NEWS

Post date: Mon, 07/11/2022 - 18:17

by Barbara Taft
Greater Phoenix WILPF

July 2022

This year, Greater Phoenix WILPF will be back with its annual Hiroshima Day Commemoration event on Saturday, August 6th. This year we are glad to be meeting LIVE and in-person. One of our members, Marjorie Thornton, has invited us to her lovely home, which features an atrium with a traditional Japanese koi pond at its center. We will have Japanese snacks, view a video about the bombings and the hibakusha who survived, sing songs of peace, and hear a reading written by one of the hibakusha. Noting the particular dangers in our world during this time due to the fighting between Russia and Ukraine, we will link current events to the past with a brief talk reminding us of the dangers of nuclear war, and will create and distribute petitions for signature. We will also distribute peace cranes made in Japan and ask participants to deliver them to others, telling the Sadako story. The evening will end with the lighting of candles, which we will set afloat in the koi pond as we pledge to work together for peace.
 

Post date: Mon, 07/11/2022 - 13:30

Hiroshima survivor Hideko Tamura Snider. Photo taken from WILPF US webinar recording.

by Ellen Thomas & Cherrill Spencer

July 2022

Various ways to commemorate the 77th anniversaries of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

This 2020 resource guide describes in detail activities WILPF branches or individual WILPFers can do during  the period August 6th-9th to to commemorate the anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Activities include the invitation to fast in the name of nuclear disarmament, and ringing public church or temple bells in your community on August 6-9th

Another action you can take from home is to watch the recording of the 2020 interview we did with WILPF member and Hiroshima bombing survivor Hideko Tamura Snider. 

Hideko is the author of "One Sunny Day" and "When A Peace Tree Blooms” and describes her experiences before, during and after the Hiroshima bomb, appealing to us all: "I depend on all of your energy, please continue what you are doing to rule out violent means, especially this inhumane, horrible weapon…we are not barbarians, we are humans, and let us be truly and fully human."

Another stay-at-home activity is to look again at the timeline the DISARM committee created of the major events in 1945 that led to the bombings.

Write emails to your own Representative to support People Over Pentagon Act HR-8040

We know that Congresspeople prefer to hear from their own constituents about topics of importance to the constituent, so we ask you to contact your Congressperson and ask them to co-sponsor a newly-introduced House Bill: HR-8040, called the “People Over Pentagon Act”, which would begin to rein in unchecked military spending : “to reduce the amount authorized to be appropriated for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2023, and for other purposes.” Here are the details. We need you to take action before the end of July while the National Defense Authorization Act is still wending its way through Congress. You can find some sample sentences here.

Speaking of the National Defense Authorization Act, HR-2850 has been submitted as an Amendment!

Good news!  On June 28, 2022, Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton has introduced an amendment to the 2023 National Defense Authorization Act using the language of HR-2850, this session’s version of the "Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act" that WILPF US members have been supporting each session since it was first introduced in 1994.  Here is what the amendment says:

AMENDMENT TO RULES COMMITTEE OFFERED BY MS . NORTON OF DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

At the end of subtitle B of title XXXI add the following:

SEC. 31ll. REQUIREMENT FOR NUCLEAR WEAPONS ABOLITION AND ECONOMIC AND ENERGY CONVERSION.

(a) IN GENERAL .—The United States Government shall—

  (1) provide leadership by signing and ratifying the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons or any other international agreement
that provides for—

    (A) the dismantlement and elimination of all nuclear weapons in every country; and
    (B) strict and effective international control of such dismantlement and elimination;

(2) redirect resources that are being used for nuclear weapons programs to use—

    (A) in converting all nuclear weapons industry processes, plants, and programs, and retraining employees, to shift to a constructive, ecologically beneficial peace economy, which includes strict control of all fissile material and radioactive waste; and
    (B) in addressing human and infrastructure needs, including development and deployment of sustainable carbon-free and nuclear-free energy sources, health care, housing, education, agriculture, and environmental restoration, including long-term radioactive waste monitoring; and

(3) actively promote policies to induce all other countries to join in the commitments described in this subsection to create a more peaceful and secure world.

(b) E FFECTIVE DATE .—Paragraph (2) of subsection (a) shall take effect on the date on which the President certifies to Congress that all countries possessing nuclear weapons have begun the elimination of such weapons under established legal requirements comparable to those described in paragraph (1) of such subsection.

