NEWS

Post date: Mon, 04/08/2019 - 05:41

Howie Hawkins, a Green Party candidate who was the originator of the term “Green New Deal.”

By the ONE WILPF Call Team

The Green New Deal is very much in the news and is an appropriate initiative to move forward for Earth Day this year. On our next ONE WILPF call on Thursday, April 11, we’ll hear from the actual originator of the term Green New Deal, Howie Hawkins, a Green Party candidate from the state of New York. Hawkins will speak to us about the best ways to support this proposal without a partisan slant.

Also, WILPF President Darien DeLu will share details of her recent fact-finding trip to Venezuela. And we’ll hear how branch SOLIDARITY ACTIONS in March turned out.

Branches should plan to report on their World Water Day and Anti-NATO Actions in March and early April. Who did you ally with? What new components did you incorporate into your event? Did you use any of the pre-promotion tactics we talked about via layering in our March call? Did you wear your WILPF sashes?   

Of course there will be announcements from WILPF US…. and a fascinating report back from our President, Darien De Lu, about what she observed in Caracas on the fact-finding trip she undertook with a coalition of peace organizations. You’ll find great resources to stay on top of the emerging news around DC’s plans for incursions into Venezuela and news from the people themselves.

Who Is Howie Hawkins?

Howie Hawkins was New York's Green Party candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2006. In 2010, Hawkins ran as the Green Party's candidate for Governor of New York and restored ballot status for the party by receiving more than the necessary 50,000 votes. In 2014, Hawkins campaigned again for Governor of New York, receiving nearly five percent of the vote and keeping the Green Party on the ballot for NY State for the next five years. Hawkins ran for Governor of New York in 2018, as well. He is a good example of the benefits of continuing to push for a third-party, state-level candidate as a way of creating broader democratic choices in the future.

Join us by registering for the call here.

You can call in with only your phone, or using both your phone and your computer for a fuller communication experience.  

All voices will be muted during the general part of the call and open during Break Out Rooms.
PRESS 5 on your PHONE keypad if you have any technical problems.
PRESS 1 on your PHONE keypad during Q&A to raise your hand and get on the stack, or to vote in real time polls.

Your access code will be provided in an email, along with a link to join the Social Webinar so you can see everyone else on the call, and the notes on the text pad.

For more information, contact the ONE WILPF Call Team at 1wilpfcalls@gmail.com.

 

Post date: Mon, 04/08/2019 - 05:26

By the ONE WILPF Call Team

The March ONE WILPF Call is now posted to the website. Check out the PowerPoint featured in the March call about how to better plan and promote your events and actions. Strategic planning can make you more successful! Consider having your leadership team view it together.

Find it here.

Every second Thursday of the month ALL WILPF members are invited to join a national conference call that is our one opportunity to connect branch-to-branch, member-to-member, and to learn about national and international WILPF news. You can find information, resources, and support on these calls!

The calls begin at 4 pm PST / 7 pm EST. Pre-registration is required, but all participants have told us that the technology for these Maestro platform calls is extremely user-friendly and easy to navigate.

Our call “engineer” Michael Ippolito is patient and attentive to make sure that everyone can get on to the call and get the most out of each call.

Plan with us

Tools and Resources Available

All of our past calls are archived on the website so you can easily listen to them and hear from excellent speakers on important subjects. Some of the calls feature PowerPoint presentations which are posted on that webpage as well. Some of the calls are open to the public and have a different registration link. All of the calls focus on informing our members, sharing information and strategic organizing to enhance our national visibility and impact through solidarity, acting as ONE WILPF. We’re stronger together….and standing together makes it easier for potential new members to find us too!

There are a good many tools and resources available on the website for your use to promote your branch and WILPF US. Find them here.

Visuals Work!

In late March, Laura Dewey (Detroit WILPF) commented on the branches listserv about a meeting she attended in Detroit. She said that simply by wearing a WILPF button she made many new contacts for her branch. This was a powerful reminder of how we can keep WILPF visible.

