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.

June 14: Phone Blast: Day 5 of Wisconsin Prisoner Hunger Strike

Starting Friday, June 10, at least six prisoners in longterm solitary confinement at Waupun Correctional Institute and Columbia Correctional Institute have been engaging in a hunger strike, refusing food and demanding an end to solitary confinement in Wisconsin prisons. Please take a minute to call, and put pressure on administration to listen to them and stop torture of prisoners in Wisconsin. For day five of the hunger strike, the prisoners are asking that you call John Litscher, secretary of the Wisconsin Department of Corrections at 608-240-5000. Hours of operation are 7:45 AM to 4:30 PM, after that time can leave a message.

Sample script: “There is a hunger strike going on in your facilities and the wardens are not taking it seriously. Please meet and negotiate with the prisoners at Waupun and Columbia Correctional Institute, and address the six humanitarian demands that they have against solitary confinement in Department of Corrections. This is the fifth day that most prisoners. In addition, Norman Green #228971 at Columbia Correctional has been on hunger strike for eight days, the Columbia Warden refuses to acknowledge food refusal is happening, and guards are interfering with his property. This needs to change immediately. ”

There will be updates and further calls to action as the situation develops.

From a letter by one of the inmates organizing the food refusal:
“In the state of Wisconsin hundreds of prisoners are in the long term solitary confinement unit aka Administrative Confinement (A.C.). Some been on this status from 18 to 20 years concurrents. We are planning a hunger strike for June 10, 2016 and we need all the help we can get to get this to the media, put pressure on the D. O.C and politicians, etc. When calling and/or emailing any of the above be persistent. Do it a minimum of two of two or three times per day. You may also call Waupun Correctional Institution to check on our well being at 920-324-5571 ”

Here is a “How-To” video for calling prisons https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=251DPVDQ17A (the example used is a lot longer than what’s expected for this call, but it shows how the process can often look like)

If you’re participating internationally, you can make an international voice call to the US very cheaply using google voice / hangouts

If you wish to write to participating prisoners to make message of support, please write to: Cesar Deleon #322800, Lamar Larry #293906, Rayshun Woods #390831, LaRon McKinley #42642, at:
Waupon Correctional Institute
P.O. Box 351
Waupon, WI 53963

Ras Atum-Ra Uhuru Mutawakkil (s/n Green) #228971 has recently been transferred to Columbia, and can be written at
Columbia Correctional Institute
P.O. Box 900
Portage, WI 53901

When writing, keep statements of support vague, language including “hunger strike” will most likely be blocked. People who wish to write can use the Milwaukee IWW PO Box as a return address, at PO Box 342294, Milwaukee, WI, 53234

More information on the incarcerated workers participating in this action and their writings can be found at: solitarytorture.blogspot.com

National Network On Cuba Statement On Orlando

Dear National Network On Cuba Member Friends,

We are horrified and outraged at yet another mass murder in the United States. While we mourn for the victims, their families and the LGBTQ community in Orlando, Fla., we also stand in solidarity with the necessary struggle against racism, against Islamophobia and bigotry or violence against Arab people, as well as homophobia and transphobia. We reject the public discourse that seeks to blame people of the Islamic faith, immigrants, people of color, women and the LGBTQ community for the hardships faced in our communities or uncertainties in our lives.

Most of all, we will not be divided. Together we can and will build a better world for all of us.

Especially for those of us who have visited or lived in socialist Cuba, we are sharply reminded that Cuba has no culture of gun violence. Cuban society values all life and works as a community to promote understanding, tolerance, and love of one’s neighbors. The Community of Latin American and Caribbean States of which Cuba is a founding member has declared the area to be a zone of peace and Cuba has provided the venue and assistance to end the more than 60 year long war in Colombia.

We should pause, reflect and denounce the forces of hate and intolerance that have allowed and continue to allow this to happen in the United States.

In solidarity,

NNOC co-chairs

Cheryl LaBash
Banbose Shango
Greg Klave
Alicia Jrapko, Nalda Vigezzi

Muslims, LGBTQ activists: ‘Blame the system for Orlando shooting’

By L.T. Pham posted on June 12, 2016, http://www.workers.org/

June 12 — As LGBTQ communities mourn — and vow to fight — in the wake of a mass shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., the mainstream media has attempted to ratchet up anti-Muslim sentiment in response.

In the early morning hours of June 12 a shooter opened gunfire during the Latin night at the Pulse club in Orlando, resulting in the deaths of 50 people and nearly as many injured. This tragedy comes at a time when anti-LGBTQ terror has been heightened by the passage of anti-trans legislation in North Carolina and across the South.

While initially ignoring that the attack targeted lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people, the big business media has begun crafting a narrative that fortifies the U.S.’s imperialist wars — at home and abroad — targeting people in the Middle East, Muslims and followers of Islam. The greatest proponents of terrorism, however, are the U.S. capitalist government and the Pentagon, which attempt to dislodge progressive revolutions in Venezuela and Bolivia while threatening socialist Cuba; kill thousands of civilians in countries like Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan; and have invaded, occupied and killed countless millions from Mexico to the Philippines.

