Thursday, August 30, 2018

Exciting Film & Panel about Nuclear Power at the Brattle Theatre Sept. 15
Cole Harrison<cole@masspeaceaction.org>
      image.png

      Dear Downwinders,

      Make sure to mark your calendars for the Boston premiere of  "POWER STRUGGLE    a full length documentary about the grassroots political battle to close Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station. 

      The film will be followed by a discussion of the current status and planned shutdown of Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station in Plymouth, MA.   

      Film Director Robbie Leppzer will speak first, followed by this outstanding panel of speakers:  

      1.  Former Governor Michael Dukakis
      2.  Representative Ruth Balser of Newton
      3.  Diane Turco of Cape Downwinders
      4.  Deb Katz of Citizens Awareness Network.

      Time:   Saturday, Sept. 15, at 11 AM
      Price: $10 at the door, but you can reserve a ticket HERE 

      As you know, Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station is 35 air miles from Boston and rated by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission as  the LEAST SAFE nuclear power plant in the country.  With 46 years of high level nuclear waste on site, we are  faced with the increased risks of decommissioning and the plant’s expected sale to Holtec.

      Now  is the time to get more familiar with the issues and potential dangers.

      Please sign up on  FACEBOOK, download and post our attached flyer, and spread the word however you can.
      The film will be followed by a discussion of the current status and planned shutdown of Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station in Plymouth, MA. Film Director Robbie Leppzer will speak first, followed by this outstanding panel of speakers: 1.  Former Governor Michael Dukakis 2.  Representative Ruth Balser of …
       
      We look forward to seeing you at this important event.
       
      Guntram  and Paula 
      Boston Downwinders of Massachusetts Peace Action

       Co-Sponsors :  Massachusetts Peace Action, Cape Downwinders, Citizens Awareness Network, American Friends Service CommitteePilgrim CoalitionGreen Newton,  New England Coalition on Nuclear Pollution, Newton Dialogues on Peace & War,  Physicians for Social ResponsibilityUnitarian Universalist Mass Action Network, Vermont Yankee Decommissioning Alliance, Watertown Citizens for Peace, Justice &  the Environment.  WILPF Cape Cod 
      -- 
      "Not one step back"

      Cole Harrison
      Executive Director
      Massachusetts Peace Action - the Commonwealth's largest grassroots peace organization
      11 Garden St., Cambridge, MA 02138
      617-354-2169 w
      617-466-9274 m
      Twitter: masspeaceaction


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      Socialist Analysis: Trump and GOP Defeated in Missouri | Momentum Grows for DSA Challenger


      Below you’ll find a collection of  articles which were recently originally published on SocialistAlternative.org. Please check SocialistAlternative.org regularly for the socialist analysis, strategy, and tactics needed to build movements to defeat the billionaire class.

      Our pages build on the proven strategies that won two historic victories for Kshama Sawant in Seattle. Our editorial team brings the experience of leading the fight for $15 to its first major victory in the nation in Seattle in 2014 and then in Minneapolis last year.  Subscribe today to receive our print or electronic newspaper.


       
      MOMENTUM GROWS FOR DSA’S JULIA SALAZAR - CHALLENGING THE NYC DEMOCRATIC PARTY ESTABLISHMENT
      In the aftermath of the stunning electoral victory of Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, momentum is growing for the campaign to elect Democratic Socialists of America member Julia Salazar to the New York State Senate. Salazar’s campaign is shaking up the Democratic Party primary race in her North Brooklyn neighborhood. Her campaign rejects corporate cash and calls for strong rent laws, ending cash bail, taxing the rich to fund transit, banning ICE from NYC, and passing the New York Health Act which would create a single payer health-care system in New York equivalent to Medicare for All on a national scale.


      BURNING DOWN THE STATE: RECORD BREAKING CALIFORNIA FIRES
      With over 400,000 acres burned since July, California is already having a record-breaking fire season. The Mendocino Complex Fire is the largest recorded fire in state history and is still expected to grow until September. What’s driving the destructive increase of wildfires? What’s the socialist solution to environmental destruction?
       

      VIDEO: SUBSCRIBE TO THE ONLY NEWSPAPER THAT HAS THE FIGHTING SOLUTIONS TO CHALLENGE TRUMP AND THE BILLIONAIRE CLASS!
      Our editorial team brings the experience of leading the fight for $15 to its first major victory in the nation in Seattle in 2014 and then in Minneapolis last year. This year we played a leading role in building the movement to Tax Amazon and big business to fund permanently affordable, public housing in Seattle.


      RIGHT TO WORK DEFEATED IN MISSOURI
      Working people, led by unions, have just won a serious fight in Missouri. On Tuesday, August 7, a “Right to Work” (RtW) law was overturned by a massive 67.5% of those who voted in the referendum. Big business got handed a big surprise by workers in a state that the corporations thought they had locked up.

