Friday, January 16, 2015


Free Chelsea Manning-President Obama Pardon Chelsea Now! 


 
 
 
 
Photos of actions celebrating
CHELSEA MANNING’s birthday
17 December 2014
http://www.refusingtokill.net/images/C_Manning_Finish-1-245x300.jpg
 
 
Chelsea Manning, one of the world’s best-known whistleblowers, was sentenced in August 2013 to 35 years’ imprisonment.  If the sentence stands, she won’t be out until 2045.  We cannot allow this; we have to get her out.
On her 27th birthday, Chelsea’s supporters from lgbtq, women’s, anti-war, anti-racist, anti-zionist, whistleblowers’ and other movements for change from 14 cities in seven countries called for her release.
Happy Bithday Chelsea Manning, Berlin 2, 19 Dec 2014
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning, Berlin, 19 Dec
Berlin – 19 December, FreeChelseaManningNet, Brandenburg Gate and SchuwZ Club.
Happy Birthday
Chelsea Manning - 17 Dec Berlin (Machon)
Berlin - 17 December, Coop Anti War cafe, (video).
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning, Boston, 20 Dec 2014
Boston – 20 December, Boston Chelsea Manning Support Committee, Veterans for Peace, Committee for Peace and Human Rights.
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning - 17 Dec 2014 Crescent
Crescent, Oklahoma – Home town of Chelsea Manning, 17 December, Center for Conscience in Action (video).
Happy Birthday CM - Dublin
Dublin – 17 December Action for Ireland (AFRI) (video).
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning - Istanbul 17 Dec  Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning - Istanbul (Ali)
Istanbul, 17 December, Kurdish conscientious objector Ali Fikri Işık drinks to Chelsea Manning.
16196231796_e333bcd3ed_o.jpg
London, 17 December, called by Payday men’s network and Queer Strike.  Chelsea Manning banner produced by Wise Up Action.
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning - US embassy 17 Dec
London, 17 December- called by Solidarity Collective (video).
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning, Philly 18 Dec
Philadelphia, 18 December, Action for Chelsea Manning and other whistleblowers, called by Global Women’s Strike and Payday men’s network.
Happy Birthday CM Rome photo
Rome – 16 December, US Citizens for Peace and Justice.
San Francisco, 17 December, called by Queer Strike.  Although it rained, 35 to 40 people came and stayed regardless, including famous Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg and his wife Patricia Marx Ellsberg.  
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning, Thailiand 19 Dec
Happy Birtday Chelseal Manning Thailand film
Thailand – (video).
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning, cake, 13 Dec Vancouver  , people
Vancouver – 13 December, Mobilization Against War & Occupation (MAWO).
Happy Birthday Chelsea Manning Venice, 15 Dec 2014
Venice, 15 December, called by Associazione E’ solo l’inizio (It’s Just the Beginning).
Chicago – 20 December, Gay Liberation Network organized a card signing meeting and raised $100 towards Chelsea’s legal fund.
Washington, DC - 16 December, Amnesty International, Black and Pink, and Casa Ruby organized a card signing meeting.
------------------
Sign Amnesty International’s petition for her immediate release.
 
Power to the whistleblowers in 2015!
Collated and circulated by:
US: 001 215 848 1120 UK: +44 (0)20 7267 8698
Queer Strike londonstrike_image004_192
US: 001 415-626 4114  UK: +44 (0)20 7482 2496
 
Fri, Jan 16, 2015 08:30 AM


 Dear Al,
In the upcoming weeks, Congressional hawks plan to push for new sanctions on Iran.  These new sanctions would disrupt the most successful nuclear talks to occur between the two countries and would undermine any diplomatic progress that has been made.  Please ask Senators Markey and Warren not to co-sponsor, and to vote against, any legislation that would place new sanctions on Iran, because they will damage current negotiations while also preventing a peaceful outcome.
If Congress does impose new sanctions, they would be in direct violation of agreements that the United States, as part of the P5+1, has agreed to.  The immediate result would be the end of negotiations.  Secretary of State Kerry, National Security Advisor Susan Rice, and Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power have asked Congress not to pass such legislation.
Iran has met all of its commitments under the interim agreement and has fully cooperated with the United States.  All the steps by Iran have been verified by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).  Thanks to these talks, the IAEA has been given more access to Iran's nuclear program.  Successful negotiations would make peaceful resolution of differences between the U.S. and Iran more likely and reduce the risk of U.S. military action.

