville #03610-036, Metropolitan Detention Center, PO Box 329002,  Brooklyn, NY 11232

Martha Hennessy #22560-02, Hampshire House, 1490 Elm St., Manchester, NH 03101

Carmen Trotta, in home confinement, can get mail via Catholic Worker, 36 East First St., NY, NY 10003

Patrick O’Neill #14924-018, write him at FCI Elkton, Federal Correction Institution, P.O. Box 10, Lisbon OH 44432.

Glare Grady, #01264-052, write her at FPC Alderson, Federal Prison Camp, Glenn Ray Road, Box A, Alderson WV 24910.

Inmates may only receive letters in blue or black ink on pure white paper. These are photocopied and given to the inmate. Use your full name in the return address and include the prisoner’s full name and number. Some letters with return address stickers are being returned so we recommend writing it out. But the authorities seem to be somewhat arbitrary. Also put your return address on the letter itself as the envelopes may not be given to the prisoners. See the website for more details.

    

Post date: Tue, 06/01/2021 - 13:59
Congress logo

June 2021

WILPF US Congress in August Is Bigger and Better!

By Mary Hanson Harrison
WILPF US 34th Triennial Congress Coordinator

Save the dates and get excited! We’re going BIGGER and BETTER!!

“WOMEN, POWER, and SOCIAL JUSTICE: Building from Strength” is the theme for the 34th WILPF US Triennial Congress this summer. Here are the dates to remember: August 13-15 and 20-22 with some weekday afternoons/evenings. This schedule offers time to “see” everyone from around the world who shares our values and passions. A radical departure from past Congresses that were limited to those able to travel to them, this Congress is more open and more accessible than ever!

Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis and Vandana Shiva
Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis (left), photo from her Amazon author page, and Vandana Shiva (right), Indian activist, environmentalist, and one of the main leaders of the International Forum on Globalization (IFG), photo credit: Giacomo Marini / Shutterstock.com.

We have a remarkable number of excellent speakers booked, along with challenging panels, roundtables, and interviews. Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis opens on the first Friday night, along with greetings from Madeleine Rees, WILPF Secretary General. Joy Onyesoh, President of WILPF International, will greet us on the next Friday. Vandana Shiva will speak during the morning of the first Saturday session; Maude Barlow, Canadian Chair of Food & Water Watch and Paul Kivel, educator and activist, are scheduled to speak on the second Sunday.

Branches will offer panels and roundtables on various and fascinating issues. Other presentations include: The Americas & Colonialism, Indigenous Women Speaking Up, Social Justice Rising Up, Interviews, and the intersections of gender and racial disparities. There will be “HOW TOs” on membership and branch building, social media, feminist leadership, legislative success, and there will also be entertainment segments.

You and your friends can plan a picnic or a house party to participate together, or plan to spend some time in the cool of your living room and still be part of it all. The important thing is we can all be together, watching, listening, discussing (and yes, arguing!) even though we will be many miles, even oceans, apart. We are getting ready for our WILPF family reunion – and this time it will be zooming out into the entire world.

More adventures, schedules, and registration information are coming to you soon!

Join the New WILPF Committee on Anti-Racism Awareness and Action

By Darien De Lu
President, WILPF US

WILPF US wants to offer branches and members ways to increase our individual anti-racism awareness as well as our knowledge of structural and institutional racism and classism. At our Congress, a presentation will both elicit and provide ideas on how to localize that increased understanding through action. Will you join the new national committee to help with that work?

This committee will also identify ways to assist branches in welcoming a variety of people – of different cultures – into WILPF branches and work: Black, indigenous, and other people of color (BIPOC); working class and other low-income individuals; young(er) people, and people of different gender identities, including non-binary.

This committee work builds on WILPF US racism education and anti-racism initiatives over the decades. Most recently, at the turn of the century, was the UFORJE (United for Racial Justice) campaign, followed a few years later by Building the Beloved Community. Now we urge all WILPF members – through individual reading and study, with branch discussions and programs, and by thoughtful interactions – to expand and refresh our understandings. The committee will encourage and support (with “how-to” info and stories) branch and member involvement with local groups active on anti-racism and economic justice issues, especially activities led by BIPOC women.

For self-education, WILPF published the beginning of a resource list in a July 2020 eNews article. An expanded list will soon be available.