****

If you have questions about any of the above, please write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org!  We hope to see you at our DISARM Committee zoom meeting on Sunday July 31st.

 

Post date: Mon, 06/27/2022 - 12:32

Boston Women's March, January 2017
Boston Women's March, January 2017. Photo © Glenn Ruga

September 16, 2021

Internationally, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom has long called for the protection of the rights of women and girls, proclaiming that women’s rights are human rights. For WILPF US, it is very clear that women’s and girl’s rights must be protected – in the U.S. and in the world.

In the US, the latest unconstitutional Texas law is simply one more in a series of laws – in Texas and other states – depriving women of the ability to make meaningful choices in their own lives and in their families’ lives. As our allies at the Kairos Center say, “The rollback of hard-won reproductive rights in Texas will drive so many women further into poverty – the message is clear: our bodies and lives are not our own.” (9/10/21 email, “A week of reckoning”).

I know that WILPF US members care deeply about maintaining and expanding the protections gained by the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision. We must defend all kinds of reproductive choice – including abortion rights. No reversible birth control method is 100% effective, and the modern U.S. economy often leaves no reasonable space for unplanned pregnancies. Worse yet, the so-called Christian values of most of the “Pro-Life” political Right oppose the government, community, or even educational actions to actually support families and reduce instances of unwanted pregnancies.

It is ironic that abortion rights (and peace) activist, Patricia Maginnis, passed away (unexpectedly) on August 30, only three days before the September 2 Supreme Court decision not to block the extremely restrictive Texas law. Otherwise – since she was active with the Occupy Oakland movement and campaigned in 2016 for Bernie Sanders – she, even at age 93, might have had the standing to speak out against the Supreme Court ruling and be heard.

Maginnis was probably the first outspoken abortion rights activist in the U.S.

In the 1960s, Patricia Maginnis and her partners in the “Army of Three” disseminated a wide range of (illegal!) abortion information – including “how-to” steps for home abortions – to thousands of women across the U.S. Read more about this radical civil disobedience activist in this hard-hitting Slate article.

In the 1960s, Maginnis’s civil disobedience approach was more confrontational and radical than what Planned Parenthood was ready to do. Today, state and federal laws have defunded and even criminalized Planned Parenthood. I anticipate that WILPFers will continue to support quality sex education in schools and women’s reproductive health care – including Planned Parenthood – in their communities. Some of us may move to take local direct action, such as taking up again the work of “the Janes” – the underground abortion access group in Chicago – or by actively teaching the safe use of the home technology of menstrual extraction.

If only the setbacks on Choice were the only traumatic events of our times, then we could focus on healing from our experiences and taking action in that area. 

Yet, of course, we have the crises of the pandemic, the climate-related catastrophes, the ongoing police excesses. Coinciding with these is the national focus on the September 11 anniversary. All of these join the horrifying airport coverage of the long-overdue Afghanistan  withdrawal to assault us, traumatize us, and keep us reactive, instead of responsive. At a time when we have the highest needs for human services, instead the massive waste of fund through an ever-increasing military budget continues to waste funds hugely.

With the public dismayed by images of the airport chaos (and in the absence of coverage of the privation in sanction-struck Afghanistan), the U.S. military and the Right quickly pass the fault for this situation to Biden, to the Afghan people, to –  to – someone else. Recent critiques suggest that somehow this debacle is the fault of “white feminists”.  Some feminists in the “west” have focused their attention on issues more important to white and middle-class women, and – like so many in the U.S. Congress – their concept of what would actually be helpful to women in Afghanistan is distorted by the U.S. imperial lens. However, WILPF is a feminist organization, and the large majority of members in WILPF US are white. Nonetheless, our demands for rights for women and girls go beyond “Western rights” and “white women’s issues”, seeking to be sensitive to the cultural and economic realities of different countries.

In addition to choices about one’s reproduction, key women’s rights include the rights to equal access in education, equal pay for equivalent work, and equal property, marriage, and other rights under the law. Depending on different cultural and economic structures, in different countries other rights will be especially important. Consequently, in the U.S. (and other industrialized nations), WILPF US supports crucial human rights that particularly affect women: the right to high quality childcare and the closely related right of caregivers – caring for children, for the elderly, and for the sick – to a just caregiver wage

The corporate media choose to magnify only a tiny section of feminist thinking and action.

