Milwaukee, July 22, 2020: NSR’s March to Keep the Lights On!

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NSR’s March to Keep the Lights On!

231 W Michigan, Milwaukee – 12 NOON

We promised WE Energies last week that if they did not meet our Clear Demands to Keep the Lights On, we would be back!!

We will rally (gather) at Victory Over Violence Park on MLK Jr. Dr. Between Center and Clarke and March to WE Energies Headquarters on 231 N. Michigan Ave.

You can either march with us or meet us there! But let’s demand WE Energies stop putting profit over people and give power to the powerless!
It’s only right to keep Milwaukee in the light!

Milwaukee, July 24, 2020: Stand In Solidarity!

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Stand in Solidarity

200 E Wells Street, Milwaukee City Hall – 5 P.M. …..

“Madison meets Milwaukee!
Black Umbrella & Frank Nitty host a “Solidarity Stance” rally.
There will be food, music, activities for kids and lots of opportunities to get educated about the movement and how to help.
This event is a display of our solidarity✊🏽 We may have different demands but in the end we all want to see the betterment of society. We will only make tangible change by standing together. The police and the system they serve have continuously used excessive force on black and brown people and have committed murders without any consequences for decades. Come out and demand for justice and liberation for our people!”

Veteran Black Panther: Links Between Capitalism and Racism Are in Plain Sight

https://bit.ly/30BjWid

THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY (BPP) originally the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense, was co-founded in 1966 by Bobby Seale and Huey Newton in Oakland, California. Motivated by outrage against police abuse in Black and Brown neighborhoods, Seale and Newton compiled a Ten-Point Program for their new organization.

Representing the vanguard of the revolution throughout the 60s and 70s, the BPP was immortalized for its iconic, powerful imagery of armed Black men and women dressed in leather and berets, determined to protect communities from vigilante and institutional forms of white supremacy.

However, safeguarding the Black community was only one tactic in the BPP revolutionary strategy, which included free breakfast for school children, health clinic programs, and a sophisticated educational agenda with teach-ins and an official media organ — The Black Panther newspaper.

In the following interview, Truthout speaks with Emory Douglas, artist, designer, producer of The Black Panther newspaper, and minister of culture for the BPP from 1967 until The Black Panther ceased publication in the early ‘80s. Douglas’s iconic artwork and design were a centerpiece of the BPP’s highly successful messaging and outreach, which inspired revolutionaries in the United States and the world. Douglas speaks of the history of The Black Panther newspaper as a tool of empowerment, the aims and techniques of his artwork and design, and how these relate to current mediums employed during present uprisings.

Yoav Litvin: Co-founder and Minister of Defense of the BPP Huey Newton said: “When the slave kills the slave master it acts as a cleansing process. Because then a man is ‘born’ and an oppressor is gone.” What have been your goals with your art? Does it serve to kill the slave master, transform him, or both?

Emory Douglas: My art is intended to connect to an audience, to the masses. It appeals to victims of oppression, with a focus on brothers and sisters in Black communities, but not exclusively.

The Black Panther was a community newspaper, which told the story from our perspective. It focused on a class of people who were not necessarily readers, but rather learned through observation and participation. The headlines, captions, artwork and photos reflected the gist of the drawn-out articles and therefore appealed to those who were not able to or going to read them.

My art for The Black Panther combined various mediums to help convey our messaging. These included pen and ink original drawings collaged with photography and inexpensive graphic arts methodologies — mimeographs, photostats, prefabricated press oh types and screentones, along with offset printing for the newspaper.

The artwork and newspaper got the attention of police early on. A man claiming to be an art dealer called me at the BPP communal housing space showing interest in my art. I knew he was police because the number was unlisted. Later on that week, the same person called the BPP central headquarters office asking to speak to me and I had comrades listen to the conversation on another phone line while the police pretended to be an art dealer interested in my work. He told me he would make me rich and that they wanted me to meet them at the hotel they were staying at in San Francisco. I told him twice I was not interested, he became frustrated and I hung up the phone….

Emory Douglas helps lays out The Black Panther, Oakland, 1970. John Seale to his left.

PETITION: WI Safe Schools, Safe Communities, Safe Start to the School Year

PETITION: https://bit.ly/39h6lR5

July 20, 2020

Green Bay Education Association – GBEA

Kenosha Education Association – KEA

Madison Teachers Incorporated – MTI

Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association – MTEA

Racine Educators United – REU

Joint Statement to State Health Secretary Palm, State Superintendent Stanford-Taylor, Governor Evers:  

Strong and immediate action to keep Wisconsin students safe is needed now from Governor Evers and the Wisconsin Legislature, the Wisconsin Department of Health Secretary, Andrea Palm, and Wisconsin State Superintendent, Dr. Carolyn Stanford-Taylor.

The Coronavirus is surging across Wisconsin. Wisconsin has the second fewest number of restrictions in place to contain the spread of the virus and has seen new records daily over the past several days.