Yours for peace and diplomacy,

Shelagh Foreman
Program Director
Massachusetts Peace Action

P.S. Please ask Senators Warren and Markey to support the  peaceful nuclear negotiations!





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Foreign Policy for All Discussion Workshops

Cambridge: Tuesday, January 20, 6:30 pm, Central Square Library, 45 Pearl St, Lewis Room.  Cosponsored with Cambridge United for Justice with Peace
Ipswich (North Shore): Wednesday, January 21, 7-9pm, House of Peace, 1 High St.  Cosponsored with North Shore Coalition for Peace & Justice
Sign up here to attend a workshop!
What is the Foreign Policy for All?
Massachusetts Peace Action and our allies are holding a series of discussion workshops across Massachusetts in Winter 2015 for our members and partners to come together and discuss the fundamental problems of American foreign policy and what a new approach would look like.

Foreign Policy for All Quick Links


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Overview Presentation
Foreign Policy for All at a Glance
Working Paper
Winter 2015 Discussion Workshops
Conference Report
Videos of the Presentations
Conference Announcement
Foreign Policy for All project overview
Feedback Form
Led by members of the Foreign Policy for All working group, the workshops will include a short slide presentation and ample time for discussion on:
- What’s wrong with U.S. foreign policy?
- What are the values that should guide our foreign policy?
- What are the key issues and priorites that should be addressed?
- Action steps: What it would take to get there from here? What are the obstacles? What actions are the people in the room prepared to take? To join us in our efforts?
Participants can read the Foreign Policy for All working paper or the shorter Foreign Policy for All At a Glance before or after the workshops.   Feedback collected will be used to improve the working paper.   The Foreign Policy for All, incorporating your ideas, will come before Massachusetts Peace Action’s annual meeting on February 7, 2015 for approval.
Full Schedule:
Cambridge: Tuesday, January 20, 6:30 pm, Central Square Library, 45 Pearl St, Lewis Room.  Cosponsored with Cambridge United for Justice with Peace
Ipswich (North Shore): Wednesday, January 21, 7-9pm, House of Peace, 1 High St.  Cosponsored with North Shore Coalition for Peace & Justice
Fall River (Southeast Mass.) Thursday, January 29, 6-8 pm, Fall River Public Library, 104 North Main St
Worcester: Saturday, January 31, noon to 4pm, Clark University, 950 Main St., room TBA; cosponsored with Clark University Peace Studies
Watertown (West Suburban): Sunday, February 1, 5:00 pm, Grace Vision Church, 80 Mt Auburn St. Cosponsored with Watertown Citizens for Peace, Justice & Environment
Sign up here to attend a workshop!
To schedule a workshop in your town, email info@masspeaceaction.org or phone 617-354-2169. 


Upcoming Events: 

No Justice, No Peace- Stop The Police Killings Of Black And Brown Youth-Drop The Charges Against The U. S. 93 Highway Protesters In Boston
 

Protesters snarl morning commute on I-93 near Boston

Commuters fume as highways are blocked; 29 in movement arrested

Protesters affiliated with the activist group Black Lives Matter carried out their most audacious and disruptive demonstration yet in the Boston area Thursday, blocking the largest highway into the city, snarling rush-hour traffic, and stopping an ambulance in its tracks.
In a pair of coordinated surprise actions that angered commuters, the protesters formed human barricades on Interstate 93 north of the city in Medford, and south, in Milton. Some put barrels filled with concrete on the highway and chained themselves to them. Twenty-nine protesters were arrested.
Continue reading below
The well-organized protests were carried out on Martin Luther King’s birthday by activists calling attention to the deaths of unarmed black men at the hands of police in Missouri and New York.
RELATED: Statements from the protesters
“There cannot be any tolerance for this,” said Colonel Timothy Alben, superintendent of the Massachusetts State Police. At a morning news conference, Alben blamed protesters for “endangering people’s lives” and delaying ambulances rushing to hospitals.
“There was no place to go,” said Scott Cluett, operations manager of EasCare Ambulance, who said the ambulance heading to MGH was delayed about 20 minutes.
RELATED: Ambulance with crash victim diverted because of protest
Continue reading it below

