Madison, April 16, 2019: An Evening with Angela Davis

An Evening with Angela Davis

800 Langdon Street, UW Madison Memorial Union, 7 – 8:30 P.M.

Through her activism and scholarship over the last decades, Angela Davis has been deeply involved in our nation’s quest for social justice. Her work as an educator – both at the university level and in the larger public sphere – has always emphasized the importance of building communities of struggle for economic, racial, and gender justice.

Professor Davis’ teaching career has taken her to many different institutions and she is now Distinguished Professor Emerita of History of Consciousness, an interdisciplinary Ph.D program, and of Feminist Studies.

Angela Davis is the author of nine books. In recent years a persistent theme of her work has been the range of social problems associated with incarceration and the generalized criminalization of those communities that are most affected by poverty and racial discrimination. She draws upon her own experiences in the early seventies as a person who spent eighteen months in jail and on trial, after being placed on the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted List.” Davis has also conducted extensive research on numerous issues related to race, gender and imprisonment. Her most recent book is Freedom is a Constant Struggle.

Davis is a founding member Critical Resistance, a national organization dedicated to the dismantling of the prison industrial complex. Internationally, she is affiliated with Sisters Inside, an abolitionist organization based in Queensland, Australia that works in solidarity with women in prison.

This event is brought to you by WUD Distinguished Lecture Series.

Please join WUD DLS for An Evening with Angela Davis on Tuesday, April 16 at 7:30 p.m. The doors of Shannon Hall in Memorial Union will open at 7:00 p.m. The one-hour moderated Q&A lecture is open and FREE to both students and the public, and will end with a 30-minute Q&A.

A GENERAL ADMISSION TICKET IS REQUIRED FOR THIS EVENT.

Tickets are available for pick up (free) at the Memorial Union Box Office to anyone with a valid WisCard (2 max) starting 2/25.

Tickets will be available for pick up (free) AND online ($4 processing fee per ticket) to all guests starting 4/1.

The Box Office is open:
Monday – Friday: 10am – 5pm
Saturday: 11:30am – 2:30pm
Sunday: Closed

If you have any questions, please contact dls@union.wisc.edu for further information.

Sign Language interpreting will be provided with CART captioning available upon request. If you need another accommodation to attend this event, please contact Kate Lewandowski at kate.lewandowski@wisc.edu. All accommodation requests should be made no less than two weeks before the event. We will attempt to fulfill requests made after this date but cannot guarantee they will be met.

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Israel closes Gaza border blocking aid transfers

Israel today closed Gaza’s main commercial crossing to all good except fuel, local sources reported.

Israel has increased its targeting of the besieged Gaza Strip over the past few days, striking sites in the enclave causing damage to property.

It claims the closure of the Kerem Shalom (Karm Abu Salem) crossing is in response what it calls incendiary balloons which exploded in the air and caused no damage to Israel yesterday.

Occupation forces regularly block access to the Gaza crossings as a means of controlling the Palestinian population. In July Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Kerem Shalom would be closed if kite and balloon launchers continued with their activity.

Gaza ran out of cooking gas as a result of the Israeli closure of the crossing days later.

Palestinians wait to fill canisters with cooking gas. Palestinians in the Gaza Strip are experiencing shortage in gas and fuel. [Ashraf Amra/Apaimages]

Anti-slavery campaigns in Britain and their impact on the formation of the United States

https://bit.ly/2SOJr9E

by Abayomi Azikiwe

Pambazuka News | February 24, 2019

The leaders of the 18th century separatist movement from England were not motivated by a genuine desire for freedom and equality.

If the so-called American Revolution of 1776 was truly committed to breaking with monarchical and autocratic rule from the United Kingdom then why did slavery grow at a rapid rate after the achievement of independence of the former 13 colonies in North America?

