NEWS

Post date: Mon, 12/09/2019 - 12:05

Mothers for Peace in San Luis Obispo welcomed the Nuclear-Free-Future Tour on July 21, 2019 with wonderful hospitality. From the Nuclear Free Future Facebook page.

By Ellen Thomas
Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee
December 10, 2019

Thanks to all who have helped to collect signatures on the petition to the Senate supporting the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW)!

We’re making a final push to obtain 10,000 US signatures on the petition, which will be presented at the United Nations during the World Conference Against A & H Bombs in New York City April 24-26, 2020, the weekend before the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) Review begins, 50 years after the Treaty was signed in 1970. It is possible that the US and other parties to the NPT may withdraw from the treaty in 2020, which makes it all the more important to show support for the TPNW.

Let us know if you want to attend the conference and be part of the WILPF US delegation to the UN!  et@prop1.org

We have received 606 petitions from WILPF members all over the country, who have collected 5,515 signatures so far. In addition to these paper petitions, as of December 1, 2019, there are 2,601 signatures on the online petition, bringing the total to 8,115.  

This is the full text of the paper petition to the Senate:

I am committed to a world without nuclear weapons. I endorse the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons adopted by 122 countries on July 7, 2017. As a citizen or resident of the United States, I call upon the President to sign and the Senate to give its consent to ratify this Treaty.
 
Further, I call upon the President, with the support of the Senate, to lead the way to negotiate the total elimination of nuclear weapons, and to redirect current and planned nuclear weapons spending to human and environmental needs.
 
Background - The use of nuclear weapons, either intentional or accidental, will cause untold suffering to millions of people and is a threat to the existence of humankind. The United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons is a legally binding treaty to eliminate nuclear weapons. The Treaty prohibits, among other things, the possession, use or threat of use of nuclear weapons. [To see the Treaty: http://undocs.org/A/CONF.229/2017/8.] Print legibly please!

This is the full text of the online petition to the Senate:

I SUPPORT THE NUCLEAR WEAPONS BAN TREATY
I am committed to a world without nuclear weapons. I endorse the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons adopted by 122 countries on July 7, 2017.

As a citizen or resident of the United States, I call upon the President to sign and the Senate to consent to ratify this Treaty.

Further, I call upon the President, with the support of the Senate, to lead the way to negotiate the total elimination of nuclear weapons.

QR CodeHere is the QR code which leads to the online petition, included at the bottom of the paper petition for people who prefer to sign online.

 

 

In the House, More HR-2419 Co-sponsors Needed!

Representative Barbara Lee of Oakland, CA, has now signed on as co-sponsor to HR-2419, the "Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act," which Eleanor Holmes Norton of Washington, DC, introduced into the House of Representatives for the fourteenth time in April, 2019. Other co-sponsors so far this session are Jim McGovern of Worcester, MA, and Ilhan Omar of Minneapolis, MN.  

Have you called your Representative yet to ask for co-sponsorship of HR-2419? HR-2419 promotes the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, and supports moving the money from nuclear weapons and other arms industries to carbon-free, nuclear-free energy production, environmental restoration, health care, education, housing, and other human needs. The text of HR-2419 is at https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/2419/text

If you have called and don't get results, please call again, and again, and set up a meeting face-to-face to explain why it is so important to support this legislation!

Here's the number to call: 202-224-3121

SUGGESTED SCRIPT #1 (For those who have not co-sponsored)
https://wilpfus.org/news/updates/action-alert-national-call-day-hr-2419-friday-november-1

Hi, my name is ____, calling from ____(city/town)____. I’m calling to urge Representative _____ to co-sponsor HR-2419,  the Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act, which supports the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, and earmarks the billions of nuclear weapons dollars saved per year for converting the arms industries to produce carbon-free, nuclear-free energy systems, and to provide for other human needs such as health care, education, and environmental restoration.... This could provide funding for the Green New Deal! 

 

 

Post date: Mon, 12/09/2019 - 11:48

Members from eight California WILPF branches who participated in the annual Cluster meeting on November 16, 2019. Photo: Sabreena Britt-Kasbati, Sacramento Branch, used with permission.

