Appleton, WI August 10, 2019: On the 2nd Anniversary of Charlottesville, Act Against White Supremacy!

2nd Anniversary of Charlottesville: Act Against White Supremacy

Fox AntiFa

𝗢𝗻 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝟮𝗻𝗱 𝗮𝗻𝗻𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗮𝗿𝘆 𝗼𝗳 𝗖𝗵𝗮𝗿𝗹𝗼𝘁𝘁𝗲𝘀𝘃𝗶𝗹𝗹𝗲 (𝗔𝘂𝗴. 𝟭𝟬-𝟭𝟭), 𝗮 𝗰𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝗳𝗼𝗿: 𝗡𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗗𝗮𝘆𝘀 𝗼𝗳 𝗔𝗰𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝗔𝗴𝗮𝗶𝗻𝘀𝘁 𝗪𝗵𝗶𝘁𝗲 𝗦𝘂𝗽𝗿𝗲𝗺𝗮𝗰𝘆 – 𝗜𝗺𝗽𝗲𝗮𝗰𝗵 𝗧𝗿𝘂𝗺𝗽 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗛𝗮𝘁𝗲 𝗖𝗿𝗶𝗺𝗲𝘀!

_____EVENT TIMES_____
Protest at Houdini Plaza: August 10 2pm central time
Vigil at Houdini Plaza: August 10 7pm central time

We hold in our hearts the memory of anti-racist activist Heather Heyer and the dozens injured by the fascists in Charlottesville. While it was a Nazi thug who murdered Heather, it is the bigot-in-chief Donald Trump, endorser of the “very fine” Nazi and Klan scum, who has enshrined their genocidal ideology as his national policy against the disabled, the LGBTQ+ community, and all People of Color.

Migrants at our southern border, who are “engaged in a federally protected activity” of seeking asylum, are having their babies ripped from their parents arms, their children kidnapped and placed in cages, women forced to drink out of toilets. Cages are so crowded that no one can even lie on the floor. Food, soap, even toothbrushes are denied them, all on the orders from Trump because of their “race” and “national origin.” This meets the very definition of a federal hate crime multiplied thousands of times.

Trump is showing off his brutality “stripes” to his rich friends on Wall Street, to show them how tough he’ll be to those who oppose their cutbacks, like the dismantling of Obamacare. We’re supposed to fight over the scraps that they grant us. That’s why they’ve poured more than $100 million into Trump’s re-election campaign. We demand that Congress immediately impeach Trump for hate crimes and dump his whole gang of rich bigots!

We ask that organizations who agree with this message organize and publicize an activity within their community on these dates. Message us to have your group’s name added to this call.

Main event: https://www.facebook.com/events/2729618263733359/?event_time_id=2729618270400025

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Venezuelan President Maduro Personally Thanks Embassy Protection Collective From U.S.

https://bit.ly/2YjyYe1

During their visit, they personally were greeted and met with President Maduro, who gifted them with a replica of Simon Bolivar’s sword.

Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro reiterated Tuesday his gratitude to United States’ activists who were members of the Protection Collective of Venezuela’s embassy in Washington.

“Our gratitude and eternal recognition to the Protection Collective of our diplomatic headquarters in Washington. Their performance reflects high morals for the defense of the dignity and sovereignty of the Venezuelan people,” the president tweeted.

The delegation of the Embassy Protection Collective visited Caracas to be part of the 25th edition of the Sao Paulo Forum, which annually gathers left-wing organizations, parties, and governments. During their visit, they personally were greeted and met with President Maduro, who gifted them with a replica of Simon Bolivar’s sword.

‘It is the replica of the Liberator’s sword, used in the Battle of Carabobo, and I want to give you as a token of appreciation of the most valuable we have, which is the love of freedom, as a symbol of the eternal union between our peoples,” the head of state said during the ceremony.

The activists occupied the Venezuelan embassy in Washinton D.C. for 37 days, defending it against U.S. authorities and the Venezuelan opposition since mid-April. To retaliate, U.S. and opposition forces sought to cut electricity and water services to the building, as well as prevent food from entering by keeping a siege on the premises daily.

The diplomatic premises were finally violently raided by U.S. police on May 16, as unofficial representatives of lawmaker Juan Guaido took over the building.

Ambassador of Venezuela to the United Nations (U.N.), Samuel Moncada, denounced it as a violation of the 1961 Vienna Convention by the U.S. government. The Venezuelan official reminded that according to Art. 22 of the Convention on Diplomatic Relations, “the premises of the mission shall be inviolable.”

Even during a break in diplomatic relations and supported by Art. 45, the receiving nation, in this case, the U.S., must continue respecting foreign properties. As is the case of the Venezuelan government who has respected the U.S. Embassy in Caracas, and under international law allowed the Swiss government — appointed by the U.S. — to take care of the premises. https://bit.ly/2YjyYe1

The Embassy Protection Collective visited Caracas to be part of the 25th edition of the Sao Paulo Forum.