Eleven protesters were arrested in Milton, and 18 in Medford. Two other people were arrested in Braintree trying to return a rental truck used in Milton.
Most of the protesters were in their 20s, though a few were in their 40s. Among them were people who listed their occupations as a librarian at Harvard University, a makeup artist, and self-employed music producer, court records show.
Protesters face charges that include trespassing, resisting arrest, disorderly conduct, and conspiracy, authorities said. They all pleaded not guilty, and were released without bail.
“The disregard for the safety and welfare of innocent citizens that this action manifests is shocking,” said Michael Morrissey, district attorney in Norfolk County.
Protesters defended their actions as a necessary call for change. “Disruptions wake people up a little bit from their privilege and insulation,” said Shannon Leary, a spokeswoman for the Milton protest. “Things have to change.”

State Police describe morning’s protests on I-93


The demonstration began at 7:30 a.m., when protesters stopped the box truck on I-93 north in Milton and unloaded four 55-gallon barrels filled with concrete, authorities said. In the face of oncoming traffic, they spread them across each lane of the highway and six people chained themselves to the barrels.
At roughly the same time, the second protest blocked the southbound highway in Medford near the Mystic Valley Parkway, as more than a dozen demonstrators tied themselves together using PVC pipe.
VIDEO: Woman explains rationale behind protest
In Medford, troopers quickly removed the protesters from the road. But in Milton, where protesters had placed their arms through the heavy barrels, emergency responders had to cut away the concrete to extricate them.
One of the protesters told a trooper, “I’m here for 4½ hours, there’s nothing you can do,” according to police. Another, asked whether she could release her arm on her own, refused to answer.
State Police said some of the protesters had worn diapers, apparently expecting the protest to last for hours. The highway did not fully reopen until 9:45 a.m.
PHOTOS: Scenes from the protests
Scott Eisen for The Boston Globe

The protest in Medford completely blocked traffic for a time, prompting some drivers to get out of their cars and yell at the protesters. They later thanked troopers for clearing the road.
“We did see some anger from the motorists on Route 93, but they cooperated with our troopers and got back in their car and waited for us to clear the road,” State Police Major Arthur Sugrue said. “It wasn’t a violent confrontation.”
When troopers approached the Medford demonstrators, they sat down and started chanting, “Black lives matter,” police said.
In a statement, protesters described themselves as a diverse group of “non-black people” allied with the activist group Black Lives Matter, which has held several peaceful marches in Boston since a grand jury in Ferguson, Mo., decision not to indict a white police officer in the shooting of teenager Michael Brown.
They defended their actions, saying it was “necessary to disrupt a capitalist structure that has been built on the physical and economic exploitation of Black bodies since our country’s inception.”
“Today, our nonviolent direct action is meant to expose the reality that Boston is a city where white commuters and students use the city and leave, while Black and Brown communities are targeted by police, exploited, and displaced,” said Katie Seitz, one of the protesters, said in the statement.
Daunasia Yancey of Black Lives Matter attended the Quincy District Court arraignment of the Milton protesters.
“We support the actions,” Yancey said.