Coverage has largely ignored more anti-capitalist feminist analyses, such as how unpaid women’s work props up corporate structures. Who pays for the “externalities” of raising children, preparing meals, and keeping house? It is largely women – and almost never business.

Meanwhile, the media generally overlook U.S. drone attacks in Afghanistan, killing hundreds to thousands of non-combatants – women, men, and children. And where is the media focus on the $2.3 trillion cost of the war (see the Costs of the 20-year war on terror: $8 trillion and 900,000 deaths) and the regressive tax system structure that forces the 99% to pay that bill? In the U.S., poverty rates for women continue to be higher than for men.

And at the same time a contradictory idea is presented, making convenient "cover". The U.S. military and Right Wing continue – as they have for the last 20 years – to present the excuse of "protecting the rights of women" to justify the brutal practices and attacks in Afghanistan, along with ongoing violations of Constitutional rights.

We in WILPF, as feminists, see restrictive state abortion laws and court rulings as blocks to women’s agency in life-changing matters – keeping women as second class citizens. For women of color – widely suffering from race-based inequalities in the U.S. – such laws can make for third-class citizenship. Poorer women – whites, Blacks, Indigenous, and other women of color – are especially affected by such laws. Economic inequities in the U.S. further restrict abortion access options for working class and low income women; we know that wealthy women will continue to find clean/safe abortions.

With ongoing attacks on abortion rights, reproductive choice is an increasingly important justice and equality issue. What capacity do we have, in these difficult and demanding times, to be active in some way on this issue? Even mutually committing to a group of a few others to a single phone call each week can be important and ultimately effective.

As with any political issue consistent with WILPF principles, WILPF members can turn to our national issue committees for guidance and organize within them (including through subcommittees) on this topic.

WILPF US issue committees focus branch and member work on particular areas, providing a national political structure for analysis, strategizing, and long-term planning and actions.

WILPF members can also work locally in their branches – both with issue committees and independently – on what matters to them. I’d like to hear more from branches! What are you choosing to work on?

If the setbacks on choice were the only crisis of our times, our way ahead would be clear. Yet, as our two-week Congress in August reminded us, we have many crises and many issues to address. View the Congress recordings here and make your choices. If you can do only a little, watch for national issue committee initiatives to take action. Or undertake more, working with your branch, some other local body, or by committing to ongoing legislative activism needed for voting reform, moving the money, and more. WILPF US depends on the initiative of its members and branches to keep on moving forward!

Darien's signature

Darien Elyse De Lu
WILPF US President

 

 

Post date: Mon, 06/27/2022 - 12:27

This is a test page

Post date: Mon, 06/27/2022 - 12:07

Boston Women's March, January 2017
Boston Women's March, January 2017. Photo © Glenn Ruga

September 16, 2021

Internationally, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom has long called for the protection of the rights of women and girls, proclaiming that women’s rights are human rights. For WILPF US, it is very clear that women’s and girl’s rights must be protected – in the U.S. and in the world.

In the US, the latest unconstitutional Texas law is simply one more in a series of laws – in Texas and other states – depriving women of the ability to make meaningful choices in their own lives and in their families’ lives. As our allies at the Kairos Center say, “The rollback of hard-won reproductive rights in Texas will drive so many women further into poverty – the message is clear: our bodies and lives are not our own.” (9/10/21 email, “A week of reckoning”).

I know that WILPF US members care deeply about maintaining and expanding the protections gained by the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision. We must defend all kinds of reproductive choice – including abortion rights. No reversible birth control method is 100% effective, and the modern U.S. economy often leaves no reasonable space for unplanned pregnancies. Worse yet, the so-called Christian values of most of the “Pro-Life” political Right oppose the government, community, or even educational actions to actually support families and reduce instances of unwanted pregnancies.

It is ironic that abortion rights (and peace) activist, Patricia Maginnis, passed away (unexpectedly) on August 30, only three days before the September 2 Supreme Court decision not to block the extremely restrictive Texas law. Otherwise – since she was active with the Occupy Oakland movement and campaigned in 2016 for Bernie Sanders – she, even at age 93, might have had the standing to speak out against the Supreme Court ruling and be heard.

Maginnis was probably the first outspoken abortion rights activist in the U.S.

In the 1960s, Patricia Maginnis and her partners in the “Army of Three” disseminated a wide range of (illegal!) abortion information – including “how-to” steps for home abortions – to thousands of women across the U.S. Read more about this radical civil disobedience activist in this hard-hitting Slate article.

