About wibailoutpeople

We are a part of the national Bail Out The People movement which formed in 2008 to fight against the bailouts to the banks. Since then we have been in numerous fights against poverty, racism and war. We demand that the people be bailed out not the banks, a moratorium on all foreclosures, a federal jobs program now and other demands. We have been participating in the Wisconsin people's uprising, Bloombergville in NYC and numerous other people's actions.

Milwaukee, June 20, 2019: CLOSEmsdf June Picket

CLOSEmsdf June Picket

901 N 9th Street, Milwaukee, 11:30 A.M. – 1 P.M.

Why do we picket?
1. To educate people on the inhumane conditions at MSDF.
2. To memorialize the 18 people who have died in MSDF since it opened.
3. To let WI taxpayers know that each day someone spends in MSDF for a crimeless rule violation costs us $100.84 vs $40 to treat that person in the community where their job, housing & support systems stay secure.
4. To hold Governor Tony Evers to his campaign promises. He told the Journal Sentinel he thinks MSDF should close “as soon as possible”. It is possible right now, and he can do it himself, with a few just and necessary policy changes.

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Please join us during the lunch hour on June 20, on the 10th Street side of the courthouse. If enough people turn out, we may expand the picket to the state office building on 6th and Wells, where the DOC has community supervision offices.

Parking is metered or nearby public lots. If you don’t mind walking a couple blocks, its often easier to find free parking on the other side of the freeway.

We’ve been holding down this monthly picket since the spring of 2017. A coalition of Milwaukee organizations have joined up to shut down MSDF. This facility is a building within a building, where captives have no access to fresh air or sunlight. They are triple bunked in lockdown cells for over 20 hours a day. There is no outdoor rec. The facility was built and is run using funds that should be used for diversionary programs to keep people out of jail, instead it’s being used to keep them on supervision under arbitrary and vindictive probation and parole officers.

We are organizing this protest on every 23rd (unless that lands on a weekend, when there’s less foot traffic). The National Religious Campaign Against Torture has called for actions on the 23rd of every month (to bring attention to 23 hour a day lockdowns). http://www.nrcat.org/about-us/take-action-current-legislation/563-together-to-end-solitary

Can’t come?

SIGN THE PETITION!!!!

If you haven’t signed the petition yet yourself, please do here: https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/its-time-to-close-milwaukee-secure-detention-facility-msdf

shut down msdf

 

Veterans, VA Employees, Local Communities Nationwide Protest Union Busting, Privatization

Want to join our fight against privatization?

Click here.

Ray Winsbush lost both of his legs in Vietnam. Since 1995, the 74-year-old veteran has been going to the Tibor Rubin VA Medical Center in Long Beach, Calif., for his medical care. But when he heard about the Department of Veterans Affairs’ plan to send more veterans to private-sector hospitals and eventually privatize the VA, he was worried.

Before he became a patient at the VA hospital, he received his treatment at private hospitals and was not a fan. So when he heard VA employees were holding a rally to protest an anti-worker labor-management contract aimed at driving out VA employees and eventually privatizing the VA, he had to show up.

“I’m out here to support them and to make sure they do not go privatized,” Winbushtold reporters. “All of the healthcare I was getting on the outside, it wasn’t as good as what the VA has given to me.”

Winsbush was joined by other veterans, L.A. County Federation of Labor President Rusty Hicks, Pastor Steve Neal, Mayor Robert Garcia, other community leaders, and concerned citizens at the June 5 rally in Long Beach, one of the 68 rallies and events held by AFGE and VA employees nationwide to protest the anti-worker contract, which covers 260,000 VA employees across the country. Seventy locals held events around the country.

The Long Beach VA Hospital was the site for the first round of contract negotiations between our union and the VA on May 28-June 7. The next round will be in Washington, D.C.

“Management gave us proposals showing their intent to go after employees, cripple the VA, eliminate our union and privatize the VA,” said AFGE National VA Council President Alma Lee, who is also our union’s chief negotiator.

AFGE President J. David Cox Sr. was at the Long Beach rally, urging people to show up every Wednesday to protest VA management’s union busting and privatization.

“If we’re going to win this fight, it’s going to be won in the streets,” he said.

AFGE VA members across the country stood together and received tremendous support from veterans and allies.

In Philadelphia, the employees of the VA regional office and insurance center, members and nonmembers of AFGE Local 940, walked outside to share a moment of silence for the attacks on their rights as employees serving veterans. Seventy-five employees gathered to hear about the attacks they face and bowed their heads together. After the shared moment, they chatted and rallied in support of our bargaining team.

