NEWS

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 08:07

Jim and Tomi Allison at an Inaugurate the Revolution event in January 2017. Photo credit: Limestone Post

by Marybeth Gardam
Chair, W$D Committee

January 2023

Shortly before Jim Allison’s 90th Birthday on December 23, 2022, he agreed to an interview over Zoom with Marybeth Gardam, Chair of the Women, Money & Democracy Committee (formerly Corporations v Democracy Committee). Read on to learn more about Jim’s important pro-democracy contributions. Watch the video of the interview herePasscode: @mB2PUip

At 90, Jim Allison has had a life well lived alongside the woman he loves and admires as his “most respected” person. He’s owned and flown his own planes and a glider, owned several motorcycles and driven them to the coasts. He’s raised children, enjoyed a very successful academic career, and in a second chapter, has become a successful pro-democracy researcher, writer, playwright, and activist.

In honor of his birthday on December 23, and on behalf of our membership, WILPF President Darien De Lu signed a Proclamation proclaiming January 21st, the infamous day of the 2010 Supreme Court’s catastrophic Citizens United decision, as Jim Allison Day in WILPF and requests every member and branch honor Jim’s activism and enduring contributions by taking action: staging protests, lobbying your elected representatives, using any of Jim’s pro-democracy plays to educate and inform, and taking any other effective actions to promote democracy and demand the rights of human persons be sovereign over those of “corporate persons.”    

Jim Allison and his wife Tomi are familiar to longtime WILPF members who recall the deep involvement they had in updating and promoting the WILPF Corporate Study course during the early 2000s. He’s also well known as a researcher, writer and playwright, having penned around a dozen plays that use humor and wit to educate about the lies and corruption corporate robber barons have used from the 1880s through the present to steal the constitutional rights intended for human persons and transfer them to the legal fiction called “corporate persons.” Many of Jim’s plays, and the Corporate Study course, can be found on the Women, Money & Democracy committee webpage.

Jim and Tomi are a brilliant team whose political and economic research, writing and activism have united them. They are a ‘power couple’ in the best sense of the words, and also they are delightful company. I learned a lot about Jim I didn’t know, and I bet you didn’t either.   

Professor and ‘Accidental Mayor’: Jim and Tomi’s Careers

Born to young parents, Jim was raised on a farm in Fresno, California by his grandparents and was an excellent student. He attended university at UC Berkeley studying Psychology. During that time the Korean War was going on and Jim knew he probably would be drafted. After graduation he enlisted and was sent to Fort Ord in Monterey, CA, for basic training and clerk typist school, then sent to Heidelberg, Germany, to work in Medical Division-Headquarters, US Army Europe. When he returned to Fresno, Jim took a job in the Juvenile Probation office, where he met his future wife Tomi. She was working with the juvenile girls while Jim worked with the boys. Shortly after they married Jim moved them to Claremont Graduate School, where he earned an M.A., then to the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor for his PhD. At Indiana University, as a professor of experimental psychology, he did significant work on reinforcement theory that led to his development of behavioral economics and to a novel non-punitive therapy for the treatment of OCD patients.

While at Ann Arbor, Jim and Tomi began reading the weekly newsletter of independent progressive journalist I.F. Stone, who was reporting on the facts behind the war in Vietnam.  “Ann Arbor was where the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) started, but we weren’t part of that. Still, Ann Arbor was really the start of our radicalization.” Tomi smiles. “Our eyes were opened to the facts that were not being reported by mainstream media, and how important it is to look deeper at original sources.” Those were busy years with the arrival of children and Jim’s academic career demanding much of their time. In 1963, when they moved to Bloomington, Indiana, Tomi got involved with Bloomington WILPF’s Vietnam War protests, then she entered local politics. She served first on the City Council then was catapulted into the position of Mayor of Bloomington. (You can read about her Mayoralty in her delightful autobiography “The Accidental Mayor”). Jim’s unwavering support of his wife’s political career, and her support of his academic and writing career, are nothing short of inspirational.