For more information about the committee, contact me at President@wilpfus.org.

Save the Date: Public Banking Deeper Dive Webinar Series Will Start August 27

By Marybeth Gardam
Chair, Women, Money & Democracy Committee

Get informed and prepared to be an effective advocate right in your own community. Sign up for a PUBLIC BANKING DEEPER DIVE series of webinar workshops starting on Friday, August 27 at 8 pm ET / 5 pm PT.

When we talk about moving the money from war and profiteering to people-centered services, public banking makes great sense. And legislation to kick-start public banking is picking up speed in states and even cities across the US. The time is right to understand the benefits and learn where your state is in the process, so you can become an effective advocate for public banking near you.   

The WILPF US Women, Money & Democracy Committee is collaborating to sponsor these hands-on organizing workshops with our partner An Economy of Our Own. Sign up by emailing the W$D Committee: publicbanking.wilpfus@gmail.com.

Look for a full article about this timely webinar series in the July eNews.

 

Post date: Tue, 06/01/2021 - 13:30

Palestinian families whose homes were damaged by Israeli aircraft strikes displaced to a United Nations school in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, on May 17, 2021. Photo by Abed Rahim Khatib / Shutterstock.com.

By Ellen Rosser
Middle East Peace and Justice Action Committee

June 2021

Let's not forget how the recent Israeli-Palestinian fighting began. Israel sought to evict two Palestinian families from the home they had lived in for 70 years in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem, homes that were built by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNWRA) while Jordan was still in charge of East Jerusalem. When protests by Palestinians and sympathetic Jews took place in Sheikh Jarrah, the Israeli police attacked the protesters. The protests then spread to the Al Aqsa Mosque compound, and the Israeli police, for the first time, attacked worshipers inside the mosque itself. 

Subsequently, protests occurred in the Israeli cities with large Palestinian populations, such as Jaffa, Haifa, and others. Then on May 10, Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza began shooting rockets into Israel, including into Tel Aviv. Israel responded by attacking Gaza from May 10 to May 21 with precision missiles. 

Rockets from Gaza during that time killed ten Israelis and two Thai workers. Israel killed 254 Gazans, including 66 children, and injured thousands more during its attacks. Israel relied heavily on US-made weapons to accomplish its slaughter. Israel’s bombs destroyed hundreds of residential buildings and housing units, leaving over 72,000 Gazans homeless. The World Health Organization reported that Israeli strikes and shelling damaged at least 18 hospitals and clinics in Gaza, including Gaza’s only COVID-19 laboratory. Israel targeted and destroyed much of the road leading to Al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza’s largest hospital. 

Israeli bombs have severely damaged much of Gaza’s infrastructure, leaving thousands of Gazans without clean drinking water. The New York Times reported on May 18 that fetid sewage waste runs through the streets of Gaza. James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute, reported simultaneously that Gazans were running out of food. Because of Israel’s 13+ year total blockade of Gaza, Palestinians living there have no way to escape Israel’s relentless bombing campaign.

Furthermore, Israel destroyed the high rise that housed the offices of the Associated Press and Al Jazeera and another building in which the Nawaa Online Media Network, a news platform affiliated with women’s rights groups and youth organizations, was located. Another Israeli bomb killed a Palestinian journalist. The Middle East and North Africa spokesman for the Committee to Protect Journalists stated: “It’s difficult to reach any conclusion other than that the Israeli military wants to shut down news coverage of the suffering in Gaza.” (Elian Peltier, "An Israeli Airstrike Killed a Palestinian Journalist" New York Times, May 19, 2021. Also read Sara Boboltz, "AP President 'Shocked and Horrified' at Israel Bombing of Gaza Media BuildingHuffPost, May 15, 2021).

In the UN Security Council, the United States blocked four resolutions calling for a cease-fire before Israel finally announced a cease-fire for 2 am May 21. Why was the US complicit in the war crimes in Gaza? 

Please email or call your senators and ask them to introduce a bill requiring that aid to Israel be cut if Israel violates international laws or the U.S. Leahy Law on Human Rights, which forbids using US funds to provide military assistance to foreign security force units that violate human rights with impunity.

And please immediately call or write your representative and ask them to sign onto the McCollum bill to protect Palestinian children, H.R.2590

If you have questions or ideas, contact the Middle East Peace and Justice Action Committee leaders at: MPEJAction@wilpfus.org.
 

