Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Remember the Carrier plant Trump "saved"? He lied. Our Revolution Chuck Jones

Our Revolution Chuck Jones<info@ourrevolution.com>

Our Revolution

Brothers and Sisters,
President Donald Trump lied when he promised to save thousands of Carrier jobs in Indiana from being outsourced to Mexico. I would know — I was the local union president who Trump attacked for calling him out.
That's why I wasn't surprised when Trump did it again. He promised to revive the automotive industry but on his watch, GM just closed down the iconic Lordstown Assembly and laid off 5,000 people and moved jobs overseas.
Across the Midwest in states like Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin, lives are being destroyed because Trump is betraying his promises to workers and communities. Meanwhile, companies like GM and Carrier are getting rich off of our tax dollars.
I'm an example of how we can WIN. With the support of Our Revolution, I ran for and was elected as Wayne Township Trustee here in Indianapolis and beat a two-term Trump-loving Republican incumbent. I was inspired to run because I wanted to make sure that companies like Carrier don't get public dollars while shipping jobs overseas.
There are candidates and groups all across the Midwest ready to stand up and fight.Our Revolution is organizing in key states to build a political revolution that will save our jobs and our communities.
We can create an economy that works for all people — regardless of race, gender, religion, or background — if we remain focused. Join us today.
In Solidarity,
Chuck Jones
Wayne Township Trustee, Indianapolis, Indiana
Former President, United Steelworkers, Local 1999

Fabled Highlander Center burned to the ground by arsonists in Tennessee… Coalition of Immokalee Workers

Coalition of Immokalee Workers<workers@ciw-online.org>
Rosa Parks (second from left) and Dr. King (second from right) attend a gathering at the Highlander Center in the early days of the Civil Rights Movement.
Here is the news, from The Nation:

News of the March 29 arson attack on the Highlander Research and Education Center in New Market, Tennessee, shocked and angered progressives across the country. Fortunately, no one was hurt, but the blaze destroyed Highlander’s main office building, along with valuable organizational records and historic documents that had not been archived at the University of Wisconsin and other repositories. Yet, for the many familiar with its storied history of movement-building, research, radical education, and cultural work, the devastation goes much deeper than property loss. It’s as if a sanctuary was violated.

And violated it was. Making crystal clear their terrorist intention, the attackers left their mark on the parking lot by spray-painting a symbol derived from the fascist Romanian Iron Guard during the 1930s that is commonly used by white supremacists. The same symbol was painted on one of the guns used in the recent murderous attack on two mosques in New Zealand, and scrawled alongside swastikas on the University of Tennessee Knoxville campus in November.

To find out more about the Highlander Center and how you can support the rebuilding effort, please visit their website:  www.highlandercenter.org .

The attack on Highlander is the latest in a rising wave of racist terror targeting black, brown, and indigenous communities, immigrants, Muslims, Jews, and gender non-conforming folks. For Highlander’s co-executive directors, Ash-Lee Woodard Henderson and the Rev. Allyn Maxfield-Steele, the attack was disheartening, frustrating, and terrifying, but hardly surprising.

“Because of our history,” they wrote in a recent press release, “we are not surprised that this space, one where marginalized people working across sectors, geographies, and identities, show up consistently, has been repeatedly targeted over our 87 years of existence”…. read more 

Farmworkers from Immokalee have long been counted among that number of marginalized groups that have sought out the Highlander Center for its support, its partnership, and its unparalleled historical knowledge of this country’s popular movements for economic and social justice.

A bit of CIW history: Way back when, in the early 1990s, when farmworkers in Immokalee first started organizing, we scoured the landscape here in the US for resources in the field ofPopular Education, the approach to community education and organization developed and practiced throughout Latin America but not widely known in this country. Many of the workers who co-founded the CIW were intimately familiar with the methodology of Popular Education; indeed, many of the CIW’s early leaders had been trained in the approach and employed it in organizing their communities back home before emigrating to the US. And so as we began to organize in Immokalee, we sought help in adapting the Latin American approach to Popular Education to the unique circumstances of the migrant farmworker community here in the US, a community divided by language, nationality, and race; a community facing unimaginable poverty and abuse; a community deeply atomized and always on the move; a community that is not, in fact, a community in the traditional sense, but more a labor reserve of immigrants deeply unfamiliar with their new surroundings and unfamiliar with each other. 

