Cuba: A call to our combative people

http://en.granma.cu/cuba/2017-09-11/a-call-to-our-combative-people

Hurricane Irma, with its destructive power, battered our island for 72 hours, beginning the morning of September 8 until this Sunday afternoon. With winds that surpassed 250 kilometers per hour on occasion, it crossed the north of the country from Baracoa – hit hard by another phenomenon of this type almost a year ago – to the outskirts of Cárdenas. However, given its immense size, practically no province was spared its effects.

Described by experts as the largest ever to form in the Atlantic, this meteorological phenomenon caused severe damage to the country, which, precisely because of its scope, has yet to be quantified. A preliminary view shows evidence of an impact on housing, the electrical system, and agriculture.

It also struck some of our principal tourist destinations, but damage will be repaired before the beginning of the high season. We have on hand for this the human resources and materials needed, given that this constitutes one of the principal sources of income in the national economy.

These have been difficult days for our people, who, in a few hours time, have seen what was constructed with great effort hit by a devastating hurricane. Images from the last few hours speak for themselves, as does the spirit of resistance and victory of our people that is regenerated with every adversity.

In these difficult circumstances, the unity of Cubans has prevailed, the solidarity among neighbors, discipline in response to instructions issued by the National Civil Defense General Staff and Defense Councils at all levels, the professionalism of specialists at the Institute of Meteorology, the immediacy of our communications media and its journalists, the support of mass organizations, as well as the cohesion of National Defense Council leadership bodies. Special mention for all of our women, including leaders of the Party and government, who with aplomb and maturity provided leadership and confronted the difficult situation.

The days that are coming will be ones of much work, during which the strength and indestructible confidence in the Revolution of Cubans will again be demonstrated. This is not a time to mourn, but to construct again that which the winds of Irma attempted to destroy.

With organization, discipline, and the coordination of all our structures, we will move forward as we have done on previous occasions. No one should be fooled; the task we have before us is huge, but with a people like ours, we will win the most important battle: recovery.

At this critical moment, the Cuban Workers’ Federation and the National Association of Small Farmers, along with all other mass organizations, must redouble efforts to eliminate as quickly as possible the trail left by this destructive event.

One principle remains immovable: the Revolution will leave no one unprotected and measures are already being adopted to ensure that no Cuban family is left to their fate.

As has been customary every time a meteorological phenomenon has struck us, there have been many expressions of solidarity received from all parts of the world. Heads of state and government, political organizations, and friends in solidarity organizations have expressed the desire to help us, who we thank in the name of more than eleven million Cuban men and women.

We face the recovery with the example of Comandante en Jefe de la Revolución Cubana, Fidel Castro Ruz, who, with his unwavering confidence in victory and iron will, taught us that nothing is impossible. In these difficult hours, his legacy makes us strong and unites us.

Raúl Castro Ruz

Havana, September 10, 2017

50 years after Revolution in Cuba

Milwaukee, September 21: Rebuilding the Peace and Justice Movements

Hosted by Milwaukee Coalition Against Trump

UW-Milwaukee Student Union, 2200 E Kenwood Blvd., Room 191, 7-9 P.M.

Join the Peace Action WI End the Wars Committee and the Milwaukee Coalition Against Trump for a night of inspiration.

A panel of speakers will address the importance of linking struggles for justice and peace in the U.S. with those against U.S. wars and intervention around the world. They will be building on the tradition of Martin Luther King, Jr., who spoke against the U.S.’ three basic evils of poverty, racism, and militarism. The struggle against these evils is currently being carried by the Poor People’s Campaign led by Bishop Rev. William J. Barber II.

This event is FREE and open to the public! More information on the event and speakers will be published shortly.

United Electrical Workers Union: Fight Racism!

Resolutions from the UE convention from August 27-31 in Pittsburgh, PA are now online: https://www.ueunion.org/ue-policy

https://www.ueunion.org/ue-policy/fight-racism

“…In response to police violence against African Americans in recent years, Black Lives Matter has become a mass movement. Since the election of Trump, hundreds of thousands of Americans have taken to the streets to oppose Trump’s so-called “Muslim ban,” his stepped-up war against immigrants, and the racist far-right. UE stands with all of those who have marched and bravely stood up to hatred, racism, and violence.