Post date: Tue, 06/01/2021 - 12:31

The Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival is engaged in “moral fusion organizing” and continuing to build a transformational movement. Participate in upcoming actions on June 7 and June 21!

By Dorothy Van Soest
WILPF Liaison to the Poor Peoples Campaign
WILPF Women, Money & Democracy Committee

June 2021

It’s time to fully address poverty and low wages from the bottom up! Emerging from the pain and organizing power of the 140 million people living in poverty or with low wages in this nation, the congressional resolution for a Third Reconstruction reflects an omnibus vision for a fundamental restructuring of society that lifts from the bottom. The non-partisan resolution comes as a response to years of movement-building to create the collective resolve necessary to implement real and transformational legislative action.
                     —www.poorpeoplescampaign.org
 

Participate in upcoming Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival actions on June 7 and June 21, and read on to learn about the initiative to fight forward for 500 days to a Third Reconstruction. In order to be effective partners in this transformational movement, we need to have a deep understanding of the following transformative organizing and mobilizing principles and strategies.

What is Moral Fusion Organizing? Moral fusion organizing is a grassroots organizing and movement building strategy that is aimed at shifting the narrative and building power. It is a moral movement, not about left versus right but about right versus wrong. It goes beyond single-issue organizing, sees that the same forces allied against poor people are working against Black and brown people, LGBTQ people, the environment, education, and healthcare. It addresses, simultaneously, the interlocking injustices of systemic racism, poverty, ecological devastation and the denial of health care, militarism and the distorted moral narrative of religious nationalism that blames the poor instead of the systems that cause poverty.

If they’re cynical enough to stick together, we ought to be smart enough to come together. That’s moral fusion organizing. It’s what brought white and Black people together in a moral movement for abolition and women’s suffrage. It’s what brought civil rights and labor together in the civil rights movement.*

What does it look like? It looks like undocumented folks in Los Angeles connecting with homeless organizers in Salinas and policy experts in Sacramento. It looks like families struggling with poverty and anti-voter suppression activists in Mississippi rallying together even when dogs and extremists try to intimidate them. It looks like a fast-food worker in Virginia standing alongside Fight for $15 activists and declaring, “I’m poor, I’m white, and I’m here. This hillbilly is joining other poor people of all colors, all sexualities, all religions . . . our backs are against the wall and we have no choice but to push.”**

How do we get to the “we” of fusion organizing? We recognize the divide-and-conquer strategy that has always been used by the forces working against injustice. We refuse to pit poor working people against immigrants, Muslims, and LGBTQ neighbors; we know that is the same as the generations-old myth that no matter how bad off white people were, they were better than a slave. We invite people into a new community—one that brings together Black, white and brown, rich and poor, gay and straight, all faiths and no faiths. We take the time to learn how to be together and hold each other up. We bond by taking action together. We know the resistance we meet is our confirmation. As Gandhi said, “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you… and then you win.”

3rd ReconstructionWhat does it mean to launch a Third Reconstruction? It means understanding what Reconstruction was about after the Civil War and how, as the first fusion movement of whites and Blacks, it was resisted by the Klan and led to a Jim Crow “Redemption” movement that was aimed at deconstructing the gains made and restoring white supremacy to our land. It means understanding that the Civil Rights Act, Voting Rights Act, and War on Poverty were also achieved through the moral fusion organizing of a civil rights movement. It means understanding that a Third Reconstruction aims to address the fundamental injustice at the heart of America’s story about how we stole this land from Native Americans and built a nation with the stolen labor of enslaved Africans.

What is 500 Days of Fighting Forward? A nationally coordinated campaign from February 1, 2021 to June 18, 2022 is aimed at changing the fundamental system that perpetuates the five interlocking injustices, not incremental or piecemeal solutions. It isn’t just a series of rallies and actions but a moral fusion organizing and mobilizing strategy aimed at changing the narrative and building power through several pulling points:

How can I learn more and take action?

  • Register at www.poorpeoplescampaign.org for details and updates about the 500 days. Click on the link to your state to find actions in your area
  • Study the 14 Steps to Moral Fusion Organizing
  • Read and get support for the resolution, Third Reconstruction: Fully Addressing Poverty and Low Wages from the Bottom Up: 3rdreconstruction.org
  • Read and discuss Rev. Barber’s recent books: Forward Together: A Moral Message for the Nation and The Third Reconstruction
  • Mark your calendars – participate in the June 7th and June 21st actions, inform and invite others.