Along with the resources you can access easily, there are also new WILPF sashes available for $10 each. Order them by contacting Chris Wilbeck in our Des Moines office at chris.wilpf@gmail.com or call her at 617-266-0999.  

Consider ordering extra sashes for your branch for anyone who shows up to stand with you at protests and demonstrations. Branch leaders can collect them afterwards, keep them safe and remember to bring them to events, meetings, actions, teach-ins, and demonstrations. These sashes fit over bulky outerwear for cold climates and are lightweight for warmer temperatures. They really help our members stand out in a crowd and amplify our visibility when we stand together.   

For more information, contact the ONE WILPF Call Team at 1wilpfcalls@gmail.com.

 

Post date: Mon, 04/08/2019 - 05:19

Peace Delegation meets with residents at an urban gardening project in Venezuela. WILPF US President Darien De Lu traveled with the delegation and gave a report on the April 1 ONE WILPF Call. Photo: Darien De Lu.

By Eileen Kurkoski
WILPF US Secretary

As WILPF US Secretary, I offer WILPF US members these general interest highlights from the March 19th Board meeting. These highlights reflect some of the exciting ongoing WILPF US programs plus new initiatives, opportunities, and branches. You can be part of the committees and member-leaders pioneering new ground! Contact: president@wilpfus.org.

The WILPF US Board meets every second month. To see the official minutes of the meetings and how to participate in those board conference calls, go to the National Board  page on the WILPF US website.
   
Venezuela Peace Delegation

WILPF US President Darien De Lu, traveling with the delegation of peace movement leaders to Venezuela, found Caracas peaceful, despite the blackout. The lack of electricity made it difficult to get money from banks and water into high-rises, because pumps were not working. (Listen to the April 1 ONE WILPF call for Darien’s delegation report.)

Holistic Committee

At the start of her presidency, Darien appointed an ad hoc committee, the Holistic Program Structure Review Committee (now simply called the Holistic Committee). San Francisco Branch member, Regina Sneed, reported briefly on the work of the committee, which is reviewing many aspects of WILPF US program to see how WILPF work can be better organized and focused. The process is progressing well with the hope that strategic decisions will be made at a face-to-face board meeting in late May.

Women’s Peacemakers Initiative

WILPF’s fiscal sponsor, Peace Development Fund, invited and funded delegates from Women for Genuine Security, Women Cross DMZ and WILPF US for a one-day “Women’s Peacemakers Initiative” conference in San Francisco on March 22. The Board explored what support we have to offer to the other groups and what we may want from them. We overlap in many interests and goals. Delegation coordinator, board member Nancy Price, reported that the delegates were preparing to teleconference. (Watch for a future eNews report on this initiative.) 

WILPF US in NYC for Commission on the Status of Women

Board members Jan Corderman and Eileen Kurkoski provided reports on their week at the annual UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) and WILPF US Practicum and Local2Global programs. These two board members focused on the objectives of the two WILPF US programs and how best to accomplish those goals.           
                                                                   
While in NYC, Jan and Eileen also attended a soiree organized by Burlington, VT, Branch member Robin Lloyd at the home of author Blanche Wiesen Cook. (Wiesen Cook is well known for her three-volume biography of Eleanor Roosevelt.) WILPF International Secretary-General, Madeleine Rees, and several International WILPF UN Office staff spoke on WILPF issues and the WILPF US need to grow a WILPF branch in NYC.  

Leaders of a budding Westchester branch, outside of NYC, also attended and talked about their plans.


Inset Photo: A WILPF soiree was part of the CSW experience in New York City recently. Photo credit: Eileen Kurkoski.

 

Post date: Mon, 04/08/2019 - 05:04

Lydia Wood of NuclearBan.US speaks at the USM’s (University of Southern Maine) Gorham campus on March 14, 2019. Photo: Martha Spiess.

By Martha Spiess
Maine WILPF

NuclearBan.US Campaign Coordinator Lydia Wood visited Maine on March 14, 2019. She was interviewed by Maine WILPFer Grace Braley in the Portland Media Center Studio, who asked questions about what the Nuclear Ban is and how civil society is working to ban the bomb.

