Friday, September 15, 2017

UFPJ National Briefing Call on the Nuclear Weapons Ban Treaty

UFPJ National Briefing Call on the Nuclear Weapons Ban Treaty

Dear UJP Activist,
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Photo: International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons
UFPJ National Briefing Call on the Nuclear Weapons Ban Treaty

Monday, September 18, 2017
8:30 pm EDT/5:30 pm PDT
Please RSVP here to receive call-in number
Presenters:
Dr. John Burroughs is Executive Director of the Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy in New York City, the UN Office of the International Association of Lawyers Against Nuclear Arms. He represents LCNP in Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty review proceedings, the United Nations, and other international forums, including the 2017 UN negotiations on a nuclear ban treaty. His publications include contributor, “Unspeakable suffering - the humanitarian impact of nuclearweapons” (2013), and author, “The Legality of Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons: A Guide to the Historic Opinion of the International Court of Justice” (1998). He has additionally published articles and op-eds in journals and newspapers including the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the World Policy Journal, and Newsday.Jackie Cabasso is Executive Director of Western States Legal Foundation in Oakland, California. A leading voice for nuclear abolition, she has been involved in nuclear disarmament, peace and environmental advocacy locally, nationally and internationally for more than 35 years. She was a “founding mother” of the Abolition 2000 Global Network to Eliminate Nuclear Weapons in 1995. Since 2007, she has served as North American Coordinator for Mayors for Peace. She currently serves as National Co-convener for United for Peace and Justice. Jackie received the International Peace Bureau’s 2008 Sean MacBride Peace Award, and Agape Foundation’s 2009 Enduring Visionary Prize. 
On December 22, 2016, President-elect Trump tweeted: “The United States must greatly strengthen and expand its nuclear capability until such time as the world comes to its senses regarding nukes”.

On July 7, 2017, at the United Nations, the majority of the world’s countries adopted a historic treaty to prohibit the possession, development, testing, use and threat of use of nuclear weapons. The vote, by 122 to 1, unambiguously demonstrates that most of the world has indeed come to its senses regarding nuclear weapons. The treaty opens for signature on September 20 at United Nations headquarters in New York, during the High-Level Segment of the 72 nd Session of the UN General Assembly, where heads of state, foreign ministers and other representatives of governments are expected to publicly sign the treaty. Fifty countries must sign and ratify the treaty for it to enter into force.
The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons represents the total repudiation of nuclear deterrence by most of the states that don’t possess or rely on nuclear weapons. But the US and the eight other nuclear-armed states boycotted the negotiations, along with Japan, Australia, South Korea and all but one of the 28 NATO member states (The Netherlands) – all countries under the US nuclear umbrella. In a joint statement following the vote, the US, France and the United Kingdom declared:
“We do not intend to sign, ratify or ever become party to [the Treaty].” Meanwhile, nuclear tensions have risen to levels not seen for decades.
While the Ban Treaty negotiations were taking place in the United Nations, two floors up in the same building, in an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council, the United States was threatening military action against North Korea, in response to its July 4 missile test.
We must keep both realities – the promise of the Ban Treaty and growing dangers of nuclear war – fully in mind as we develop strategies to accomplish the urgent goal of a world without nuclear weapons.
What does the Ban Treaty mean in our sharply divided world? How can we best utilize it in the United States to stigmatize nuclear weapons and delegitimize the doctrine of nuclear deterrence? How can we move from prohibition to
disarmament?
Join UFPJ’s National Briefing Call on the Nuclear Weapons Ban Treaty

Monday, September 18, 2017
8:30 pm EDT/5:30 pm PDT
Please RSVP here to receive call-in number

 
Click Here to watch a short interview with Jackie Cabasso at the United Nations on July 7, 2017, immediately following the historic vote on the Ban Treaty.
Help us continue to do this critical work and more-- make a donation to UFPJ today.
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In Boston-Thursday September 21th- Standout for Black Lives-Ashmont T Station

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Standout for Black Lives
Ashmont T station plaza
Thursday Sept. 21, 5:30-6:30 PM
Third Thursday of the month Sept. 21, Oct. 19, Nov. 16

Please join us!  All are welcome!
Hold signs and banners; hand out fliers to pedestrians and drivers at red lights.
Dorchester People for Peace
www.dotpeace.org     Phone:  617-282-3783                                       kelready@msn.com  

From The Oquinquit Maine Playhouse -Take a Look! Heartbreak Hotel Highlight Video is Out Now!

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Ogunquit Playhouse



Harvard Art Museums-ART

WARHOLCAPOTE
September 10–October 13, 2017
American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.), Cambridge, MA

Members of the Harvard Art Museums can receive $10 off* tickets to this production with code HAM10.

From the Words of Truman Capote and Andy Warhol
Adapted by Rob Roth
Directed by Michael Mayer
Starring Stephen Spinella and Dan Butler

In the late 1970s, Truman Capote and Andy Warhol decided that they were destined to create a Broadway play together. Over the course of the next several months, they would sit down to record a series of intimate, wide-ranging conversations. The play never came to be, and the hours and hours of tape were lost to the ages. Until now.

With the support of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the Truman Capote Literary Trust, award-winning director Rob Roth adapted WARHOLCAPOTE from never-before-heard conversations between these two icons of American art and literature. This world premiere production is staged by Tony Award-winning director Michael Mayer (Spring AwakeningHedwig and the Angry Inch).
Please note that following the 7:30pm performance on Wednesday, October 4, Harvard Art Museums curator Mary Schneider Enriquez and artist Jesse Aron Green will discuss Andy Warhol.
We are also pleased to remind you that in conjunction with this performance, the Harvard Art Museums’ Art Study Center will have Open Hours sessions dedicated to Andy Warhol’s Marilyn Monroe portfolio from 1 to 4pm on the following Mondays: September 18September 25, and October 2. Don’t miss out on the unique opportunity to see these gorgeous screenprints! Each week a different group of six prints from the portfolio will be shown.


*This discount is valid for select performances on Zone A and B seating, subject to availability. Offer cannot be combined with any other discount.
           
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From Socialist Alterative- Tell the big developers what YOU think

Friends,

Minneapolis is in the midst of an affordable housing crisis.

With each passing year, rents climb further out of reach for everyday working people and families. On average, a one bedroom apartment in Minneapolis goes for $1200 a month - that’s a 15% increase since 2009!

The “let the market handle it” approach isn’t working for the vast majority of Minneapolis. Big developers pretend housing is a simple issue of supply, but of the 5,600 rental units planned for the metro area in 2016, only 1/10 were slated to be affordable. We need a new vision for our city - one that puts the needs of renters and working people before the needs of big developers and people who own mansions.

We need a representative who is NOT FOR SALE to the highest corporate bidder. We need Ginger Jentzen for Minneapolis City Council Ward 3.

Ginger is the only candidate who’s firmly pledged not to accept money from big business or big developers. While Minneapolis City Council members pay themselves $80,000/year, Ginger would accept only the average wage of a resident, donating the rest towards building social movements.


Please chip in $50, $100, or $600 today to the campaign that’s NOT FOR SALE.


We want to print hundreds of these yards signs to fill our ward with the exciting message of a candidate who’s not for sale. But we need YOUR help. You can have a real impact. 
Please donate $50, $100, or $600 to get these signs in the yards of hundreds of homes.  If you’d like to put one up in your yard please contact us.  
Contribute
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Prepared and paid for by Vote Ginger Jentzen (not corporate cash) PO Box 583162 Minneapolis MN 55458

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