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.

NYC Health Care Workers say: Mobilize the power of labor to defend Muslims and immigrants

https://csw-pdx.org/2017/02/16/nyc-health-care-workers-say-mobilize-the-power-of-labor-to-defend-muslims-and-immigrants/

The following motion was adopted by AFSCME DC 37 Local 768 (NYC Health Care Employees) on February 6.

WHEREAS, the crisis of the undocumented in the United States has deep roots in a system of oppression and colonialism in which the U.S. played a major role; and

WHEREAS, some Local 768 members have reportedly been given unacceptable instructions to decrease the population of undocumented immigrants in their facilities by 40%; and

WHEREAS, Local 768 members, like health care providers and other workers, have grave concerns over threats to this desperately needed safety net coverage; and

WHEREAS, Local 768 believes we have a basic ethical obligation to defend undocumented immigrants in need of health care from round-ups, jail and deportation by ICE; and

WHEREAS, any attempt to have Local 768 members identify patients for such discriminatory treatment would violate not only our professional obligations but NYC law and NYC Health + Hospitals’ stated policy; and

WHEREAS, this situation is made even more urgent by Trump’s attacks on “sanctuary cities” and NYC regulations limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities; and

WHEREAS, we join with NYC-area building-service, education, Teamster, construction trades and other unionists in standing up for the rights of us all in opposition to attacks on our Muslim and immigrant sisters and brothers; and

WHEREAS, solidarity is a matter of life or death for labor under attack by anti-union “right to work” legislation and court cases (Friedrichs); therefore be it

RESOLVED, that Local 768 formally and publicly state the following:

1) We will continue to serve all those in need and oppose any attempt to use immigration status against them, or to collect such information.

2) We will not go along with demands to cut care to undocumented patients, which would violate our most basic ethical responsibilities.

3) We also reject any attempt to undermine the federally mandated right to treatment of all those seeking emergency care.

4) Local 768 will establish a committee to defend the rights of immigrant patients, families and staff.

5) We advocate that the unions of the NYC metropolitan area come together in a massive protest showing the power of labor to stand up against any and all anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim and other racist attacks in line with the labor motto, “AN INJURY TO ONE IS AN INJURY TO ALL.”

 

Milwaukee, Feb. 17-19: Black Arts Festival

A cultural celebration of art takes center stage this weekend in honor of Black History Month. The 2017 Black Arts Festival gets underway Friday, Feb. 17.

The Wisconsin Black Arts Festival is sponsored by the Wisconsin Black Chamber of Commerce.  It takes place Friday, February 17 thru Sunday, February 19 at the Wisconsin African American Women’s Center at 3020 West Vliet, Milwaukee. For more information go to www.twbcc.com

Andy Puzder is OUT of the running for Secretary of Labor!

Andy Puzder is OUT of the running for Secretary of Labor!

This is because you, me, and thousands and thousands of others spoke up, showed up, and said NO WAY to putting the worst of the worst fast-food CEOs in charge of the Department of Labor. Workers just delivered a MAJOR victory against Trump’s rigged economy.

We said NO. And we won. Spread the news that resisting works:Puzder withdraws!SHARE THIS IMAGE NOW >>I know that real soon, we’re gonna have another nominee. So we’re demanding that Trump appoint a real Secretary of Labor. Someone who stands WITH workers. Who stands WITH labor unions and faith communities, WITH women and immigrants.

When we’re united, Trump can be beat. Let’s remember what we just did:

  • We said NO to the guy whose restaurants, Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s, were hit with more federal employment discrimination lawsuits than any other major U.S. hamburger chain.
  • We said NO to the guy who actually said “ugly women don’t sell burgers.”
  • And we said NO to the guy who makes more money in a day than I make working one year at his restaurant chain.

We said no – with emails, phone calls, tweets, signs, videos, and with our bodies in the streets. We beat money, power, and privilege. And we proved that WE CAN DO THIS.

Thank you, my fellow workers and friends. I am so proud to stand shoulder to shoulder in protest with you today.

