NEWS

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 09:27

 

World Beyond War, which has been endorsed by WILPF US, WILPF International and several WILPF sections, has recently published A Global Security System:  An Alternative to War.

During the WILPF 100th  Anniversary Congress, copies were given to each WILPF section as well as notables Mairead Maguire, Jody Williams, Madeleine Rees and Amy Goodman.  This publication is the first effort of World Beyond War to describe an alternative security system to replace the war system that we have now.  

World Beyond War wants as many people as possible to read A Global Security System and provide feedback.  World Beyond War is collecting this feedback to be incorporated into what they hope to be annual revisions as the plan is developed and refined. WILPF members will note many parallels between this publication and the WILPF Manifesto.  WILPF is particularly encouraged to provide input regarding the role of patriarchy in war and militarism.

The new International Disarm Committee will be following up with the WILPF sections to gather their thoughts and input.  The WILPF US Disarm/End Wars Committee urges all WILPF members to read A Global Security System, which is available to download for free on the World Beyond War website, or can be purchased for $60 for ten copies including shipping. 

Contact:  Leah Bolger, leahbolger@comcast.net or 541-207-7761

Photo: Leah Bolger presents a copy of A Global Security System:  An Alternative to War to Nobel Laureate Mairead Maguire. Photo was taken at The Hague by Jodie Evans on Leah’s iPhone

Post date: Sat, 05/16/2015 - 12:46

Nominations due May 30.
Applications due June 6.

Interim Board Instructions
PDF file

Application Form for National Position
World File | Zip File

Nomination/Recommendation Form for National Position
Word File | Zip File

 

 

Post date: Fri, 05/15/2015 - 17:57

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Post date: Tue, 05/12/2015 - 19:14

Here are some of the reasons you should stay engaged with us:

  • Non Proliferation Action… US WILPF was well represented at the big April 24h PEACE & PLANET Conference, March and Festival on the eve of the Non Proliferation Treaty sessions at the UN.   WILPF’s Disarm and End Wars Committee members participated in the planning of this important event, and US WILPF was a formal “Endorser”. 
  • Abolishing Nuclear Weapons… May, 2015 our Disarm and End Wars Committee will conduct its annual Lobby Day in Washington, DC, bringing a new young member from Portland, OR with them to learn the ropes in approaching Congress.  They’ll be also educating Congress and the Administration on the importance of eliminating nuclear weapons.
  • Collaborating on a new MANIFESTO for International Peace and Conflict Resolution… US WILPF women collaborated on the new vision for creating Peace, 100 years since the original Manifesto was issued by the Delegates to the Women’s Peace Conference at The Hague. The new MANIFESTO was adopted and released at our International Congress in April which issues a modern call to end war and address the root causes of war.  Read about it here.

Making a difference in the area of HUMAN RIGHTS.

  • Raising the Issue of Sex Trafficking… Many WILPF branches across the US, led by the example of the Madison and Milwaukee WI branches, are pursuing community education programs on Human Trafficking and modern day sex slaves, a huge multi-national billion dollar business that is alive and well on the streets of US cities.
  • Standing with Victims of Violence and Immigration Disaster In Mexico…  This Fall we will be bringing a speaker from Mexico to travel to branches across the country and lift up the issue of immigration reform, the children held in detention at our southern border and the heartbreaking case of the 43 students kidnapped from Ayotzinapa, Mexico and later found murdered in a mass grave.  Read more about it here.
  • Demanding an End to Racially Motivated Police Violence…  WILPF branches across the US marched in solidarity with protesters in Ferguson, MI after the death of Michael Brown.   Our St. Louis branch, close enough to Ferguson, joined the local protests there.  And our Rapid Response Team issued a strong STATEMENT you can read here.

Addressing ENVIRONMENTAL and DEMOCRACY Issues

  • Water Privatization Actions… WILPF members are collaborating with protesters and activists in Detroit to demand an end to water shut-offs for non-payment of bills in that beleaguered city.  WILPF members in the town of Davis, CA worked hard to prevent the privatization of their water system and still face the corporate takeover of water plants.   
  • Protecting Our Health & Food Security…Long before the WHO named the toxic herbicide (weed-killer) Glyphosate (in Roundup and other weed-killer products) “a probably Carcinogen”, The WILPF Human Right to Health & Safe Food Campaign was already organizing branches and members to educate their communities about this health threat and food security threat, and to take action.
  • Anti-Fracking and Anti-Keystone Pipeline Actions…From one end of America to the other, WILPF branches have joined with other collaborating environmental and legal rights groups to address the environmental threats of fracking, mountain-top mining and petroleum tar sands pipelines. Read about it here.

Please continue to work with us in making our voices heard in the world on issues of PEACE.

If you would like more information on what you can do to be involved, please contact WILPF.
email: info@wilpfus.org
Phone: 617-266-0999

You can also stay in touch with WILPF through our Facebook page:

Post date: Fri, 05/08/2015 - 08:12
WILPF Executive Committee

 

Read about the officers, resolutions, Manifesto and new Sections and listen to audio of 41 presentations during the Conference – linked from the 100th Anniversary Special Edition of the WILPF International Membership News.