In the 1960s, Maginnis’s civil disobedience approach was more confrontational and radical than what Planned Parenthood was ready to do. Today, state and federal laws have defunded and even criminalized Planned Parenthood. I anticipate that WILPFers will continue to support quality sex education in schools and women’s reproductive health care – including Planned Parenthood – in their communities. Some of us may move to take local direct action, such as taking up again the work of “the Janes” – the underground abortion access group in Chicago – or by actively teaching the safe use of the home technology of menstrual extraction.

If only the setbacks on Choice were the only traumatic events of our times, then we could focus on healing from our experiences and taking action in that area. 

Yet, of course, we have the crises of the pandemic, the climate-related catastrophes, the ongoing police excesses. Coinciding with these is the national focus on the September 11 anniversary. All of these join the horrifying airport coverage of the long-overdue Afghanistan  withdrawal to assault us, traumatize us, and keep us reactive, instead of responsive. At a time when we have the highest needs for human services, instead the massive waste of fund through an ever-increasing military budget continues to waste funds hugely.

With the public dismayed by images of the airport chaos (and in the absence of coverage of the privation in sanction-struck Afghanistan), the U.S. military and the Right quickly pass the fault for this situation to Biden, to the Afghan people, to –  to – someone else. Recent critiques suggest that somehow this debacle is the fault of “white feminists”.  Some feminists in the “west” have focused their attention on issues more important to white and middle-class women, and – like so many in the U.S. Congress – their concept of what would actually be helpful to women in Afghanistan is distorted by the U.S. imperial lens. However, WILPF is a feminist organization, and the large majority of members in WILPF US are white. Nonetheless, our demands for rights for women and girls go beyond “Western rights” and “white women’s issues”, seeking to be sensitive to the cultural and economic realities of different countries.

In addition to choices about one’s reproduction, key women’s rights include the rights to equal access in education, equal pay for equivalent work, and equal property, marriage, and other rights under the law. Depending on different cultural and economic structures, in different countries other rights will be especially important. Consequently, in the U.S. (and other industrialized nations), WILPF US supports crucial human rights that particularly affect women: the right to high quality childcare and the closely related right of caregivers – caring for children, for the elderly, and for the sick – to a just caregiver wage

The corporate media choose to magnify only a tiny section of feminist thinking and action.

Coverage has largely ignored more anti-capitalist feminist analyses, such as how unpaid women’s work props up corporate structures. Who pays for the “externalities” of raising children, preparing meals, and keeping house? It is largely women – and almost never business.

Meanwhile, the media generally overlook U.S. drone attacks in Afghanistan, killing hundreds to thousands of non-combatants – women, men, and children. And where is the media focus on the $2.3 trillion cost of the war (see the Costs of the 20-year war on terror: $8 trillion and 900,000 deaths) and the regressive tax system structure that forces the 99% to pay that bill? In the U.S., poverty rates for women continue to be higher than for men.

And at the same time a contradictory idea is presented, making convenient "cover". The U.S. military and Right Wing continue – as they have for the last 20 years – to present the excuse of "protecting the rights of women" to justify the brutal practices and attacks in Afghanistan, along with ongoing violations of Constitutional rights.

We in WILPF, as feminists, see restrictive state abortion laws and court rulings as blocks to women’s agency in life-changing matters – keeping women as second class citizens. For women of color – widely suffering from race-based inequalities in the U.S. – such laws can make for third-class citizenship. Poorer women – whites, Blacks, Indigenous, and other women of color – are especially affected by such laws. Economic inequities in the U.S. further restrict abortion access options for working class and low income women; we know that wealthy women will continue to find clean/safe abortions.

With ongoing attacks on abortion rights, reproductive choice is an increasingly important justice and equality issue. What capacity do we have, in these difficult and demanding times, to be active in some way on this issue? Even mutually committing to a group of a few others to a single phone call each week can be important and ultimately effective.

As with any political issue consistent with WILPF principles, WILPF members can turn to our national issue committees for guidance and organize within them (including through subcommittees) on this topic.

WILPF US issue committees focus branch and member work on particular areas, providing a national political structure for analysis, strategizing, and long-term planning and actions.

WILPF members can also work locally in their branches – both with issue committees and independently – on what matters to them. I’d like to hear more from branches! What are you choosing to work on?