By Darien De Lu
Sacramento Branch
December 10, 2019

WILPF members in California enjoy a special opportunity to connect each year. Like a sort of mini-conference, the annual California Cluster meeting offers a day of presentations, discussions, and branch updates. This year featured segments on counter-(military) recruitment, International WILPF news, the feminist Green New Deal, Venezuela and Bolivia, Public Banking, the Our Children’s Trust lawsuit, WILPF’s Treaties action, and the special tour planned for March 2020, “The Pentagon: Exposing the Hidden Polluter of Water.”
    
Each year a branch takes on the responsibility of hosting the Cluster, with Santa Cruz stepping up for the November 16, 2019 meeting. The organizers reached out to WILPFers across the state and as far as Arizona and Oregon, and members from eight branches participated: Peninsula/Palo Alto, San Jose, Monterey, San Francisco, the East Bay, Sacramento, Fresno, and Santa Cruz. Branch reports are a lively part of the Cluster, giving many ideas for actions. We were especially impressed by the report of a Fresno Branch member who has bought a house for sheltering homeless people.

Sandy Thacker from the East Bay described her program to tell high school students about alternatives to enlistment.  The No Child Left Behind Act requires schools to allow military recruiters in high schools or else lose their funding; however, it also requires alternative voices to be allowed into the schools. The book Breaking Cadence, by Rosa del Duca, offers insight into military life.

I briefly presented on the similarities and differences between the political situations in Venezuela and Bolivia. In both countries, economic elites are a source of right-wing violence, and the US shows more interest in mineral resources (oil and lithium, respectively) than in human rights.

We celebrated the signing into California law of the Public Banking bill, which WILPFers worked hard to pass. The idea originated in North Dakota, where a state public bank was founded by socialists 100 years ago. Learn more from the short videos available at www.publicbankinginstitute.org.

The legal case of Our Children's Trust is coming before the San Francisco Circuit Court. This slow-moving lawsuit calls on the federal government to mitigate climate change under the public trust doctrine. Last summer, Earth Democracy and WILPF US agreed to join the Amicus Brief for the Our Children’s Trust landmark youth climate justice lawsuit.

We also had the chance to hear directly from Palo Alto Branch member Cherrill Spencer, who wrote the WILPF document on treaties for the October Solidarity Action. Another California WILPFer who has for years emphasized to us the importance of treaties is Ann Fagan Ginger. We heard about the San Francisco Branch's event in her honor.

Our organizing highlight of the day was Nancy Price’s presentation about WILPF's upcoming California tour with Pat Elder. This project focuses on the military’s responsibility for water contamination from all the chemicals used on bases for the maintenance of equipment. As a result, we are facing a nationwide drinking water crisis from a class of synthetic chemical substances known as PFAS. Since the 1940s, when these chemicals were developed, they have been used both in commercial products and in fire-fighting foam for military bases.

The tour seeks to educate the public – especially those living near military bases – about the dangers from this chemical contamination. Tour organizers will work with climate groups to make the connection that the military has the largest carbon footprint. Climate-crisis-related catastrophic flooding and rising sea levels can flood military bases, washing toxic contamination into surrounding communities and water sources.

All eight branches are committed to activities for the tour in their communities. The tour will culminate with two forums, the first on March 21 in Berkeley and the second on March 22, World Water Day (with the theme water and climate), in San Francisco.

 

Post date: Mon, 12/09/2019 - 11:36

A St. Louis Branch Screwnomics Book Club project supported by a WILPF US mini-grant aims to develop leadership skills among young women.

By Lynn Sableman
Chair, St. Louis Branch

December 10, 2019

The St. Louis branch of WILPF took on the Screwnomics project as a means of bridge-building to the local community. The project means to offer a free, fun, feisty, feminist intro. to macroeconomics. It also aims to be an act of public service with the project’s built-in dimension of developing leadership skills in young women who serve as facilitators for the meetings.

Our branch has been in decline for many years now. This seemed like a good opportunity to attract younger members.

I am writing this at the end of October, after the first offering and midway through our second five-session “Screwnomics Meet-up.”

This project was sparked by a visit from Marybeth Gardam in her position as Development Chair for the national WILPF board. She presented a program called WINGS to our St. Louis Branch board, which is meant to encourage and develop leadership skills in younger women. The project involves introducing a free book club that would be an intro to feminist economics through Rickey Gard Diamond’s textbook Screwnomics. Gardam also informed us of the possibility of receiving a mini-grant from WILPF to do this work.