After Tomi’s mayoral term ended, she returned to WILPF and, at a cocktail party to support Howard Dean in 2004, a WILPF member told the Allisons about the WILPF Corporate Study Course, “Challenge Corporate Power: Assert The People’s Rights.” They were intrigued and then hooked after they attended the WILPF Triennial Congress in San Francisco and met some of the course authors: Virginia Rasmussen, Jan Edwards, Molly Morgan, and Mary Zepernick. They returned to Bloomington determined to use the course to inform and organize the public about the threat to democracy that unchecked corporate power presents. Another significant teaching tool was Jan Edwards’ Timeline of Corporate Constitutional Rights, a cogent graphic history of how corporations stole rights intended for human persons and used them against people and planet. For the next several years the Allisons were immersed in not only facilitating the course, but eventually in updating it.

Translating the WILPF Corporate Study Course into a Podcast

The course is still a useful tool. I asked why they thought it had fallen into disuse. “Young people absolutely need to learn about how an unequal balance of power affects their future,” Tomi insisted. Both Jim and Tomi agreed that WILPF members became bored with facilitating the course, long before their communities had fully absorbed its lessons. “We WILPFers are constantly wanting to know the next big thing,” Tomi explained, “always curious about what we’re missing.” But they both agreed that consistently reaching out to newer, younger activists is essential. “Young people have everything to gain by the kind of small group organizing and fact-finding that course offers,” Tomi said. “We have to get them ready to dig in and find the facts themselves, not be so ready to accept what the media (and others) tell them is the truth about this rigged system.”

That’s why they enthusiastically endorse translating the Study Course into a Podcast being prepared by the W$D Committee for launch sometime in 2023. The working title of the Podcast is “POWER GRAB” and will offer a format that is more accessible to younger activists who like to absorb information this way. The flashpoint for each episode of the podcast will be a current issue related to the oppression of young people, people of color, and the poor, then it will quickly pivot to document the history behind the issue at hand as well as emerging solutions and ways to organize against corporate power. This new resource aims to incorporate a parallel timeline to the Timeline of Corporate Constitutional Rights, demonstrating how racism has fueled a ruthless capitalism. The project is partially funded by a mini grant from WILPF US and another from WILPF International, but much more funding is needed.

Jim’s keen sense of justice, his need to uncover the facts and to do so by consulting original sources and source materials and rooting for underdog, has defined his work for WILPF.  His most recent work is an excellent Podcast with the Bloomington League of Women Voters. This podcast has recently been picked up statewide. You can listen to it here.

“The pendulum is shifting back towards a more progressive era,” Jim said. “We’re encouraged that Biden has begun to enforce the anti-trust laws that have been on the books since the 1900s.” But Tomi added, “What is needed is a powerful youthful movement to push him further. Those systemic injustices will affect the lives of the young for decades to come and must be reversed.” I asked Jim what one thing he would change if he could. Without hesitation he answered, “The Supreme Court…I’d end lifetime terms. Those were set at a time when lifetimes were usually no more than 50 or 60 years. And I’d set more oversight. Right now the only very weak oversight is the House of Representatives which holds the ‘power of the purse.’ The Supreme Court is an expensive operation to fund.”

It’s been an honor to work with Jim and Tomi over the years, and a lot of fun too. They know the importance of the personal touch in organizing and networking. They’ve accomplished so much, with hopefully much more on the horizon. For me, the most valuable part of what Jim and Tomi have taught me is that, despite appearances and deliberate efforts to quash such enthusiasm, the persistent and careful work of a single person, especially when united with other like-minded activists, can accomplish a great deal. The fact that we haven’t yet fully transformed an oppressive and ruthless economic system should not slow down our efforts.

Recommended Reading

Jim and Tomi Allison currently recommend the book EVIL GENIUSES: The Unmaking of America by Kurt Anderson.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 08:02

2017 Chicago Congress Leadership Institute participants and presenters.

By Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

January 2023

About three years ago, as WILPF President, I was working with the national Congress Committee, looking for appropriate venues for our 2020 Congress. Then the COVID pandemic began, and our planning was upended! Fortunately, after a one-year delay of the Congress, Congress Coordinator Mary Hanson Harrison organized our first-ever virtual WILPF Congress, with almost ten days of amazing programming!

Yet a virtual Congress just isn’t the same as an in-person one. Now – with masks, tests, and boosters as needed – WILPF US is looking at planning the 2024 Congress as an in-person event. Possibly we can offer some sessions as hybrid virtual and in-person. The complex machinery of putting on a WILPF Congress has multiple “moving parts,” and here I’m going to lay out the basic planning components and steps.