If the setbacks on choice were the only crisis of our times, our way ahead would be clear. Yet, as our two-week Congress in August reminded us, we have many crises and many issues to address. View the Congress recordings here and make your choices. If you can do only a little, watch for national issue committee initiatives to take action. Or undertake more, working with your branch, some other local body, or by committing to ongoing legislative activism needed for voting reform, moving the money, and more. WILPF US depends on the initiative of its members and branches to keep on moving forward!

Darien's signature

Darien Elyse De Lu
WILPF US President

 

 

Post date: Tue, 06/14/2022 - 07:29

 

Please Take 3-5 Minutes!  Help the national campaign to get TPNW mentioned in the media between June 15 and 20 

The DISARM Committee is asking all WILPFers to help flood three major news outlets with letters to the editor and feedback between June 15 and 20. The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) is getting short shrift in our national newspapers, National Public Radio and TV cable news channels.  Help change that!

How do we get the TPNW described much more frequently in news reports? The Nuclear Ban Treaty Collaborative (NBTC)—of which WILPF is a member—has created a national campaign to make this happen. The strategy is to focus all our coordinated media efforts on three of the top media outlets in the US: The New York Times (NYT), National Public Radio (NPR), and CNN. The goal is not necessarily to get as many letters published as possible. Rather, it is to send in hundreds of letters and comments calling for these three outlets to cover the TPNW, and to send their reporters to Vienna for the First Meeting of States Parties of the TPNW June 21-23.

The NBTC has set up an easy to use webpage with links to the feedback webpages of CNN and NPR, and the NYT email address to write to. From this website you can download talking points and language to use when writing a Letter to the Editor for the NYT, NPR, or CNN. You can copy and paste from the talking points provided, and modify them in your own voice.

To provide your feedback to CNN or NPR, you’ll go to their websites. At the CNN webpage choose “Editorial Feedback” and then “General Political Feedback”. The NYT can be emailed directly.

The TPNW is the best tool that we have to pave a clear pathway to the elimination of nuclear weapons. Now is the time to make our voices heard! After you have submitted your messages to any or all 3 outlets, please fill out the form on the right hand side of the webpage so the NBTC can keep track of how many messages have been sent.

Thank you for helping WILPF make a strong showing in this national campaign!

 

Delayed” Poor People’s Campaign Watch Party!

For all those that cannot be in DC in person on Saturday, June 18th for the Poor People’s Campaign rally, we will offer a virtual group viewing of the recorded event.

Together we will watch the recording of the rally after it has ended, stopping to discuss the content of particular parts of the program. Participants will also be able to interact in the chat.

This WILPF Zoom event will start on Saturday June 18th at noon PDT (1 pm MDT, 2 pm CDT, 3 pm EDT).

Follow this link to register.

 

International Day of Action for Peace in Ukraine: June 25

It’s up to us to push for an end to the war in Ukraine!

So— this is the call to you! Working with your branch or with other peace allies in your community, please organize now for educational activities to take place on June 25 in your community

We’re all aware of the terrible toll in deaths, displacement of people, worsening of the global hunger crisis. Destruction is augmented by environmental toxins as well as the huge carbon footprint of the war, and the worsening climate crisis. If not ended through diplomatic means, the war could continue for years. Already, the fighting in the Donbas has continued since 2014. The U.S. government seems to be more interested in weakening Russia than in ending the devastating consequences of the war, including the loss of life in Ukraine.

Recommended approaches include writing letters to the editor of newspapers and flyering in local, well-trafficked places. You can print and distribute this helpful flyer from Nation Builder. They also have an informative FAQ resource you can print and hand out.

Also, consider holding informative rallies and vigils—especially at Congressional offices from June 21-30. Plan now for meetings with members of Congress, where you can emphasize the benefits of diplomacy and the costs of the continued war (again, see the FAQ for key points).

If you want to collect hard-copy signatures, you can print this petition from CODEPINK.

WILPF is part of a coalition that includes local, national and international groups across four continents. Plan now to be part of this unified response by peace-loving people around the world: Say No to War in Ukraine and Yes to Negotiations and Peace!

Please see this website for further information and post the details of your event on it.

 

June is the time to influence your Congressional Reps to vote AGAINST the NDAA

Every year the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) is debated in the House and Senate Armed Services Sub-Committees, and the language of their amendments to the President’s budget sets military policy and the maximum dollar amounts that can be spent on a multitude of “defense” projects.