Working-class unity can never be taken for granted. Winning depends upon our success in the fight against racism. UE and the wider labor movement is not immune from racism. We must consciously work to overcome racism in our diverse working class…”

UE Logo

 

Milwaukee Premier: The Blood Is At The Doorstep

https://mkefilm.org/the-blood-is-at-the-doorstep/

Tickets go on sale THURSDAY for

https://mkefilm.org/the-blood-is-at-the-doorstep/

It’s a scene Milwaukee natives will not soon forget: Dontre Hamilton, an unarmed Black man resting in Red Arrow Park, shot 14 times by a police officer in broad daylight, leaving behind a devastated family to pick up the pieces and bringing a community already struggling to maintain positive police-community relations even closer to the brink. Filmed over a three-year period, The Blood Is at the Doorstep focuses intimately on the Hamilton family’s strength in the face of unspeakable tragedy, as we follow mother Maria and older brother Nate as they turn to community organizing as a means of honoring Dontre’s memory while still doggedly pursuing answers, with public outcry intensifying the longer none are given. A heart-rending portrait of justice deferred from director Erik Ljung, illuminating one family’s remarkable ability to channel their grief into fuel for activism and community building, and a sobering reminder of the chasm that so often divides us.

AND for

Milwaukee, September 30: Black Women’s Empowerment March

Hosted by UBLAC Milwaukee

44th and Auer, Milwaukee, 10 AM. – 2 P.M.

On September 30, 2017 a multi-community movement led by a coalition united demands for racial justice will host a March for Racial Justice in Washington, DC. to stand for racial justice. Within this march Black Women’s Blueprint will host a March for Black Women also in Washington, DC. We are living in a time where it’s either now or never we take a stand for and with one another. Many from all over the world will join them in D.C, but there are many of us who are unable to attend and Black Women’s Blueprint is asking folks who are unable to attend to organize a march in their own cities. We have reached out to women here in Milwaukee and there is great interest to stand in solidarity with those in D.C. So we are planning a local March for Black Women in Milwaukee also on Saturday, September 30th. We will not end our work the day of the march, but will continue to stand in solidarity and work within our own communities and pushing back against the system in our city, across the country, and world. In this highly political moment of the twentieth year anniversary of the Million Women March, we amplify UNITY among us, LOVE, and EMPOWERMENT. After the march we plan to continue the work and form an agenda around the work we need to do in regards to the struggles of Black women and girls that needs to be done here in Milwaukee.

Background and information from March for Racial Justice:
We will march because as long as U.S. laws, policies, and practices remain steeped in racism and white supremacy, basic human rights and civil rights for all our universal and constitutional rights will never be fully realized. Why September 30? It marks the anniversary of The Elaine Massacre in Elaine, Arkansas. The Massacre was part of a series of racist massacres and lynching during the Red Summer of 1919. Black soldiers returning from fighting in WWI would no longer tolerate the inhumane treatment, racism and terrorism that greeted their return to the U.S. They resisted the treatment and demanded their civil rights to be honored and upheld by their country. Instead of having their rights respected, they were met by murderous white mobs, many of whom were sanctioned by a white supremacist state. These brave African Americans fought, against all odds, for the protection of their families, communities and liberty. Their deaths and imprisonment highlighted the foundation of white supremacy in our justice system as not one person from the white lynching mobs was ever imprisoned for committing these criminal acts. On September 30, we mourn their lives and honor their resistance. The courage of their resistance reverberates through the generations and inspires our struggle today.

March for Racial Justice’s vision is to create a just and equitable future for communities of color.

#M4RJ

Madison, September 27: People’s Hearing: Stop ab190! / Audiencia pública: ¡Alto ab190!

Hosted by Voces de la Frontera

Wisconsin State Capitol, Madison, 10 A.M. – 3:30 P.M.

ENGLISH BELOW

Audiencia pública: ¿Got milk? ¡No sin inmigrantes, alto AB190! miércoles, 27 de septiembre, 10:30am
Capitolio estatal en Madison, Cuarto 411 South
Autobuses salen de Voces Milwaukee a las 8am.
Info: 414-828-2692

Ven para hablar y mostrar oposición contra AB190 que converteria policia y sheriffs en rama de ICE.