Doreatha Hines
Hardee’s Worker
Orlando, FL
Fight for $15

Voces de la Frontera Responds to Sheriff Clarke

Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Contact: Sam Singleton-Freeman, 414-469-9206sfreeman@vdlf.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

 

 

In response to Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke’s remarks concerning the 287g program and his desire to aid Donald Trump’s efforts to separate millions of immigrant families, Voces de la Frontera issued the following statement from Executive Director Christine Neumann-Ortiz:

“287G is a discredited program that converts local law enforcement into Immigration agents, and it is highly controversial. The program has been found by federal courts to systematically violate people’s civil rights by promoting racial profiling. The courts have found the program violates people’s constitutional right to due process, freedom from unlawful detention, and equal protection under the law.

“287g is the program that Sheriff Arpaio used in Maricopa County to wage a campaign of state-sponsored terror against immigrants, Latinos, and people of color. If Clarke has 287g authority, he will be able to do as Arpaio did, barricade Latino and immigrant neighborhoods, picking up Latinos solely based on their appearance and interrogating them about their immigration status.

“287g is an unfunded mandate. The federal government will not reimburse Clarke or Milwaukee County for the civil rights lawsuits sure to follow, as has happened in other counties.

“Contrary to promoting public safety, this program will make us all less safe. People will be afraid to work with local law enforcement out of fear that they, their families or friends will end up deported. Families will be afraid to go to the parks with their children. Milwaukee will be a place to avoid, undermining the local economy and depriving our community of the important contributions immigrants make as taxpayers, consumers and workers.

“Being undocumented is a civil infraction, it is not a crime. Yet Clarke has always characterized undocumented immigrants as hardened criminals, instead of mothers, fathers, working people, and grandparents who are trapped in a failed immigration system and are making important contributions to our community.

“In his latest comment he is cynically trying to pit African-Americans against immigrants. He has shown the same level of disrespect for the rights of African-Americans as for the rights of immigrants. He has called supporters of the Black Lives Matter movement “subhuman,” and compared them to ISIS. He has used racial slurs to attack African-American public figures who disagree with him.

“Sheriff Clarke thinks he is above the law. Clarke has not been held accountable for deaths in his jail. In fact he has abused his power to try to intimidate officials from mounting a meaningful investigation. He has used his power to bully people for even looking at him the wrong way in an airport. He has wasted taxpayer money building his personal brand as a spokesperson for the most vile, racist voices in our politics. He must resign.

“Monday showed the deep opposition to Clarke’s plan to bring 287g to Milwaukee County. Tens of thousands of people participated in a community-wide general strike by withholding their labor, shutting down their businesses, and supporting a one-day consumer boycott. We are prepared to sustain similar action to keep Clarke from bringing 287g to Milwaukee, and to join with nationwide mass resistance against Trump’s unconstitutional executive orders that aim to force local government to be an arm of Immigration, legalize discrimination, and carry out mass deportations.”

Post Slavery Feminist Thought and the Pan-African Struggle (1892-1927): From Anna J. Cooper to Addie W. Hunton

http://www.globalresearch.ca/post-slavery-feminist-thought-and-the-pan-african-struggle-1892-1927-from-anna-j-cooper-to-addie-w-hunton/5575039

http://www.globalresearch.ca/

By the 1880s the post-slavery institutionalization of national oppression and economic exploitation of people of African descent was well underway in the United States.

Although a series of presidential orders, constitutional amendments and legislative measures enacted during 1862-1875 sought to breakdown the legal basis for the enslavement of African people, these actions were restricted by the entrenched interests of both the militarily defeated Southern planters and the emerging Northern industrialists, the two factions of the American ruling class which fought bitterly between 1861-65 for dominance over the economic system which would determine the future of society for the remaining decades of the 19th century…

…Women played an instrumental role in both the formation of the Pan-African Movement from the late 19th century through the national liberation struggles of the middle to late 20th century. In Ghana, South Africa, Egypt, Guinea, Algeria, Angola, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Zimbabwe and other states, women were at the forefront of the independence efforts in the areas of mass mobilization, political education, armed struggle and national reconstruction.

In the U.S., it was the activities of women such as Mamie Till Mobley, Rosa L. Parks, Jo Ann Robinson, Ella Baker, Diane Nash, Fannie Lou Hamer, Septima Clark, Gloria Richardson, among many others, who provided the social impetus for the reemergence of the Civil Rights and Black Power struggles of the 1950s and 1960s. Since the 1960s and 1970s, consciousness related to the essential role of women in popular movements and intellectual culture has grown immensely.