Marybeth provided templates for program flyers and letters to professors requesting their help in finding a course facilitator/intern, as well as a step-by-step process to follow to disseminate information about the program.

A team of three, made up of myself and two new board members, friends of mine before I joined WILPF, sprung into action to plan a projected five meetings lasting two hours each. Marybeth suggested three hours of intern preparation time for each session in addition to class contact time.

Marybeth’s  “organizer” instructions, with a detailed ‘how to,’ was followed precisely. The search was on for the college student or recent grad as well as for participants. By posting on social media, joining appropriate FB groups, directing emails to social justice groups in town, and reaching out to acquaintances, we found our intern eventually. She ‘got’ WILPF because she was an active member of Amnesty International from her high school days forward.

We received four unproductive inquiries before finding an applicant from Webster University who was an International Relations major, with a minor in International Human Rights, and who had a lot of experience as a facilitator from these classes. She was perfect.

We set up some tabling opportunities for outreach through the Women’s March. Then we scheduled meetings for first Saturday of the month for five consecutive months. We had our core group of five people from our WILPF Branch and seven others, all people I knew from work or life.

The book was challenging reading but it was fun to have a relaxed book club atmosphere to grapple with terms that are a very relevant part of today’s news. One participant,  a fossil fuel professional, left after we started talking about how much the fossil fuel industry is subsidized by the US ($20 billion annually) and also by the EU (55 billion euros annually).

In the current session, condensed into two months, the meetings are being held on alternate Saturdays at the Ethical Society, which granted us free rent and heavily promoted the meetings to their groups. It was there that we found our second facilitator, a woman getting her PhD in literature and gender studies at St. Louis University. She, too, is excellent.

We all worked hard to attract new attendees. Marguerite Adelman from WILPF Vermont has been a wonderful help managing the posts on Meetup, announcing our meetings. Additionally, we’ve publicized the sessions through social media and the Meetup app. Unfortunately, so far we’ve attracted only one person new to us. However, our facilitator has joined WILPF.

We are now discussing a bookstore-based effort, which requires a group size of twelve before it can be offered. The concept of these gatherings has appeal and merit. To be continued...

Feel free to contact me with questions: lynnsableman@att.net

 

Post date: Mon, 12/09/2019 - 11:27

Renowned actor Wali Jamal reads MLK’s Beyond Vietnam Speech to an enthralled Pittsburgh audience on November 11, 2019.

By Susan Smith
Pittsburgh WILPF

December 10, 2019

Pittsburgh’s renowned actor Wali Jamal read Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence speech on Armistice Day, Monday, November 11, 2019 at the Warren United Methodist Church. The Pittsburgh chapter of WILPF and eleven community groups co-sponsored the dramatic reading of the speech linking war, racism, and poverty, which was originally delivered by Dr. King in 1967 at Riverside Church in New York City.

Civil Rights activist and US Representative John Lewis (GA) was among the 3,800 in the audience at Riverside when Dr. King delivered this speech. Lewis described it as “a speech for all humanity—for the world community. I heard him speak so many times. I still think this is probably the best.”

The reading was followed by a brief, all-participant discussion on the topic, “How can we use MLK’s insights in the work we are doing?” About 80 people participated in the active sharing of ideas. Discussion continued in the refreshment room where ideas were shared across participating groups and many attendees made new contacts.

If you would like more information about the Beyond Vietnam speech, check out these links:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC1Ru2p8OfU
http://www.aavw.org/special_features/speeches_speech_king01.html

 

Post date: Mon, 12/09/2019 - 11:15

By Eileen Kurkoski
WILPF US Secretary

December 10, 2019

At their November 26 meeting, the national board appointed a program chair, discussed collaborating with “An Economy of Our Own,” received CSW and international updates, and discussed several financial/budget issues.

  1. Program Chair: The Board voted unanimously to appoint Joan Goddard Program Chair, starting immediately. Her appointment is for the two months until she takes office in that position at the late January Board meeting, as a result of the anticipated (unopposed) election results. The exciting new challenge for her position is the implementation of Program 2.0, agreed upon by the Board, the Program Committees, and the overwhelmingly favorable response in the survey of WILPF members. Program 2.0 seeks to make WILF US program work more strategic, cohesive, and effective.
     