Between June 6th and mid-July is when the 2023 NDAA is being developed, so now is the time to write to your Representative and Senators to tell them the NDAA budget is much too large, and you want them to vote against the NDAA and substantially cut military spending.

Please click here to read more and to see sample sentences that you can use to help you craft your letters. You can also read a new analysis and background statement on the Ukraine crisis here.

 

Register Today for the International Congress

Making Connections: Environment, Social Justice and Demilitarisation for Feminist Peace

A week of collective decision-making and discussion for a future of feminist peace

Learn more about the International Congress, register and pay for your ticket here (at the bottom of the page).

WHEN? July, 16 - 24 2022 This year’s agenda consists of formal decision-making meetings on the weekends (July 16-17 and July 23- 24), and workshops, networking, and debate sessions during weekdays (July 18-22).

WHERE? Online via Canapii There will be a special orientation to Canapii for early registrants in June, and more throughout the month. There will be a quick video tour of the Canapii platform given by our Congress Event Coordinator, Valerie. Congress delegates will also be invited to attend a number of orientation sessions in June.

Interested in attending Congress? Then secure your ticket now!  Registration is $15, or more to support other WILPFers’ attendance.

 

Jennifer Bailey Returns as Program Chair

At the June Program Committee meeting, organized by the Disarm Issue Committee, the committee welcomed back returning Program Chair Jennifer Bailey after a five-month break. With the new chair now in place, the Program Committee is likely to be changing its meeting schedule. For those WILPF members who are not yet Program Committee members and who might want to participate in future evening meetings as observers, please inquire with Jennifer Bailey by emailing her at ProgramChair@wilpfus.org. Please use the same email address to contact Jennifer Bailey about any other Program Committee matters.

 

The Themes of Our Times: Suggest Yours

Ending the Before/After Meetings, Possibly Moving to a Monthly Half-Hour

How do we cope with the daily horrors from our news updates?

Perhaps, like me, you’d welcome a chance for some empathy, a chance to take time to recall positive and successful responses to shock. The traumatic news today is stressful, and we can be mutually encouraging through sharing positive communications!

I’ve wrapped up the Before and After meetings, which had been before and after the monthly Program Committee meetings. It’s likely that the Program meetings will shift away from occurring monthly, so I’m considering a new way to talk and connect with WILPF members.

Would you like to suggest or comment on a theme for one of these possible monthly half-hour conversations? What do you think of this new approach?

If you’d like to suggest themes for these conversations, please email me.

Or, just to let me know you’re interested in such a monthly event, please contact me to say so.

Darien De Lu, President@wilpfus.org

 

 

Post date: Tue, 06/14/2022 - 07:22

Photo credit: Poor People’s Campaign Social Media Toolkit

By Emily Keel
Liaison to the PPC

The Poor People's Campaign rally will be held in Washington DC on Saturday, June 18.

WILPF has offered unwavering support of the campaign's values and we must continue to be a part of the work. As Dr. King said in 1968, it is “dangerous to be asleep in a revolution with everything going on around you. It may be that we spend too much of our national budget establishing military bases around the world, and too little on bases of genuine concern and understanding”. 

We are called to continue to show our genuine concern and understanding by responding to requests for actions including making phone calls, sending emails and texts, contributing money and showing up for actions that support the platform of the PPC: a moral revolution of values to repair the breach in society; the principle of everybody in and nobody out, since all deserve the nation's abundance; the notion that when you lift from the bottom, everybody rises; prioritizing the leadership of those most impacted.

Each of us in WILPF can be proud of the support that we offer as a partnering organization, both with our physical presence in DC and by viewing the event online. 

The PPC rally is quite early for West Coast time. Those in the Pacific Time zone, and others who aren’t up early on a Saturday or otherwise can’t see the PPC rally in real time can still participate in a shared group viewing experience of the recording. Join our special “Delayed” PPC Watch Party!

Together we will watch the recording of the rally after it has ended, stopping to discuss the content of particular parts of the program. Participants will also be able to interact in the chat. 

This WILPF Zoom event will start on Saturday June 18th at noon PDT (1 pm MDT, 2 pm CDT, 3 pm EDT) 

Together, we have a vast power that when organized and put into action again and again will cause a shift in our nation's priorities, for as long as we are able to vote. Our next significant contribution, in solidarity, will be getting out the vote in a non-partisan way, focusing on minority populations and less frequent voters. We will be led by our own committee in those important actions.