This review of the philosophical and political contributions of women as it relates to the organizational origins of Pan-Africanism from the 1890s to the conclusion of the 1920s provides a glimpse of the significance of these issues. Much more work is needed by scholars, journalists and activists in uncovering and exposing this important history to wider audiences including emerging generations of revolutionaries within the western industrialized states and the broader world.

anna-julia-cooper

Washington D.C., February 16: Workers’ Rally to Stop Puzder

President Trump has nominated Andrew Puzder to become the next Secretary of Labor – and his history of pay cuts and job killing at Carl’s Jr. shows that the labor movement is in trouble if he is confirmed.

That’s why this Thursday, February 16 at 8:30 a.m., we’re joining our union family and other labor activists to pressure our lawmakers to vote NO on his confirmation.

Are you able to join us? Click here for more information and to invite friends.

Who: AFGE members, union members and other labor activists
What: A protest to encourage lawmakers to vote NO to Andrew Puzder’s confirmation
Where: Upper Senate Park
Washington, D.C. 20001
Nearest metro stations are either Union Station or Capitol South
When: Thursday, February 16 at 8:30 a.m.
Attire: AFGE blue & gold, layers for warmth
RSVP & Contact: Appollos Baker, appollos.baker@afge.org

We hope you are able to join us and stand up for working families.

In solidarity,
AFGE, https://www.afge.org/

defeat-andy-puzder

U.S. Women: We’re going on strike

Alcoff,Arruzza,Bhattacharya,Fraser,Ransby,Taylor,Odeh,Davis
February 6, 2017
The Guardian 
The ‘lean-in’ variety of feminism won’t defeat this administration, but a mobilization of the 99% will. On 8 March we will take to the streets.

The massive women’s marches of 21 January may mark the beginning of a new wave of militant feminist struggle. But what exactly will be its focus? In our view, it is not enough to oppose Trump and his aggressively misogynistic, homophobic, transphobic and racist policies. We also need to target the ongoing neoliberal attack on social provision and labor rights.

While Trump’s blatant misogyny was the immediate trigger for the huge response on 21 January, the attack on women (and all working people) long predates his administration. Women’s conditions of life, especially those of women of color and of working, unemployed and migrant women, have steadily deteriorated over the last 30 years, thanks to financialization and corporate globalization.

Lean-in feminism and other variants of corporate feminism have failed the overwhelming Linda Martín Alcoff, Cinzia Arruzza, Tithi Bhattacharya, Nancy Fraser, Barbara Ransby, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Rasmea Yousef Odeh, Angela Davismajority of us, who do not have access to individual self-promotion and advancement and whose conditions of life can be improved only through policies that defend social reproduction, secure reproductive justice and guarantee labor rights. As we see it, the new wave of women’s mobilization must address all these concerns in a frontal way. It must be a feminism for the 99%.

The kind of feminism we seek is already emerging internationally, in struggles across the globe: from the women’s strike in Poland against the abortion ban to the women’s strikes and marches in Latin America against male violence; from the vast women’s demonstration of last November in Italy to the protests and the women’s strike in defense of reproductive rights in South Korea and Ireland.

What is striking about these mobilizations is that several of them combined struggles against male violence with opposition to the casualization of labor and wage inequality, while also opposing homophobia, transphobia and xenophobic immigration policies. Together, they herald a new international feminist movement with an expanded agenda: at once anti-racist, anti-imperialist, anti-heterosexist and anti-neoliberal.

We want to contribute to the development of this new, more expansive feminist movement. As a first step, we propose to help build an international strike against male violence and in defense of reproductive rights on 8 March. In this, we join with feminist groups from around 30 countries who have called for such a strike.

The idea is to mobilize women, including trans women, and all who support them in an international day of struggle – a day of striking, marching, blocking roads, bridges, and squares, abstaining from domestic, care and sex work, boycotting, calling out misogynistic politicians and companies, striking in educational institutions. These actions are aimed at making visible the needs and aspirations of those whom lean-in feminism ignored: women in the formal labor market, women working in the sphere of social reproduction and care, and unemployed and precarious working women.