Ven para apoyar la restauración de licencias de conducir a los inmigrantes.

————————-

Citizen’s Hearing: Got Milk? Not Without Immigrants, Stop AB190! Wednesday, September 27th, 10:30am
State Capitol in Madison, Room 411 South
Buses leave from Voces Milwaukee at 8am
Info: 414-828-2692

No to police acting like ICE! Join us to speak out against the destructive impact AB190 would have on our communities and Wisconsin’s economy, particularly the dairy industry. Instead of turning police into ICE, Scott Walker should return driver’s cards to immigrants.

September 27 2017 Voces Madison

Bolivia’s President Morales Says Hurricanes are Product of Capitalism

Morales has long identified the system as the root cause of climate change.

Bolivia’s President Evo Morales says the devastating hurricanes hitting Caribbean nations over the last week are caused by pollution created by the capitalist system, and is urging countries to implement the policies of the Paris Climate Deal.

“It is urgent to retake the Paris Agreement,” Morales wrote on his official Twitter account. “The world calls for peace between brotherly peoples and not walls against human beings.”

The Bolivian president also welcomed the comments made by Pope Francis during his visit to Colombia, calling for “a reconciliation with Mother Earth.”

Morales said the world is demanding peace between peoples, and not walls, such as the one that President Donald Trump wants to build on the U.S.-Mexican border.

In June, Trump announced that the U.S. is withdrawing from the 2015 Paris agreement.

He said moves to negotiate a new “fair” deal that would not disadvantage U.S. businesses and workers would begin.

Only three sovereign nations are not part of the accord, which aims to stem global warming.

Of the other two, Nicaragua feels the agreement does not go far enough, and Syria remains mired in a civil war.

At the the COP 21 Climate Change Conference in Paris in 2015, Morales had blamed capitalism for environmental destruction, calling it “the formula that has destroyed our species.”

Just back in July, the Bolivian leader had also remarked that “the U.S., the most industrialized and most polluted country in the world, cannot deny its responsibility for the damage it causes to the environment.”

https://www.telesurtv.net/english

Milwaukee September 10: Riverwest Radio benefit – Sigmund Snopek III & Mark Borchardt

Hosted by Riverwest Radio and The Coffee House (19th Street – Milwaukee, WI)

The Coffee House’s Living Activism Series presents a
Benefit Concert for Riverwest Radio featuring:
Music from Sigmund Snopek III
A new play by film maker Mark Borchardt – “What’s in the Box?”
The Riverwest Radio All-Stars featuring George Darrow & Marc Ferch
Sunday, Sept. 10, 2017
7 – 9 pm (doors 6:30 pm)
at The Coffee House
1905 W. Wisconsin Ave. (enter at the door on the horse-shoe drive off Wisconsin Ave)
Milwaukee, WI 53233
http://www.the-coffee-house.com/
414-534-4612

Free-will donation at the door – all proceeds go to Riverwest Radio. Be generous!
Riverwest Radio Inc. is a Nonprofit 501(c)(3)
Support grass-roots community radio! www.riverwestradio.com

Sigmund Snopek has been a dominant figure on the international musical scene since the late 1960s. Whether exercising his skills as composer, soloist, bandleader, multi-instrument sideman or orchestrator, Snopek continues to share his creativity. Snopek’s music is rich and lyrical and ranges from top 40 through progressive rock to jazz and classical.

A live performance of an original short play, “What’s in the Box?”, by Mark Borchardt. Synopsis: A mysterious package arrives at the home of a bickering couple. Mysterious intrigue and witty repartee ensues as they attempt to heatedly determine “What’s in the Box?” Mark is co-host of “Cinema Fireside” Mondays 7 – 8 pm on Riverwest Radio: http://www.riverwestradio.com/show/cinema-fireside/

Riverwest Radio Coffee House

SEPT 11-17: Topple White Supremacy! Durham 9/12 + local actions

Hosted by International Action Center

Workers World Party Durham Branch and Workers World Party

Take it to the streets to tear down white supremacy!

Come to Durham Sept 12 and/or host local actions http://iacenter.org/supportsep11-17durhamweekofaction/

Durham September 12 2017 Poster

Momentum continues to build towards actions planned in Durham on September 12 and elsewhere around the country throughout that week to build the struggle against white supremacy. Caravans are being organized to join the major demonstration planned in Durham that day. Additionally, solidarity actions are planned in cities from coast to coast.