An organizer and a Cuban Muslim, Abdul Hakeem Peña, told Workers World: “What happened in Orlando is a disgustingly tragic event targeting the LGBTQ community and the Latino community. This is reflective of the hostile times we live in and the violent fervor instigated by [U.S. presidential candidate] Donald Trump’s rhetoric, as well as the U.S. government’s ‘war on terror’ and war on LGBTQ and other oppressed groups. This is not an Islamic attack, but an attack of anger and hatred that was misdirected. Anger and hatred have no religion.

“In this the holiest month of Ramadan,” continued Peña, “in which Muslims practice charity and goodwill to all humanity, let us not get worked up and be driven to acts of violence against our fellow working class and fellow strugglers against the capitalist system — which only teaches humanity to be bloodthirsty against the enemies of capitalism. Let us stand in solidarity. Let us unite with the Muslim community and say ‘As Salamu Alaykum! Peace be upon all of you!’

“We cannot make enemies of each other; anti-Muslim hysteria quickly becomes mass shootings that targets Muslims and those assumed to be Muslims — such as the shooting in Oak Creek, Wisconsin, in 2015 that killed six and injured four in a Sikh temple. Moreover, this hysteria is used to justify wars for profit and capital, disguised as a patriotic feat to defend the U.S. against foreign enemies.”

Capitalist politicians = no solidarity for working class

Earlier this year, Florida Gov. Rick Scott supported the state Legislature as it attempted to pass an anti-trans “bathroom bill” which would criminalize transgender people for using the restroom that best aligns with their identity.

Following the tragedy in Orlando, reactionary, anti-LGBTQ, anti-poor, racist Gov. Scott wants the state to do everything in its power to defend against this “act of terror.” It comes as no surprise that capitalist politicians want the working class to forget their reactionary positions in order to serve the interests of big media and the bosses.

Imani Henry, a Black trans activist with the Peoples Power Assembly, said, “The irony of this tragedy is that we live in a country where Black and Brown lives, especially LGBTQ ones, DO NOT matter. Black and Brown LGBTQ people are treated as second class on a daily basis — we are discriminated against at every turn and struggle just to have jobs, housing, health care, and access to education in the U.S. We live in constant fear of anti-LGBTQ violence, which many times goes unreported because of the further humiliation and violence we experience at the hands of cops and courts. Does the U.S. government care about trans women of color, many of whom live below the poverty line, and are murdered in record numbers in the U.S.?

“It is a shame,” said Henry, “that the Black Lives Matter movement, a specifically Black LGBTQ-led movement, is deemed a ‘terrorist’ organization and vilified in the press, with cops sanctioned to have a militarized presence at our demonstrations. That right-wingers can shoot BLM activists and not be prosecuted, but BLM leaders — most recently Jasmine Abdullah, a Black and queer activist in Pasadena — can be sentenced to 90 days in jail under a ‘public lynching’ law while the cops who murdered Freddie Gray, Akai Gurley, Shantel Davis, Ramarley Graham and countless more get no time at all.”

Teresa Gutierrez, campaign manager for the Workers World Party election campaign of Monica Moorehead for President and Lamont Lilly for Vice President, stated: “As a Mexican lesbian, my heart is heavy today for my sisters and brothers and all my LGBTQ family gunned down on Latino Party Night at Pulse Night Club. But I blame the system, not the shooter, for this tragedy. It is Trump’s racist rhetoric that is to blame. It is President Barack Obama’s mass deportations, [presidential candidate and former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary] Clinton’s war machine that is to blame. Mexicans and others have shown in California, New Mexico and Illinois the answer: Fight back, shut it down. We will not go back. Let us dedicate Pride this month to the Pulse martyrs.” http://www.workers.org/

WWP candidates say: Solidarity with LGBTQ people — Smash capitalism, racism & Islamophobia!

Workers World Party’s election campaign, with Monica Moorehead and Lamont Lilly as presidential and vice presidential candidates respectively, sends our solidarity, condolences, and fight-back spirit to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer communities and all those impacted by the anti-LGBTQ mass shooting that occurred June 12 at the Pulse club in Orlando, Fla., which has taken the lives of at least 50 people. Over 50 more have been wounded.

The shooting happened as many communities across the country and globe kick off Pride month. Pride came out of the Stonewall Rebellion of 1969, in which queer and trans people — predominantly people of color, homeless people and youth — fought back against unending police raids.

While the media hesitates to name the mass shooting as an incident fueled by anti-LGBTQ bigotry, our campaign calls it a direct attack on LGBTQ people. Its violence should not be taken lightly or viewed in isolation within a U.S. society in which Black lives don’t matter when it comes to police violence and mass incarceration; in which Mexicans and other immigrants of color are detained and deported in record numbers; and in which women are sexually assaulted on college campuses and in the U.S. military in epidemic numbers.

In the middle of the political circus called the presidential elections, we are reminded that workers and oppressed people will always bear the brunt of the violence so long as capitalism and its bourgeois democracy are in place. Millions are people are excluded from the existing political process — prisoners, youth, the undocumented and many others who cannot access the polls because of disability, gender identity and/or race. Yet when the crisis of capitalism is exposed in the form of massive layoffs, tuition hikes, police brutality — and even mass shootings — it is those who are excluded from the bourgeois political process who are blamed.