The Embassy Protection Collective visited Caracas to be part of the 25th edition of the Sao Paulo Forum. | Photo: Nicolas Maduro Twitter

Superior/Duluth August 24, 2019: Pride Letters to Prisoners

Superior/Duluth Pride Letters to Prisoners

Since Pride is at the end of August and in September, we thought it appropriate to write to marginialized LGBTQIAplus folx. These folx are constantly suffering sexual, physical, and mental harrasment. We write letters to folx in solidarity on this side of the wall!

Superior Save the Kids is a chapter of Dismantle the School to Prison Pipeline-Save the Kids. We have projects for Formerly Incarcerated peers, community activism, food justice, and in soldarity with hunger strikers such as Cesar De Leon
We are a group of activists, community organizers, students, and academics trying to end criminalizing detention of youth. Our main goals is education and organize around police murder of youth, decarceration of criminally-involved youth, and transformative justice.
Our main project is Letters to Prisoners which emphasizes solidarity over charity. We have special meetings to highlight Holidays, Mothers, Fathers, Trans folx, and Valentines events. This is a great and easy project to send communication to someone on the other side of the prison wall. Letters make sure incarcerated folks are not left in the shadows of America’s gulags.

Cynthia-Fox-Inside-Outside-Alliance-promotes-Sept.-9-prison-work-strike-Durham-County-Jail-080916-by-Mark-Schultz

Detroit, August 5, 2019: Eyewitness report on Cuba and the Middle East

Monday, Aug. 5, 7pm

5920 Second Ave., (at Antoinette, one block north of I-94)
Detroit 48202

You are invited to a special weekly organizing meeting of Moratorium NOW Coalition and MECAWI where Julia Kassem will report on her recent trip to Cuba with the 50th Venceremos Brigade. Julia has studied in the Lebanon for the past year and will also discuss the political situation in the Middle East from a revolutionary perspective. Julia is a leader in the U.S. Palestinian Community Network (USPCN) and has worked with community groups in Detroit organizing against the massive property tax foreclosures in our great city.

On Fcebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/637709863387933/

Remembering People’s Warrior Tom Manning

https://www.rfc.org/blog/article/2336

Ray Luc Levasseur
Black August
August 1, 2019

Tom Manning’s death on July 30 has me in the grip of an emotional riptide. I feel like part of me died with him.

Tom was imprisoned at USP-Hazelton, WV at the time of his death. The ostensible cause of death, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, was a heart attack.

I received Tom’s last letter on July 15. He wrote that he was in dire circumstances, his medical needs treated with deliberate indifference, delays in receiving necessary medication, his body weak from lack of oxygen. Supporters scrambled to get a lawyer in to see him, but death arrived first.

Tom battled the Bureau of Prisons criminal negligence of his medical needs for the past 10 years, beginning when he almost died from an untreated knee infection while at USP-Coleman, FL. As a result of that infection, most of his knee was surgically removed and he was wheelchair bound for the rest of his days.

But he was not through fighting.

When he arrived at FMC-Butner, NC for further medical treatment he was kept in solitary confinement under abysmal conditions for 3 years. Much-needed knee and shoulder surgeries were repeatedly delayed until pressure from Tom’s supporters forced the BOP to act. But the surgeries came too late, and combined with the lack of necessary rehab insured that Tom remained in a wheelchair.

Tom always had the warrior spirit, right to his last breath. Many more like him, and the ruling class would tremble. The ache in my heart over his passing will be forever.

In remembrance, I offer words I wrote in 2014 for Tom’s book “For Love and Liberty,” a collection of his paintings:

When Tom Manning and I first met 40 years ago, we were 27 years old and veterans of mule jobs, the Viet Nam war, and fighting our way through American prisons. We also harbored an intense hatred of oppression and a burning desire to organize resistance.

As members of a community action group called SCAR, we worked its ‘survival programs’ including a community bail fund, prison visitation program, and a radical bookstore. The Red Star North bookstore drew the venom of police – surveillance, harassment, raid and assault.

Tom and I disappeared underground in the midst of this and COINTELPRO revelations. We remained underground for near 10 years, much of it on the FBI’s ten most wanted list. We were tagged as ‘terrorist’ and ‘extremely dangerous’ because as ‘members of a revolutionary group’ we used explosives against targets of empire: predators of apartheid South Africa, Puerto Rico’s colonialism, and the slaughter in Central America.

We considered our work anti-terrorist. It was a time, you see, when activists were killed, imprisoned, tortured and exiled. ‘Winter in America’ as Gil Scott-Heron put it, and raging hell in El Salvador. It was a time when the U.S. sub-contracted its terrorism and if you were on the wrong end of it – you died.