WILPF is proud to be a long-standing national mobilizing partner of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival.

References:

* Q&A with Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II, Exhibition, Fall 2017.
** Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II and Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, "Creating a Moral Movement for Our Time" The Nation, August 8, 2018.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 06/01/2021 - 10:25

A Tax Day Spring awakening held on the Brunswick, Maine town green was co-sponsored by Maine WILPF.

June 2021

Three New Branches in the South!

By Theresa El-Amin, Fannie Lou Hamer Branch
George Friday, Triad North Carolina Branch

South Branches

On May 22, 2021, new WILPF members in Metro Atlanta and the Triad of North Carolina (Charlotte, Greensboro, Winston-Salem) held an event via Zoom to announce they had achieved branch status with ten or more members. On March 20, the Fannie Lou Hamer Branch (Columbus, GA) held a similar event when it reached over ten members including honorary member Roy Bourgeois, founder of School of Americas (SOA) Watch.

Robin Lloyd led off the celebration on May 22 by inviting the more than 20 participants in the Zoom event into the Africa Day event underway at her home in Burlington, Vermont. Robin shared her history as a third generation member of WILPF-US by telling how her grandmother boarded a ship in 1915 to attend a meeting with women from around the world trying to stop the first Great War. Jan Corderman welcomed the new branches and thanked the Southern Anti-Racism Network (SARN) for leading the way to organize three new branches in the South in less than five (5) months.

Theresa El-Amin, SARN Board Chair, thanked Jan Corderman for providing the tools to make recruiting new members easy. “Having the ‘Join WILPF Today’ brochures made it easy to recruit new members. After reading the timeline snapshot of WILPF history and our commitment to human rights, a just economy, racial and social justice, those invited to join expressed appreciation for being asked,” said El-Amin.

After new members from the Triad, Metro Atlanta, and Fannie Lou Hamer branches introduced themselves, members from the Des Moines, Fresno, San Jose, and Triangle branches introduced themselves. Ellen Thomas, co-chair of Disarm/End Wars, told of committee activities and invited new members to the next meeting. Leni Villagomez Reeves, co-chair of the Cuba and Bolivarian Alliance issue committee, described efforts in support of ending the US blockade against Cuba. Joan Goddard provided an update on plans for the Advancing Human Rights issue committee to meet on June 30. Barbara Taft, co-chair of the Middle East Peace and Justice Action Committee (MEPJAC), discussed the many activities underway including Israel-Palestine work. Jan Corderman reported on the Membership Development Committee campaign, “One by One, We Grow.”

In support of efforts towards full participation of the many new Black women joining WILPF branches in the South, the Black Liberation Caucus was also formed at the May 22 meeting during a 15-minute breakout session. Agreement was reached by the eleven (11) participants in the Black Liberation Caucus. [Video of the May 22 Zoom event is up on the WILPF US YouTube channel].

WILPF Maine Co-Sponsors “Tax Day Spring Awakening”

By Martha Spiess
Maine Branch

Maine Tax Day graphicMaine WILPF co-sponsored a 2021 Tax Day Spring Awakening on the green in Brunswick with several other groups on May 17. We spoke about divesting tax dollars from the military and investing them in human needs – to education, climate, food, health & peace.

Several Maine WILPF members attended the event – one of the first outdoor ventures for this year – with vaccinations in arms, masked, and distanced. It was lovely to be in the physical presence of so many allies.

Our #NuclearBan Banner Caravan was on display with a QR code for participants to find out more about Eleanor Holmes Norton’s bill HR 2850 to provide for nuclear weapons abolition and economic conversion, and information about where to read the text (http://prop1.org/prop1/hr-2850.pdf). We asked Maine’s members of Congress to become co-sponsors.

Our #NuclearBan Banner caravan was launched on January 22, 2021, from Christine DeTroy’s doorstep and has since continued to travel across Maine, visiting related mile markers that help distinguish the MILESTONE treaty.

Graphic: Promotional poster for the May 17 Tax Day Spring Awakening co-sponsored by the Maine Branch.