Our WILPF Congresses are major undertakings that are largely dependent on volunteer efforts by WILPF members and branches. What about you and/or your branch? Are you ready to step up – and to benefit from the excitement, energy, and the nationwide WILPF connections that such involvement can offer?

Right now WILPF is beginning the search for the 2024 Congress venue. The ideal location has a supportive branch and good transit connections (especially – even in these times when we’re increasingly aware of the climate costs of flying – air connections, which are necessary for many participants going to a national Congress). We’ll see how close we can come to that ideal. Are you or your branch interested in receiving more information?

Whether or not your branch is interested – and even if you’re not in a branch – Congress planning can connect you with other WILPFers in satisfying and necessary work. The official planning usually starts with the appointment of the Congress Committee. That committee will solicit members and branches to invite us to their city as a Congress site. In cooperation with interested branches, they do the initial research on venue pros and cons. Then – based on these invitations from branches, venue possibilities, and other locally available advantages, and other factors and considerations – the Congress Committee members make a site recommendation to the Board.

Once a site is chosen, the Site Committee – usually about 8-12 folks from the site vicinity – will form and take over the planning work for the local on-the-ground logistics. (I was on the 2005 San Francisco Site Committee, along with others who were within about a 200-mile radius of SF. I believe we all enjoyed those site meetings, and the planning we did helped connect a number of local branches. Members from a wide area all contributed to the success of the 2005 Congress. It was a wonderful opportunity to work with and get to know many dedicated WILPFers.)

The Congress Committee may continue as an advisor for all planning. Also – usually after the site is chosen and the site committee work is underway – the President consults with the Steering Committee to appoint the Congress Program Committee. (The Congress Program Committee is separate from the Site Committee. but – obviously – stays in close contact to confirm the kinds of facilities needed, the available time slots, and local cultural talent.)

For all of these committees, some prior Congress experience is helpful. But, since there will certainly be experienced folks on each one, that is by no means required. For now, a few folks have stepped up to bring together a sort of pre-committee. This pre-committee has started with several interested members, yet down the line, there will be a formal member-appointment process for the Congress Committee – which could include you. Are you interested?  You can contact me at President@wilpfUS.org for more information.

The Board will work with these committees to determine how to get member input in planning the Congress.  An anonymous wise woman from a decades-back site committee gave important feedback calling for the Congress program to be posted on the website as soon as possible with clear information (workshops and leaders, maps and directions, etc.), for officers and board members to be introduced in the first plenary, and for members to be invited to participate rather than having long letters read to them on opening night. In other words, WILPFers want to attend, get information, participate, and know about their options

We always have amazing and memorable Congress experiences. And there are sometimes great ideas that don’t work out! What ideas might you want to try? Contact me for more information: President@wilpfUS.org.

I’m glad to see people looking forward to the 2024 Congress – as well as to the “pre-Congress-year Gathering” to take place in 2023. That gathering – a much simpler affair than a Congress, with a likely focus on our connections as activists – will be a good foundation for 2024. (See more info in the announcement part of this eNews.) As a virtual event, it will be a chance for WILPFers across the country to get to know others and reconnect. 

In WILPF, it’s making the connections that makes us a stronger organization!

 

 

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 07:45

This image was provided by the Nuclear Ban Treaty Collaborative of which WILPF US is a member.

by  Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas
Co-chairs, DISARM Committee

January 2023

It feels like we don’t have much to celebrate lately so the DISARM Committee invites all WILPFers to get out on their favorite demonstration corner or outside their most despised weapons manufacturer sometime between the 20th and 22nd of January 2023 to celebrate the second anniversary of the Entry Into Force (EIF) of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). Nineteen WILPF branches and members-at-large took to the streets in January 2021 when the TPNW became international law; let’s see if we can beat that number in 2023!

WILPF US is an active member of the Nuclear Ban Treaty Collaborative, which meets online to plan events and strategize how to raise public awareness of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.  Please visit the website to view previous actions and the banners used in 2021.

On the Resources for Actions page you will find new posters, social media ideas, a video to share and more. When you have organized your action for the second anniversary of the TPNW (January 22, 2023), please enter its details here so it will appear on a world map and draw more people to your action.  Please take photos of your action and send them and a short report to disarmchair@wilpfus.org for the next eNews and to post on the @WILPF SMART Facebook page.