Protesters arraigned in Quincy District Court


Some protesters have ties to the Occupy Boston movement, according to two law enforcement officials briefed on the demonstrations. One official called the protesters “anarchist-type people who are using the demonstrations to create problems with the police.”
Sugrue said there was no advance warning of this demonstration from any sources, including social media and protest groups that police have been talking to. “It was unexpected for us,” he said.
It took drivers four times longer than usual to travel north up a 5-mile section of the expressway between Braintree and Milton. According to state transportation statistics, the average time spent on that commute during the last three months between 5 a.m. and 11 a.m. was less than 15 minutes. On Thursday, it was an hour.
Philip Wood of Rockland, who owns a construction company, said the delays caused him to send a dozen of his workers home without pay after a company truck was stuck in traffic. Wood said he was not unsympathetic with the protesters’ cause but said there are better ways to go about it.
“All they do when they do something like this is alienate people to their cause,” he said.
Governor Charlie Baker and Mayor Martin J. Walsh of Boston criticized the shutdown as dangerous and disruptive.
“I just don’t understand it,” Walsh said. “I made it perfectly clear that I would love to have a conversation with anyone who wants to have a conversation with me. My doors are open. . . . I think someone should take me up on that offer.”
At MGH, some patients called to cancel while others were late. Some employees and doctors were delayed and had to reschedule patients.
Three patients headed to Brigham and Women’s Hospital for morning surgical procedures were up to two hours late because of traffic, said Lori Schroth, a spokeswoman. The hospital adjusted the schedule and all the patients had their procedures as planned.
Peter Racicot, senior vice president for Fallon Ambulance, said the shutdown slowed responses across Greater Boston, affecting as many as 100 ambulances. “This incident has caused havoc for public safety,’’ he said.
After the arraignment of the Medford protesters, 11 supporters greeted them outside the courtroom, breaking into applause as each one emerged carrying a clear plastic bag containing their belongings. One protester, who gave his name as Jackson, said he “wanted to show solidarity to black people as a non-black color person.”

More coverage:
Opinion | Ward Sutton: Where race relations stand in America
Opinion: Deeper issues with modern justice

Liz Kowalczyk, Nicole Dungca, David Abel, and Evan Allen of the Globe staff, and Globe correspondents Jean Lang and Aneri Pattani, contributed to this report.
 

No Justice, No Peace- The Cases Of Ferguson, Missouri’s Michael Brown And New York's Eric Garner - Stop The Police Murders Of Black And Brown Peoples-All Out In Boston On MLK Day-January 19th



Protest March in Boston on Martin Luther King Day
 
4 Mile March Against Police Violence and Racism 
1 pm on Monday, January 19 at Old State House (corner of State and Washington streets, downtown Boston) responding to a national call named after the time (4 1/2 hours) Michael Brown's body lay in the street in Ferguson, MO
 
www.4milemarch.org (national website -- Coalition Against Police Violence)
 
www.justicewithpeace.org (UJP website)
Looking For The Heart Of Saturday Night, Christ The Heart Of Any Night-The Songs of Tom Waits-Take Five


From The Pen Of Peter Paul Markin



A YouTube film clip of Tom Waits performing Looking For The Heart Of Saturday Night

If you, as I do, every once in a while, every once in a while when the norms of the today’s bourgeois-driven push, you know grab goods, grab the dough, grab some shelter from the storm, the storm that these days comes down like a hard rain falling, to get ahead in this wicked old world have to step back and take stock, maybe listen to some words of wisdom, or words that help explain how you got into that mess then you have come to the right address. Okay, okay on that bourgeois-driven today thing  maybe going back further to Calvinist Puritan avenging angels times with John Winthrop and the Mayflower boys but you best ask Max Weber about that since he tried to hook the boys to the wheel of the capitalist profit, profit for you at the expense of me, system with the new dispensation coming out like hellfire from Geneva and points east and west. But you get the point.

If all that to-ing and fro-ing (nice touch, right) leaves you wondering where you fell off the edge, that edge city (edge city where you danced around with all the conventions of the days, danced around the get ahead world with blinkers on) where big cloud outrageous youthful dreams were dreamt and you took risks, damn did you take risks, thought nothing of that fact either, landed on your ass more than a few time but just picked yourself up and dusted your knees off and done stick around and listen up. Yeah, so if you are wondering,  have been pushed off your saintly wheels, yeah, pushed you off your sainted wheels, and gotten yourself  into some angst-ridden despair about where you went off that angel-driven dream of your youth, now faded, tattered, and half- forgotten(but only half, only half, the wisp of the dream, the eternal peace dream, the figuring out how to contain that fire, that wanting habits fire in your belly dream sisters and brothers), and need some solace (need some way to stop the fret counting the coffee cups that while away your life), need to reach back to roots (reach back to roots that the 1950s golden age of America kicked the ass out of to make us crave oneness, to forget about those old immigrant customs, made us forget that simple country blues, mountain breeze songs, cowboy ballads, Tex-Mex, Cajun Saturday night that make the people feel good times), reach back to the primeval forest maybe, put the headphones on some Tom Waits platter (oops, CD, YouTube selection, etc.- “platter” refers to a, ah, record, vinyl, put on a record player, hell, look it up in Wikipedia, okay) and remember what it was like when men and women sang just to sing the truth of what they saw and heard.