Blame the system and fight back!

We cannot expect any of these conditions to change just because there is another presidential election. Trump’s unapologetic anti-migrant, anti-Mexican, anti-Muslim and misogynistic rhetoric has mobilized and effectively misled millions of workers to believe that a billionaire has the best interest of the working class in mind. Trump’s rhetoric cannot be separated from the events in Orlando, nor from any attacks on oppressed peoples. Clinton is no better, as the political dynasty she has been a part of for decades — the Democratic establishment — has approved wars, mass deportations, and austerity measures taken in the form of mass incarceration, cuts to social services and much more.

U.S. democracy only serves the ruling class in its efforts to consolidate wealth and profit by waging war against Black and Brown people at home, at the borders, in the Global South and in every corner of the earth that imperialism can latch its claws.

The capitalist crisis becomes more intense day by day. This system is no longer able to pull itself out of crisis. It relies on tragedies like the mass shooting in Orlando to stir up panic and pull allegiance from the masses, who are tricked into believing that the greatest threat to their safety exists anywhere but inside the U.S., the belly of the beast.

We stand shoulder to shoulder with LGBTQ people, Muslims, migrants, immigrants, Black and Brown youth, women, workers, and all oppressed people who refuse to be used in imperialist wars and divide-and-conquer strategies. In the spirit of the Stonewall Rebellion, the Compton Cafeteria Riots and the resistance LGBTQ people display everyday, we say: Unite the Working Class! LGBTQ Liberation Now! Smash Racism and Islamophobia! Abolish Capitalism! Fight for Socialism!

Milwaukee, July 7: Building People’s Power, Lamont Lilly Leads Community Conversation

Lamont Lilly, Workers World Party Vice Presidential candidate, https://www.facebook.com/mooreheadlilly2016, will be in Milwaukee, WI to lead a community conversation about building people’s power July 7, 2016. Free and open to the public. Join us!
Lamont_Lilly_JPEG__Milwaukee_WI_7_7_16
LAMONT LILLY BIO
Lamont Lilly, Vice Presidential candidate for Workers World Party (WWP) will be leading a community conversation about BUILDING PEOPLE’S POWER at this event.

Lamont Lilly is a leading member of the Durham, North Carolina., branch of WWP and a member of WWP’s National Committee. As a people’s journalist, as an activist, an organizer, and a speaker, Lilly has traveled widely to stand in solidarity with struggles against racism and imperialist war, for people’s justice and for socialism.

Lilly was born in 1979 in Fayetteville, NC. A military veteran, he graduated from North Carolina Central University, and then worked for several years as an educator and nonprofit
program coordinator, focusing on African American youth leadership and academic development. His focus on youth continued as he became an activist.

In 2010, he traveled to Colombia in South America as a human rights delegate with Witness for Peace, advocating for displaced Indigenous and AfroColombian people. In 2015,
Lilly went to Syria and Lebanon in a delegation led by Ramsey Clark and Cynthia McKinney. In Beirut, he spoke as a Black Lives Matter representative at the International Forum for
Palestinian Solidarity. In Damascus, where millions are displaced by war, he met with Syrians defending their sovereignty and opposed to the U.S. instigated destruction of
Syria. He also met comrades of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Inside the U.S., he has gone wherever the struggle called, including Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Oakland, Los Angeles, and New York. From the Baltimore rebellion after the
police killing of Freddie Gray to the Days of Grace actions in Charleston, S.C. in the wake of the racist massacre at Mother Emmanuel AME Church, Lamont Lilly is always there on the
ground—as a journalist providing consistent revolutionary inside perspective on the Black Lives Matter movement and the continuing struggle for Black Liberation, and as a tireless
organizer whose energy and enthusiasm have helped
encourage a new wave of activism among oppressed
and working-class youth.

Lilly’s political commentary has been featured in Workers World newspaper, Truthout, Counterpunch, the LA Progressive, Black Youth Project, the Durham News, and Triangle Free Press.

Lilly was awarded a 2015 Local Hero Citizen’s Award by Indy Week of Raleigh-Cary-Durham-Chapel Hill N.C. for “pushing for workers’ rights and police reform.”

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More information about July 7 event: 414-395-0665

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Milwaukee, June 11: Rally in solidarity with Waupun prisoners

Some prisoners at Waupun CI & Columbia CI have started refusing to eat any food at all to demand the end of the egregious & inhumane practice of long term solitary confinement. Some families of these prisoners & supporters will be rallying to express solidarity with them, & raise awareness about this campaign.

When: June 11th, 12 PM,
Where: Milwaukee county courthouse.(where the May Day rally ends each year)

IWOC, EXPO, WISDOM, Voces de la Frontera & several other organizations are on board. Everyone is encouraged to attend the rallies & participate in the phone zaps. Come on out!

For more information on this campaign, and to learn how you can help, please visit: SolitaryTorture.blogspot.com.