NEWS

Post date: Mon, 02/23/2015 - 12:44

Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, US Section

February 2015

We, the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, US Section are opposed to the United States government sending military aid to the Ukraine. The situation is changing daily on the ground and poses the danger of a wider war, even of a nuclear war.  The threat is greater now than during the Cold War. Sending military aid into such an unstable situation, as suggested by many in the US government, is untenable.   

The intense diplomatic activity initiated by President Hollande of France and Chancellor Merkel of Germany recognizes the critical nature of the situation. This is widely understood in Europe, less so in the United States. The crisis reveals old Cold War thinking in its opposition to the former Soviet Union aggravated by the expansion of NATO, economic sanctions, and aggressive rhetoric on the part of the US government.  

Fortunately diplomacy resulted in a cease fire agreement, Minsk II, which went into effect at midnight February 14, 2015. Nevertheless, the agreement is universally recognized to be extremely fragile.

The United Nations Security Council on February 17, 2015 unanimously adopted a resolution initiated by Russia in support of the Minsk agreements on the Ukraine crisis settlement.

The situation is more dangerous now than during the Cold War or the Cuban missile crisis because there are no established channels of communication between President Obama and President Putin. The potential for miscalculation is vastly greater than in 1962, when President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Khrushchev established and maintained back-channel communications to enable them to keep their countries from stumbling into a nuclear conflict. President Obama has cultivated no such channel and has ignored overtures from President Putin to reduce the level of strategic tension.

We call upon the United States to undo the damage unleashed when representatives of the United States engineered the overthrow of the democratically elected government of Ukraine last year – after it agreed to hold new elections. In doing so, the United States aligned with avowed and unabashed followers of WWII Nazi collaborator, Stephan Bandera – the Svoboda and the Pravy Sektor (The Right Sector) party led by Dmitry Yarosh. These elements in the Kiev government are an internal obstacle to a cease fire and durable peace in Ukraine. The militias of the Pravy Sektor constitute a major part of the Kiev government military assault on Ukrainian civilians. The Right Sector militias have vowed not to honor the cease fire.

Civilians are suffering under military attack in eastern Ukraine – as are the young men conscripted by the Kiev government. Both sides are tired of the fighting. Ukraine recruits are refusing to serve. Huge numbers of refugees continue to leave the country. The economy is falling apart.

If the United States truly wishes to be part of the efforts to achieve stability in the region, it must disavow its association with the Svoboda and Pravy Sektor elements in the Ukrainian government. The United States must eschew the use of military options to solve diplomatic problems. If we wish to provide aid, let it be humanitarian aid for the civilians. If we wish to be part of the solution, it must be through dialogue.  Achieving peace, stability and prosperity in Ukraine, as anywhere, requires multi-lateral collaboration. As a world leader, the United States must foster cooperation with Russia and other countries.  Let us use our influence to lead the world towards cooperation and collaboration, rather than instigating conflict.

Photo: Ukraine: UNICEF and ECHO assist children and families in bomb shelters. Natalia and her little brother Ivan spend all night and major part of the day inside the bomb shelter in Donetsk. Their mother is afraid to let them go outside because of the shelling. September 28, 2014.   ©UNICEF/Ukraine/2014/F.Volpi 

Post date: Fri, 02/06/2015 - 07:17

By Carol Urner for Disarm/End Wars

January ended on a hopeful note for both abolition of nuclear weapons and ending war. The 33 nations of Latin America and the Caribbean reaffirmed their commitment to their region as a zone of peace and committed themselves to support a treaty banning nuclear weapons as proposed in Vienna in December. Read an assessment of the CELAC declaration here.

But February opened on a sour note. President Obama submitted the largest US base military budget in history to Congress on February 2.  But in the spring months ahead will be many more opportunities to promote our goals. Join us and work on what you most care about.

This month closes February 28 with a challenging forum (live streamed), in which WILPF is deeply involved, on Possible Nuclear Extinction of the Human Race.

But we cannot allow human extinction. It is now 70 years since the ending of World War II and the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. We say we have the power as women to STOP WAR and eliminate nuclear weapons.  Let’s use it now!

Join a massive mobilization to shut down Creech AFB and militarized drones on March 4-6 as Helen Jaccard outlines in her entry. Continue building our movement to end wars with Spring Rising  March 18-21.