St. Louis Branch Holds Mother’s Day Micro-Action

By Cara Jensen
WILPF Saint Louis Branch Communications & VP

St. Louis Branch member Cara JensenDrawing inspiration from the Cape Cod branch's clothesline actions, WILPF St. Louis held a Mother’s Day for Peace Micro-Action using paper peace cranes and a flyer with a QR code to raise awareness of the anti-war origins of Mother's Day.

The plan included creating origami peace cranes, hanging or having them available in a basket, and posting a sign about how Mother’s Day began as a nonviolent protest of war in 1870. The action took place on May 9, 2021.

About five or six branch members spread throughout the St. Louis region participated, including Joyce Best, pictured here.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 06/01/2021 - 09:02

Demonstrations against the economic policies of Colombian President Ivan Duque by citizens in Medellin, Colombia, May 5, 2021. Photo: Wirestock Creators / Shutterstock.com.

By Leni Villagomez Reeves
Co-chair, Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Committee

June 2021

We are being urged by people of Colombia, including the president of WILPF Colombia (LIMPAL) Diana Maria Salcedo, who spoke recently from Colombia: 

  • To raise our voices against the Duque government violence;
  • To promote international human rights intervention in the situation. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights is ready to come to Colombia and examine the human rights situation during the General Strake – Paro Nacional. United States and international pressure can make the Duque government allow this;
  • To work to end US military aid, sponsorship, and presence in Colombia.

What Can We Do?

There is a Dear Colleague letter directed to Secretary of State Antony Blinken circulated by Rep. James P. McGovern (MA) and co-led by Rep. Mark Pocan (WI), Rep. Jan Schakowsky (IL), and Rep. Raúl Grijalva (AZ). This letter denounces the excessive violence against citizens by Colombian Security Forces, National Police and riot police (ESMAD), and calls for the suspension of all US direct assistance to Colombia’s National Police, especially to Mobile Anti-Disturbances Squadron (ESMAD) riot police unit.

Ask your congressional representative to sign on to this letter, please.  

Why Speak Out?


This Duque Pare Banner picture is from the WILPF Colombia (LIMPAL) website, used with permission.

Colombia has risen in protest against a right-wing government that has mishandled everything: health, education, the economy, pensions, police and military violence, and of course the pandemic. Community, labor, feminist, environmental, and campesino/Indigenous organizing for change has been met by paramilitary death squads and regular assassinations of leaders. (See my article “In Colombia, the Struggle Continues” on pp. 7-9 in the Winter/Spring 2021 issue of Peace & Freedom.)

The spark that ignited this for the urban poor and organized labor was a proposed regressive sales tax on food, fuel, and basic services like water and electricity – and even on funerals – in the middle of the pandemic. These are neoliberal fiscal policies designed to take from the poor to benefit the rich. The renewed spraying of glyphosate has also mobilized campesinos and Indigenous peoples in rural areas. And right-wing President Ivan Duque’s orders to the Escuadrón Móvil Antidisturbios (ESMAD), with their reckless and often lethal response to stop the protests at all costs, made people angrier. ESMAD is a US-trained and funded attack unit connected to the Colombian Army and designed to repress movements for social justice throughout the country.

Paro Nacional — General Strike

There is an ongoing national strike, with broad participation: unions representing most of the workers of Colombia, including the teachers, regional and national Indigenous organizations, students, and community, including feminist organizations. This is only the latest and largest of a series of protests and actions. The strike and demonstrations have been suppressed – or rather attacked – with great brutality by the government.

The human rights organization Temblores has verified at least 1,773 cases of militarized police violence resulting in at least 40 deaths, thousands of wounded, over 900 arbitrary detentions, 33 attacks on journalists, and 12 cases of sexual assault by police. On May 13 one of the victims, a minor, killed herself after being raped in Papayán by the Escuadrón Móvil Antidisturbios.

 

Post date: Tue, 06/01/2021 - 08:45
ICBM Graphic

Graphics from beyondthebomb.org, used with permission.

By Ellen Thomas
DISARM Committee Co-chair

June 2021

Please join DISARM’s June 2021 Disarm Legislative Action Campaign to move forward two significant pieces of weapons-cutting legislation that are stuck in committees of the 117th Congress. We are asking for volunteers to engage in a sustained lobbying campaign, through phone calls to members of the House of Representatives (see Strategy & Call To Action below).