  2. Minutes: The Board approved the September 24 WILPF Board minutes.
     
  3. WILPF Collaboration with “An Economy of Our Own”: Marybeth Gardam is recommending WILPF enter into a formal collaboration with this organization. “An Economy of Our Own” is planning three conferences for 2020 to attract women who are interested in working on a new economy with a feminist perspective. The organization and the conferences will also promote solutions practiced by some women around the country but which are not getting enough attention. Others in the group include authors, Ellen Hodgson Brown (Web of Debt), David C. Korten (When Corporations Rule the World), and Rickey Gard Diamond (Screwnomics). The Board approved proceeding on the collaboration procedure and looks forward to more details.
     
  4. Commission on the Status of Women Update: WILPF International has invited women from the Middle East and Afghanistan to be involved in some kind of WILPF International CSW program. Mary Hanson Harrison has submitted a request for a CSW presentation on food, and Darien De Lu has worked with others to submit a request for a CSW panel on the 1995 Peace Train to Beijing, a WILPF International initiative in which she and over 200 other riders took part.
     

    For our own WILPF US CSW Programs – the Practicum and Local to Global (L2G) –  we unanimously agreed to create an ad hoc CSW Programs Committee to support the Coordinators/Faculty of our CSW Programs, as they directed us to do, and to seek Practicum program participants at universities located where we have branches, and to generally help promote the programs. Three board members volunteered to be on the committee: Jan Corderman, Treasurer, Mary Hanson-Harrison, Past President, and Eileen Kurkoski, Secretary; Eileen will focus on getting grants for WILPF US program. More volunteers are needed! (Contact president@WILPFUS.org for more information.) Note: The L2G application deadline is December 20, 2019.

  5. International Update: WILPF US is signing on to a statement from some of the Americas Region sections against the extreme violence and threats in connection with the coup d’états in Bolivia.
     
  6. Financial and Budget Discussions: The Board discussed the following topics related to our budget.
  • Providing more support for issue committees and branches. In the subsequent executive session, the Board voted to approve limited additional support, using current staff.
  • Modifying the WILPF US subsidy for Local to Global participants’ travel expenses. The Finance Committee will present a proposal at the January board meeting.
  • Obtaining bids to develop a new (or better) website. In May 2019 the Board had approved moving forward on a new website.
  • Maintaining WILPF US’s social media (esp. Facebook) presence by paying a social media worker vs relying on a volunteer-only social media presence. Darien De Lu presented a number of statistics about our FB posts over the past five months. She used these statistics to show how having staff post “news” items related to topics our issue committees are addressing led to substantially increased numbers of “people reached” (as well as “engaged”) for other (not as popular) posts about specific WILPF US actions and topics. (In the subsequent executive session, the Board voted to approve limited social media work, using current staff.)
  • Having a series of calls to promote and train for a member recruitment campaign and rewarding members who bring in new members by providing WILPF sashes, books on hand, and WILPF T-shirts.  (The Board approved awarding sashes and on-hand books.)
  • Changing our travel reimbursement protocols for Board-related (and some other) travel, to raise the mileage payment (using a car) from the current $.14/mi., and to clarify the hotel cost limitation for a “reasonable” hotel, shared room. (The Board generally approved some additional reimbursement. The Finance Committee will present a proposal at the January board meeting.)
  1. Executive Session: After the open Board meeting the Board discussed in executive session what kinds of work should be done by particular staff members. Also the Board approved the Nominating Committee membership appointment by Laura Dewey, Acting Chair of the Nominating Committee, of an active volunteer, Martha Collins of Milwaukee.

 

Post date: Mon, 12/09/2019 - 10:52
WILPF SMART

December 10, 2019

WILPF US’s Facebook blog WILPF SMART has grown to 60 members. Working backwards chronologically, here are some posts by members of the group about a variety of issues and events (by no means exhaustive):

  • Cindy Domingo educated us about what’s happening in Bolivia, in Cuba, Venezuela, and in the Philippines, and about Medea Benjamin’s brush with the police for doing nothing wrong.
  • Greta Zarro connected us to World Beyond War’s webinar on Civilian Defense.
  • Linda Modica posted articles about Turkey’s desire to get out of the NPT, and naming universities that profit from nuclear weapons production.
  • Deborah Livingston shared a video from the School of Americas gathering at Fort Benning, GA.
  • Ellen Thomas shared information about arrests at the Kansas City nuclear weapons plant, about the Kings Bay Plowshares trial in Georgia, about the Golden Rule touring the Pacific in support of the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, about a public meeting about San Onofre’s nuclear waste, and about several important bills in Congress deserving support.
  • Joan Brannigan warned us about Turkey’s possession of 50 U.S. nuclear weapons.
  • Marguerite Adelman told us about Burlington, Vermont’s week of high school and public programming about Eleanor Roosevelt.
  • Mali Lightfoot shared an amazing video, “What If We Nuke a City?”