And begin preparing now for April and May with our Centennial Year Congress (April 22-25), our international conference (April 27-29) in The Hague, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Review Conference (April 27 to May 22) and Alliance for Nuclear Accountability D.C. Days May 17 to 20.  Check our Disarm/ End Wars spring calendar below for more information. We will also be working with Congress on Norton’s bill to abolish nuclear weapons. Send your own ideas and questions for the months ahead to carol.disarm@gmail.com  and to et@prop1.org .

March 11: Fukushima Day. No more nuclear power, nuclear waste or uranium mining.

April 15: US Income taxes due. WILPFers hold creative demonstrations at Post Offices with strong support from United For Peace and Justice and the international Global Day of Action on Military Spending. We will prepare materials specific to WILPF and nuclear weapons abolition.

April 22-25: WILPF Centennial Congress in The Hague: Six members of Disarm/End Wars Committee in the official ten member delegation will be available for report back to US Branches. April 27-28: International NGO conference which the same six members will be attending in The Hague and be available for report backs.

April 24-26: Peace and Planet Mobilization for a Nuclear-Free and Just and Sustainable World. March, festival and two day conference on nuclear weapons abolition in New York City before the NPT meetings.

April 27-May 22: Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Meetings

 

Photo: Delegates at the third annual summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), issued a declaration fully supporting the outcomes of the Third International Conference on the Humanitarian Impact of Nuclear Weapons in Vienna. Photo courtesy of International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

 

Post date: Fri, 02/06/2015 - 07:12

By Helen Jaccard, WILPF Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee

Join WILPF and other peace groups March 4-6 to protest drone warfare at Creech Air Force Base near Las Vegas.  This convergence, organized by Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Nevada Desert Experience, Veterans for Peace, Voices for Creative Non-Violence and CODEPINK, is a mass mobilization to stop drone wars and directly confront US militarism.  We are expecting hundreds of people at this non-violent direct action.

Since 2005, drone operators at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada have completed thousands of assassinations of “suspected terrorists” thousands of miles away from the comfort of their computers north of Las Vegas.  Despite this claim, they have in fact killed thousands of civilians–– including more than 200 children in Pakistan alone and are terrorizing communities in several countries.  Recent independent research indicates that the identity of only one out of 28 victims of U.S. drone strikes is known beforehand. Though officials deny it, the majority of those killed by drones are civilians.

This is hurting the United States' standing in the international community –– take it from Ret. Colonel Ann Wright: 

“As a former US diplomat, I am very sensitive to the perceptions of the international community toward US foreign policies. The US.assassin drone campaign is a source of great anti-American sentiment around the world, not just in the Middle East. The moral and ethical aspects of illegal extrajudicial executions should be weighing heavily on those men and women in our government who make the decisions to kill and those who implement those decisions.”

This ends in 2015. Save the date to shut down killer drone operations and demand an end to Obama’s covert wars around the world. Get inspired by photos and a video  of previous Creech protests! To get involved, please contact Helen Jaccard at helen.jaccard@gmail.com or (206) 992-6364.

WILPF has been involved with many anti-drone projects.  MacGregor Eddy (Monterey County Branch) and others from the San Francisco Bay Area branches have been attending monthly vigils and civil disobedience actions at Beale AFB for years.  WILPF organized drone death walks  and participated in a petition   to Ban Weaponized Drones from the World.  WILPF member Leah Bolger is a key Drones Quilt Project quilter and coordinator.  She displayed the quilts at the 2014 Triennial Convention in Detroit, and the quilt display will be at the Shut Down Creech event.  Marge Van Cleef is also available to facilitate workshops and help with other anti-drone resources.

PS: If you are considering attending #ShutDownCreech  please also consider heading to Los Vegas to support the Boycott RE/MAX: No Open House on Stolen Land Campaign, March 2 – 3. Email NoOpenHouse@codepink.org for more info.

Helen Jaccard, WILPF Creech Event liaison and Shut Down Creech steering committee member
Photo: Shut Down Creech! national mobilization
 

 

Post date: Fri, 02/06/2015 - 06:48

By Carolyn Ulenhake Walker

We donned black garments and black veils and went down to the capitol to mourn the loss of our democracy on January 21, the fifth anniversary of the Citizens United ruling giving corporations First Amendment rights of free speech.