If the norms of don’t rock the boat (not in these uncertain times like any times in human existence were certain, damn, there was always something coming up from the first man-eating beast to the human race-eating nuclear bombs), the norms of keep your head down (that’s right brother, that’s right sister keep looking down, no left or rights for your placid world), keeping your head down being an art form now with appropriate ritual (that ritual looking more and more like the firing squad that took old Juan Romero’s life when he did bad those days out in Utah country), and excuses, because, well, because you don’t want to wind up like them (and fill in the blank of the “them,” usually dark, very dark like some deathless, starless night disturbing your sleep, begging, I swear, begging you to put that gun in full view on the table,   speaking some unknown language, maybe A-rab, maybe gibberish for all you know, moving furtively and stealthily against your good night) drive you crazy and you need, desperately need, to listen to those ancient drum beats, those primeval forest leave droppings maybe, that old time embedded DNA coda long lost to, oh yes, civilization, to some civilizing mission (think of that Mayflower gang or ask Max Weber), that spoke of the better angels of your nature when those angel dreams, half-forgotten but only half remember, ruled your days. Turn up the volume up another notch or two on that Tom Waits selection, maybe Jersey Girl or Brother, Can You Spare A Dime (can you?), Hold On, or Gunn Street Girl.

If you need to hear things, just to sort things out, just to recapture that angel-edge, recapture the time when you did no fear, you and everybody else’s sisters and brothers, that thing you build and from which you now should run, recapture that child-like wonder that made you come alive, made you think about from whence you came and how a turn, a slight turn this way or that, could have landed you on the wrong side. And I have the list of brothers and sisters who took that wrong road, when he wound up face down in some dusty back road arroyo down Sonora way when the deal went bust or when she, maybe a little kinky for all I know, decided that she would try a needle and a spoon, I swear, or she swore just for kicks and she wound up in Madame LaRue’s whorehouse working that bed to perdition, hey, sweet dreams baby I tried to tell you when you play with fire, watch out.

So if you need to sort things out about boozers (and about titanic booze-crazed struggles in barrooms, on beaches, in the back seats of cars, lost in the mist of time down some crazed midnight, hell, four in the morning, penniless, cab fare-less night), losers (those who have lost their way, gotten it taken away from them like some maiden virginity), those who never had anything but lost, not those who never had a way to be lost, dopesters inhaling, in solitary hotel rooms among junkie brethren, gathering a needle and spoon in some subterranean dank cellar, down in dark alleys jack-rolling some poor drunk stiff out of his room rent for kicks (how uncool to drink low-shelf whiskeys or rotgut wines hell the guy deserved to be rolled, should feel lucky he got away with just a flipped wallet), out in nighttime canyons flame blaring off the walls, the seven seas of chemical dust, mainly blotter, maybe peyote (the sweet dreams of ten million years of ghost warriors working the canyon walls flickering against the campfire flames) if that earth angel connection comes through (Aunt Sally, always, some Aunt Sally coming up the stairs to ease the pain, to make one feel, no, not feel, better than any AMA doctor without a prescription pad), creating visions of long lost tribes trying, trying like hell, to get “connected,” connected in the campfire shadow night, hipsters (all dressed in black, mary mack dressed in black, speeding, speaking be-bop this and be-bop that to stay in fashion, hustling, always hustle, maybe pimping some street urchin, maybe cracking some guy’s head to create a “new world order” of the malignant, always moving), fallen sisters (sisters of mercy, sisters who need mercy, sisters who were mercifully made fallen in some mad dash night, merciful sister feed me, feed me good), midnight sifters (lifting in no particular order hubcaps, tires, wrenches, jacks, an occasional gem, some cheap jewelry in wrong neighborhoods, some paintings or whatever is not saleable left in some sneak back alley, it is the sifting that counts), grifters (hey, buddy watch this, now you see it, now you don’t, now you don’t see your long gone John dough, and Mister three card Monte long gone too ), drifters (here today gone tomorrow with or without dough, to Winnemucca, Ogden, Fresno, Frisco town, name your town, name your poison and the great big blue seas washing you clean out into the Japans ), the drift-less (cramped into one room hovels, shelters, seedy rooming houses afraid to stay in-doors or to go outside, afraid of the “them” too, afraid to be washed clean, angel clean), and small-time grafters (the ten-percent guys, failed insurance men, repo artists, bounty hunters, press agents, personal trainers, need I go on). You know where to look, right.