“Employees standing together is the back bone of what makes union strong,” said Local 940 President Jim Rihel. “Only together can we fight back against the unprecedented attack we face today.”

For our rally in Fresno, Calif., AFGE VA Local 2654 employees were joined by Fresno-Madera-Tulare-Kings Central Labor Council, Communications Workers of America, SEIU, Carpenters United, Central Valley Partnership, Valley Forward, and the other union members who came out to stand with us and say no to union-busting and privatization.

In Portland, Oregon, joining our rally were Veterans for Peace, Physicians with Social Responsibilities, Oregon AFL-CIO, Portland Jobs with Justice, Healthcare for All Oregon, Bernie PDX, Portland DSA, and former state senator and veteran Robert Boyer.

In Gainesville, Fla., VA employees at the Malcom Randall Medical Center took to the streets and were joined by allies like Jeremiah Tattersall, field director for North Florida Central Labor Council, who criticized the VA for refusing to fill 400 vacancies at the VA in Gainesville. AFGE Local 229 President Muriel Newman told reporters she was worried about the VA’s plans to eliminate employee grievance filing ability.

“We are concerned about the grievance procedure where employees have the right to speak to management through the union on any kind of abuse of power or mismanagement,” she said.

In Washington, D.C., Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton (D-Va.) and Congresswoman Abigail Spanberger (D-Va.) wore red to show solidarity with VA employees.

Many lawmakers and leaders tweeted in support of our union and VA employees: Sen. Jacky Rosen, Rep. Susan Wild, Rep. Jason Crow, Rep. David Trone, Rep. Andy Levin, Rep. Linda Sanchez, Rep. Debbie Dingell, Rep. Jamie Raskin, Rep. Mark Takano, Rep. Abigail Spanberger, Rep. Frank Pallone, Rep. Dina Titus, Rep. Jennifer Wexton, Rep. Ro Khanna, Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia, and San Diego County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher.

Also tweeting in solidarity with us were the AFL-CIO and several state federations, AFL-CIO Richard Trumka, AFSCME, CWA, Teamsters, IFTPE, BCTGM, and other unions and allies.

The MISSION Act: rushing to privatize

The VA rushed to launch its expanded privatization program under the controversial MISSION Act on June 6, a move that will potentially harm veterans as more veterans will be pushed out of the VA with no system in place to track how long it takes them to receive care in the private sector or measure the quality of care received – even though the VA’s own clinicians are held to strict timelines and exacting quality standards.

“This is a clear double standard that is designed to push veterans out of the VA, no matter the consequences, and to starve the VA of the resources it needs to continue providing the high-quality care veterans expect and deserve,” AFGE President J. David Cox Sr. said.

The push to privatize more of the VA comes as the department quietly released data showing a marked increase in the number of vacancies inside the agency. There were 50,201 vacancies as of May 31, up from nearly 49,000 at the end of 2018 and around 35,000 at the end of 2017.

In addition to doctors and nurses, there are significant shortages of mental health clinicians and VHA police officers – critical positions that the VA needs to fill to help combat a rise in veteran suicides and to protect both patients and employees.

“The vast majority of veterans want to get their care at the VA, where the medical staff is trained to address their unique and specialized needs, and where one-third of employees are veterans themselves,” AFGE National VA Council President Alma Lee said. “Yet by allowing vacancies inside the VA to steadily rise, and rushing through reforms that will push more veterans to the private sector, it’s clear that this administration is ignoring the will of veterans in a blind pursuit to privatize the VA.”

Want to join our fight against privatization?

Click here.

Pan African Journal: Worldwide Radio Broadcast June 2, 2019 Edition

https://bit.ly/2WD0Ysc

Listen to the Sun. June 2, 2019 special edition of the Pan-African Journal: Worldwide Radio Broadcast hosted by Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire. The program features our regular PANW report with dispatches on the international aid conference designed to provide relief to the people of Mozambique after two devastating cyclones earlier this year; there has been another shooting at the location where opposition forces have been sitting-in outside the Ministry of Defense in the Republic of Sudan; African Union (AU) member-states are stepping up their cooperation with the leading Chinese tech firm Huawei amid attacks by the United States; and Algeria may not hold a national election next month as originally announced due to ongoing political unrest inside this North African state. In the second and third hours we continue our month-long focus on Black Music Month looking at the contributions of John Coltrane.

June 22-25, 2019: March To Madison to Fight For Public Education!

Stand Up for Public Schools Wisconsin

Official registration is now live!!! Click here to register: http://www.wisconsinnetwork.org/blog/march

Join us to STAND UP FOR PUBLIC SCHOOLS and demand a budget that works for Wisconsin’s children.