Some 20 of us from the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom and Move To Amend, Des Moines, demonstrated our opposition to the ruling that equated money as free speech  The event was covered by the Des Moines Register

As we walked among the legislators and veterans (a special day for veterans) through the halls of our capitol carrying our signs and walking in silence, we received thumbs up, thanks, and even some snubs. It is however amazing how many people don’t know much about Citizens United. So much education of the public is needed. Our funeral march lasted about 45 minutes. It truly was a “sad” day!

The Nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics says that with no transparency in the giving of this big money, lots of money never gets counted. Thom Hartmann has said on his program on Free Speech TV that all figures point to $4 billion spent just on the midterm elections! Is it any wonder that close to 80% of Americans think we need to get rid of the big money in our elections? 

Did we change the world? Maybe a smidgeon! Did we empower ourselves to do something about the crisis of our Democracy? Yes! We will probably be doing it again soon.   Contact Des Moines WILPF wilpf.dsm@gmail.com for more on our work.

Photo: Protesters at the Capitol Rotunda marched to mourn the Citizens United decision anniversary. Photo by Jan Corderman.

 

Post date: Fri, 02/06/2015 - 06:35
Hattie Nestle

By Earth Democracy Issue Committee  

Earth Democracy’s Hattie Nestel posts her interview videos of people telling how a gas pipeline would devastate their property and community, and Mary HH joins St. Louis Branch members to rally at Monsanto’s annual shareholder meeting to tell her family’s story of serious health impacts from toxic chemicals.

The power of story-telling is that it connects the personal with community from the local to the global. And, it is the power of story-telling that can move our elected representatives, at all levels of government, to represent real people and not corporations. 

Hattie Nestel has produced some amazing videos. Here’s her inspiring interview with 12-year-old Alice and more new videos are here.

Here Hattie tells her own story of becoming a videographer.  “In late 2013, after the Kinder-Morgan gas pipeline across Massachusetts, www.nofrackgasinmass.org  was announced, almost immediately across Massachusetts, local groups formed to oppose it and organizers sponsored a walk across along the pipeline route to the Statehouse in Boston in July 2014. Now diverse groups from New York, Massachusetts and New Hampshire have formed a multi-state alliance to oppose this 350 miles pipeline.  

During that walk, I heard stories from homeowners about the devastating impact the pipeline would have on their properties. Most of them felt they would have to relocate, since they feared the danger of fracked gas coming through a 36-inch pipe that could affect their wells, soil and health.

I decided these landowners’ stories must be heard throughout the state as the needed easements would cross over 1500 private properties and so I took the Local Community Access Television’s course to learn how to use a video camera. I wanted to film these interviews and post them to Community Access Stations across the state and to YouTube.

I produced the interviews to show not only the impact on property owners, but the effects the pipeline would have the beautiful pristine and rural areas of the state as many state forests would be cut down and many waterways rerouted.

I have completed 28 interviews including with our Congressional Representative Jim McGovern and two state representatives, and I have interviews coming up with several state senators. I have also interviewed the executive directors of the Mount Grace Conservation Land Trust and the Nashoba Land Trust talking about the important restriction on that conservation land that must not be violated.  

Presently, more than 40 towns have passed referendums prohibiting the pipeline from coming through their towns. And, importantly, most state officials with people in their districts who oppose the pipeline have spoken out in opposition, as have US Senators Warren and Markey, and US representatives. To learn more about taking a course at your community TV station and how to get started on interviews, contact Hattie at Hattieshalom [at] Verizon.net

 

Photo: Hattie Nestel by Marcia Gagliardi.

 

Post date: Fri, 02/06/2015 - 06:23
WILPF US Section President Mary Hanson-Harrison

By Ginger Harris, St. Louis Branch member

On short notice, eight St. Louis WILPF members, three of their friends, and WILPF US Section President Mary Hanson Harrison joined up on January 30 in St. Louis to rally with others as representatives of our Human Right to Health and Safe Food Campaign. They joined with national representatives of the Organic Consumers Association, Moms Across America, Sum Of Us, and local representatives of St. Louis’ Gateway Green Alliance, GMO-Free Midwest, Interfaith Committee on Latin America, Southern Illinois’ Food Works, doctors from St. Louis and San Francisco and other health and environmental advocates -- altogether 40 or more people.