In embracing a feminism for the 99%, we take inspiration from the Argentinian coalition Ni Una Menos. Violence against women, as they define it, has many facets: it is domestic violence, but also the violence of the market, of debt, of capitalist property relations, and of the state; the violence of discriminatory policies against lesbian, trans and queer women; the violence of state criminalization of migratory movements; the violence of mass incarceration; and the institutional violence against women’s bodies through abortion bans and lack of access to free healthcare and free abortion.

Their perspective informs our determination to oppose the institutional, political, cultural and economic attacks on Muslim and migrant women, on women of color and working and unemployed women, on lesbian, gender nonconforming and trans women.

The women’s marches of 21 January have shown that in the United States, too, a new feminist movement may be in the making. It is important not to lose momentum.

Let us join together on 8 March to strike, walk out, march and demonstrate. Let us use the occasion of this international day of action to be done with lean-in feminism and to build in its place a feminism for the 99%, a grassroots, anti-capitalist feminism – a feminism in solidarity with working women, their families and their allies throughout the world.

Linda Martín Alcoff is a professor of philosophy at Hunter College and the Cuny Graduate Center and the author of Visible Identities: Race, Gender, and the Self.

Cinzia Arruzza is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York and a feminist and socialist activist. She is the author of the author of Dangerous Liaisons: The Marriages and Divorces of Marxism and Feminism.

Tithi Bhattacharya teaches history at Purdue University. Her first book, The Sentinels of Culture: Class, Education, and the Colonial Intellectual in Bengal (Oxford, 2005), is about the obsession with culture and education in the middle class.

Nancy Fraser is professor of philosophy and politics at the New School for Social Research in New York. An Einstein fellow at the John F Kennedy Institute of the Free University of Berlin, she also holds the chair in global justice at the Collège d’Etudes Mondiales, Paris. In winter 2014, she was visiting professor of gender studies at Cambridge University. Her most recent book is Fortunes of Feminism: From State-Managed Capitalism to Neoliberal Crisis (Verso, 2013).

Barbara Ransby is an historian, writer and longtime activist. She is a Distinguished Professor of African American Studies, Gender and Women’s Studies, and History at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor is assistant professor in the department of African American studies at Princeton and author of From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation.

Rasmea Yousef Odeh is the associate director of the Arab American Action Network, leader of that group’s Arab Women’s Committee and a former member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Angela Davis is a political activist, writer and scholar. She is distinguished professor emerita at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and founder of Critical Resistance, a grassroots organisation that campaigns to end imprisonment as a solution to social problems. She is the author of Are Prisons Obsolete? (2003) and Abolition Democracy (2005); her autobiography was first published in 1974.

Milwaukee, March 5: Solidarity March and Call to Action; Selma’s Bloody Sunday

Hosted by UBLAC Milwaukee

Join UBLAC Milwaukee as we stand and march in solidarity wth Sisters in Synergy and thousands of influential women in the fields of politics, entertainment, education and entrepreneurship to take part in the celebration and commemoration of The Bloody Sunday, The Selma-to-Montgomery March and the Voting Rights Act of 1965!

Our program and route details will be released VERY SOON. Please share and invite women to this Facebook invite.

This will serve as a the beginning and meeting point for women in Milwaukee and the surrounding areas to come together, build, equip, connect, and educate Black communities with resources and opportunities that will help provide a sustainable environment free from oppressive systems.

Not since the 1960s have U.S. citizens suffered from such blatant attacks on democracy: sweeping suppression of voting rights and women’s rights with a heightened pipeline to prison and disenfranchisement of black and brown people.

Our nation’s children are counting on us. We cannot afford an existence in silence. No more life in the shadows. There is no time like the present time! We must stand up and resist!

From Milwaukee to Anchorage to Rhode Island and Chicago to Texas we will stand in solidarity!

UBLAC, Uplifting Black Liberation and Community is a coalition led by Black Women, Queer, and Trans* folx working towards Black liberation with people of African heritage in Milwaukee to give the tools necessary to resist oppression. UBLAC was established un August 2016 during Milwaukee’s Sherman Park Uprising after a former Milwaukee Police Officer Dominique Heaggan -Brown shot and killed an Sylville Smith.

Visit www.selma50.com for Selma event details and www.sistersinsynergy.com for national solidarity march details.

milwaukee-selma