What could you share? Please join WILPF SMART, and help educate the world!

 

Post date: Tue, 11/26/2019 - 04:50

The Corporations v Democracy issue committee has been renamed the Women, Money & Democracy issue committee.

Click here to visit the new page.

Post date: Thu, 11/21/2019 - 07:04

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Post date: Fri, 11/15/2019 - 11:35

Giving Tuesday

50 nations ratified the UN Treaty to Prohibit Nuclear Weapons. 

That’s big news, because WILPF has been working with our allies towards this goal for 75 years, ever since the first atomic bombs were dropped on civilian populations in Hiroshima and Nagasaki Japan at the conclusion of WWII.  

This win follows decades of work by WILPF members. Patient and strategic advocacy and protest by courageous and tireless WILPF members who organized, planned, protested and lobbied. It follows years of patient, delicate diplomacy at the UN and through our UN program Reaching Critical Will.

There will still be plenty of work ahead to press the Biden Administration to be in compliance with this new treaty, and to pursue a mindful transition to an economy based on collaboration, not on war and threats of war.   

Donate

What the Treaty Means

Once the treaty goes into force in January 2021, it will be against international law for countries to own, stockpile, manufacture, sell or transfer, test, use, or threaten to use nuclear weapons. This will force a new analysis and strategy for global security, that does NOT depend on nuclear annihilation of the planet.  

See all the details and learn how YOU can be part of the continuing efforts to get the nine nuclear nations to sign on to the Treaty.  This VIDEO explains it briefly. 

Key Points:

  • On 1-22-21 nukes will be completely illegal under international law.
  • Countries around the world ratified the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
  • Using, threatening to use, testing, developing, manufacturing, transferring, possessing, or stockpiling nuclear weapons will be against international law.
  • Check out the video for list of corporations that make nukes which must be held accountable.
  • Now we have to finish the job WILPF and our allies have brought this far.
  • Nine nuclear armed nations have boycotted the treaty. THAT HAS TO CHANGE.

Ray Acheson

You can help SHIFT THE MONEY & BRAINPOWER from weapons of mass extinction to green technologies we need.

Here’s how:

  1. Spread the word about this treaty.  MS Media is not covering the story.
  2. DEMAND our legislators respect this new international law and JOIN the TREATY NOW.
  3. DIVEST from the companies that make nuclear weapons.  Find the whole list at DontBankontheBomb.com or on the Video.
  4. Join WILPFus.org to help work on this NOW. 

Work with us and help lead the effort.

75 Years of Activism and Commitment

Countless WILPF members have given their time, dollars, been arrested and sacrificed family time to build support for peace and abolishing nuclear weapons. We can’t list all of them. Here are four of our S-Heroes.  

Donate
To honor their tenacity and sacrifice.  

Unquestioned commitment
Ellen ThomasEllen Thomas (North Carolina) camped outside the White House in a personal vigil that went on for 18 years. Now she is one of our DISARM Committee Co-Chairs and continues to promote the strategy of complete nuclear abolition through www.prop1.org. This Treaty’s success is very personal to her.   

 

Peace runs in the family
Robin LloydRobin Lloyd’s grandmother was a founding member of WILPF, along with her friend Jane Addams.  Robin (Vermont) devoted much of her life to seeking an end to the threat of nuclear weapons and towards peace through activism and producing films that sought international understanding.  She devoted much of her family fortune to peace and international diplomacy and is still helping to lead our Burlington VT branch.        

Intrepid persistence 
Carol UrnerDespite her own disability after a devastating auto accident that killed her husband, Carol Urner (Oregon/California) spent years during every Congressional Session wearing a path to the offices of Congress members to lobby for an end to nuclear weapons.  She was a well-recognized and very  effective citizen lobbyist on behalf of WILPF US and our allies. This win is a source of joy for her now.