Following the program, Lydia spoke about “Social Justice, Feminism and the Bomb” at the USM Gorham Campus at the Student Diversity Center. Her interview is in production and a YouTube video of her USM talk is available and is posted on our Facebook page. She spoke about the bomb as a tool of imperialism, and WILPFers were impressed and challenged by her talk.

We did get some feedback from viewers, primarily in response to the YouTube channel where Lydia’s talk is posted, and from the program airing now on Portland - Public Access and CTN. The intersectionality of Peace & Justice and Climate issues is gathering the most comments so far. “Climate” commentary comes primarily from youth as in this post by Sayre:

“Thank you for describing the UN Treaty against nuclear weapons. I also work for climate change too and clearly the issues are connected."

R. James writes: "I work on climate and nuclear energy is not one of the solutions to global warming. Nuclear energy is not clean. It is not green.”

Lydia Wood spoke of the disproportionate impact of nuclear weapons upon people of color. Bravo Test in 1954 in the Marshall Islands was where, every single day for 12 years, the US dropped the tonnage equivalent of 1.6 Hiroshima bombs.

On this point, Jen (relocated to Arkansas) wrote us: “I'm from Kwajalein Ebeye...I love Ebeye with all my heart, it is my home...it is also hell on earth.” Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear bombs, dropped on Japanese civil society, were followed by US testing for years within the Majol (Marshallese) coral atolls and island group of Micronesia.

For more information, contact me at mspiess@myfairpoint.net.

 

Post date: Mon, 04/08/2019 - 04:54

Edith Bell was a co-presenter at a Women’s History Month program on “Visionary Women: Champions of Peace and Nonviolence.”

By Susan Smith
WILPF Pittsburgh

On March 27, 2019, Edith Bell and Susan Smith, Ph.D., gave a presentation to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) at the Federal Building in downtown Pittsburgh on the topic  “Visionary Women: Champions of Peace and Nonviolence.”
 
Susan SmithThe program was for National Women's History Month. It was hard to choose which women to include but we included local, national, and international women. The program started with founders of WILPF and continued through the present, using photos and giving information about a dozen women. A time for questions and answers follow the initial presentation.

About 50 people attended. The presentation was well received—participants shared the names of some women they wanted to highlight and asked good questions.
 
Here is a copy of the PowerPoint. Others are welcome to use it as is or to update it to fit their needs.

Inset photo: Susan Smith was the other co-presenter at the event.
 

 

Post date: Mon, 04/08/2019 - 04:43

By Michael Ippolito
WILPF US National Communications Coordinator

Mark your calendars for the upcoming Technology Training Call Dates:  
April 15 & 22
May 6, 20, & 27
June 10
 
These calls are always on Mondays at 8 pm EST, 5 pm PST. You can register by clicking here.

These trainings usually take place one to three times a month on Mondays. Once you are registered you will regularly get the reminders 24 hours & 2 hours before each call. Also keep an eye on the monthly eNews for upcoming dates, or find them at the registration page.

The trainings can be customized to cover what you, personally, are looking to get out of them.  You are encouraged to please email Michael@TeamGood.org in advance about what you would like to get out of the trainings or to simply say you will be on the call. Depending on how many people come to the calls, we try to have more trainers and create groups that are leveled to create the best learning experience for you.

There are typically 2-3 trainers on these calls. Each training usually goes 20-25 minutes, so on just one training call you will have the opportunity to take part in as many as four different trainings. If you prefer, you can stay in one training for the duration of the call. We work to customize the trainings for the people who attend them and to focus on the needs of the participants.

Topics covered include (but are not limited to) the following: Using Facebook &Twitter as well as a technology called Slack, the Maestro call interface (social webinar), and general technology questions. WILPF US also has accounts on Pintrest & MediaRevolt.org which we will be glad to show you how to utilize.