Since May, the CDC has cautioned that full reopening of schools would be “highest risk,” and that in both K-12 and higher education settings, the more people interact, “and the longer that interaction, the higher the risk of COVID-19 spread.” The “lowest risk,” the guidelines say, would be for students and teachers to attend virtual-only classes. The Kaiser Family Foundation released a report indicating that one in every four educators falls in a high risk category making them more vulnerable to COVID-19. And as districts serving majority populations of students and families of color, we cannot ignore the disproportionate impact of illness and death that COVID-19 has had on Black and Brown communities. According to the CDC, “Long-standing systemic health and social inequities have put some members of racial and ethnic minority groups at increased risk of getting COVID-19 or experiencing severe illness, regardless of age. Among some racial and ethnic minority groups, including non-Hispanic Black persons, Hispanics and Latinos, and American Indians/Alaska Natives, evidence points to higher rates of hospitalization or death from COVID-19 than among non-Hispanic white persons.”

Our students need safe, equitable, well-resourced classrooms staffed with highly qualified educators, so they can learn. The classroom is where every single educator wants to be this fall, but with no effective containment of Wisconsin COVID-19 cases, a virtual reopening for public schools is necessary.

Our fates as Wisconsinites are linked together. We represent over 10,000 public education workers from across the state, responsible for educating over 160,000 public school students, and we are calling on you to guarantee a science-informed, safe and equitable school reopening for the 2020-2021 school year.

Justin Delfosse, GBEA President

Tanya Kitts-Lewinski, KEA President

Andy Waity, MTI President

Amy Mizialko, MTEA President

Angelina Cruz, REU President

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Milwaukee, August 3, 2020: People’s Climate Coalition 3rd Court Date

People’s Climate Coalition 3rd Court Date

951 N James Lovell Street, Milwaukee – 8:30 A.M.

The Milwaukee Police Department has magically rediscovered all of the male sit-in participants tickets from December 6th’s climate strike. They originally “lost” the tickets in the system.

This will be the third appearance at the Milwaukee Municipal Court that PCC will have to make.

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Milwaukee, July 24-25, 2020: ~ Art In Protest ~ “The People’s Holiday” Bonus Checkpoint

~ Art In Protest ~ “The People’s Holiday” Bonus Checkpoint

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The People’s Holiday – BONUS CHECKPOINT ALERT !!!

– Art In Protest –

Pop-up sculpture & sign art park at Kadish Park from Fri 7pm – Sat 7pm of the Riverwest 24!

You can do it!!

Bring supplies! Bright paint! cardboard plywood – sign & mural making materials, templates! Bike flags!!

Covid-senstive art build packs will be available to groups for make & take signs or for the sculpture installations. Safety yes.

UV spray painted sculptures built at Kadish Park hill by Friday night will be lit with solar powered LED lights!

Prizes will be awarded to all art makers builders & volunteers ~

Sculptures, plywood murals & signs should be spread around town! Pick them up around typical race finish time Saturday 6-7pm & volunteers will be needed from 7-8pm to Leave No Trace @ Kadish Park.

Black Lives Matter.

Cycling community, please listen, activate & make change happen.

The Black is Beautiful ride was a wonderful celebration of Milwaukee cyclists. Thank you to the organizers – please coordinate more community rides!

This would also be a fantastic spot for a pop-up RW24-style dance party so any sound systems and DJs are most welcome.

Lots of amazing professional artists creating BLM posters & murals & stickers – a freeform art fair may allow us to support these artists directly?

Does anyone have a map of the RW street art installations? Maybe a fun bonus lap opportunity?

Love Milwaukee actively

Ride Bikes

Wear a mask

Don’t be a Jerk

note: the ~ Art In Protest ~ Bonus RW24-style Checkpoint has not been sanctioned or approved by the Riverwest24 organizing committee. I did not even ask them for permission. Please respect the race, keep friends healthy, and stop at stop signs.

Menominee Falls, July 25, 2020: Nationwide Kneel for 9 & Self-led Prairie Prayer/Meditation Walk

Nationwide Kneel for 9 & Self-led Prairie Prayer/Meditation Walk

Join us and others nationwide as we Kneel for Nine minutes. Then, take a self-guided tour through our prairie. Quotes and scripture will be placed throughout the one-way walking path to guide your prayer/meditation.

Masks and social distancing required.

Schedule:
2:15p gather
2:30 Nationwide Kneel for Nine
2:40 Closing
2:45 Self-guided tours begin

Note: The building will not be open for entry so please plan accordingly and utilize the restroom prior to arriving.

If you feel sick, please join us in kneeling at 2:30p at home and join our Facebook live stream.

No photo description available.

Milwaukee, July 22, 2020: Stand For Justice

Stand For Justice

27th & Oklahoma

“Stand for Justice”

Let’s ALL exercise our right to support Black Lives Matter in ways both large and small. Come “Stand” with us rain or shine every Wednesday and Saturday from 12:00-1:30 p.m. on 27th & Oklahoma. Bring your own sign and chair if you like.

This small protest is perfect for folks like me who are unable to attend long protests and rallies. Remember: EVERYTHING WE DO MATTERS.

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