The purpose was to let the shareholders, inside Monsanto headquarters and folks driving along the arterial road, know that Monsanto should stop producing the agricultural poison glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup herbicide

Moms Across America founder Zen Honeycutt cited the long list of diseases associated with glyphosate and with foods that have been genetically engineered to tolerate glyphosate (so far: soy, corn, cottonseed oil, canola, sugar beets, alfalfa, Hawaiian papaya and some summer squash) and crops that have not been gene-spliced, but use glyphosate in other ways, such as drying wheat for faster harvesting.

She explained that glyphosate is an antibiotic (that works against the body’s biological systems) that reduces the effectiveness of our immune system over time the way heavy use of antibiotics in our health system has allowed the growth of bacteria that we don’t currently have an antidote for, and the same way that heavy use of glyphosate to kill weeds has by now prompted the development of "super-weeds” immune to glyphosate. This has led Monsanto to apply to the US EPA for approval of their new GMO crops that are Dicamba-ready similar to Roundup-ready crops. Glyphosate is also a chelator, combining with and thus depriving our bodies of essential nutrients. Honeycutt then, by prearrangement, gave the same speech inside the rather heated shareholders meeting, along with the spokeswoman for SumOfUs, which had arranged to introduce a shareholders resolution to make Monsanto more sensitive to health and integrity issues.

Jeff Ritterman, MD from San Francisco, gave a fairly comprehensive explanation of how and why glyphosate is so damaging to humans and all vertebrate animals, including especially developing fetuses: glyphosate is an endocrine disrupter and DNA mutagen, thus causing birth defects. According to Dr. Ritterman, Monsanto knew as far back as the 1980s that high levels of glyphosate were statistically associated with birth defects, and as far back as 1993 that medium and low levels of glyphosate were also associated with birth defects. 

Our own WILPF President Mary Hanson Harrison gave the most rousing speech: about how Monsanto has for decades been waging “chemical war” on the world  -- and the most emotional speech about growing up on an Iowa dairy farm where her father, mother, sister and brother either died of diseases associated with DDT poisoning (e.g., cancers) or developed  Parkinson’s disease.  Monsanto began producing DDT in 1944, along with some 15 other companies. 

After the speeches, rally-ers constructed a “road-side"-type memorial in front of Monsanto’s corporate sign with photos of many individuals who died due to glyphosate exposure.  Most of us WILPFers and friends then returned to our St. Louis WILPF Branch president’s home to continue the conversation about “corporate chemical warfare” and how to spread the word, which will be challenging in a metro area heavily influenced by the number of scientists who have been on Monsanto’s payroll and the number of high-profile civic institutions, like the public radio station, symphony, and world-renowned botanical garden, that have been the recipients of Monsanto’s highly publicized charity!  We’re hatching some plans!  For more as the St. Louis Branch devel ops plans, contact Ginger Harris at gngr8s [at] gmail.com.

 

Photo: WILPF US President Mary Hanson Harrison speaks at rally in St. Louis MO outside the Monsanto shareholders meeting January 30, 2015.    Ginger Harris photo

 

Post date: Fri, 02/06/2015 - 06:16

By Advancing Human Rights Issues Committee (Barbara L Nielsen, chair)

It is with great sorrow that we inform you of the death of Lucinda Tate, on January 17, and with bittersweet hope for the future that we announce plans for the establishment of the Lucinda L. Tate Human Rights Education Fund of the [WILPF US] Advancing Human Rights issues committee (AHR), as a memorial tribute fund in honor of Lucinda, whose passing in Portland, Oregon, was a shock of immense loss and sadness to all of us who knew her and her work. Services will be held Saturday, February 28, 2015, at 2 p.m. in her parish of St. Andrew Catholic Church, 806 Northeast Alberta Street, Portland, Oregon.

Lucinda Lilly Tate, the embodiment of compassion, civility and courage, was chair and later co-chair of the national AHR Issues Committee and locally served as convener of our Portland, Oregon Branch. Lucinda made substantive contributions spanning many decades of her time and energy to Portland-based activities that advanced peace, social and economic justice for all and honored her African-American, Cherokee, Cree and Blackfoot heritages in all of her work. A native Oregonian, she grew up in Montana, earned a bachelor’s degree in education and a teaching certificate from Montana State University in Billings, then earned an Oregon teaching certificate at Portland State University and spent two years as a classroom teacher.