Any questions about the trainings, technology in general, or the other social media platforms, please email michael@teamgood.org and/or fellow WILPFer julie@teamgood.org. Julie is one of the regular trainers on these calls. 

Participate in the Weekly WILPF Twitter Wednesdays!

Also offered are fun weekly actions on Wednesdays where you get to meet & casually talk with other WILPFers.You are invited to participate in these weekly Twitter Wednesdays.

Each Wednesday for the last year and a half, WILPFers from around the country have been gathering at 7 pm EST & 4 pm PST to amplify the messages of WILPF US while getting to know one another on our weekly Twitter calls. You can register for the calls by clicking here.

If you do not have a Twitter account we will help you create one on the spot! Once you have a Twitter account, the process is very easy. As many WILPFers who have participated in the actions have remarked, “The environment is a lot like stuffing envelopes around a table.”

We welcome branches that are working on specific issues or national issue committees to message Michael@TeamGood.org if you’d like us to plan having your issue be what we tweet about in a future Twitter call. This will provide you with the opportunity to invite your branch members or issue committee members to join us to further magnify the message.

Each person that joins the call and tweets with us means thousands more people will see our content on social media. This is due to each tweet reaching on average thirty people. We tweet out at least two hundred tweets in a night and sometimes as many as three hundred! This means that up to nine thousand people will see our message per each WILPFer on the call! So when we have twenty people on these calls, we can accumulate as many as one hundred thousand people seeing our content.
 
Help WILPF US amplify our messages by joining the Wednesday Twitter calls!
 
You don't have to come every week and it is OK if you can only stay for a portion of the call.

These calls are also an excellent opportunity for inviting family and friends to join in an easy and fun action.

Please consider these calls as a tool for recruiting in addition to magnifying the message of the important issues you are all working on as part of WILPF US.  

 

Post date: Fri, 03/01/2019 - 09:56

Photo credit: Rachael Warriner / Shutterstock.com

By Randa Solnick
Santa Cruz Branch

The Green New Deal (GND) is one of the most hopeful proposals we’ve seen in a long time. The previous eNews had the first part of this article; here’s the second.

The Green New Deal is being proposed and considered in this Congress, but it has a history:

  • 1930s and 40s: Franklin D. Roosevelt instituted his New Deal economic reform and job programs
  • 2000: Ralph Nader’s talk of a “blue-green alliance” between labor and environmentalists begins, then in 2006 the BlueGreen Alliance was established
  • 2007: The term “Green New Deal” is coined by New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman
  • 2008: Van Jones talked about green jobs in his book The Green Collar Economy
  • 2016: Noted by Obama, GND became part of Jill Stein’s Green Party candidacy, and was already central to European Greens
  • Then 2018:  Brand New Congress members took it up, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders. AOC visited young Sunrise Movement activists twice when they were occupying Pelosi’s office to forward the concept of a Select Committee on a Green New Deal. By December 2018, several senators—including Cory Booker, Bernie Sanders, and Jeff Merkley—had signed on with some Congresspeople to support the formation of a Select Committee.

The four pillars of the GND are: The Economic Bill of Rights, a Green Transition for the economy, real financial reform including public banking, a functioning democracy. You can see the details of the four pillars here.

What Can WILPFers Do?

Here are some of my ideas about what we WILPFers can do, and I’m sure you’ll be able to think of more once you get enthused about this:  