An informal alliance of national, regional and local organizations have pulled together a national call for a coordinated week of actions to topple white supremacy and state repression from Sept. 11-17, in the wake of events in Durham and Charlottesville.

Tuesday, Sept. 12, will be the next court date for anti-racist freedom fighters in connection with the toppling of a Confederate statue in Durham, as well as the one-month anniversary of the righteous resistance to white supremacists in Charlottesville and the murder of anti-fascist protester Heather Heyer there.

That morning, the community will gather at the Durham County Courthouse at 8:30 am before the next court appearance begins. Following the hearing, a march will leave the courthouse and head to Victory Plaza (CCB Plaza) in downtown Durham for a celebration of resistance, in the South and around the country, to the system of white supremacy in all its forms – racist monuments, the prison system, police brutality, deportations and detention of immigrants, the school-to-prison pipeline, and more. Caravans from Baltimore, New Orleans, Detroit, and elsewhere will join Durham activists for an assembly and community gathering.

The events in Charlottesville and Durham have lit a spark of resistance across the country to the neo-fascist, far-right, and white supremacist forces who have been emboldened by the Trump presidency. The week of actions, and the demonstration in Durham on September 12, will help to carry the resistance forward. This takes added significance in the face of the Trump administration’s new attacks on immigrants, with the repeal of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program just this week.

Tell us about your action or your plans to join us in Durham!
/iacenter.org/supportsep11-17durhamweekofaction/>
Onwards to tear down white supremacy!

Durham Sept 12 action:
facebook.com/events/886520761526422/

Sept 11 – 17 week of actions:
facebook.com/profile.php?id=267032350459968

Durham Sept 11 to 17 2017 Week Of Action

ENDORSERS:

Defend Durham Network that includes: Inside-Out Alliance, International Workers of the World (IWW), Ignite NC, Durham Beyond Policing, Workers World Party, Durham Branch, Southerners on New Ground (SONG), Youth Organizing Institute (YOI), Spirit House/All of us or None, Durham Solidarity Center, Redneck Revolt, Fight for 15; Baltimore Peoples Power Assembly; Baltimore Workers Defense Network; Rev. CD Witherspoon, President Emeritus, Baltimore Southern Christian Leadership Conference; Monica Moorehead & Lamont Lilly, Workers World Party 2016 presidential & vice-presidential candidates; Andre Powell, AFSCME Delegate, Baltimore Metropolitan AFL-CIO Council; Anti-Police Terror Project, Oakland; Unión del Barrio; International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu Jamal; The MOVE Organization; Families United For Racial & Economic Equality NYC (FUREE); USW 8751 Executive Board, Boston Bus Drivers; May 1st Coalition for Worker & Immigrant Rights, NYC; BAYAN, USA; ILPS (International League of Peoples Struggle), US Chapter; Peoples Power Assembly, NYC; Equality for Flatbush, NYC; NYC Shut It Down; Peoples Power Assembly; Hoods 4 Justice; Metropolitan Anarchist Coordinating Committee (MACC); Brooklyn Anti-gentrification Network (BAN); Virginia Student Power Network; UVA Students United; Wisconsin Bail Out the People Movement; Take Em Down NOLA (New Orleans); Peoples’ Assembly (New Orleans); Smash White Supremacy Coalition – Chicago; Roanoke Peoples Power Network; Michigan Peoples Defense Network (MPDN); Moratorium Now! Coalition to Stop Foreclosures, Evictions & Utility Shutoffs (Detroit); Michigan Emergency Committee Against War & Injustice (MECAWI); William Davis, President, Detroit chapter of National Action Network, President, Detroit Active and Retired Employees Association; Women’s Fightback Network, International Action Center; Deloyd Parker, Exec Dir of S.H.A.P.E. Community Center, Houston; Philippines-U.S. Solidarity Organization – Southern California (PUSO SoCal); Union of Progressive Iranians; Puerto Rico Alliance; ILPS Southern California; Anti-Racist Action, Committee to Stop FBI Repression, Latin American Solidarity Committee Milwaukee, Workers World Party Wisconsin

August 30 2017 Durham Call In Day