We are saying: ENOUGH. STOP PLAYING POLITICS WITH OUR KIDS AND DO YOUR JOB.

Members of Joint Finance cut $900 million out of the education budget and the proposal on the table is not even close to adequate or fair for Wisconsin’s public schools.

We are calling on all lawmakers to restore this essential and feasible funding to the budget before they send it to the Governor’s desk. Specifically, we are calling for a restoration of the special education funds (to a 60% reimbursement level), mental health aids, poverty aid, and aid for English Language Learners that was cut from the budget.

​​Milwaukee school board member Megan O’Halloran has announced that she intends to march to Madison to draw attention to the inadequacy of state funding for so many districts around the state. We applaud her willingness to take a public stand and the immediate offer of many others to join her. It seems clear that there are many people around the state who have testified, sent letters, and feel ignored – they are looking for ways to be heard and do all they can in the final days before the budget is passed to call for fair funding and make sure the budget that gets to the Governor is one that meets our kids’ needs.

While the entire walk is 60 miles, there are easy ways to join in for short or long stretches of the walk, and cheer along the way with local “whistle stops” – or to call for action where YOU live if you can’t make it to the march!

We are calling for an all-state final meet-up spot for the home stretch so that we come together from all over the state to walk the last stretch in Madison, ending at the State Capitol on Tuesday June 25!

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Rockford, IL, June 15, 2019: Defend Women’s Rights

Defend Women’s Rights

E State Street & Alpine Rd., Rockford, IL, 12 NOON – 1 P.M.

In the face of attacks on basic women’s rights across the country, we will gather to show our solidarity with women in their fight for freedom from oppression and exploitation.

We oppose the attacks on women’s basic healthcare such as access to safe abortions. Access to healthcare is a fundamental human right.

Also fundamental to women’s human rights is safe and affordable housing, a clean environment with drinkable water, safety from police and domestic abuse, a union job, and peace.

Join us on June 15 at 12pm to say that we oppose the attacks by the US ruling class on women in the USA and around the world.

No photo description available.

300 US Southcom Troops Arrive in Honduras To Teach ‘Humanitarian Assistance’

https://bit.ly/2MBa1FA

Some 300 more U.S. soldiers will supplement their Latin American and Caribbean allies to improve disaster response and “other crisis situations.”

Another Southern Command brigade of U.S. Navy and Marine soldiers arrived in Honduras this week as part of what the U.S. Embassy in Honduras has called “a multi-national disaster response task force” released Tuesday.

Some 300 members of the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force – Southern Command (SPMAGTF-SC), more widely known as Southcom (or in Latin America as Comando Sur), will work together with their Latin American and Caribbean counterparts to improve response to disasters and “other crisis situations” as well as strengthen international security forces throughout the region.

The U.S. Navy brought with them extensive training equipment which will be used throughout various military exercises in the future.

Southcom has been a controversial actor in Latin American politics for many years since its founding as a force to defend U.S. interests at the Panama Canal. The commander of Southcom, U.S. Admiral Craig Faller has intimated that the force could be reoriented for intervention in Venezuela by aiding the opposition:

This new deployment of troops under the auspices of humanitarian assistance is an event that happens to coincide with widespread civil unrest in Honduras which has grown to a fever pitch as Hondurans clamor for a voice against the neoliberal policies of their President Juan Orlando Hernandez (JOH). Incidents like the burning of a door at the United States embassy in the capital of Tegucigalpa and the attacks on offices belonging to subsidiaries of U.S.-owned multinationals are among recent news coming out of the country.

The protests started as demonstrations and strikes by teachers and doctors protesting what they believe to be privatization efforts by JOH’s administration, but appear to have grown into more than that.

The SPMAGTF-SC press release explained, “This deployment will allow our partners to improve regional capacities and carry out humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations. In addition, it will provide the Marine Corps with an opportunity to improve its agility in these types of situations.”

This most recent deployment also comes just in time for the start of hurricane season in the Atlantic which will extend from June 1 to November 30.

The special force unit plans to work in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras, as well as parts of Colombia, Peru, and Brazil later this year.

Southern Command covers 31 countries and is responsible for providing guidance on intelligence, operations, and security cooperation in Central and South America, and the Caribbean as a way to protect military resources of the United States.

https://bit.ly/2MBa1FAhttps://bit.ly/2MBa1FAhttps://bit.ly/2MBa1FA

The U.S. navy brought with them extensive training equipment which will be used throughout various military exercises.

The U.S. navy brought with them extensive training equipment which will be used throughout various military exercises. | Photo: EFE