End the Nuclear EraAnother effective way of presenting our messages to the public is lawn signs. We have designed one with our main message in support of the treaty, with a large QR code that can be scanned by a smart phone from a distance.  That QR code links to an online petition to the President and Senators to sign the TPNW.

The design is in a pdf file. You can print this design on a letter sized sheet to hold up to passing people so they can scan the QR code on their smart phones.

Not able to be outside between January 20th to 22nd? Then please write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper a week before; you can download a sample LTE here.

What About Ukraine?

We ask you to do double duty during January because of course the terrible war in Ukraine continues. We are a member of the Peace in Ukraine coalition which is planning for two Weeks of Action from the 13th to 27th of January. We are asking you to hold rallies, protests at your Congressional representatives’ offices, and to table at your local farmers markets; we are calling for

CEASEFIRE Now.
DO NOT RISK NUCLEAR WAR! 
DIPLOMACY to End the War in Ukraine.
$$$ for Climate, Jobs, Healthcare, & Housing
NOT Weapons for Endless War.

Many resources for such actions can be found here. One of the newest flyers answers the question: “Why should Congress stop voting for more weapons?”

When you have organized your event against the war in Ukraine please go to this link and post the details there, or look for events near you that you can join.

Your DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee thanks you for taking part in these vital events. Please write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org  if you have any questions or wish to join our listserv.

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 07:21

Some of the WILPF members and friends who gathered on December 6 to support the Carrboro City Council’s passage of a resolution supporting the TPNW.

By Anne Cassebaum
Triangle Branch

January 2023

Triangle WILPF is working for nuclear disarmament by supporting the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons [TPNW] one local council at a time. The photo above features some of the 11 WILPF members and friends who gathered to support the Carrboro City Council which passed a strong resolution on December 6, 2022, in favor of the TPNW drafted by the International Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons [ICAN] Cities Appeal. Lucy Lewis, center, headed up the effort. This Appeal is certainly one of the roads and a local route toward nuclear disarmament.

The strategy of the Cities Appeal gets the costs and risk of nuclear weapons before councils. Citizens approach state, city, and town councils to support a simple statement urging all nations to ban nuclear weapons. The website, icanw.org, provides resources.

Ideally councils send an official email that they have voted to support the statement, but if they do not wish to bring the matter to an official vote, they can simply sign a letter of support (as Asheville, NC did). Failing a majority vote in support, individuals in legislatures or on town councils can sign the Parliamentarian Pledge in support.

Right now not enough people have acted to call it a groundswell, but the movement is growing and has strong benefits.

It gives us a chance to educate and get media attention on the silent but imminent danger of nuclear weapons…and their costs. The mayors of Green Level, which passed the ICAN resolution, and Durham both expressed surprise at the amount of federal tax dollars that go for nuclear weapons and their maintenance…and not for housing, health, and other needs. National Priorities provides an easy, excellent source for those numbers, broken down town by town.

This effort has also unified local peace and justice groups as Triangle WILPF joins with others in NC to engage one council after another.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 07:20

From left, WILPF women Nouha Ghosseini (Lebanon), Ayo Ayoola-Amale (Ghana), Cindy Piester (United States), and Tamara Lorencz (Canada) call for peace in the COP27 Blue Zone.

by Cindy Piester
WILPF US Delegate to COP 27

January 2023

I was the WILPF US Delegate to the 27th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP27) in Egypt in November 2022.

COP 27 appeared to be a failure in powerful ways, while giving space that did allow for some wins, such as the move to finally begin to address much needed Loss and Damages. Some of the other improvements included the much needed renewed climate negotiations between US Envoy John Kerry and his Chinese counterpart, Xie Zhenhua; the successful efforts that prevented some nations from being able to roll back some of the climate advances seen under the Paris Agreement; the UN announcement of plans to deliver early warning systems against climate disasters for everyone on earth within just five years; and some forward movement to reduce methane emissions.
 
Of the US government officials that spoke at COP, I found former presidential candidate Al Gore’s demand to leave fossil fuels in the ground and to end their subsidies something I hope WILPF US will fully support. He also called for the World Bank President, David Malpas. to step down due to predatory colonialist lending practices that effectively excluded African nations from accessing climate adaption funds.  