If you need to be refreshed on the subject of hoboes, bums, tramps (and remind me sometime to draw the distinction, the very real and acknowledged distinction between those three afore –mentioned classes of brethren once told to me by a forlorn grand master hobo, a guy down on his luck moving downward to bum), out in the railroad jungles in some Los Angeles ravine, some Gallup, New Mexico Southern Pacific  trestle (the old SP the only way to travel out west if you want to get west), some Hoboken broken down pier (ha, shades of the last page of Jack Kerouac’s classic), the fallen (fallen outside the gates of Eden, or, hell, inside too), those who want to fall (and let god figure out who made who fall, okay), Spanish Johnnies (slicked back black hair, tee shirt, shiv, cigarette butt hanging from a parted lip, belt buckle ready for action, leering, leering at that girl over there, some gringa for a change of pace, maybe your girl but watch out for that shiv, the bastard), stale cigarette butts (from Spanish Johnnie and all the johnnies, Camels, Luckies, no filters, no way), whiskey-soaked barroom floors (and whiskey-soaked drunks to mop the damn place up, for drinks and donuts, maybe just for the drinks), loners (jesus, books, big academic books with great pedigrees could be written on that subject so let’s just pass by), the lonely (ditto loners), sad sacks (kindred, one hundred times kindred to the loners and the lonely but not worthy of study, academic study anyway), the sad (encompassing all of the above) and others at the margins of society, the whole fellahin world, then Tom Waits is your stop.

Tom Waits is, frankly, an acquired taste, one listen will not do, one song will not do, but listen to a whole record (CD okay) and you won’t want to turn the thing off, high praise in anyone’s book, so a taste well worth acquiring as he storms heaven in words, in thought-out words, in cribbed, cramped, crumbled words, to express the pain, angst and anguish of modern living, yes, modern living, looking for busted black-hearted angels (who left him short one night in some unnamed, maybe nameless, gin mill), for girls with Monroe hips (swaying wickedly in the dead air night, and flaming desire, hell lust, getting kicked out of proper small town hells (by descendants of those aforementioned Mayflower boys promising the world for one forbidden night), get real, and left for dead with cigar wrapping rings, for the desperate out in forsaken woods who need to hold on to something, and for all the misbegotten. 

Tom Waits gives voice in song, a big task, to the kind of characters that peopled Nelson Algren’s novels (The Last Carousel, Neon Wilderness, Walk on the Wild Side, and The Man with the Golden Arm). The, frankly, white trash Dove Linkhorns of the world, genetically broken before they begin, broken before they hit these shores (their forbears thrown out of Europe for venal crimes and lusts, damn them, the master-less men and women, ask old Max about them too), having been chased out, cast out of Europe, or some such place. In short, the people who do not make revolutions, those revolutions we keep hearing and reading about, the wretched of the earth and their kin, far from it, but those who surely, and desperately could use one. If, additionally, you need a primordial grizzled gravelly voice to attune your ear and occasional dissonant instrumentation to round out the picture go no further. Finally, if you need someone who “feels your pain” for his characters you are home. Keep looking for the heart of Saturday night, Brother, keep looking.