It may be hard to maintain hope that what we are doing is making a difference. But hope is an essential anti-authoritarian strategy. We must continue to believe that our actions can influence the outcome, especially as we stand shoulder to shoulder in support of each other. 

I appreciate each and every one of you who helped to encourage branch members and others to attend, and those who sustained our PPC committee with your attendance and thoughtful suggestions. It was a team effort and we succeeded in mobilizing our organization both in-person and remotely. 

Let's continue the long and hard task of protecting each other, lifting each other, working for justice and for the peace and security of all people. May it be so.
 


To register in advance for the WILPF PPC watch party use this link.

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

You may contact me at ppc-comm@wilpfus.org

 

Post date: Tue, 06/14/2022 - 07:01

By Helen Jaccard
Jane Addams Branch
photos by Gerry Condon

In 1958, four Quakers sailed Golden Rule from California towards the Marshall Islands in an effort to interfere with nuclear weapons tests. Revitalizing their project, Veterans For Peace led a rebuild of the Golden Rule from 2010-15, and has since been sailing up and down the West Coast, to Hawai’i and back. We have held hundreds of events to educate people about nuclear issues, and what individuals can do to prevent nuclear war.

San Diego

In January and February, we visited San Diego.  Thanks to the San Diego VFP chapter, we had a COVID-safe indoor event, online and outdoor presentations, and we took dozens of people sailing!

We commemorated the first anniversary of the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons’ entry into force, and scattered the ashes of our long-time skipper, Wil Van Natta.

Deported Veterans

Captain Chris Appleton sailed Golden Rule to San Diego and Ensenada. He remarked, “Previous to this, I was, like most Americans, completely ignorant of this largely forgotten and conveniently overlooked group of outrageously wronged veterans. We spent three days in Ensenada meeting and sharing meals with them after going on day sails in Ensenada Bay.

Heroically, these vets have remained organized to help and keep track of each other, and to agitate from afar for the US government and President Biden to make good on their promises to make an effort to repatriate these veterans.”

For Captain Chris Appleton’s complete report, see the Golden Rule News, Spring 2022 at  tinyurl.com/GRNewsSpring22

“Golden Rule: A Journey For Peace”

The trailer for the new documentary "Golden Rule: The Journey for Peace" is out! This film tells the story of the historic Veterans For Peace sailboat, its mission to stop nuclear weapons, and the sail back from Hawai'i to California.  We are really looking forward to seeing the entire documentary—SOON!

Thanks to crew member and filmmaker Nolan Anderson and his production team.

Great Loop

From September 2022 through December 2023 the Golden Rule will sail around the Eastern United States, a route called the “Great Loop”, on a mission to educate the rest of the country about how they can help stop the possibility of nuclear war.

Schedule: bit.ly/GRStops 
Map: bit.ly/GRGLMap

For further information, including about volunteering or crewing, send an email to Helen Jaccard at vfpgoldenruleproject@gmail.com.

 

Post date: Tue, 06/14/2022 - 06:46

By Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas

June 2022

Every year the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) is debated in the House and Senate Armed Services Sub-Committees, and the language of their amendments to the budget the President sent them sets military policy and the maximum dollar amounts that can be spent on a multitude of “defense” projects.

The 2023 NDAA is being developed between June 6th and mid-July, so now is the time to write to your Representative and Senators to tell them the NDAA budget is much too large, and you want them to vote against the NDAA and substantially cut military spending.

This chart shows the Federal budget- setting process. (Photo credit: Cherrill Spencer has added to a National Priorities Project chart.)

Please contact your members of Congress RIGHT AWAY about the NDAA

The total discretionary spending in the President’s federal budget request for the 2023 fiscal year is $1.6 trillion, of which $813 billion is assigned to defense costs and $787 billion is assigned to all other non-defense spending.  This outrageous budget request once again prioritizes violence, the military and war over peace and human needs. But more spending on militarism can’t address the nation’s or the world’s problems.

We are asking our WILPF members to write to their Congressional Representative and Senators to press for reductions in defense spending during the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) discussions, and to vote against the NDAA when it comes to the full House and Senate’s vote.  Please write before June 30th for the most effect.