       
      1968 was a tumultuous year of radical struggle in the U.S. and internationally. From the anti-Vietnam war protests to the assassination of MLK, 1968 offers rich lessons and dire warnings for our struggles today. For working people and youth today, it provides a window into the power of mass movements.
       
      Subscribe to Socialist Alternative today!

      9/03 34th Bread & Roses Heritage Festival

      Charlie Welch<cwelch@tecschange.org>
      34th Bread & Roses Heritage Festival

      Monday, Sept 3  11:30 to 6 Campagnone Common Lawerence MA

      As the region’s only true Labor Day festival, 34th Annual Bread & Roses
      Heritage Festival is an open-air arts and music festival honoring
      Lawrence, Massachusetts’ multi-cultural roots and rich labor history
      while commemorating the most significant event in Lawrence history: the
      1912 Bread and Roses Strike. A day of activism and family fun, the
      Festival boasts 3 stages of socially conscious performances, an array of
      family activities, rows of community vendors, historical trolley and
      walking tours, culturally diverse food offerings, educational
      presentations and more!

      SCHEDULE: breadandrosesheritage.org/schedule
      <http://breadandrosesheritage.org/schedule>
      VOLUNTEER: breadandrosesheritage.org/volunteer
      <http://breadandrosesheritage.org/volunteer>

      HIGHLIGHTS
      • Historic Trolley Tours: FREE 50 minute tour of the historic mill town,
      Lawrence, MA. Departs from City Hall every 30 minutes starting at
      12:00pm, with the last trolley at 4:00pm. Get TICKETS in advance at the
      Friends of Lawrence Heritage State Park tent (these fill up quickly).

      Los paseos en trolley con guía en español salen a las 2:00pm, 3:00pm y
      4:00pm. Busque su boleta en la mesa de “Friends of Lawrence Heritage
      State Park.”

      • Historic Walking Tours: FREE. Leaves from the Strikers' Monument on
      the Common across from City Hall and goes through the mill district,
      focusing on the Strike of 1912.

      • Commemoration Ceremony at 11:30AM at the 1912 Textile Workers'
      Strikers' Monument across from City Hall. Welcome by the Chair of the
      1912 Strikers’ Monument Committee, the President of the Bread and Roses
      Heritage Committee, and Mayor Dan Rivera
      <https://www.facebook.com/dan.rivera.716>.

      • Celebration of Dreamers and Doers for Social Justice - We will
      celebrate the accomplishments and ongoing organizing efforts of several
      local workers’ campaigns.

      • “Hustle and Soul”- A group of young, local creatives present an
      eclectic multimedia production will take festival-goers on a
      thought-provoking experience to explore the topics of intergenerational
      struggles, the immigrant/urban experience, and reimagining the future of
      the City of Immigrants.

      • Lawrence History Live! – Historians, workers, and union
      representatives present their insights into Lawrence's history and
      today’s workers’ issues and actions in a centrally located speakers’
      tent. Lawrence History Live! also includes a Community Forum which
      offers in-depth discussion of the current housing crisis. Festival
      visitors are encouraged to participate and contribute their views in a
      Q&A format. SCHEDULE COMING SOON:
      breadandrosesheritage.org/lawrencehistorylive
      <http://breadandrosesheritage.org/lawrencehistorylive>

      • Community Corner – In the tradition of the labor, free-speech, and
      civil rights movements, we are providing a soap box, open to all, to
      step up and have a voice. breadandrosesheritage.org/soapbox
      <https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fbreadandrosesheritage.org%2Fsoapbox&h=AT0A-KFKVkQ365ikFfbkOnovsldPFzuXe7nkaVjFzBSFJjNZD6HNeMy8VPLefNh9oPHt6u39BzvrU_Hc4JqNcF-G9lWAeQjH_WW5M2wJ5Jf1Cr6rBmTxL66Ju947TTtT7Q>

      • Family Activities – Family entertainment includes an international
      food court, pony rides, walking and trolley tours, a magic show, learn
      about reptiles, and portrait artist Ed Bray. The highly popular Kidz
      Zone will feature an eclectic mix of arts and crafts by the Lawrence
      Arts House <https://www.facebook.com/TheLawrenceArtsHouse/> (La House),
      a community based expressive arts studio with a therapeutic framework
      that reclaims art-making as a process for healing. MORE:
      breadandrosesheritage.org/familyactivities
      <http://breadandrosesheritage.org/familyactivities>