  1. Let your organizations know of your support for the GND. Many of them are very familiar to us: Food and Water Watch, Organic Consumers Association, 350.org, the Sierra Club.
  2. There’s one major organization you might not have worked with yet, the Sunrise Movement. Founded a year and a half ago by young adults, you might have read that two hundred of their activists occupied Nancy Pelosi’s office a week after the midterm elections, pushing for a Climate Committee that would have the teeth of subpoenas. They were joined by AOC and other Representatives! We can educate young people and their families by signing them up for notices from the Sunrise Movement (again, it’s a movement for young people). They say they’re “building an army of young people to stop climate change and create millions of good jobs in the process.” Get high school students to sign up for the High School Green New Deal Campaign here.
  3. Talk to community groups, get them excited and hopeful. I have lots of articles and ways to use them, contact me if this would help. In this article in The Atlantic, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says “This is going to be the New Deal, the Great Society, the moon shot, the civil-rights movement of our generation.”
  4. Speak to groups of voters and workers; speak to workers’ rights activists, to community organizers, to single-payer health care proponents, to sustainable farmers. Create public information programs on the GND together. An informative article in The Nation, Why the Best New Deal Is a Green New Deal, explains: “The climate movement has become a powerful political force, with tens of thousands of people from across America’s largest cities and smallest communities calling for an end to the unsustainable use of fossil fuels—but now the call includes plans that create jobs and address the possible disproportionate effects on marginal and at-risk communities. Progressive politicians are following their lead, increasingly realizing that the only way to equitably meet the challenge of a clean-energy revolution is a 21st-century economy that guarantees clean air and water, modernizes national infrastructure, and creates high-quality jobs.”
  5. Visit your Congressional reps and say (as this Huffington Post opinion piece puts it): “We need a mass mobilization of people and resources, something not unlike the U.S. involvement in World War II or the Apollo moon missions―but even bigger. We must transform our energy system, transportation, housing, agriculture and more.”  
  6. Contact your local people involved in Public Banking – you can find a map and information at PBI, Public Banking Institute. Its founder, attorney Ellen Brown, has a number of articles on the PBI website to explain her ideas for funding the GND in the huge amounts we need to counter climate change. We’re trying right now to connect her to the Congresspeople involved in figuring out how to pay for this undertaking.

The Green New Deal connects the dots just as WILPF has been doing for this last century. For those of you who’ve been the recipients of some of the good done by FDR’s New Deal–help pass that on to our younger generations.  Spread the message that the Green New Deal for our time needs to be "broader and more inclusive" than the original one!

Sign up for the websites, to get updates, and help spread information and action opportunities around your community. A GND week of action in early February already took place, getting even more individuals and groups involved. We’ll be hearing a lot more about the ideas and efforts taking root, and very soon!

The Greens say:  Let us not rest until we have pulled our nation back from the brink, and until we have secured the peaceful, just, green future we all deserve.

I hope to hear from some of you with your ideas and plans for action. Contact me at rsolick@gmail.com.

 

Post date: Fri, 03/01/2019 - 09:44

Above: Ibtissam, a 15-year-old orphan girl, lives in a ragged tent with her 7 siblings in an IDP settlement in Khamir, about 100 km north of Yemen’s capital. Ibtissam’s father was killed when her hometown of Saada was attacked in 2015 and her mother died of a stroke shortly after. Ibtissam and her siblings were evacuated by an uncle and aunt. They are among the more than 3 million people who have fled their homes in search for safety and security since the escalation of the conflict in 2015. Photo: Giles Clarke/UN OCHA, 2017. Used by permission of the photographer.


By Ellen Rosser
For the Middle East Committee

The situation in Yemen is still tense. The conflict began in 2014 when the Houthis moved from their center in Saada and took over much of the country, including the capital of Sanaa, where they overthrew the government of President Hadi and drove him out.

The fighting escalated in 2015 when Saudi Arabia and the UAE formed a coalition fighting to restore the Hadi Government. The US provided logistical support, including refueling fighter planes, and the coalition has carried out more than 18,000 raids on Houthi-held areas. Though the US issued a statement in November 2018 saying it halted refueling assistance, it has also provided intelligence support and supplied weaponry to the coalition.


Photo: Kholod, 3 years old, stands on a hospital bed at Al Thawra Hospital in Al Hudaydah, Yemen, in April 2017, shortly after being admitted to the pediatric ward for severe acute malnutrition. One of five children, her father is a teacher in a local school but he had not been paid in months. According to UN figures, nearly 2.2 million Yemeni children are acutely malnourished and an estimated 462,000 children suffer from severe acute malnutrition in Yemen today, a nearly 200% increase since 2014. Giles Clarke/UN OCHA.