Here are some sample sentences you can choose from to put in your letter:

  • As your constituent, I’m reaching out to ask that you vote NO on the outrageous $813 billion National Defense Authorization Act and commit to fully funding healthcare, education, and green jobs!
  • The NDAA prioritizes military force over diplomacy by funding $15 for the military for every $1 for diplomacy and non-military aid. It will be diplomacy that ends the terrible Russia-Ukraine war, not more and more weapons being given to Ukraine.
  • The Pentagon emits more greenhouse gas pollution than up to 140 nations. We cannot address a problem like climate change, which requires global cooperation, by continuing to fund destructive U.S. militarism at the expense of people and the planet. Please help lift the carbon BOOTPRINT of the US armed services off our necks!
  • We should be reducing our reliance on nuclear weapons, not spending money to refurbish Cold War relics such as the B83 nuclear bomb.
  • Instead of spending $7.5B on our military bases in Germany I’d rather $3.5B be allocated to Medicare hearing benefits.
  • A lot more people would benefit from $10B spent on a better immigration system than the $12B more to be wasted on the unreliable F35 airplane.
  • Now is the time to listen to the needs of your constituents, not military contractors and corporate donors who make a killing on killing.

Thank you for contacting your Representative and Senators about the NDAA by email, a letter, or phone call to their local and national offices.  Please send a copy of your letters, and any replies, to disarmchair@wilpfus.org.

Background Statement on the Russia-Ukraine (USA) War

Back on March 1st, WILPF US issued a public statement on the invasion of Ukraine by Russia which is posted on our website. Members of the DISARM /End War Committee have also written, for WILPFers’ and the public’s reflection, an up to date background informational statement and analysis with regard to “the Ukraine crisis” between the Russian Federation (“Russia”) and the United States of America (“USA”).  You can find the link to that background statement following the March 1 statement — near the bottom of this webpage.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 06/14/2022 - 06:04

Palo Alto Rally Group outside the Post Office. Photo credit: Lotus Yee Fong

By Judy Adams and Cherrill Spencer
Peninsula Branch

June 2022

In support of the call from WILPF to re-engage our community on the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), on June 7th our branch sponsored a small rally, on short notice, outside our Palo Alto CA main post office. We invited community members, local press, and city council members of three local cities—two of whom we recruited into our group Mayors for Peace, and one into the group Back from the Brink. As it was the last day for Californians to turn in their Primary Election ballots, we had good exposure for our small but energized group, as people came and went by us delivering their mail-in ballots. 
     
Rallying for the TPNW were four branch members: our local “peace dancer” Sharat Lin in his distinctive, signature butterfly wings (representing the global migratory flight of peace actions); representatives of the local Pacific Life Community/Catholic Worker; a member from the local Multifaith Voices for Peace and Justice group; a seasoned peace activist and his 93-year-old mother; and a Japanese woman who held our “No More Hiroshima’s/Nagasaki’s” sign.  

As the photos show, we displayed several of our WILPF TPNW petition signs with a large QR Code, along with several signs from our regular Friday noon vigils. We distributed various brochures on our table. Framing our small group were our two WILPF banners, “End the Nuclear Era” and “Peace and Planet Before Profit.”

An intern for a local paper published this article on our rally, with a photo. We also have a short video of three of our members, Lotus Yee Fong, Judy Adams, and Cherrill Spencer reading the text of the following statement, provided for us by WILPF: 

Statement on the Existential Threat of Nuclear Weapons and on the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons
 
The power to initiate a global apocalypse lies in the hands of the leaders of nine nations.
As 122 nations of the world indicated when they adopted the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in July, 2017, this is unacceptable.
     
As concerns about the threat of nuclear weapons re-enter the public consciousness, it is important to know that humankind is not without an answer to the nuclear threat. The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, which entered into force on January 22, 2021, provides a clear pathway to the elimination of the nuclear threat.
 
We call on all nuclear armed states to take immediate steps to:
            • engage the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons,
            • attend the First Meeting of States Parties, and
            • sign, ratify and implement the Treaty.

We also call on the US media to recognize the existence of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and to include the Treaty in discussions, articles, and editorials regarding the nuclear threat and methods available to address it.             
 
We congratulate other branches who took action on June 7, and we will dedicate our branch to continuing to support the TPNW. 

Photos by Becky Fischbach and Lotus Yee Fong

Pages