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.

United American Indians of New England-Indigenous Peoples Day MA

https://www.youcaring.com/uaine-461402

Please help United American Indians of New England defray costs for our current Indigenous Peoples Day initiatives (IndigenousPeoplesDayMA) and other upcoming events including National Day of Mourning 2016. Every donation is greatly appreciated, especially since we are all volunteers! By the way, the total amount raised that appears on youcaring is a rolling total from 2015.
(Please note that we are not a tax-deductible 501c3 charity and are not incorporated.  If you wish to make a contribution from a donor-advised fund, please contact us directly at info@uaine.org for fiscal sponsor information.)
Thank you!

47th National Day of Mourning: November 24, 2016
12:00 noon
Coles Hill Plymouth, MA

http://www.uaine.org/

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Milwaukee, November 5: NoDAPL Water Protectors’ Fundraiser – Milwaukee

NoDAPL is a resistance born of the spirituality, love and fierce determination of Native people to shut down the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL).*

DAPL endangers fresh water for the Standing Rock Sioux and 8 million people living downstream, and also impacts many sites that are sacred to indigenous nations. A historic convergence of more than 200 Indigenous nations at Standing Rock will not allow this to happen.

Standing Rock Support Committee (Milwaukee) is hosting a benefit show to raise funds for the Legal Defense Fund & HonorTheEarth for the Water Protectors.

A detailed list of performers will be announced soon. The show will feature poets, artists, singers, performers, Indigenous speakers — who will address & update on the situation at Standing Rock, and plethora of #NoDapl buttons, t-shirts, art-work etc that people can buy. So, come on out, and bring friends!

For more information, check out:

http://www.honorearth.org/nodaplpermits

*Credit to BGD:
http://www.blackgirldangerous.org/2016/09/nodapl/

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Milwaukee, November 19: Standing Rock Winter Supply Drive

This drive is looking to collect winter supplies for our brothers and sisters at Standing Rock so that they can prepare to face the elements and keep the peaceful protest against the DAPL standing strong throughout the winter months. I wanted to start this event so that everyone who wants to contribute to the cause in some way but doesn’t have the time or means to get out to Standing Rock can still pitch in. Myself and a few others will personally be delivering all donated supplies to the camp. We will document the entire trip photographically so you can watch your contribution be made! #NoDAPL

The most needed supplies are:
-Cash for Firewood (to be purchased in closer proximity to the camp)
-Zero-degree sleeping bags
-Winter tents that can withstand strong winds
-Checks payable to Standing Rock Sioux Tribe – Donations.

A comprehensive list of needs is available at http://sacredstonecamp.org/supply-list/

All donated supplies (except firewood) should preferrably be new and factory sealed.

The National Cafe will be providing a cash bar and coffee for purchase

Monetary donations can also be made at: http://standingrock.org/news/standing-rock-sioux-tribe–dakota-access-pipeline-donation-fund/

Questions can be addressed to Joseph Sanfelippo at jsanfelippo82@gmail.com

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For Rasmea: All out for November 29 federal court hearing—most important of the case—in Detroit!

All out for November 29th federal court hearing—most important of the case—in Detroit!

If you’re not in the Midwest and can’t make it to Detroit, organize a solidarity event in your city!

WHEN: Tuesday, November 29th, 2016, at 2 PM Eastern Standard Time (rally at 2 PM, hearing starts at 3 PM)

WHERE: U.S. District Court, 231 W. Lafayette Blvd., downtown Detroit, Michigan

The Rasmea Defense Committee is calling on everyone to mobilize for Detroit on November 29th, and tell us here that you’re attending or if you need a ride or if you can provide transportation!

Supporters from Chicago and other parts of Illinois, Milwaukee, Detroit / Dearborn, Grand Rapids, Minneapolis / St. Paul, Cincinnati, Indiana, and other Midwest areas are already committed to attend.

In addition, NY is organizing a solidarity action on November 28th, Harvard Law School is discussing the case on November 11th, and others in Florida, Texas, and California are planning actions as well.

If you are NOT in the Midwest, we are calling on you to also organize support events for Rasmea on or around November 29th.  Again, it is the most important hearing in the case, and it also falls on the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, so there may already be Palestine support forces near you that are organizing events we can join with Rasmea’s story.

Let us know once it’s scheduled, by emailing info@stopfbi.net.

And continue to support #Justice4Rasmea by donating to the defense, and staying in touch through justice4rasmea.org and justice4rasmea@uspcn.org.

