Greenfield, December 11, 2018: Night Out Of Darkness, Peace & Justice, Free Palestine!

Night out of Darkness 2018_Final

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A Night Out of Darkness

Jewish Voice for Peace – Milwaukee

5235 S 27th Street, Greenfield, Islamic Resource Center, 6:30 – 8 P.M.

Join us as we move towards the solstice and shortest days of the year to create light in these difficult times. We will light candles and join together in solidarity, against Islamophobia, racism, anti-Semitism, settler colonialism, and hate, and FOR love and justice. There will be words by Rabbi Michael Davis and others, as well as food** and joy. All welcome.

➢ We honor indigenous sovereignty on these lands.
➢ We refuse to be silent about anti-Muslim, anti-Arab, anti- Semitic, sexist and racist hate speech and hate crimes.
➢ We condemn U.S. and Israeli state surveillance of Muslim, Arab & Palestinian, and migrant communities.
➢ We join in solidarity with refugees and migrants; we honor the rights of all people to move.
➢ We fight anti-Muslim profiling and racial profiling in all its forms.
➢ We support the Palestinian Great March of Return.
➢ We call for an end to racist policing #SayHerName #BlackLivesMatter.
➢ We stand together with the LGBTQ community against violence.
➢ We protest the use of anti-Semitic hate crimes and anti-Arab racism to justify Israel’s repressive policies against Palestinians.

We hope you will join us on Dec. 11th—together, our calls for justice will reverberate across the country.

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France: The WFTU on the side of the French workers

http://www.wftucentral.org/france-the-wftu-on-the-side-of-the-french-workers/

The World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) expresses its solidarity with the workers and people of France who are fighting against the policy of high prices and excessive taxation of the French government and at the same time are protesting against the anti-labor policies of the European Union and the IMF. The international class-oriented trade union movement joins its voice to that of the working youth in France, with the homeless, the unemployed, the new-poor, immigrants for a world without capitalist exploitation.

The police state and state violence highlight the role of the state and the goals of the bourgeoisie. President Macron’s maneuvers to weaken protests through false and hypocritical social dialogues should not trap the working class and the people. The class unions, the class-oriented vanguard can significantly help the people masses, leaving their own mark, giving the orientation, the content and the appropriate forms of struggle, isolating the neo-fascist and racist elements, in order to strengthen the struggle and the anti-capitalist claims.

Long live internationalist solidarity!

The WFTU Secretariat

Call to Strike in Light of Carol Folt’s Proposal to Reinstate Silent Sam at UNC

The TAA-AFT Executive Board at UW Madison stands in solidarity with UNC educators in their grading strike against a racist monument on campus.
http://silencesam.com/

Below is the call to strike by anti-racist protestors in light of Carol Folt’s despicable proposal to UNC’s Board of Governors:

The UNC Board of Trustees (BOT) and Chancellor Carol Folt took several liberties today, both overt and covert. The overt: The BOT and Folt proposed that the University re-erect a Confederate Monument on a public university campus in 2018—155 years after enslaved people forced the passage of the Emancipation Proclamation and 153 years after the defeat of the Confederate States of America. They’ve proposed to spend $5.3 million dollars out of the University budget to house the Confederate Monument, Silent Sam, even as the administration is planning to hike student fees in order to make up a Facilities Maintenance deficit. Sadly, these outrageous proposals are in keeping with the University’s legacy of exploiting enslaved black people to build this campus and its history of racial segregation that lasted until 1955.

The covert: the BOT and Folt proposed that the University spend millions of dollars annually to increase the policing and surveillance of student and community protesters. This also fits with the University’s and Chapel Hill’s legacy of policing antiracist activists and its disregard for black bodies. This history is exemplified in the case of black Chapel Hill resident James Lewis Cates’ murder in 1970 by a white motorcycle gang in the Pit, and the University’s repression of black student protests that followed. http://silencesam.com/

Demand the Immediate Release of Prominent Palestinian Author Susan Abulhawa from Israeli Detention!

https://tinyurl.com/y8hoc8ou

This is an urgent and time-sensitive situation. Please sign and share widely among your networks to ensure Susan’s immediate and unconditional release from Israeli detention!

Susan Abulhawa, the Palestinian novelist, has been denied entry at Tel Aviv Airport on her way to the Kalimat Palestinian Literature Festival sponsored in part by the British Council. Despite the help of a lawyer from the British Council, the US Embassy and the festival organizers who have been on hand to assist, she was been detained by border forces upon her arrival.

She is one of the most commercially successful Arab authors of all time. Abulhawa’s 2010 debut novel Mornings in Jenin, a multigenerational family epic spanning five countries and more than sixty years, looks unflinchingly at the Palestinian question – and became an international bestseller translated into twenty-eight languages. Susan was also a juror among a panel of internationally recognized human rights activists at the recent International People’s Tribunal on US Colonial Crimes in Puerto Rico.

At this point, Susan is in detention awaiting a judicial decision regarding her appeal to allow her entry. Festival organizers and the British Council have stated that her participation is a cornerstone of the festival and very much needed.

We demand the immediate release of Susan Abulhawa and a guarantee that she will be able to travel and participate in the Kalimat Palestinian Literature Festival without any further incident. As a prominent Palestinian author, she deserves to be allowed to attend the Kalimat Palestinian Literature Festival in her birthright county.

Below is the contact info for the US Embassy of Israel to ask that she be allowed entry to participate. (https://www.science.co.il/Embassy.php)

In addition to signing this petition, please contact these US officials to demand they assist in assuring Abulhawa’s speedy release and permission to travel to the festival.