And the Highlander Center was there for us. Highlander was there not only as the leading US resource on the question of Popular Education, but, for all intents and purposes, the only US resource on that question.  And what we found out as we got to know Highlander and its remarkable staff is that, for a small, poor community in the rural south looking to organize for social and economic justice, there was simply no better place for finding the insight, the support, and the space you need to reflect and build your own vision of change than the Highlander Center and its ever-welcoming circle of rocking chairs overlooking the mountains outside New Market, Tennessee. In that space, a 25-year friendship was born.
CIW’s Silvia Perez (right) and Lupe Gonzalo pictured during a recent meeting in the circle of rocking chairs at the heart of the CIW’s community center in Immokalee, a visual quote immediately recognizable to those familiar with both Highlander and the CIW.
That’s why, just as they stood with us when we needed help to get off the ground a quarter century ago, we are standing with the Highlander Center today in their time of need as they start to pick up the pieces and build the center again from the ashes in the wake of this heinous crime. As Highlanders’ co-directors noted in the statement following the fire, this is not the first such cowardly attack the center has faced. Indeed, as they put it, Highlander “has been repeatedly targeted over [its] 87 years of existence.” But while that perspective might make it easier to see past the hate and anger of the moment and focus on the Center’s unwavering mission of advancing human rights and dignity, it does not make the task of rebuilding any easier. 

So we are asking the Fair Food Nation to do its part to help the Highlander Center get back on its feet again. Please honor the 25-year friendship between our two organizations with your donation the the Highlander Center today. You can visit the Highlander website and donate here

Thank you.
Coalition of Immokalee Workers
Connect with us
A copy of the CIW's official registration and financial information may be obtained from the Florida Division of Consumer Services by calling toll-free 1-800-HELP-FLA (435-7352). Registration does not imply endorsement, approval, or recommendation by the state. The website for the Florida Division of Consumer Services is  https://www.freshfromflorida.com  

Help Chelsea Win Her Legal Appeal With the Fourth Circuit Chelsea Resists Legal Fund via ActionNetwork.org 4/19/2019 9:17 AM

Dear Supporter,
Thank you so much for your generous donation to Chelsea Manning's legal fund.
As you know, Chelsea is still incarcerated for refusing to testify before a federal grand jury. Today, it will have been 43 consecutive days (as of April 19, 2019).
For the first 28 days, Chelsea was held in "Administrative Segregation." More than 15 days of isolation has been defined as "prolonged solitary confinement," and is considered "torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment" by the UN General Assembly (http://solitaryconfinement.org/mandela-rules).
Chelsea's legal team has been working around the clock on her defense, and have submitted an appeal and a bail motion for her release pending appeal to the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. Should these efforts prove unsuccessful, the legal team will work to secure other post-contempt relief to win Chelsea's release.
As we all await the court's response, it is our hope that you might be able to make another small contribution to Chelsea's legal fund, to help ensure that her legal team has the resources they need.
Your donations will enable Chelsea's legal team to continue with their tireless efforts, so that Chelsea can once again be free.
Thank you,
The Chelsea Resists Support Committee
P.S. If possibile, please select 'Recurring Donation' to maximize your support.

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WARS ABROAD, WARS AT HOME A Message From the Future With Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

WARS ABROAD, WARS AT HOME

A Message From the Future With Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
“A Message From the Future With Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,” a seven-minute film narrated by the congresswoman and illustrated by Molly Crabapple. Set a couple of decades from now, it’s a flat-out rejection of the idea that a dystopian future is a forgone conclusion. Instead, it offers a thought experiment: What if we decided not to drive off the climate cliff? What if we chose to radically change course and save both our habitat and ourselves?  What if we actually pulled off a Green New Deal? What would the future look like then?   More

Friday, April 19th Take Action for Venezuela Activists opposed to the Venezuelan opposition takeover of diplomatic buildings belonging to the elected Venezuelan government have been staging a 24/7 vigil to protect the Venezuelan Embassy that lies in the heart of Georgetown in Washington DC.


Take Action for Venezuela

Activists opposed to the Venezuelan opposition takeover of diplomatic buildings belonging to the elected Venezuelan government have been staging a 24/7 vigil to protect the Venezuelan Embassy that lies in the heart of Georgetown in Washington DC.
Calling themselves the Embassy Civilian Protection Collective, the activists are working in the embassy during the day, holding educational events in the evening, and sleeping on couches at night. The evening events include seminars on Julian Assange, Haiti, US foreign policy in Africa, peace talks with Korea, the war in Yemen, and the political situation in Venezuela.
The activists were appalled when, on March 18, the Venezuelan opposition took over the military attaché building on 2409 California St in Washington DC, with the help of the DC Police and Secret Service. On that same day, the opposition also took over the Venezuelan Consulate in New York City.
As a step toward showing that support, we will be publishing the Declaration of the Embassy Protection Collective (Colectivos Por La Paz). They are seeking individuals and organizations to sign on to the Declaration.