Background:

On Tuesday, November 29th, 2016, the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, Rasmea Odeh will once again be in a Detroit courtroom—this time for the most important hearing in her case to date—before Judge Gershwin Drain.  This Daubert hearing will, in all likelihood, have two mental health experts from each of the prosecution and defense sides testify before the judge, and then he will hear legal arguments as to whether the testimony of Dr. Mary Fabri—the clinical psychologist from the world-renowned Kovler Center for the Treatment of Survivors of Torture, who diagnosed Rasmea’s Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)—is scientifically valid and applicable to the facts of the case.

Recall that before the 2014 trial, Dr. Fabri, who has worked with torture survivors for over 25 years, was prepared to testify as to how Rasmea’s PTSD, caused by the torture and rape she experienced at the hands of Israeli military interrogators in 1969, affected her answers to questions on complex immigration forms decades later in the U.S.

Judge Drain originally ruled her testimony irrelevant and inadmissible, which led to Rasmea’s unjust conviction; but earlier this year, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that he had erred, and sent the case back to him for the Daubert hearing.

Recently, Rasmea was subjected to 17 hours of mental examination by a government expert.  Her defense had argued strongly to oppose this questioning prior to the November 29th hearing, but Judge Drain still allowed it.  Even though the government continues to try to challenge Rasmea’s story, and claim that she does not have PTSD and did not get brutalized by the Israeli authorities in the 60s and 70s, Rasmea remains steadfast and strong, and will continue to exercise her constitutional right to assert a meaningful defense.

Rasmea and her lawyers are confident that the results of this hearing will lead to a new trial sometime in early 2017, in which Dr. Fabri will testify before a jury, and the details of Israel’s torture and crimes against Rasmea will be heard.  But if Judge Drain rules against her on November 29th, we will again appeal the decision.

That is why we are mobilizing heavy for this hearing.  It is as important a moment as any we have had in the case.

From the beginning, the Rasmea Defense Committee has pointed out that the legal proceedings against Rasmea are nothing but a pretext to intimidate those who organize and struggle to realize a liberated Palestine.  Demonstrations in support of her have taken place across the U.S. since her arrest in 2013, and we are again going All Out for Detroit on November 29th.

The Rasmea Defense Committee is led by the U.S. Palestinian Community Network and the Committee to Stop FBI Repression

November 3rd, 2016

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West Philadelphia: IAC And Philly Thrive Are Trying To Rewrite History

https://philadelphianeighborhoods.com/2016/11/02/west-philadelphia-iac-and-philly-thrive-are-trying-to-rewrite-history/

Text, images and video by Tyler Carmody

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After the shooting of Trayvon Martin and the acquittal of his shooter George Zimmerman, the Black Lives Matter movement exploded onto every television screen, Twitter feed, and the minds of activists who wish to better the lives of African-Americans.

Organizations like the International Action Center (IAC) in Philadelphia and Philly Thrive focus on ensuring that black lives really do matter, and they will stop at nothing to make that known.

The IAC was founded in 1992 by Ramsey Clark and is currently headquartered in New York City. The organization is anti-capitalist, and therefore receives no funding from big business, but rather funds itself internally through its thousands of members.

Mattie Boyd (above), 26, has been with the IAC for about two years and is part of a team of 15 people who fight for social justice in the Philadelphia chapter, which is one of almost 20 chapters nationwide.

“Things like pollution, poverty, and racism in America really have an international character,” Boyd said. “We need to pull together an international movement for these things.”

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Recently, the IAC has been involved in a fight to remove the infamous statue of Frank Rizzo from out front of the Municipal Services Building in Center City. This has included public protests, sit-ins on city council meetings concerning the statue, as well as helping to create the Frank Rizzo Down Campaign.

“It is such an offensive symbol to people of color and progressives, and has emerged as this receptacle of all of this justified hatred for the oppressors,” Boyd said. “But, it’s not just symbols we need to go after; it’s also institutions like cops, politicians, and the military.”

Betsey Piette (below) is one of the founding members of the Philadelphia chapter of the IAC, and has led numerous protests against the statue. She has been fighting the actions and ideologies of Frank Rizzo since 1978.

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“In a public thoroughfare, a statue like this is highly offensive,” Piette said. “That means that it must be a target for our coalition.”

In addition to the IAC, organizations such as the Philly Coalition for REAL Justice have also been fighting to take down the statue.

“When we join together with similar organizations like ours, it really leaves a mark,” Piette said.