Sometimes when we met underground I noticed Tom sketched on scraps of paper. I was impressed with how well he drew. I said to him – man, you got talent, why not do landscapes, portraits, big pictures! His response – no time for that, for our priority was taking down this wretched system that disrespects and destroys life.

The government’s mandate is that Tom die in prison, as our comrade Richard Williams did in 2005 after a long period of medical neglect and solitary confinement.

Tom has risen beyond the gulag’s attempt to strip his humanity. You can feel the dignity and spirit of resistance in his paintings. He is one of those carrying heavy burdens, be they the ‘sans-culottes’ of the world, a Haitian health care provider, or a victim of police bullets.

Political prisoners do not exist in a vacuum. They emerge from political and social conflicts. The ruling class and media attempt to criminalize, demonize and marginalize these prisoners, because recognition of political prisoners is de facto admission that serious conflicts exist and remain unresolved.

In 2006 an exhibit of Tom Manning’s paintings – ‘Can’t Jail the Spirit’ – opened at the University of Southern Maine. Police organizations throughout the Northeast conducted an intense ‘shut it down’ campaign. The police were particularly disturbed with the characterization of Tom as a ‘political prisoner’ and his painting of Assata Shakur on display. When the police got to the university’s corporate funders, the USM president capitulated and the exhibit was ordered shut down. The exhibit’s supporters then carried Tom’s paintings through the city streets and rallied at Congress Square.

‘There is no speech or language where their voice is not heard,’ reads Psalm 19:3 and the gravestone of Black freedom fighters Jonathan and George Jackson. Voice, through its many forms, articulates vision. Call it subversive art, liberating art, art that challenges the one-dimensional. Tom’s art is a voice among the dispossessed that transcends concrete and razor wire with an affirmation of life.

The paintings of Tom Manning and American Indian Movement activist Leonard Peltier; the creative work of Puerto Rican Independista Oscar Lopez Rivera; the poetry of anti-imperialist Marilyn Buck, which lives on; and the Earth defender poems of Marius Mason; the spoken word of Mumia Abu-Jamal and Mutulu Shakur. They are the voices of our political prisoners, principled and honorable men and women who communicate from isolation and suffering.

We must not let their voices be suppressed. They need to be heard and celebrated by freedom loving people everywhere.

I extend deep gratitude to all those who provided some measure of support and solidarity to Tom during his 34 years in prison.

With Tom’s passing, Jaan Laaman remains the sole United Freedom Front prisoner. It’s time to bring Jaan home.

FREE ALL OUR POLITICAL PRISONERS

Ray Luc Levasseur
Black August
August 1, 2019

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A portion of proceeds from the sales of “For Love and Liberty” benefits the Rosenberg Fund for Children.

You can read more about the book and purchase a copy through Freedom Archives here or contact Freedom Archives at 522 Valencia Street San Francisco, CA 94110; 415.863.9977;  www.freedomarchives.org

Milwaukee, August 1, 2019: Wisconsin Jewish Leaders March & Rally Against ICE, Say #NeverAgainIsNow

Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Contact: Michael Rosen, (414) 467-8908, rosenmatc@gmail.com

Thursday — Wisconsin Jewish Leaders March & Rally Against ICE, Say #NeverAgainIsNow 

Milwaukee action is part of a national wave of Jewish-led “Never Again” actions to resist the Trump Administration’s campaign of terror against immigrants and refugees

Who: Southeastern Wisconsin Jewish leaders, community supporters, Voces de la Frontera, more

What: #NeverAgainIsNow rally and march against ICE

When: Thursday, August 1st, 8 AM

Where: Marchers will gather at 8 AM at Cathedral Square (520 E Wells St, Milwaukee, WI 53202) before marching to the Milwaukee ICE Office (310 E Knapp St, Milwaukee, WI 53202)

Visuals: Dozens of Jewish community members and supporters holding colorful signs and banners reading “Never Again Is Now,” “Never Again Means Close the Camps,” “Jews demand freedom for immigrants,” and “Shut down ICE;” Jewish leaders blowing shofars

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN — On Thursday, August 1st, dozens of Wisconsin Jewish leaders and supporters will rally and march to demand the closure of the Trump Administration’s concentration camps at the border and permanent protection for undocumented immigrants and people seeking asylum. Community members will gather at 8 AM at Cathedral Square in downtown Milwaukee before marching to the ICE office at 8 AM.

“Our whole lives we were taught, ‘You shall not stand idly by,’” said Rabbi Laurie Zimmerman of Congregation Shaarei Shamayim in Madison, one of the organizers of Thursday’s action. “We refuse to remain silent when migrants face inhumane treatment. We refuse to remain silent when they are forced into filthy, overcrowded detention centers and deprived of basic rights. American Jews came to this country seeking a better way of life and at times fleeing persecution. We stand in solidarity with today’s immigrant community. We will protest until our government treats them with dignity.”

Follow Voces de la Frontera on Twitter at @voces_milwaukee and on Facebook. 

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