Each bill seeks to defund nuclear weapons and move the money to human needs. Rep. Ro Khanna introduced HR-2227 to take immediate action to halt the modernization of Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs), and Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton introduced HR-2850, a bill designed to abolish nuclear weapons worldwide, and convert the arms industries to instead provide for human needs.

Strategy & Call To Action

There are 45 representatives who sit on either or both of the Progressive Caucus and the Defense Spending Reduction Caucus. These representatives are likely allies of HR-2227 and HR-2850.

There are two immediate actions for as many WILPF members as possible to take:

  1. Familiarize yourself with HR-2227 and HR-2850.
  2. Commit to making up to 6-7 phone calls a day for the next two weeks to a set of representatives who may be outside your congressional district.

The intended outcome is that the selected 45 representatives will receive multiple calls asking for their co-sponsorship of HR-2227 and HR-2850 – and thanking them for any support already provided. The many calls should result in putting the legislation at the top of their “call reports,” which are regularly delivered to representatives. We expect this attention to lead to a buildup of formal co-sponsors.

To help you, here is a call script and a detailed phone list. Contact disarmchair@wilpfus.org to sign up for this action and receive updates and materials.

Why Is This Special Effort So Important?

In May, Disarm committee members attended a webinar facilitated by Peace Action related to HR-2227 – #defund the ICBM. Legislative staffers for the bill’s sponsors were guests at the webinar. They recommended a targeted, intensive phone calling campaign to bring constant attention to the legislation. More co-sponsors can lead to quick action from the committees where the legislation now sits.

Our government spends 60% of its discretionary budget on costly weapons and endless wars. Cutting back excessive military spending, as with this bill and with HR-2850, is an important step to #movethemoney!

Additional Important Congressional Action

Please also take national action: Call your House representative and ask her or him to join the new Defense Spending Reduction Caucus that Representatives Barbara Lee (D-CA) and Mark Pocan (D-WI) created in July 2020. Find your Representative’s Congressional office contact information by entering your zip code here. You can also find your Representative and Senators by calling the Capitol Switchboard at 202-224-3121.

The Defense Spending Reduction Caucus will recommend cuts to the National Defense Authorization Act that the House Armed Services Committee will present to the full House for debate and a vote later this spring, we’re told. President Biden’s proposed $753 billion fiscal year 2022 defense budget is even larger than Trump’s most recent budget and includes upgrades of nuclear weapons and delivery systems (missiles, bombers, and F-35 jets), drones, and submarines.

You can also endorse the Move the Money Campaign pledge as an individual.

The Two Bills to Move the Money

HR-2850 - Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act (click here for current co-sponsors)

Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton announced the re-introduction of her "Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act” on April 24, 2021. She has introduced a version of this bill every year since 1994. The bill is a comprehensive approach to the redirection of all funds used for nuclear weapons programs to converting the weapons industries toward providing for human needs and carbon free, nuclear free energy. A major update for this version of the bill includes an option to ratify the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). Additional background information, including the history of the bill, can be found on the Proposition One website. In addition to making phone calls, a letter to your representative can be sent (here).

HR-2227 - Investing in Cures Before Missiles Act (click here for current co-sponsors)

This House bill has the same text as its Senate companion bill, S-982. The intent of this legislation is to halt modernization of the ICBMs that make up the land leg of the nuclear triad.

The formal name of this modernization activity is the ”Ground Based Strategic Deterrent” (GBSD) program. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects the cost of this modernization at over $264B. The Federation of American Scientists has evaluated and made recommendations for alternatives to GBSD. A first step to disarmament of this leg of the triad is to defund the GBSD program and transfer the billions of dollars to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention for universal coronavirus vaccine and research into emerging infectious diseases.

Thank you for taking these actions. To learn more about the DISARM Committee, contact DisarmChair@wilpfus.org.

 

 

 

Post date: Tue, 06/01/2021 - 08:13

The WILPF US Advancing Human Rights (AHR) Committee is being revived. Bring your interests, ideas, and questions to our June 30 meeting.

By Joan Goddard
2020 WILPF US Program Chair

June 2021

There are so many ways to support human rights! WILPF members interested in United Nations work involving women, immigration and border militarization, mass incarceration, militarization of local police, anti-racism, and other human rights matters are invited to meet June 30. 