I was also able to get WILPF US’ popular handout that Nancy Price and Darien Du Lu helped create in Gore’s hands (the handout is entitled “Addressing Loss & Damages, the Green Fund, and the Climate Impacts of U.S. Military Emissions”). Our strong support for Loss and Damages was clear and the success of this effort is something that WILPF can be very proud of. The handout also addressed the fact that our Department of Defense (DOD) is the largest institutional contributor to GHG emissions in the world while also alerting readers to the need to reform the UNFCCC’s inadequate military emissions reporting protocols.
 
I was also able to raise these issues personally at the US State Department US Delegates meeting held at COP 27. It was chaired by Jessie Young who serves directly under Presidential Climate Envoy John Kerry. I spoke for a few minutes on this, alerting dozens of other US delegates to this significant issue. Further, just ahead of COP and while still in Cairo, I was able to give a short but well received presentation on these and other WILPF concerns to an international conference on Africa organized by the International Peace Research Institute that was being held in Juba, South Sudan.
  
Given that the existential horror of the climate crisis is already here, already killing hundreds of people at a time from climate caused events like the flooding in Pakistan, it is unbelievable that fossil fuel interests prevailed as the dominant force at COP 27, but prevail they did. During the final hour, some eighty nations, including the US, the UK, and the European Union, attempted to add language to the COP’s final report that would finally call for phasing out fossil fuels. However, the Egyptian President of COP refused to move the protocols necessary into place to allow this to go forward. He said many other nations objected and that the war in the Ukraine also played a role in that decision.

In the year ahead, WILPF’s advocacy to reduce the DOD budget and the economic and environmental impacts of US militarism, as well focusing on ending fossil fuel subsides, are essential to future success. I will cover all of this in greater detail in future offerings.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 07:15

by Eileen Kurkoski
Chair of the Anti-Killer Drones Group, DISARM Committee

January 2023

Artificial intelligence is developing quickly and impacting many aspects of our lives. Militaries are using it in weaponry, including nuclear weapons, to grow and maintain power, even if it jeopardizes our very existence.

It is necessary for all humankind to speak up for peaceful ways to deal with differences and conflicts. Because of the development of nuclear weapons the world has come close to destroying itself many times. We have been lucky to have wise people making decisions at key times….like the man in this story adapted from Army of None by Paul Scharre:

Lieutenant Colonel Stanislav Petrov was on bunker duty outside Moscow on September 26, 1983. His job was to report a missile launch up the chain of command to his superiors. When sirens blared and the screen flashed “launch”, warning him of a detected missile, Petrov was uncertain because this was a new system and the new satellite’s early warning system might be in error, despite its high confidence ratings. He waited.

Another launch. Two missiles were inbound. Then another— five altogether.

Petrov had a funny feeling and reasoned, why would the United States launch only five missiles when a surprise attack would more likely be massive, to wipe out all Soviet ground missiles? He put the odds of this being a real strike at 50/50. He needed more information.

He called the radar operators to see if they saw anything. They didn’t.

If he told his superiors to fire nuclear missiles, millions would die and it would start WWIII.

Petrov went with his gut and called his superiors to inform them the system was malfunctioning. He was right; there was no attack.1

If a machine took Petrov’s place, it would have done whatever it was programmed to do, without ever understanding the consequences of its actions.

This story tells of a risk of artificial intelligence, of machine autonomy, that can kill millions of people. It warns us not to totally depend on machines, even if safeguards are put in place.

Efforts of millions of people, and billions of dollars, are going into the fast development of artificial intelligence. It is a complex issue with benefits and drawbacks, and serious consequences. (See my article, “Technology – the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly” on pp. 4-6 in the Spring/Summer 2022 issue of Peace & Freedom).

The brilliant cosmologist, Stephen Hawking, warned that the “development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race.” Artificial intelligence could “take off on its own and re-design itself at an ever-increasing rate.” Hawking concluded, “Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldn’t compete, and would be superseded.”2

Do we want to find out if he is correct?   

What Can We Do about AI?

What can we do about artificial intelligence (AI)? We can educate ourselves and others by sending messages about AI to all the social media sites we can find. We can write newsletters and send messages and talk with our legislators letting them know we have grave concerns about the development of full artificial intelligence, especially in the development of lethal weapons. In all our communications, we can stress that a human being must be kept in the loop when humans are targeted.

