Posts Tagged ‘peace’

Dallas: Stop FBI Repression–Protest at Earle Cabell Federal Building

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010

Protest at Earle Cabell Federal Building in Dallas Texas
Date: Fri, 2010-12-03 16:30
Organized by: El Centro College Students for a Democratic Society
Action: Call for Week of Action Nov. 29 – Dec 3: Stop FBI and Grand Jury Repression
Location:
Earl Cabell Federal Building
1100 Commerce St
Dallas, TX
United States
In response to a repressive war on political dissent being carried out by the FBI, against anti war and union solidarity activists”, the El Centro College Students for a Democratic Society will be holding a demonstration at the Earle Cabell Federal Building on December 3, 2010 @ 5:30pm.

All anti war, peace, Union, and international solidarity organizations are called to support our brothers and sisters in resisting a modern day “Witch Hunt.”

Demands:

1. End All Grand Juries

2. Hands off Anti War and International Solidarity activists

3. Return of all seized material

Reference: http://www.stopfbi.net/

Where: Earl Cabell Federal Building 1100 Commerce St. Dallas, TX

When: December 3, 2010 5:30pm
http://www.stopfbi.net/events/el-centro-college-students-democratic-society/12-3-10/protest-earle-cabell-federal-building-d

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_150980044944954&id=159700580739567#!/home.php?sk=group_150980044944954&id=159700580739567#!/photo.php?fbid=1728079726929&set=o.150980044944954

VIDEO: Move Money from the Pentagon to Our Communities | New Priorities Network

Sunday, November 28th, 2010

New Priorities Meeting, Washington DC, October 3, 2010 from Mike Prokosch on Vimeo.

 

see also: http://www.uslaboragainstwar.org/article.php?id=23246

How can we move our money from the Pentagon to our communities, fund the jobs and services we need?

On October 3 2010, some 26 peace, racial and economic justice organizations came together and founded a network to support the long-term organizing it will take. This video features short statements about challenges we’ll face: breaking down the silos between movements, building power at the grassroots, organizing for the long term, focusing on what matters to our neighbors, connecting the economic pain of today with the ‘justice economy’ that’s possible.

Speakers are: Michael Eisenscher and Michael Zweig, USLAW; Phyllis Bennis, IPS; Alan Charney, US Action; Steve WIlliams, POWER and GGJ; Aaron Hughes, IVAW; Judith Le Blanc, Peace Action; Lisa Savage, Code Pink and Bring Our War $ Home; Joanie Parker, 1199SEIU and the Boston Coalition to Fund Our Coalition – Cut Military Spending 25%; Michael Leon Guerrero, Grassroots Global Justice.

LEARN MORE

 

Contact: [email protected]

Dallas: Death Marchers Haunt New Bush Library Digs | Medea Benjamin | The Rag Blog

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010

http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/11/medea-benjamin-death-marchers-haunt-new.html

Demonstrators from March of the Dead protest in front of Dallas SWAT officers during groundbreaking at new George W. Bush Presidential Center at SMU, Nov. 16, 2010. Photo by G.J. McCarthy / AP.
Breaking new ground:
Protests at the future site
of the George W. Bush Library

By Medea Benjamin / November 19, 2010

DALLAS — Several thousand people lined up to see George Bush, Dick Cheney, and Condoleezza Rice shovel dirt into a hole at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, the site slated to become the George Bush Presidential Center housing a museum, library, and archives.

Over 100 peace activists showed up to protest, including New York City artist Laurie Arbiter, who helped organize a March of the Dead and carried a sign asking “Does America Have a Conscience?” “Rather than build a library, we should leave the broken ground and just fill it with a big pile of rubble,” said Arbiter. “That would truly represent the catastrophic results of the Bush Administration.”

As part of the March of the Dead, protesters dressed in black, wore white death masks and had signs around their necks representing dead Iraqis, Afghans, and U.S. soldiers. The dramatic march stopped traffic and provoked strong emotions in passers-by, participants and even the police.

Renee Schultz, who drove from Indianapolis to join the protest, wore the death mask and a sign representing a 23-year-old female U.S. soldier killed in Iraq. “When I first put on the mask, I just stood there and cried. I kept thinking, ‘I am 23 years old and had my whole life ahead of me. Why did I die?’” Schultz looked over at the riot police and noticed that one of them also had tears streaming down his eyes.

When the marchers attempted to reach the public viewing area, the police forced them back to the designated “protest pen” far from the ceremony. One of the protesters, a wheelchair-bound veteran of the Korean War and World War II, angrily told the police that he did not fight in two wars to be told that his freedom of speech would be confined to a “protest zone.”