 

PHOTO: From left: Joy Onyesoh, Margrethe Tingstad, Sameena Nazir, Kozue Akibayashi, Catia Confortini, and Kerry McGovern. Photo credits: Li Grebäck

 

 

Post date: Fri, 05/08/2015 - 08:00
Women's Power to Stop War

 

Anne Hoiberg, San Diego WILPF

Congress delegates and participants in 100th anniversary celebration in The Hague called on countries to reduce military spending by 10% and shift the funds to education as a specific step toward world peace.

During April 27–29, more than 900 women from 80 countries met at The Hague to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom and to use their power to stop war. In 1915, WILPF’s founding mothers braved underwater mines and submarines to join more than 1,200 women from other countries for a Congress in The Hague to protest WWI and to seek ways to create permanent peace. During both gatherings in The Hague, 100 years apart, women came together to demand peace in the world and to reject the bomb and the bullet.

As one of the 900 women, I enjoyed a week of meetings where we discussed the root causes of war, the challenges to peace, and the means to create a permanent peace. The obstacles to overcome include militarism, masculinities, patriarchy, war-profiteering, capitalism, and a culture of violence. An important recommendation centered on the demand to reduce spending on the military by 10% in all countries and shift those funds to education.  

Global military expenditure reached $1.776 trillion in 2014, with the US the largest military spender at nearly three times the level of second-placed China ($610 billion versus an estimated $216 billion).  Other countries in the top ten in military spending include Russia, Saudi Arabia, France, UK, India, Germany, Japan and South Korea. The top exporters of major weapons in 2014 are the US, Russia, China, Germany and France, representing 74 percent of all arms exports.

Another important recommendation promoted the banning of nuclear weapons, explosive weapons (bombs, rockets, landmines, cluster bombs), and autonomous weapons (killer drones). An urgent push for disarmament and protection of humans from nuclear test sites and submarines also was demanded.

Other crucial resolutions were endorsed as were the resolutions adopted in 1915. The ending of war is up to women. Women’s power can stop war.

 

PHOTOS by Mir Grebäck von Melen
Top: Conference closing. Bottom: Participants moved poker chips representing money spent on the military to piles representing education and other human needs.

 

 

Post date: Fri, 05/08/2015 - 07:51

Exhibits and events continue in the US in honor of the 100th anniversary – a library exhibit at the University of Colorado, Manifesto celebration in Cape Cod, and a mayoral proclamation in San Francisco.

The Boulder Branch worked with library staff to open a 100th anniversary WILPF poster exhibit at the University of Colorado Boulder Norlin Library. The International WILPF papers are housed at the archives at Norlin Library, thanks to Elise Boulding, international president of WILPF in 1970), reports Anne Marie Pois.

Cape Cod Branch’s centennial celebration was featured in a half hour segment on the major NPR affiliate and a full color front page feature in the Cape Cod Times. Laura Roskos prepared copies of the WILPF International Manifesto for distribution at the event.

San Francisco Branch member Anne Politeo wrote a proclamation in honor of the centennial, which was circulated to the branch for further editing then submitted to the SF Board of Supervisors.  The proclamation signed by the president of the board concludes:

THEREFORE, be it resolved that April 28, 2015, the 100th anniversary, be designated by the city and county of San Francisco and Board of Supervisors, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom Day.

 

 

PHOTO (above): WILPF poster exhibit at the University of Colorado Boulder Norlin Library opened in time for the April 28 anniversary.   CREDIT: WILPF Boulder Branch

Post date: Fri, 05/08/2015 - 07:37
Hattie Nestel continues her organizing and work to oppose the Kinder-Morgan Pipeline gas pipeline

 Hattie Nestel, WILPF at large, Massachusetts
 

As part of my opposition to the proposed Kinder Morgan Corporation pipeline that would carry fracked gas from fields in Pennsylvania through New York State, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, I participated in six days of a Pipeline Pilgrimage led by Young Adult Quakers through six New Hampshire towns. 

The pilgrimage occurred one year since my knee replacement. I wasn’t sure how I would manage in hilly New Hampshire, but I was determined to give it a try. I was the oldest person on the pilgrimage by at least fifteen years.

Going through New Hampshire's beautiful hills, lakes, and forests along the proposed pipeline route, I was sickened by the thought that this all can be destroyed with one signature from FERC, the Federal Regulatory Energy Commission, approving the proposed pipeline.

Since late last spring, I have worked with hundreds of others in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, and Pennsylvania to oppose this pipeline, called the New England Direct pipeline by Kinder Morgan. In November, I demonstrated against FERC with newly formed Beyond Extreme Energy, BXE activists DC and will do so again at the end of May. 

I have sold more than five hundred lawn signs and bumper stickers opposing the pipeline. I have interviewed more than thirty-five people who are targeted to have the pipeline go through their properties. I have video-interviewed our federal and state politicians about the proposed pipeline and have arranged to have the interviews aired on 26 Massachusetts cable access stations and YouTube.