The AHR committee meeting, via Zoom or telephone, will be held on Wednesday, June 30 at 5 pm PT / 6 pm MT / 7 pm CT / 8 pm ET. We’ll share our interests in the many areas of concern that the Advancing Human Rights (AHR) issue committee could address. Participants at the meeting may want to set up several new subgroups and we will decide about the next meeting time for the AHR committee.

In February 2020, Philadelphia WILPF members went to Brownsville, Texas to volunteer for a week helping immigrants traveling across the border. At the meeting, concerned and/or experienced WILPFers will share information about how services are organized across the country to assist immigrants – and other ways to help. (WILPFers at the 2017 US WILPF Congress agreed to work on immigration and border militarization.)

Working with AHR, you can learn from members with long-term interest and experience with United Nations activities. These include:

  • the Commission on the Status of Women 
  • CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women)
  • UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (regarding women being equally represented in negotiations to end armed conflicts) 
  • the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 
  • other work particularly involving women. 

You can join them in their work to educate and activate ourselves, other WILPFers, and the public around these important issues – working with branches across the country. 

Also, AHR can include a group to share ideas and plans for working nationally on racial justice by supporting national initiatives and legislation, such as the national legislation named for George Floyd, and by supplementing other current and upcoming WILPF US anti-racism efforts.

Please attend the June 30 meeting if you are interested in working with other WILPF members on human rights issues. Register here. Your confirmation email will be from Jane Addams!

If you cannot attend on June 30, send your suggestions and/or requests for further information to AHRChair@wilpfus.org.

 

Post date: Tue, 06/01/2021 - 08:02

Danielle Atkinson, National Executive Director and Founder of Mothering Justice, will be one of the speakers discussing how we can truly value essential workers during the June 10 ONE WILPF Call. Photo courtesy of the speaker.

By Marybeth Gardam
Chair, Women, Money & Democracy Committee 

June 2020

Lessons from the pandemic prompt us to ask what kind of society we want, and how we can value essential workers by paying them equitably. On the June 10 WILPF Call ZOOM (7 pm EST / 4 pm PST), two dynamic leaders will discuss why investing in caring is good economic policy and how we can support current legislation to get us there. Gather talking points and strategize in breakout rooms! Here is the registration link.

We want a community-centered, people-centered economy where caring work (teachers, nurses, delivery people, housekeepers at hospitals and nursing homes, aides and other mostly female professions, including stay-at-home moms and caregivers) is valued for the way it undergirds our entire economy.  

With so many economic recovery proposals floating, so many legislative bills to fund essential workers and their families, the June 10 WILPF Call will focus on what each of those bills offer and which ones deserve our support in the short window we have for advocacy.  

Even if you’ve been on the ONE WILPF Maestro calls in the past, you’ll have to register for this Zoom call at this link

Featured Speakers

Danielle AtkinsonDanielle Atkinson has extensive experience as a church-based, electoral, and community organizer. She has worked with organizations such as America Votes, State Voices, Population Connection, and ACORN. In 2012, Atkinson founded Mothering Justice, a leadership development and advocacy organization. Atkinson has led organizing efforts to raise the minimum wage in both Florida and Michigan. Mothering Justice also led the fight to get earned paid sick time in Michigan. Her work organizing mothers won her the 2013 Michigan Organizer of the Year Award. Atkinson received bachelor’s degrees in political science and sociology from Pfeiffer University and lives in Royal Oak, Michigan, with her husband Frank and their six children.

Truth FreemynTruth Freemyn was the Principal Consultant of PBF Leadership Consultants for more than 20 years and Associate Consultant of Venture Concept Consultants. She has been involved in leadership development for more than two decades, with proven professional expertise in fundraising, management, human resources, and the personal growth and development fields, working with staff, volunteers, managers, boards, and funders. Freemyn formerly served as National Workplace Anti-Discrimination Project Director for 9to5, NAWW for five years where she oversaw the national welfare work and directed the Wisconsin-based 9to5 Poverty Network Initiative. She has served on a number of national coalitions including: The Rockefeller Foundation Grassroots Leadership for Women Coalition, the American Friends Service Committee National Coalition on Ending Poverty, and the Children’s Defense Fund National Welfare Advocacy and Monitoring Partnership.

These calls are open to the public, so please forward this notice to anyone you know who would be interested in attending this informative Zoom.

All of our past ONE WILPF Calls are archived on our website.

 

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