While the IAC fights to remove the statue of Rizzo from the public view, organizations like Philly Thrive have been protesting the building of the PES refinery in Southwest Philadelphia, seeing it as a heavy contributor to the displacement of low income and African-American people in the area. Lawrence Miller has been a key member of the organization’s Right to Breathe Campaign.

The Right to Breathe Campaign’s main goal is to expose the fact that oil companies such as PES in Philadelphia are polluting strictly low-income areas of color.

“The expansion of the oil and gas industry as dense as Philadelphia will disproportionately affect these communities,” Miller said. “This is not only a public health issue but a racial and economic justice issue.”

Although some believe the causes of these organizations seem almost futile, those involved are optimistic for the future. For Piette, nothing is impossible.

“Having a presence when something needs to be spoken about, even if it’s only two people, you can have an influence. Keep fighting.”

-Text, images and video by Tyler Carmody.

Black Workers For Justice: ‘Solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux and all the Struggles of Indigenous People’

http://blackworkersforjustice.com/solidarity-with-the-standing-rock-sioux-and-all-the-struggles-of-indigenous-peoples/

The Black Workers for Justice, http://blackworkersforjustice.com/ support the struggles of the indigenous peoples to defend their land and treaty rights and their struggles for environmental justice. And in this moment we are in full support of the resistance of the Standing Rock Sioux to the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). We call on all people to support them politically and materially.

Racism at Work

The location of the Dakota Access Pipeline is another transparent case of environmental racism. The pipeline’s original path crossed the Missouri River just north of Bismarck, but the residents objected fearing oil spills. The city’s population is 90 percent white. The pipeline was redirected south to go under the river along the Standing Rock Reservation. The river provides the majority of the reservations drinking water.

For us this is just another case of targeting people of color and other vulnerable populations for receiving the harmful byproducts of capitalist production. That was the case in Warren County in 1982 when PCB was dumped in the community or in the Shiloh Community of Morrisville when wastewater from the Koppers plant resulted in Superfund Clean Up Site in 1989.

The contrast between the treatment of the Standing Rock protestors and the anti-government protest in Oregon led by the Bundy family is stark. The white supremacist rightwing group seized and occupied Federal land while heavily armed. They were not assaulted and have recently been exonerated. The Standing Rock protestors while peacefully protesting have been subject to violent responses including physical injuries, being held in dog cages, having numbers written on their bodies and being subject to invasive body searches.

Who are the Culprits?

The DAPL is a $3.7 billion project that promises to provide 470,000 barrels of oil a day. The Energy Transfer Crude Oil Company is constructing it. 17 banks are providing capital for construction of the project. They are Citi-Bank, Wells Fargo, BNP Paribas, SunTrust, Royal Bank of Scotland, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, Mizuho Bank, TD Securities, ABN AMRO Capital, DNB First Bank—and that’s actually a bank based in Philly; it’s not the DNB Bank based in Norway, which is actually provided several hundred million to the Energy Transfer family separately—and ICBC London, SMBC Nikko Securities and Société Générale according to Hugh MacMillan of Food and Water Watch. In other words it is the banks and Wall Street, the chief instruments of the 1%.

We should also note that Donald Trump holds stock in Energy Transfer and Phillips 66, which holds one quarter of the stock in Dakota Access. No surprise here.

States join together to repress the struggle

We are witnessing not only the militarization of law enforcement that was so blatantly on 2016-09-16-1474044012-2676960-defend_the_sacreddisplay in Ferguson but also the cooperation of law enforcement agencies across state lines. At least six states across the Midwest, including Wisconsin, Minnesota, Indiana, Nebraska, South Dakota and Wyoming have deployed deputies to join local law enforcement, state police and a private security firms. Activists in Minnesota and elsewhere mounted protest against the Sheriff demanding they bring their deputies home

 Response from National Political leadership

President Obama has acknowledged that Native American nations are making their voices heard and called for more consultation between the Native American tribes, the agencies and other parties. He has said this in the context of relationships developed during the course of his administration but has offered no condemnation of the tactics of the security company employed by Energy Transfer or the violation of sovereignty and treaty rights.

The statement released by the Clinton campaign is an affront to the Standing Rock Sioux and says absolutely nothing. It tries to maintain neutrality but simply maintains her support for fracking, the oil industry and the banks. “From the beginning of this campaign, Secretary Clinton has been clear that she thinks all voices should be heard and all views considered in federal infrastructure projects. Now, all of the parties involved—including the federal government, the pipeline company and contractors, the state of North Dakota, and the tribes—need to find a path forward that serves the broadest public interest.” This what the people can expect in a Clinton presidency.