Nothing is ever enough. Almost daily, headlines in our local newspaper report on our progress or lack of to stop the pipeline.

Informational meetings bring experts in energy fields, politicians, and now lawyers hired to help us stop this destruct and destroy the corporate dinosaur threatening our beautiful states and ways of life. 

We know New England does not need nor would we benefit from the two billion cubic feet of fracked gas intended to go through this pipeline. The gas is likely intended for Europe via duty-free ports in Maine. Fracking extracts an extremely fossil fuel via an extremely dirty process that injects chemically treated water into shale formations to break up rock. The process is an immense water hog, and storing chemically toxic waste used in drilling is as unsolvable a problem as storing radioactive waste from nuclear power reactors. 

The proposed Kinder Morgan, Tennessee Gas thirty-six-inch pipeline would deliver enough fuel to produce more than twice the combined power generated in all of New England by coal, petroleum and nuclear fuels in 2012! 

The gas would be liquefied and exported to Europe from Dracut, Massachusetts through the port of Saint John in New Brunswick, Canada. 

Many of the towns that this pipeline would go through have only wells for all their water and feel threatened by the risk and destruction that pipelines pose to their water supply.

In Massachusetts and New Hampshire, much land is conserved against development to protects wildlife corridors, wetlands, farms, and forests. The proposed pipeline threatens even conservation land, although lawyers and land specialists look for every avenue to oppose the pipeline.

During the pilgrimage, I heard heartbreaking stories of homeowners who had conserved, protected, and loved their lands for decades only to face eminent domain proceedings that would rob them of their property and the prospect of land too toxic to live on or sell if the pipeline is built.

More than fifty Massachusetts towns have passed resolutions opposing the proposed pipeline to prevent it from going through their towns. New Hampshire towns have adopted the same strategy. Still, no one knows how our states rights' to decide will stack up against the feds. 

One argument about gas pipelines is that natural gas is cleaner than coal. However, drilling, storing, distributing, and burning gas produces both carbon dioxide and methane. They are both powerful greenhouse gases. Over time, methane becomes concentrated in the atmosphere and is a great risk to global warming. Although the propaganda about fracked gas is that it is cleaner than coal, when considering both carbon dioxide and methane, gas is not a safe bridge to renewable fuels.

My knee survived the pilgrimage, and I ended up with lots more physical energy, more contacts, and increased appreciation of the beautiful landscapes and lives that will be devastated if we lose this battle. I am grateful that I was able to participate in the pilgrimage. And I had fun.

Hattie Nestel  Hattieshalom@verizon.net
WILPF at Large, Massachusetts

 

PHOTO: Massachusetts WILPF member Hattie Nestel (front row, left) continues her organizing and work to oppose the Kinder-Morgan Pipeline gas pipeline.

 

 

Post date: Fri, 05/08/2015 - 07:17
Info Graphics

 

Marybeth Gardam, Corporations v Democracy, Earth Democracy

The World Health Organization Declares Glyphosate A Probable Human Carcinogen and the WILPF safe food campaign introduces a community survey tool.  See also the talking points against the TPP. 

The Human Right to Health & Safe Food Campaign website has added a SURVEY you can use locally to open the dialogue about toxic chemical herbicides used in your community and what can be done about making food safer locally.  

Once you get your questions answered, you can use that information to open a dialogue locally with community leaders and the public. 

This Survey is a good start. But don’t stop there! 

Announce your findings in a media release, at a film you schedule or a book study you organize.

Include letter writing components to those meetings and events too.  There are sample letters on the website for you to use!  

And don’t forget to order your Infographic Cards for distribution at your event!  We’ve already distributed more than half of the 7000 we ordered, so don’t wait! Read articles about the dangers of glyphosate

TELL THEM AGAIN! 
Even if you’ve contacted them before…

CALL YOUR MEMBER OF CONGRESS AGAIN this week about saying NO to the TPP!

The Trans Pacific Partnership is being opposed by the GOP and a handful of Democrats, but some of the Congress is still on the fence. 

It’s especially important now to contact your GOP and Dem members of Congress in order to tell them you oppose the TPP and want them to block it and the President’s Fast Track. Here are some great Talking Points to refer to when you make that call. 

And here are some other materials you might find useful!  

Post date: Fri, 05/08/2015 - 06:27
U.S. Social Forum

Nancy Price, Earth Democracy Committee

Another World Is Possible - Another World Is Necessary

Philadelphia PA and San Jose CA will host the 2015 US Social Forum – based on the understanding that people’s movements are what create social change.

These two simultaneous forums are an opportunity for regional and issue-specific social justice projects to work toward broader unity. The goal is to map out action plans for a cohesive movement and organize to grow a social movement to counter corporate rule and all forms of oppression.

Find information and registration for the June 25-28 Philadelphia forum  and for the June 24-28 San Jose forum Panels, Workshops and People Movement Assemblies are just being organized and posted.  

More will be posted in the June eNews and updates to the Branch and member lists.

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