The gathering was part of a three-day People’s Response, filled with rallies, marches, teach-ins, and exhibits of crosses and soldiers’ boots to represent the war dead. Organized by Texans for Peace, The Dallas Peace Center, CODEPINK, and Veterans for Peace, among others, the speakers included former FBI agent Colleen Rowley, former CIA agent Ray McGovern, retired Colonel Ann Wright, professor Robert Jensen, and Texas State Representative Lon Burnam.

Also among the protesters was Cindy Sheehan, the Gold Star mother who led a prolonged protest outside Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas in 2005. “Bush should not be allowed to profit from war crimes, crimes that he has even admitted to,” said Sheehan. “It’s not right that he will make millions from his book and speaking engagements, while millions have been killed, displaced, tortured and had their lives ruined because of him.”

The whole dang crew: Digging in at groundbreaking ceremony for George W. Bush Presidential Center in Dallas, Nov. 16, 2010. Photo by L.M. Otero / AP.
The protesters focused on the lies Bush told the American public to justify invading Iraq, his authorization of torture and the need for accountability. “Accountability is the sign of a true democracy,” said former CIA agent Ray McGovern. “No one should be above the law and the truth must not be buried or rewritten.”

Protesters were also concerned about the policies the new Bush Center will promote. President Bush said the Center would include an “action-oriented institute” to advance the principles his administration stood for, including the “benefits of limiting the role of government in people’s lives.”

According to local organizer Leslie Harris of CodePink, “this really means promoting the same kinds of disastrous policies that brought us preemptive war, economic crisis, environmental disaster, unprecedented presidential power, and diminished civil and human rights. We can’t let one of America’s worst presidents shape our future policies.”

The peace activists who came to protest Bush also discussed their disappointment with the Obama administration and the difficulties they anticipate in pushing the new, more conservative Congress to stop funding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Among the actions they encouraged were:

  • supporting the January 15 FBI protest in Washington DC;
  • promoting local campaigns, including citywide resolutions, to bring our war dollars home;
  • reaching out to allies, particularly groups victimized by the economic crisis, but also reaching out to members of the Tea Party who want to see cuts in Pentagon spending;
  • pressuring the State Department to stop using private security contractors;
  • supporting the December 16 veteran-led civilian disobedience in Washington DC;
  • organizing a delegation to Iraq to take testimony from Iraqis about George Bush and the legacy of the US invasion;
  • stopping John Yoo, author of the “torture memos,” from teaching law at the UC Berkeley law school.

For some light entertainment after long days of protest, a group stopped by local Barnes and Noble to reshelve — and photograph — Bush’s Decision Points in a more appropriate place in the store. These included placing the book next to The Murder Business in the True Crimes section, Wing Nuts in the Fantasy Section, When Law Fails: Making Sense of Miscarriages of Justice in the Legal Section, and our favorite in the Children’s Section, Dr. Seuss’ Will You Please Go Now?” With the renewed media attention on George Bush, including his sanctioning of torture, Bush might do well to take Dr. Seuss’ advice.

[Medea Benjamin was a founder of CodePink. Follow her on Twitter: www.twitter.com/medeabenjamin.]

Source / Huffington Post


Where Bush’s book belongs. Images from Waging Nonviolence.

Denton: 2nd Annual Peace Festival

Friday, November 5th, 2010

NOVEMBER 11TH (VETERAN’S DAY) 2010 @ 5:00 PM, Denton Square

PEACE MARCH FROM FRY & HICKORY @ 4:00 PM

The second annual Denton Peace Festival brings people together to funk the war and celebrate peaceful resistance to violence and injustice with parade style politics and musical mayhem. On NOVEMBER 11th, Veteran’s Day, peaceful people will party in the streets on the corner of Fry and Hickory.

The people’s peace parade will arrive at the historic Denton Square where the music festival will begin. The Denton Peace Festival features local bands, artists, veterans, and activists who are expanding the culture of non-violent resistance to war and militarism here in our community. Hear veteran’s of war explain why they choose peace and why they want to end all the wars NOW!

Live music, artistic freedom, and participatory political theater will fill the night air, drowning out the politics as usual of otherwise silent citizens.

Come for the party, stay for the music, leave with new ideas.

info from http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=125449934139826

Austin: TSEU rallies in solidarity with One Nation

Sunday, September 26th, 2010

In solidarity with the ONE NATION March for Jobs, Peace, Justice, and Education for All ! to be held in Washington, D.C., Oct. 2, 2010, the Texas State Employees Union will rally at the AFL-CIO (11th & LaVaca) in Austin Friday, Oct. 1, at 4:45 pm.