Investing in peace
Yvonne LoganOver the course of her life Yvonne Logan (Missouri) brought brilliance, grace and fun to the cause of international peace. Her work as part of the Baby Teeth Project at St. Louis University helped make the public aware of the devastating long term radiation threats from nuclear testing and explosions. While all peace and justice mattered to Yvonne and her husband Joe, they used their personal fortune to fund organizing to end to nuclear weapons.  

Going Forward We Need YOUR Support.  

In 2021 and beyond, WILPF will continue the pressure on to outlaw nuclear weapons. 

It's the cause of the century...so we might still HAVE a planet by the end of the century. 

We’ll be holding the new Administration’s feet to the fire on nuclear weapons, pushing the US to sign on to the prohibition treaty, and advocating to move the money from war and nukes to the services and science that this planet needs.  

Please donate to support our work.
Donate

Women's International League for Peace & Freedom  
US Section 

WILPF US posterWILPF US was founded in 1915 by Jane Addams and other courageous peace women. Nuclear abolition and PEACE are a big part of what we do.

We also have efforts in the area of Human Rights, Environmental Justice, Economic Justice and Feminist Economics.  

We’re multi-issue, because we recognize it's all connected.  We advocate for moving the money from an economy built on debt and death to one built on human needs, dignity and life. 

We've championed women's rights, feminist policies and economics, and we partner with allies including the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, An Economy of Our Own, The International Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) The Poor Peoples Campaign, The US Women & Cuba Alliance, World Beyond War, the Black Alliance for Peace, Code Pink, World Beyond War, and many other allies.

Join us at www.wilpfus.org/join.

Learn more about us at www.WILPFus.org/story/history.  

Donate

 

Post date: Tue, 11/12/2019 - 07:00
Kings Bay Plowshares defendants

From left, Kings Bay Plowshares defendants Martha Hennessey, a friend standing in for Steve Kelly, Mark Colville, Clare Grady, Carmen Trotta, Patrick O’Neill, and Elizabeth McAlister, stand outside the Glynn County Courthouse in Georgia on October 24 after they are found guilty on all four counts. Father Kelly is still incarcerated because he refuses to cooperate with conditions for release, and was on probation for a previous Plowshares action when he entered Kings Bay. All photos by Ellen Thomas.

By Ellen Thomas
Co-chair, Disarm/End Wars

WILPF members Megan Rice, Ellen Barfield, Marge Van Cleef and her partner Bill Dyson, and Ellen Thomas have recently returned from a week-long gathering of Kings Bay Plowshares supporters to support the seven Catholic workers during their trial. Known as the “Kings Bay Plowshares 7,” they entered the Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base in St. Mary’s, Georgia, on April 4, 2018, with hammers, chisels, “crime scene” tape, washable paint, and defendant Elizabeth McAlister’s blood in a baby bottle for pouring on the logo of the Trident submarine. Kings Bay is the US Navy’s port for Trident submarines and the largest nuclear submarine base in the world.

Kings Bay PloughsharesThis symbolic Plowshares action of “beating swords into plowshares” was to call attention to the 1,152 nuclear warheads on the six Trident submarines based in Kings Bay, each about 30 times the explosive force as the Hiroshima bomb. 

The defendants—Elizabeth McAlister, Clare Grady, Martha Hennessey, Patrick O’Neill , Steve Kelly, Carmen Trotta, and Mark Colville—have already spent  up to 18 months in Glynn County, Georgia, jail or on house arrest. On October 24, 2019, they all were convicted of three felonies and one misdemeanor (conspiracy, depredation of government property, destruction of government property, and trespassing), which could mean over 20 years in federal prison. They will probably be sentenced after Christmas.

View a slideshow of pictures I took during the week here.

Detailed notes on the trial were taken by Ralph Hutchison, Chairman of the Alliance for Nuclear Accountability’s Board of Directors, and you can read them, and see more of my photos, here.

I videotaped the defendants speaking at the Brunswick, Georgia, Festival of Hope on Sunday, October 20, the evening before their trial began, and I have also posted a talk delivered on October 22 by Art Laffin of the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker Movement in Washington, DC, who shared the history of the Plowshares movement.

You can keep up with what is happening on the Kings Bay Plowshares 7 home page and Facebook page, where you will find actions you can take to support them. Please consider doing something to support these brave activists. One action they recommend is to send op-eds to local papers.

 

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