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, November 25: Solidarity With #4thprecinctshutdown In Minneapolis

On November 15, 2015, a police officer from the Minneapolis Police Department shot #JamarClark in the head. Witnesses say that at the time Jamar was shot he was lying on the ground. Jamar was unarmed. He was only 24 years old.

The two officers who were standing over Jamar when he was shot, Mark Ringgenberg and Dustin Schwarze, have both been with the department for just 13 months. Both have been placed on paid leave pending the outcome of a state investigation. The Minneapolis Police Department has not said which officer shot Jamar above his eye, killing him.

Members of Jamar’s family and surrounding community have held vigil at the precinct where the officers work since his murder. They have faced harrassment, abuse, and arrests at the hands of the Minneapolis Police Department. They have also endured threats from the KKK.

On November 24, 2015, four white men, wearing ski masks and bullet proof vests, fired upon those gathered at the precinct. As many as five people were shot. It is believed that the shooters were members of the KKK who had made previous threats to “shoot nigs.” According to eyewitnesses, police made no effort to apprehend the shooters. The shooting happened in front of police precinct, but it took nearly twenty minutes for officers to arrive.

We stand in solidarity with those who seek justice for Jamar Clark. Please join us for an emergency action for Jamar and those injured in last night’s shooting.

cropped-blm.jpg

Sam Marcy: The Klan & The Government, Foes Or Allies?

http://www.workers.org/marcy/cd/samklan/index.htm

“…The Klan is one of the very few organizations in this country which has avowedly been a secret terrorist organization. Murders, kidnappings, burnings, lynchings, whippings, and downright mass terror have characterized its existence since its inception more than 100 years ago.

The Encyclopedia Britannica, the most authoritative but highly conservative encyclopedia in the U.S. and abroad, bluntly characterizes the Ku Klux Klan as a “secret terrorist organization.” That puts the Klan on a fundamentally different plane than merely an organization which promotes racism, no matter how viciously…

There are embryo fascist organizations all over Europe. The U.S. finances fascist gangs in the less developed countries as a means of threatening, intimidating, and overthrowing, where possible, governments which are striving to be independent of U.S. imperialist interests.

The lessons of armed self-defense are especially necessary and indispensable in the light of the congenital propensity of monopoly capitalism to rely more and more on illegal force at home and abroad. The fact that the Klan has been numerically small in different periods of U.S. history has not prevented it from suddenly surging forth as a mass organization, as it did in an earlier period of the U.S. when the ruling class needed it more frequently.

Now, with the capitalist crisis ever deepening and widening, it is inconceivable that the ruling class, which through the CIA promotes covert operations on a world scale, will suddenly drop its interest in supporting and maintaining clandestine, extra-legal support groups to promote its domestic objectives.

The capitalist crisis is bound to produce a tremendous resurgence of the working class. It is equally certain that the ruling class will attempt to inhibit, derail, and utilize all sorts of support organizations in the struggle against an aroused and united working class and oppressed peoples’ united front. It is in light of this perspective that one needs to view each and every step in the development of not only KKK activity but other forms as well, and to properly organize against it with all the diligence, energy, and devotion which are necessary in the struggle…”

Solidarity With Black Lives Matter Minneapolis! #JusticeforJamar

Black Lives Matter Minneapolis
UPDATE: 4 White supremacists shot 5 unarmed protesters Nov. 23 at the #4thPrecinctShutdown. We will not be intimidated. Stand with us tomorrow. Students are walking out.

After Jamar Clark, an unarmed black man was shot in the head by police last Sunday, community members have held a 24/7 occupation of the 4th Precinct for the past week to demand justice.

Join us on Tuesday, November 24th as we march for justice for Jamar Clark and take our voices directly to those who must listen to the people.

#Justice4Jamar #4thPrecinctShutDown

Rev. Pinkney Placed In Solitary Confinement

Report on Nov. 20-22 visit to Marquette, by David Sole, http://moratorium-mi.org/

I flew into Sawyer airport at 3:10 pm on Friday. A supporter of Rev. Pinkney picked me up and we drove to the county courthouse where Gov. Snyder maintains an office. At 4:30 pm we held a press conference outside the building. ABC TV 10 and NBC TV 6 attended. We had three Marquette activists plus myself. We opened a “Free Rev. Pinkney” banner and gave interviews. ABC ran the story at the 10 pm news and has it posted on their website. All Marquette media received a press release earlier in the week and a phone call the day before.

I went to prison that evening and had a 3 hour visit with Rev. Pinkney. He was in good spirits. Except for visits and 15 minutes for meals he was restricted to his cell – part of punishment that also includes loss of phone access. His blood pressure is up (he didn’t suffer from this before his transfer to Marquette) and they ordered his pressure checked once a week (clearly inadequate). The food in Marquette is worse, if possible, than at Lakeland prison.