AFL-CIO position on DAPL

This repressive and violent response to the non-violent actions by the Protectors is taking place in the shameful context of the AFL-CIO’s support for the Dakota Access Pipeline. At the urging of the Building Trades, the Federation has placed support for a few temporary jobs above the sovereignty and cultural rights of the Standing Rock Sioux. Moreover it flies in the face of the AFL-CIO’s previously acknowledged position that “The carbon emissions from coal, from oil and natural gas, agriculture and so many other human activities have caused global warming, and we have to act to cut those emissions, and act now.” Trade union and labor activist are horrified that President Trumka has not condemned the violence, including attack dogs and mace, being used against the protestors include placing arrestees in cages. Many unions such as UE, CWA and APWU have come out in opposition to DAPL and have criticized the AFL-CIO for their position. We encourage other union members, individually and through their locals, to do the same.

Indigenous united front

The Dakota Access Pipeline has created the broadest united front of Native American tribes seen in North America in many years. It is reported that at least 100 and perhaps as many as 300 tribes have given support. Moreover indigenous groups from South American have joined the effort. In North Carolina, the Cherokee, Lumbee and Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation have given political and material support.

Support for IEN

blacklivessolidarityWe also support the efforts of our friends in the Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN)(http://www.ienearth.org/) who have taught us much about climate justice and have been essential leaders of the struggle for environmental justice here in the US, especially among people of color. Their leadership is recognized on the international level as well. They have been and will continue to be a vital source of information about what is taking place on the ground.

Build Solidarity

Our communities have limited resources and are called upon to support so many things. We ask that as you provide support for Haiti and Eastern North Carolina that you also consider support for the Standing Rock Struggle as they take their resistance into the fall and winter months. At a minimum we must educate our family, friends and coworkers. We should see this as a duty.

The resistance at Standing Rock and the Black Lives Matter Movement are two of the most important struggles of our time. The well being of oppressed people depends on our strong support for these fights. The forces of white supremacy and right wing populism on display during this presidential campaign make it clear that we are entering a very dangerous period. Our survival depends on us building unity, creating democratic peoples assemblies and contending for power locally and statewide while we participate in national efforts to resist, build and win. http://blackworkersforjustice.com/

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Long Shots: Durham Activist Lamont Lilly Runs for Veep on the World Workers Party Ticket

NOTE: Moorehead-Lilly are on the ballot in Wisconsin

Indy Week: http://bit.ly/2eodN1E

“…Much love to the indigenous peoples I met up in Standing Rock, who taught me so much and elevated my consciousness and my spirit,” he said. “These are people that have been fighting against colonialism and white supremacy for the last five hundred years. And we bring them here with us today in love and resistance and solidarity and self-determination. We have to learn to connect Black Lives Matter with Standing Rock, the Palestinian resistance with the Latino movement.”

He went on: “We have to connect all oppressed communities together in order to defeat this wicked system: the state, white supremacy, racism, and also, what?”

The crowd responded in shouted unison: “Capitalism!”

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Help Keep Right-To-Work-For-Less Out of the Virginia State Constitution

PETITION (Please share): http://bit.ly/2e2BE8C

From the Virginia AFL-CIO, https://www.va-aflcio.org/news/vote-no-1:

The General Assembly really needs to think about what matters to them. Could they spend their time working to improve schools or jumpstart the economy? Or would they rather try to amend the constitution with an unnecessary distraction?

Amendment 1 is a complete waste of time, and does not deserve to be in the Virginia Constitution. It’s unnecessary, costly and nearly impossible to reverse.

Priorities matter. And for the lawmakers behind Amendment 1, it’s clear they don’t have Virginia’s best interest at the top of their list. Vote NO on Amendment 1. It’s time to protect Virginia’s constitution and our working families.

 

Chicago, November 6: Revolutionary Theory Discussion: Elections

Do we really have to choose between Trump’s racism and Clinton’s militarism? During election years, the movement in the United States is always at risk of getting derailed and distracted by the media cirucus that accompanies presidential elections. Join us for an informal discussion on elections and other forms of “democracy” under capitalism. There will be short readings provided on a Marxist analysis of this topic, no prior knowledge or familiarity with Marxism or socialism is necessary. We strive to make this an engaging and welcoming space for everyone!

This is part of Chicago Workers World Party’s monthly “Revolutionary Theory” discussion series in which we try to unite theory and practice – studying and learning from history and the real work, then taking that theory out into the streets and our communities.

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