This is an important political question since even in the 21st century there are repeated references by elected officials in both houses of Congress, the White House and the Supreme Court to the “Founding Fathers” and “Framers of the Constitution.” What is not mentioned by these career politicians and lifetime jurists is that many of the authors of the United States Constitution were large-scale slave owners themselves.

These wealthy landowners and slave masters did not see any reason to liberate the more than 700,000 Africans living in the former colonies by the conclusion of the 1780s. The existence of slavery was quite profitable and with the discovery of the cotton gin in 1793, the expansion of involuntary servitude across the South and extending further west empowered the planters to the point where as a result of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 they were able to dominate the House of Representatives through a provision declaring that enslaved Africans could be counted as three-fifths of a person.

In an article published by Paul Finkelman of the Albany Law School in New York: “The three-fifths clause provided the extra proslavery representatives in the House to secure the passage of the Missouri Compromise of 1820 (bringing Missouri in as a slave state); the annexation in 1845 of Texas, which was described at the time as an ‘empire for slavery’; the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850; the law allowing slavery in Utah and New Mexico; and the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 (which opened the Great Plains and Rocky Mountain territories to slavery). None of these laws could have been passed without the representatives created by counting slaves under the three-fifths clause.”[[i]] …. https://bit.ly/2SOJr9E

– Abayomi Azikiwe is Editor at Pan-African News Wire, https://panafricannews.blogspot.com/

 Zong massacre of 1781 by the British slave traders

400 years (1619-2019) after the beginning of African enslavement in the British colony of Virginia

by Abayomi Azikiwe

Pambazuka News | February 24, 2019

https://bit.ly/2NKp50m

Six months from now, a commemoration of the long saga of struggle against national oppression and economic exploitation will take place.

 

In late August of 1619, approximately 20 Africans were brought to the shore of Jamestown Settlement in Virginia, then a colony of Britain, having been captured by Portuguese colonisers in the Ndongo and Kongo kingdoms (in the vicinity of modern day Angola, Republic of Congo-Brazzaville and the Democratic Republic of Congo) and then stolen again en route to Vera Cruz on the coast of Mexico by British traders operating a warship flying a Dutch flag for the purpose of labour exploitation.

After being marched 100-200 miles (160-320 kilometres) from inland West-Central Africa, the 350 captives were loaded at the slave-port of Luanda on to the vessel San Juan Bautista. The British traders attacked the San Juan Bautista near its destination and took 50-60 Africans placing them on the White Lion and Treasurer ships directed towards Virginia where these vessels initially landed at Point Comfort (Hampton today)[[i]].

It has been reported that the majority of Africans arriving on the White Lion were acquired by wealthy British planters including Governor Sir George Yeardley and Abraham Piersey. At this time there appeared to have been no specific laws related to enslavement in the colony…. https://bit.ly/2NKp50m

– Abayomi Azikiwe is Editor at Pan-African News Wire, https://panafricannews.blogspot.com/

 

Africans arrive in Jamestown Settlement in August 1619

Madison, March 6, 2019: Celebration of Planned Parenthood

Celebration of Planned Parenthood

3706 Orin Rd., Madison, 6 – 8 P.M.

Today! March 6, 2019. Madison Abortion Defense decided that the best way to begin our campaign of resistance, at the start of 40 Days of Clinic Harassment, is with affirmation and love for an organization we are grateful to have in our community. We Planned Parenthood.

There will be music to enjoy and cards and markers for writing notes of appreciation and support for clinic staff and patients. Come and share your appreciation for Planned Parenthood, abortion services, and all reproductive and sexual health care that empowers us to direct the course of our own lives. Countering the anti-abortion attacks of Vigil for Life by asserting that we are proud to have Planned Parenthood and abortion services in our community is a powerful act that will sustain our movement in the weeks to come.

See you tonight at 6!

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Madison, March 6, 2019: Remember Tony Robinson Anniversary March and Vigil

Remember Tony Robinson Anniversary March and Vigil

1202 Williamson Street, Madison, 6 – 8 P.M.

On March 6th we will gather at the Social Justice Center near where Tony Robinson was slain and hold a candle light vigil.