Another important message to include is demanding the U.S. spend lots more effort and lots more money on NEGOTIATIONS, MAKING TREATIES, and other NONVIOLENT RESOLUTIONS to conflicts. The U.S. may have to defend itself from AI attacks (hopefully the U.S. will not attack or provoke attacks with its AI), but we humans can improve our chances of surviving by ALWAYS pressing for PEACEFUL negotiations and PREVENTING conflicts.

To learn more about AI, consider reading Paul Sharre’s comprehensive book Army of None, listed in the footnotes, and spend time reading this site.

Contact Eileen if you want to get more involved with the anti-killer drone and autonomous lethal weapons committee: eileen4wilpf@gmail.com. Your support is needed and appreciated!

Footnotes

1. Adapted from “The Man Who Saved the World” in Paul Sharre, Army of None: Autonomous Weapons and the Future of War (W.W. Norton & Company, 2018), pp. 1-2.

2. Sharre, Army of None, p. 232.

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 07:05

Tallahassee, Florida / February 21, 2018. A huge crowd participated at a “Never Again” rally to protest and change gun laws after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Photo credit: KMH PHOTOVIDEO, Shutterstock.com.

By Virginia Pratt, LICSW
WILPF Boston Branch

January 2023

According to the National Gun Violence Archive’s annual statistics, there were 638 mass shootings in 2022 as of December 26. That is almost 2 mass shootings a day. According to this source, we have had 43,559 people killed in America by gun violence with an additional 37,875 people injured. The impact of gun violence disproportionately affects young people, particularly young men of color. Guns are also commonly used for suicide. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) over 20,000 youth age 15–19 died by suicide. Homicide and Suicide combined account for more than half of the deaths of young people by guns. Tragically, these are preventable deaths.

Our national laws aren’t doing enough to stop the violence. The US is distinguished by its horrendous level of gun violence. Australia, Canada, England, and New Zealand have had tragic mass shootings, but instead of stopping with thoughts and prayers, they made significant policy changes to prevent future mass shootings. England banned the purchase of semiautomatic weapons within a year after the Dunblane Primary School shooting in 1996 where one teacher and 16 students were killed and another 15 students were wounded. To date, that has been England’s worst mass shooting. Australia had a gun buyback program that collected over one million guns that were later melted down. In Canada, Prime Minister Trudeau strengthened background checks. Over 1,500 models of assault weapons are banned in Canada. Germany has strong licensing requirements for gun ownership and regulates ammunition as well as gun ownership. New Zealand restricts machine guns, assault rifles, and military style semi-automatic rifles.

Nationally, repeal of the “Protection of Lawful Commerce for Firearms Manufactures” would remove protection from liability for gun manufacturers. Gun manufacturers make massive profits and need to be held accountable. Gun Violence costs America $229 Billion annually, more than $700 per person. Costs include response from first providers, legal proceedings, medical treatment, and long-term care. Hidden costs like the lifetime effects of trauma on the victims and their families and friends cannot be calculated. Nor can we calculate the negative effects and poor quality of life for people in this country who do not feel safe in their schools, churches, mosques, temples, supermarkets, movie theaters, nightclubs, parks, or neighborhoods.

Citizens in Falmouth, MA, successfully developed a petition to prevent the resale of AR-15s by their police department. Up until this time, police in Falmouth have been able to sell confiscated weapons back to gun dealers which keeps them in circulation. The petition would specifically prevent assault weapons from re-entering the open market. Instead, the weapons would be destroyed. Surely other towns could pass similar regulations.

Contrary to the popular saying, more guns do not make us safer. Evidence proves that more guns result in more shootings. In this country, there are more guns than there are people, more than one gun per person. This is why we have many more deaths and injuries from firearms than other countries. In states with more guns, there are more completed suicides, and more deaths and injuries in domestic violence. And, as we know, there are more mass shootings when guns, especially high-powered guns, are easily available. Sadly, gun-related deaths have overtaken car accidents as the leading cause of death in children and adolescents aged 1-19 in the US since 2020.

We need to question a culture that puts more value on a personal right to bear arms than on a personal right to feel safe. We should ask a basic question: What are guns for? Guns are made to intimidate, shoot, injure, and kill. Why do we tolerate easy access to guns? If we can have public health regulations restricting the sale of alcohol and cigarettes to minors and that bans smoking in public spaces, we can regulate the purchase of guns and ammunition.