TSEU calls for:
JOBS
EDUCATION
REBUILD PUBLIC SERVICES
DEFEND PUBLIC EMPLOYEES

In conjunction with our biennial General Assembly, TSEU always has an action the first afternoon of the GA highlighting issues of importance to state/university workers and the provision of state services.  This year our GA is Oct. 1 – Oct. 3, and we want to show our solidarity with all our sisters and brothers gathering in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 2.

We expect there will be a couple of hundred TSEU members from all over Texas here in Austin for the event.  Join us!

For more information call the TSEU office at 512-448-4225

http://www.cwa-tseu.org/

Washington, D.C.: One Nation March for Jobs, Peace, & Justice Now

Friday, September 10th, 2010

What is the One Nation March?

On Saturday, October 2, 2010, hundreds of thousands of people from across America will gather at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. to demonstrate our re-commitment to change. The One Nation March will feature human and civil rights leaders, labor leaders, environmental and peace activists, faith leaders, celebrities and sports figures – all marching together to help Put America Back to Work and to Pull America Back Together. And to help reorder our national priorities so that investments in people come first.

When is the March?

Saturday, October 2, 2010. Our official program will begin at 12:00 pm and end at 4:00 pm. The event site will open for our guests at 6:00 am, and our pre-program will kick off at 11 am. We anticipate tens of thousands of people from across the country for this march. Please plan on arriving in the morning to allow sufficient time to get to the Lincoln Memorial.

Where is the March?

The March takes place on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial located on the National Mall in Washington DC.

Is the event open to the public?

Yes, this event is open to the public. No tickets or pre-registration is required. Please note that all buses traveling to the event are required to register with March organizers.

ONE NATION official website:  http://action.onenationworkingtogether.org/content/index

US LABOR AGAINST THE WAR flyer:  http://www.uslaboragainstwar.org/downloads/One%20Nation%20USLAW%20flyer.pdf

San Antonio: Peace Market | Esperanza Peace & Justice Center

Friday, September 10th, 2010

The Esperanza Center’s annual Mercado de Paz/Peace Market is the Friday and Saturday of Thanksgiving weekend of each year. The day after Thanksgiving is known as the busiest shopping day of the year, when throngs of holiday shoppers overrun a retail landscape dotted with corporate clones. As an alternative to crowded malls filled with crazed consumers and mass-produced goods, the Esperanza’s Peace Market features unique, handmade gifts and artesania centered around themes of peace, social justice, cultural diversity, and ecological concerns. Shoppers can wield their economic power by spending their time and money supporting individuals and groups that are fighting for a better world.

A diverse array of gifts are offered each year from artists like: Oscar Alvarado, mosaic-tile artist and found-object furniture designer; Veronica Castillo, internationally-renowned ceramic artist from Izucar de Matamoros, Mexico; Martha Prentiss, silversmith and owner of Prentiss Jewelry; Barrio Beat/Alma de la Raza, a company that seeks to carry on Chicana/o culture through community-based business enterprise, and to reflect and include voices of the pueblo in its operations; and Colores del Pueblo (formerly Pueblo to People), a Houston-based nonprofit organization that buys merchandise from over 200 grassroots craft and agricultural co-ops throughout Latin America—paying much better prices than for-profit corporations—and then resells directly to consumers in the U.S., thereby eliminating unfair profit and providing artists in developing countries a larger market for their work.

 http://www.esperanzacenter.org/

Interested in being a vendor? Click here for more information

Killeen: Under the Hood Cafe to Protest 3rd ACR Deployment Friday

Thursday, July 29th, 2010
Friday from 4 to 6 p.m., Under the Hood will demonstrate opposition to the
upcoming deployment of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment from Fort Hood,
Texas, scheduled to occur sometime next month.

After gathering at the Under the Hood Cafe, located at 17 S. College St. in
Killeen, we will march to the East Gate of Fort Hood to hold a rally in
support of the Troops being forced needlessly to suffer as a result of the
illegitimate and unwinnable occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.

The 3rd ACR is notorious for repeatedly deploying wounded warriors. In
addition to demanding an end to the occupations, we are demanding an end to
the 3rd ACR’s policy of deploying Soldiers with PTSD (post-traumatic stress
disorder), TBI (traumatic brain disorder), MST (military sexual trauma) and
physical trauma. Soldiers suffering from such issues SHOULD NOT BE DEPLOYED
NOW OR EVER!!!