Lucinda Tate worked tirelessly for more than 40 years advocating for Oregon’s poor and underrepresented communities in remunerative as well as volunteer capacities. A long-time board member of the Oregon Food Bank, she also worked for and served in leadership positions in organizations such as the African American Catholic Community of Oregon, the Janus Youth Program, the Metropolitan Alliance for the Common Good and the Portland Rainbow Coalition. She held formal positions in the District of Columbia for the US Department of Labor, and back in Oregon at the Mount Hood and Portland Community Colleges and the City of Portland, and was active in Service Employees International Union Local 88, as shop steward. Serving on the board of the Oregon State Education Association, she had been the first Black woman elected as district president, representing more than 1,500 state employees. She retired from her active and varied working career after 10 years of service working as the community outreach coordinator and community center director at Portland’s St. Andrew Catholic Church.

As co-chair of the AHR issues committee, Lucinda Tate worked collaboratively to establish its Human Trafficking subcommittee and to coordinate WILPF’s anti-trafficking work in coalition with the campaign of the United Methodist Women to “Intercept Human Trafficking” around the Super Bowl. She further “acted locally” in Portland, while she brought attention to the global issues of the spectrum of human trafficking that intensify around this iconic event that has become so emblematic of excessive celebratory conspicuous consumption in many forms, and had planned on educational leafleting again in February 2015 at a local sports bar.

At the 2014 WILPF US Triennial Congress in Detroit, she skillfully melded and excellently facilitated a half-dozen members’ disparate presentations into a lively, coherent and well-received panel workshop on Violence Against Women, including human trafficking. At the time of her untimely death, she was eagerly looking forward to participating in the WILPF US Local 2 Global practicum at the United Nations 59th Commission on the Status of Women, working on a Cities for CEDAW project within her branch simultaneously while mentoring a young Portland branch member in these activities. She is sorely missed.

Contact Barbara Nielsen bln.sf.ca@gmail.com for information on plans for the education fund.

Photo: Lucinda Tate on Super Bowl Sunday 2014, in photo she had one of the sports goers take outside a Portland sports tavern showing the game.

 

Post date: Fri, 02/06/2015 - 06:11

by Darien De Lu, Sacramento-Sierra Foothills Branch

The Sacramento-Sierra Foothills Branch is making a special effort to attract new interest through a year of special programming and follow-up.  The 100th birthday plans begin in Women's History Month when the branch hosts film showings with discussions for the first three Thursdays in March, culminating on the final Thursday with a "Living History Dance Performance" telling stories of Isadora Duncan.  Peace activist Lois Flood is coming to Sacramento to present the dance and poetry production she has put together.

Other activities planned for later in the year include a presentation by local members about their experience at the International WILPF Conference; the initiation of a local economics study group emphasizing corporations, catastrophic climate change, and the evolution of corporate personhood; and possible branch involvement with the US Social Forum in San Jose, California in June.

The branch planned many of these activities at a special retreat meeting last September.  Members hope to put particular attention to attracting new branch and WILPF members through the combination of special branch programs every other month and careful follow-up with those attending any of the 100th-year events.

Contact the author at Darien De Lu <conjoin (at) macnexus.org>

 

Photo provided by Lois Ann Flood. Used with her permission

Post date: Fri, 02/06/2015 - 05:55
Women Power to Stop War

A lively guide to activities for celebrating WILPF’s 100th anniversary is now online and ready to put into practice.  Choose from an array of ideas to mark the occasion your community. As the Centennial Coordinator Heather Wellman points out:

Whether you are a branch or an at-large member, there are strong benefits to making this a public event to crow about! 

The visibility will help WILPF in so many ways.  And it can make a big difference in your community too!

Your event could mean new members for existing branches, or increased interest in starting a new branch!

It’s a great way to get young people and folks with an interest in history involved.

And it’s a strong reason to connect with local media!

Click here for suggestions for doing all of that. 

 

Post date: Tue, 01/06/2015 - 12:27

The Human Right to Health

The Human Right To Health & Safe Food is a National Campaign of WILPF US Section — Women’s International League for Peace & Freedom

This campaign is a collaboration of two National Issue Committees of WILPF US, the Corporations v. Democracy Issue Committee and the Earth Democracy Issue Committee.

It is designed to facilitate community education and activism, to inform the public about the dangers of toxic herbicides being used indiscriminately on food crops throughout the United States of America.

For information on this campaign, go to https://humanrighttohealthcampaignuswilpf.wordpress.com/

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