It has been over 20 years since the Columbine school shooting that shocked people all over the world. How many more school shootings do we need before we take needed action? In Michael Moore’s 2002 documentary film about the Columbine shooting, comedian Eddie Murphy jokingly proposed a terrific solution. What if the cost of a single bullet went up to $500 – with inflation let’s say $2,000 per bullet. It would become too expensive to shoot people.

Let’s show real respect for human life by advocating for and passing stricter laws to reduce access to guns, especially semi-automatics. We all deserve a right to personal safety, especially our children.
 

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 07:02

Angel Vasquez and Patricia Wells in a play available on YouTube that was co-written by Agustin Lira and WILPF Fresno member Patricia Wells. 

By Patricia Wells
Fresno Branch

January 2023

WILPF Fresno has recently completed a video about Covid-19 and farmworkers and is in the process of distributing it. The branch hopes the video will be shared by WILPF members with their local Spanish-speaking community organizations and individuals. The video is in Spanish with English subtitles and is available on YouTube.

“Covid-19, A Play” was written by Agustin Lira and Patricia Wells during the height of the pandemic in 2020. As the virus swept through cities and states, it hit farmworkers and workers in food processing industries especially hard, causing significant fatalities in the Central Valley of California and throughout the country. Deemed “essential,” these workers by law had to keep working, and as the pandemic raged on, they were the ones who kept the country alive and fed though they were given no protections whatsoever. This play was created so that their sacrifices will not be forgotten. 

This is not a medical study; it is a dramatic story of a small farmworker family living in the outskirts of town, unaware of the present danger which will send them in a life and death struggle for survival, greatly affecting their lives. This play shows workers who to contact, where to go and what to do to protect themselves and their families against the ravages of Covid- 19. Given the continued lack of protections and support for these workers, they have experienced higher rates of serious illness and death from the virus.

Please view and share the video "Covid-19, a Play" with your own local communities.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 06:58

By Ellen Mass
Boston Branch

January 2023

The Boston chapter of WILPF US started a Saturday morning letter writing group in September 2020 because of memories from the letter writing group of Yvonne Pappenheim here in Boston who would insist on bringing senior WILPF women together at her home where she prepared unusual desserts for each of the 6 to 8 of us in the 1990s. All the letters were handwritten then and responses back from elected officials were read at each session, as well as our outgoing letters. Yvonne had the stamps and envelopes right there, and personable sisterhood always brought satisfaction. 

While the present Boston chapter letter writings are virtual (only one writer does them longhand), some of the same process takes place in regards to discussion of issues, writing time, and critique of the letters and who to send them to.  We've written about 75 letters over the past 28 months which cover disarmament, domestic and gun violence, war developments, women's rights, legislative disputes and grassroots initiatives, especially from WILPF. We join other group initiatives such as Massachusetts Peace Action.

We are fortunate to live in a state with progressive legislators such as Ayanna Pressley, Elizabeth Warren, Ed Markey, and Jim McGovern, and on occasion Rep. Katherine Clark. We sometimes thank them for their stand and their introduction of progressive bills and resolutions such as Rep. McGovern's support of Cuba. Recently, one of our members received a promising letter in response to US destruction in Yemen from Senator Edward Markey stating his determination “to continue to monitor this issue and advocate for the United States to pursue policies of peace.”

Letter writing is a highly satisfying pursuit because of how much relief it gives one to directly address the decision-maker in our own words, whether we write a short one-paragraph letter or a longer one that will likely be read by congressional staff. We educate ourselves and find validation in our pain or hopes and dreams. Our letters will also be sent to the WILPF Committees that are familiar with and keep abreast of the different topics we are writing about.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 06:54

Peter Morgan of Maine Veterans for Peace and Jacqui Deveneau of Maine WILPF hold new “Diplomacy” banners at a winter solstice event in Portland, Maine.

By Martha Spiess and Christine DeTroy
Maine Branch

January 2023

Concerned Maine WILPFers have been actively supporting the call for a Christmas Truce. The war in Ukraine has increased the threat of nuclear war, caused the Pentagon budget to skyrocket, and is exacerbating the climate crisis.

Extending into the new year, we will be on street corners, over bridges, and along the roadside with our new “Diplomacy” banners as a way to pressure our members of Congress and our neighbors to advocate for much more political space and resources for diplomacy!

We are committed to carry this message onto our Twitter and Facebook social media accounts, a message that segues into the upcoming recognition of TPNW’s entry into force on January 22, 2023.

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