The military’s hold over its Soldiers is at the breaking point. More and
more, Soldiers are turning away from the lies of Empire and discovering what
real democracy and service looks like. Each time we publicly demonstrate in
the Fort Hood community, we see a surge of troops and family members in the
coffeehouse asking questions and making themselves a part of the
international struggle for peace. Visible resistance is a MUST if we are to
continue building support to end the occupations and secure justice for the
people of Iraq and Afghanistan, as well our own troops.

Come be a part of this exciting demonstration, and help the Under the Hood
community continue to support Soldiers removing their support for the wars!
For more information, call the coffeehouse at 254-449-8811, write to
[email protected], or visit underthehoodcafe.org.

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/note.php?note_id=429599994216&id=1524611236&ref=mf

Austin: Million Musicians March for Peace, March 20

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Photo from the web.  From Jose Ole:
Million Musicians March for Peace Braves Storm In Remembrance of the Costs of War…on the 7th Anniversary of the Invasion of Iraq.
Defying sub-freezing wind chill and wind gusts of up to 39 mph, hundreds of Austin musicians and non-musicians expressed their passionate support for an end to the Iraq occupation and ever-spreading war at the annual Million Musicians March for Peace.
This unique Austin event, held in conjunction with demonstrations in 700 cities worldwide, marked the 7th anniversary of George Bush’s invasion of Iraq, based on false information, resulting in the displacement, wounding, or death of millions of innocent civilians and thousands of U.S. troops, and draining the U.S. treasury.
The Million Musicians March for Peace is a musician-led all volunteer effort that takes months to organize every year and is paid for by passing the tip jar at fundraising music parties and out of organizers’ pockets. Their passionate support for a peaceful U.S. policy was very apparent Saturday.
Despite icy wind that cut through clothing, blowing over p.a. speakers, hats, signs…even blowing the bow out of one fiddleplayer’s hand…the show went on. Although the weather had a big effect on the size of the crowd, it also emphasized the sincerity of those present on Saturday.
The cold, lively crowd gathered for two hours at the steps of the Capitol to hear music from many artists including David Garza and Southpaw Jones, and words from Colonel Robert Bowman on the realities of war. Everyone then formed a parade behind the Minor Mishap Marching Band and parts of the Jericho Brass Band and marched and played it’s way through downtown Austin. The parade spontaneously grew as it passed through SXSW crowds, ending up at City Hall with a concert by Guy Forsyth, Carolyn Wonderland, Shelley King, and Bill Kirchen.
The Million Musicians March for Peace is organized by the Instruments For Peace network of musicians and friends. The organizers and participants in this year’s event want to thank all who helped to make this a successful event, including the Austin Center for Peace and Justice…and Texans For Peace, Texas State Representative Lon Burnam, Dallas Peace Center, Artists For Media Diversity, VoteRescue, Texas State Representative Elliott Naishtat, Happy Living with Justice, icon media, Austin Permanent Peace Protest, Institute to Honor Freedom of Conscience, Waco Friends of Peace, Denton Peace Action, Texas Labor Against the War, CodePink Austin, Code Pink Greater Dallas, Veterans For Peace, Vietnam Veterans Against the War, Monkey Wrench Books, and Health Care For All Texas.
“Everybody can be an instrument for peace.”
Thanks to Richard Bowden for this story.

Houston Peace Festival

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=3965&id=1828946493&saved#!/event.php?eid=315668908027&ref=nf

Saturday, March 6, 2010, 12:30 pm – 8 pm

1318 W 26th Street, Houston, TX 77008
A day of celebration, party and networking with all the nuts, freaks, peaceniks, tree huggers, activist, hippies, rockers, woodstockers, generation X’ers, Y’ers, Z’ers, scenesters, vegeterians, animal lovers, meat lovers, people lovers, peace lovers, earth lovers, rebel rockers, zen marxist, budhist, christians, jews and muslims too.

Live Music by:
Macy McKinzie, Meghan Miller, Jordan Cervantez, and Micah Lamb
Zachary Ford – http://www.myspace.com/featuresyndicate
Tygaraja – http://www.myspace.com/tyagarajasong
Much Love -http://www.myspace.com/muchlovemusac
Spain Colored Orange – http://www.myspace.com/spaincolouredorange
listenlisten – http://www.myspace.com/listenlisten
Electric Attitude – http://www.myspace.com/electricattitude

Dance performance by:
Dancepatheatre – http://www.dancepath.com
The Brazilian Arts Foundation – http://www.brazilianarts.org & http://www.houstonbrazilianfest.org

Variety of food and kids activities.

For more information go to: http://www.friendshouston.org/announcements/peace-festival-march-6-2010