Rev. Pinkney received the many birthday cards and has been getting letters and some books. The prison guard handed me a Workers World newspaper and a book that they had refused to allow in to him. He greatly appreciates all correspondence, even when he can’t answer.

Rev. Pinkney is challenging the bogus “tickets” written against him for misusing the telephone. He was supposed to get out of the lockdown on Wednesday, Nov. 25.

During the visit, Rev. Pinkney gave me blank paper and a pen to take notes. The previous week a visitor was given paper and pencil by the guard and allowed to take and carry out notes. I was also given paper and pencil at Lakeland by the guard and allowed to take and carry out notes. The guard was right in view while I took two pages of notes and said nothing.

On the way out a guard demanded I empty my pockets. Of course, they were empty and checked when I went in, so I handed over the notes I had just taken. These consisted mainly of copying the “ticket” charges against Rev. Pinkney, ideas of places for people to contact, and the need for more protests. The guard confiscated these, saying that one could not take anything out from the visiting area.

On Saturday I went with one supporter to NMU campus and left leaflets about Rev. Pinkney around the library. We went to the public library where an art fair was happening and stood outside handing leaflets to about 50 people.

At 5 pm we drove to the prison for another visit. Before I could get out of the car, Officer Johnson came out to the parking lot and said that “Pinkney is in segregation and can see no visitors.” I asked why and he said “for smuggling information out to his wife.” I stated that I wrote the notes and I attempted to carry them out, not Rev. Pinkney. He refused to discuss this and started shouting at me to get off prison property. 

We left and called the TV stations to announce that we would be protesting Sunday morning at the prison gate. We didn’t expect the media to attend on short notice, Sunday morning, as they have very small staffs. Myself and two supporters gathered at the gate to Marquette prison at 9:30 am Sunday morning. We opened the Free Pinkney banner, took some photos, and held the banner for the prison cameras and the traffic on Rte. 41 to see (photo above). No media attended.

We later attended a luncheon that followed services at the St. Paul Episcopal church where two Pinkney supporters attend and had arranged for me to speak. About 25 congregants listened to a presentation and got leaflets. We urged them to send a holiday card to Rev. Pinkney, call the governor to express concern, and make a holiday donation (see holiday campaign leaflet).

The Dr. Esiquio Uballe and his wife Susan Uballe who invited us to the church will be working to see if their priest or the bishop can visit Rev. Pinkney despite the segregation blockade. Esiquio and Susan will also bring up the issue of Rev. Pinkney to a peace and justice council in which they participate to work on generating more local support.

http://www.bhbanco.org/

Pinkney shirt

School Of Americas Watch Labor Caucus Solidarity Statement For UAW Local 833

“On Saturday, November 21, as part of the weekend of activities calling for the closing of the School of the Americas (now renamed Western Hemisphere Institute for Security and Cooperation; go to soaw.org for more information about SOA/WHINSEC and its role in training military and paramilitary forces who murder trade unionists) about 75 union and worker rights activists met at the Labor Caucus workshop. We reached unanimous agreement to pledge our support to your strike for a just contract and the basic union principle of equal pay for equal work.”

National Day of Mourning

http://www.uaine.org/

Since 1970, Native Americans and our supporters have gathered at noon on Cole’s Hill in Plymouth to commemorate a National Day of Mourning on the US thanksgiving holiday. Many Native Americans do not celebrate the arrival of the Pilgrims and other European settlers. Thanksgiving day is a reminder of the genocide of millions of Native people, the theft of Native lands, and the relentless assault on Native culture. Participants in National Day of Mourning honor Native ancestors and the struggles of Native peoples to survive today. It is a day of remembrance and spiritual connection as well as a protest of the racism and oppression which Native Americans continue to experience. http://www.uaine.org/

46th National Day of Mourning: November 26, 2015
12:00 noon
Coles Hill Plymouth, MA

We Are Not Vanishing.
We Are Not Conquered.
We Are As Strong As Ever.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/UAINE/events/

uaine4

Sheboygan, December 12: UAW Local 833 Holiday Bazaar

Saturday, December 12

Emil Mazey Hall
UAW Local 833
5425 Superior Avenue,
Sheboygan, WI
920-458-2273

Find that perfect gift among the many crafters and vendors, enjoy delicious food, and a friendly setting!

Free admission

http://uawlocal833.org/

———-

Also bring non-perishable goods for striking Local 833 members. Checks or money orders can also be brought to the hall or sent in. Thank you.

And join the picket lines anytime. Stop by the hall or call to find out where support is needed.

UAW