Yemen is suffering a massive humanitarian disaster because of the fighting, with 85,000 children dying of starvation and many more civilians dying from cholera and starvation. Recently a peace conference in Sweden obtained an agreement from the warring parties to open the crucial port of Hodeida through which most humanitarian aid comes, and a UN peacekeeping mission is monitoring the implementation of the ceasefire that stopped the fighting there. However, clashes still have been reported and neither the Houthi militia nor the government forces have deployed from the city yet.

The US position on the war in Yemen is unclear and in flux. Following Saudi Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi (October 2018), the US Senate voted in December to end the US role supporting Saudi Arabia in Yemen, even though Trump has not indicated that he supports ending the US role there.

However, when the new Democratic-majority House passed the same resolution and sent it to the Senate in January, the Republican-controlled Senate refused to consider it, citing the government shutdown as the reason at that point.

The new Congress has taken this issue up immediately (see Congress Poised to Move Forward with Bold Agenda on Yemen) and the House passed a bill invoking its War Powers ability to end the US involvement in Yemen. But yet another GOP maneuver is blocking the bill from getting a Senate vote. Even if the Senate were to pass a similar bill, Trump may veto it. That could cause a constitutional crisis, since only Congress has the right to declare war.

Please call your Senators and ask them to immediately halt all US military support for the war and all sales of weapons or nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia. Telephone switchboard for Senate: 1-202-224-3121.

 

 

Post date: Fri, 03/01/2019 - 09:37

By Jan Corderman and Linda Lemons
WILPF Des Moines Steering Committee Members

WILPF Des Moines’s major event in February was our 9th Strong Feisty Women, Powering Change Event, honoring Eloise Cranke for powering change in our community, Marti Anderson for powering change in our legislature, and Cathy Glasson for powering change in movement politics. More than 100 people came together to celebrate the power and resilience of women using their talents and skills to create change.

Eloise Cranke is a longtime activist and member of WILPF, whose calendar is always full advocating for peace and justice issues. Marti Anderson, also a long time WILPF member, has been involved her entire career in the advancement of women’s and children’s rights and the human need for safety and respect. She has served in the Iowa Legislature since 2013, and is working hard to advocate for human rights and the protection of our environment in a legislature focused on supporting corporations. Cathy Glasson, President of SEIU Iowa, which represents more than 5,000 hardworking Iowans, ran for governor of Iowa, and used an approach called movement politics in which she created her platform from listening to the needs of people and the issues they are facing. Mary Hanson Harrison, our outgoing US WILPF President, shared the legacy of women coming together to meet the needs of people, and the advocacy for peace and justice, which eventually led to the creation of WILPF.

Des Moines Branch Feisty Women The Raging Grannies led us in song, expressing our sentiments with new lyrics to familiar tunes. We even had a statue of Jane Addams and encouraged people to take pictures with her. We had 22 cosponsors of our event and offered space for people to share information about their church community or organization. We believe we were quite successful in creating space for people to come together, and to share their stories, gifts, and ideas with each other, so that we can continue to enhance and build our movement for peace and justice.

Besides our Strong Feisty Women event, WILPF women continued to remain active in a variety of other events this month. As a coalition member of Iowa Alliance for Responsible Agriculture, WILPF women joined with other coalition members at the capitol the day before our Strong Feisty Women Event to lobby for a moratorium on factory farms. At any given time, the state of Iowa has over 20 million pigs and more than 40 million egg-laying hens that are predominantly confined on over 9,000 factory farms. We don’t need more!! This method of farming can have a myriad of impacts on air, water, and public health documented in over 50 years of respected, peer-reviewed studies. It’s time to reclaim the rich agricultural heritage of our state. The Raging Grannies closed out the day by leading everyone in the “Personhood Song” to the tune of “This Land Is Your Land,” and “Home on the Earth,” to the tune of “Home on the Range.”  