Ron Dermer, Israeli Ambassador to the United States

202-364-5500

David Friedman, US Ambassdor to Israel

Sen. Robert Casey, PA

202-224-6324

Sen. Patrick Toomey, PA

202-224-4254

Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick

202-225-4257

Milwaukee, December 7, 2018: Fight Back Friday!

Fight Back Friday!

815 E Locust Street, Milwaukee, 4-6 P.M.

We love working in Milwaukee Public Schools, but know our days are also challenging and stressful. That’s why Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association (MTEA) welcomes all MPS educators and education workers to the Riverwest Public House Cooperative for “Fight Back Friday.” This event will be held on the first Friday of every month from 4pm to 6pm, and will offer local educators and education workers a space to connect, rejuvenate, and advocate for our students and profession.

Every month we will feature a different activity or speaker to keep the event fresh. Come and join others fighting to make our public schools the best possible place for our students.

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WEAC & Other Labor-Community Orgs. Fight Back Against Right Wing Lame Duck Legislative Session

https://weac.org/

PROTESTS AT STATE CAPITOL IN MADISON ALL DAY AND NIGHT DECEMBER 4, 2018!!

UPDATE: The Joint Finance Committee voted 12-4 along party lines early Tuesday to approve three GOP-authored extraordinary session bills after making several tweaks to the legislation. The bills, which both houses of the Legislature plan to take to the floor this afternoon after they were introduced Friday, would make a series of changes to state law to give the Legislature more oversight of the incoming Tony Evers administration and say over the decisions of AG-elect Josh Kaul. 

WEAC is partnering with our allies to push back on the right win legislative lame duck session, after over 40 provisions were introduced at the very end of the day Friday. Radio ads startedMonday and WEAC members and public education supporters are being asked to immediately email your legislators and share digital content on social media channels. WEAC will inform you about opportunities to be part of press events, rallies and townhalls being organized in various areas of the state as well.

Please cut and paste the message below to share with your members:

Lame duck session an outrageous attempt to bypass election results

An outrageous attempt by Legislative Republicans to ram through last-ditch laws is on the fast-track, with five bills containing more than 40 changes in state law being announced at 4:30 p.m. Friday, set for a hearing Monday and up for a vote as soon as Tuesday.

Voters were clear: Strengthen schools, fix roads, protect health care access. The Republican majority instead is set to go back to their old nasty tricks of getting their way – voters be damned. If anyone still questioned their capacity to put politics over people, this should settle the question once and for all.

Governor-Elect Tony Evers should have the same ability to governor as that afforded to Governor Walker. But there’s no getting around how far his political opponents will go. This special session is a signal that this is not the end of Walker’s reign. It’s a sign of what’s to come when Governor-Elect Evers takes office, and how active we’ll need to be to counter the GOP legislators who are digging in their heels at all costs.

Here are some of the key measures being pursued by Republicans in the Lame Duck Session:

Preventing withdrawal of health care lawsuit

Republican candidates campaigned on protecting health care access, yet a key part of the package would fundamentally change the role of the state Attorney General, giving lawmakers broad new powers to constrain incoming AG Josh Kaul and prevent him from intervening in Scott Walker’s lawsuit against the federal ACA. The provision limits the ability of the Attorney General to settle or withdraw cases by requiring the approval of the Joint Committee on Finance. Current law only requires approval of the governor.

Limiting early voting

Another bill would bar early voting from starting earlier than two weeks before an election — despite a federal judge’s ruling two years ago that struck down similar restrictions as racially discriminatory. The proposed voting changes come after Democrats won every statewide office in the November election, powered by record voter turnout for a midterm and record early voting totals.

The Assembly GOP proposal could disproportionately affect early voting in Wisconsin’s biggest cities, which vote heavily Democratic.

Stripping the governor’s power on jobs agency

One bill would give GOP lawmakers more power over Walker’s job-creation agency, the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp., which Evers has sought to dissolve, and strip the governor of the power to appoint the agency’s CEO.

Moving the presidential primary

Another change would move Wisconsin’s presidential primary to March, which local election officials have said would be “impossible” to carry out. The effort to move the 2020 primary would improve the chances of conservative-backed state Supreme Court Justice Daniel Kelly, who would be up for election for the first time in the April 2020 election. Walker appointed Kelly to replace retiring Justice David Prosser in 2016.

Pre-Existing Conditions

One bill included passed the Assembly last year, but stalled in the Senate. It would help people with pre-existing conditions get health coverage if the federal Obamacare law is repealed or struck down in court. The bill doesn’t provide the same level of protections as Obamacare to people with serious health conditions.

Republicans are considering a slew of other changes to elections, taxes and transportation funding, including these items of note:

  • Provisions that prohibit courts from deferring to administrative decisions.
  • Provisions that would allow the Legislature to intervene in lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of a statute with their own counsel outside of the Attorney General’s office and to require that “special counsel” represent the defendant in such cases where JCLO determines the interests of the state would best be represented.
  • Elimination of the solicitor general and the Attorney General’s ability to appoint to the positions.
  • Provision authorizing legislators to have their own representatives outside of the Department of Justice.
  • Provision related to senate confirmation of the governor’s appointments, requiring that any individual nominated by the Governor or another state officer or agency, and with the advice and consent of the Senate appointed, to any office or position may not hold the office or position, be nominated again for the office or position, or perform any duties of the office or position during the legislative session biennium if the individual’s confirmation for the office or position is rejected by the Senate.  Currently, there is nothing prohibiting the governor from nominating the individual again for the office or position or appointing the individual to the office or position as a provisional appointment.
  • Total appropriations for workforce development grants for career and technical education remain the same but are allocated differently, with no funding allocated for teacher development program grants. The program’s goal is to increase the number of licensed teachers in Wisconsin Schools, so given the state teacher shortage is at best a questionable move.

https://weac.org/