      While you're there check out the poster exhibit at the museum. (3rd one
      down)

      https://www.dropbox.com/s/rg39lighm3dcx3b/Sept%202018.pdf?dl=0


      Festival on Facebook

      https://www.facebook.com/events/2139542119708500/

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      On The 50th Anniversary Of The Summer Of Love, 1967-“The Monterey Pops Festival” (1968) –A Documentary

      On The 50th Anniversary Of The Summer Of Love, 1967-“The Monterey Pops Festival” (1968) –A Documentary




      DVD Review

      By Associate Film Editor Alden Riley 

      The Monterey Pops Festival-1967, starring Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, The Mamas and the Papas, Ravi Shankar, and the usual suspects from the 1960s acid rock circuit on the West Coast, produced by D.A. Pennebaker, 1968 

      I don’t mean to grouse every time I get an assignment from my boss, from film editor Sandy Salmon, but I think I have grounds to do so here. I only mentioned in passing in reading a recent review Sandy did of a 2015 biopic of Janis Joplin, Janis Joplin: Little Girl Blue, one of the icons of the 1960s and of the Summer of Love, 1967 which he and his old-time film critic friend Sam Lowell have gone into overdrive over that I had never heard of her and was not familiar with her work. That faux pas on my part got me this netherworld assignment to watch and review the DVD under review, The Monterey Pops Festival of 1967, the very first one, the three day affair, which has also (back in mid-June) celebrated its 50th anniversary. Sandy’s idea was, I think, that once I heard and saw her and the other top West Coast groups from his generation that I would go out and buy a tie-dye shirt or look for the nearest commune or something.     

      Sandy mentioned that the guy who put the documentary together about the two day concert was the very same guy who trailed after Bob Dylan in his classic Don’t Look Back (which I also haven’t seen but I will charge an unfair labor practice if he attempts to get me to watch and review that one since one thing I do know is that Bob Dylan couldn’t and can’t now sing whatever merits he has as a songwriter and part-time “voice” of his generation or whatever it was that Time magazine dubbed him back in the ancient folk times). Whatever merits the subject matter of this documentary has it certainly is not in the almost amateurish production values here especially in light of the huge technological advances that have been made which makes this documentary seen like one of those old silent movie flicks in comparison. Grainy, swirly footage, seemingly random and inchoate views (or non-views) of the acts on stage and some odd-ball sound effects (or non-sound effects) which I am sure Sandy and his crowd will glower over as efforts to “go back to nature” from a simpler time when everybody was looking intently at their electronic devises of choice.      

      I will pass over the performances some of which were very good including Ms. Joplin’s break-out performance with her band Big Brother and the Holding Company on the old blues classic Piece Of My Heart. If she had that much energy consumption on one song I don’t know how she would have gotten through a full set never mind a whole concert but maybe the drugs really did help keep her going. Same goes for Jefferson Airplane with demonic Grace Slick and Marty Balin on High Flying Bird and the great harmonics of the Mamas and Papas (someone said they were “spot on” meaning very in tune) that came through even in this primitive production. But what was that all about with the Who leader smashing and Jimi Hendrix burning up perfectly good electric guitars on stage. I don’t get it and I don’t want to ask Sandy, and definitely not Sam Lowell who was actually out in San Francisco in 1967 although I am not sure he attended the festival, because I don’t want a two hour lecture about creative rock and roll and stage presence-thank you very much.

      Here is the funny thing though since this was a billed as a Pops Festival the guy who stole the show (the shown part since I understand that several big-time performers wound up on the cutting room floor (which are shown in a separate disc in the three disc collection as “outtakes”-the other disc Jimi Hendrix and Otis Redding’s performances which I did not have time to view and in the case of Hendrix did want to after seeing that maniacal burning in the main frame) was Ravi Shankar who played the sitar hardly a new instrument and a did a rif that was probably about five hundred years old. The crowd loved it, hell, I loved it although it was perhaps a shade too long given the eighty minute length of the film. 


      What really interested me and which Sandy will probably give me an earful about were the close-up shots of the attendees, of the audience, of the mostly young audience in their best “hippie” garb some of it which looked very cool even now. Porkpie hats, old-time Victorian dresses, World War II G.I. surplus stuff like that. Funny though and maybe Sandy will think the same thing when he watches the DVD or maybe re-watches most of the audience looked like they had done some serious weed or some drug before they got to the concert (or maybe at it although it didn’t seem like I saw a lot of smoke, weed smoke although a fair amount of cigarette smoke when that was cool. Some of the young women then, women who today would be my grandmother’s age certainly looked foxy. I wonder if anybody who watched the film today and who had been there then would be shocked by the footage of them in their “to be young was very heaven days”. I wonder if Sandy would think the same think thing or dismiss my observation and go back into his ecstatic dream world with Sam yakking about the days when men and women played rock and roll for keeps and everybody listened with baited breathe.