At our regular meeting we heard about different types of representative governments from Jeffrey Weis, a local professor, who delivered a talk on “How Presidential Republics Fail and why the United States May Be No Exception.” WILPF members also attended a Climate Revival, featuring the author of a recent book club read Climate Church, Climate World, which focuses on the importance of faith communities taking action to address our climate crisis. Carolyn Uhlenhake Walker, WILPF member, spoke about the Sustainability Task Force she is helping to lead to create a climate action plan for the city of Des Moines.

Regardless of the activity, our focus is on building relationships, changing the narrative, and finding our feminist voices to create a movement for change.

 

Post date: Fri, 03/01/2019 - 09:29
Caracas, Venezuela

Aerial view of Francia Square (aka Altamira Square), in the Venezuelan capital city, Caracas. Paolo Costa / Shutterstock.com

By Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

The developing situation in Venezuela is extremely concerning.  Because Venezuela is an oil-rich country, the US government is preparing to use military force and otherwise intervening in a sovereign country’s internal affairs.  This is the same US policy as in Iraq. Yet, in Venezuela, the US is opposing the elected president. And though it is US sanctions that have brought on several years of Venezuelan economic, food, and medicine crises; these conditions are now being used to justify regime change on Trumped-up charges. Trump officials do not even deny their goal of taking control of Venezuela’s oil reserves.

WILPF US opposes such intervention! Take action for peace! Below are numerous suggestions and resources for activism, from nowaronvenezuela.org.

We can learn a painful lesson when we note that the current US intervention continues bipartisan federal policies and sanctions that have been in place through multiple administrations, including Obama’s.  (See the recap of recent US intervention in Venezuela in this article.)  

The US sanctions are devastating to the people.  (Such policies are also being used against Iran.). The trade sanctions, along with the withholding of money legitimately owed to Venezuela for oil sales in the US, have crippled the fragile economy of Venezuela.  

The Trump administration, backed by the corporate media, paints the elected government of Nicolás Maduro as tyrannical, ignoring the broad Venezuelan governmental support for food, health care, and education for the poor.  The mainstream media (including, NPR and PBS) give selective and biased coverage.  (See this informative article). They have showcased the US-backed posturing and incitement to violence around humanitarian aid, despite the U.N. position against politicizing such aid.

US policy toward Latin America has long been one of domination. Repeatedly, the US has backed the rule of dictators, as long as they support US strategic goals. Governments, elected or otherwise, which attempt to determine their own path are branded as dictatorial and are subject to all possible attempts to overturn them, from sanctions and proxy wars, to coup d’états and direct military intervention. Many of us remember the deadly US role in Central America and the key part played by convicted felon (now reappointed) Elliot Abrams!

Please join in to protect the self-determination of the Venezuelan people, and the safety from war of their country! Take action now and prepare for major demonstrations planned across the country on March 16 and March 30,  Here—condensed and revised from nowaronvenezuela.org, with thanks to them—are some ideas and resources for action:

  1. In the event of military intervention in Venezuela—HIT THE STREETS & SHUT IT DOWN! If the U.S. or its allies take military action against Venezuela, step up immediately and help take our resistance to the streets with grassroots acts of multiple kinds. No business as usual! Help become a global voice to demand NO WAR! Discuss and plan now for times and places to gather in case military action against Venezuela occurs. Make preparations in your city for emergency actions the day after any military action.
  2. Provide some alternative information and gather signatures on President Maduro’s Open Letter to the People of the United States. Ideally, work with other groups in your community to do so. Talk with people about the reality of the situation in Venezuela, using diverse information resources, including the fact sheets and other materials here.  Collecting signatures on the Open Letter serves as an act of solidarity and resistance. You can also sign and share the petition online.  
  3. Join the demonstrations locally and in Washington, DC, on March 16 — Hands Off Venezuela and on March 30 — Say No to NATO, War, and Racism.

Our efforts are critical!  Broaden international solidarity, promote diplomacy, and respect the sovereign self-determination of other countries! No to US Intervention!
 

 

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