Wanting to light up the night sky with messages of love and remembrance. Bring your own candles if you can.

We must never forget the brutal murder of our beloved Tony Terrell Robinson and the racist system that made that murder possible.

We must continue to unite and build community – build people power.

It is our duty to fight for our freedom, It is our duty to win.

ALL POWER TO THE PEOPLE

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Jewish Activist From Detroit Defends Ilhan Omar

DEFEND ILHAN OMAR

#ISTANDWITHILHAN

By Jerry Goldberg

As an activist from a Jewish background, I completely defend Ilhan Omar’s remarks pointing to the role of AIPAC, the Zionist lobby in Washington, of paying politicians (both Republicans and Democrats) to attack those who stand up in defense of Palestine and especially who want to criminalize those who advocate the boycott and divestment movement from Zionist Israel.

Attacking Zionism and its US lobby AIPAC (American Israel Political Action Committee) is not in any way anti-semitic. Judaism and Zionism are not the same. Zionism in its modern incarnation since Theodore Herzl, is a racist, pro-colonial ideology, that was embraced by imperialism beginning with the Balfour declaration in 1917, when it coincided with western imperialism’s desire to have a garrison state and outpost in the Middle East to guarantee the robbery of Arab oil and resources. That is why Israel is always on the wrong side of every progressive struggle worldwide, even embracing apartheid South African with its Nazi leaders.

Jews never embraced Zionism and had no interest in migrating into Palestine, until they were essentially forced into Palestine when the United States closed its borders to Jewish refugees from the Holocaust. The imperialists conveniently and cynically saw the opportunity to use Jewish refugees with no where else to go as their shock troops in their war against the Palestinian people to create the illegal state of Israel. And U.S. imperialism funds Israel to this day as its military outpost in the Middle East.

It is unfortunate that main stream Jewish leaders embrace Zionism and have brainwashed too many Jewish youth and others in the US into equating the racist Zionist ideology with the Jewish religion. Many of these so-called leaders turned their backs on defense of the Black liberation movement in the US when its leaders understood the connection of the Palestinian struggle to the struggle for liberation of oppressed people in the US and worldwide.

However, as an activist for 50 years, I am encouraged that the real role of Israel as a racist, imperialist outpost is now understood by more and more activists, including young progressive Jewish activists.

I fully defend Ilhan Omar and all those who stand up for the liberation of all oppressed people. I have every confidence that Israel’s days as an apartheid state are limited, and a free Palestine that embraces all its people will ultimately emerge victorious.

#ISTANDWITHILHAN

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Sheboygan, March 23, 2019: ‘People’s Offensive March & Rally’

March and Rally

Three march departure points. Choose any one! Join by 11 A.M. Look for “People’s Offensive March & Rally” banners (and signs)!

– 1104 Wisconsin Avenue, Sheboygan
– 9th & Superior, Sheboygan
– Bus Transfer Point between 8th & 9th Avenue (In front of Post Office)

All marchers will proceed to Fountain Park for a unity rally!

 

We will come together to unite the community in a march and rally. We will lift up the voices of all exploited people to fight for a WISCONSIN WHERE ALL FAMILIES CAN PROSPER.

Visit the Facebook pages of these organizing groups for start locations and ongoing info:
● Wisconsin Bail Out The People Movement
● Sheboygan Comm-UNITY March
● Crusaders Of Justicia

More info: sheboygancommunity@gmail.com

PDF’s of English and Spanish Fliers:

PeoplesOffensiveFlyer01 March 23 2019 Sheboygan

PeoplesOffensiveFlyer02-Spanish March 23 2019

HALF-SHEET PDF: PEOPLES OFFENSIVE SHEBOYGAN MARCH 23 2019 HALF SHEET

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