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Dr. Paula J. Caplan (1947 – 2021)

Dr. Paula J. Caplan (1947 – 2021)
Posted by jj on May 23, 2024 in Background, Women In the Arts, Social Justice, Intersectional Issues
Dr. Paula J. Caplan    (1947 – 2021)

Paula J. Caplan was a clinical and research psychologist, author of books and plays, playwright, actor, director, and activist. She was born  July 7, 1947,  and raised in Springfield, Missouri; attended Greenwood Laboratory School; received her A.B. with honors from Radcliffe College of Harvard University; and received her M.A. and Ph.D. in psychology from Duke University. She was an Associate at the Du Bois Institute, Hutchins Center for African and African American Research, Harvard University at the time of her death.  She had been a Fellow at the Women and Public Policy Program of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard; a Lecturer in Harvard's Program on Women, Gender, and Sexuality and in the Psychology Department. She was a former Full Professor of Applied Psychology and Head of the Centre for Women's Studies in Education at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education; and former Lecturer in Women's Studies and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto.

In regard to her expertise in psychology and in women's studies, as well as her political/social action work, she appeared on many major network talk and news shows.

 She gave hundreds of invited addresses to a wide variety of community and academic groups. She was interviewed frequently for the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, Time, Newsweek, US News and World Report, and Psychology Today.

Among her plays, "Shades" (secret wounds that only love can heal) won the Pen & Brush New Plays Contest; "Call Me Crazy" (about the questions "Is anybody normal? And who gets to decide?") won second place in the 1997 Arlene and William Lewis Playwriting Contest for Women and other awards; and "The Test" (based on the poignant, true story of two men on Death Row) was published by Samuel French in its collection of winners of its 2001 Off-Off-Broadway New, Short Plays Competition. Her screenplay for "The Test" was made into a video that won the Alliance for Community Media-New England Film Festival and has been screened in numerous other festivals and various other venues.  The number of books she authored or co-authored is in the double digits.

Before Paula passed away, July 21, 2021, she formed a nonprofit organization called Picture Social Justice (PSJ). The mission of PSJ is to promote social justice equity through film and television. Paula's vision was simple: raise awareness, educate, and advocate for those adversely affected by social injustice.


Not only was Paula the founder of Picture Social Justice, but she was the heart-and-soul of the latest film project, Execution by the Numbers. As you can imagine, Paula's untimely death interrupted efforts to complete the film project. But Paula's vision and body of work are too vital to the social justice community for it to be abandoned, so  plans for completion have moved forward.

For more details of Dr. Paula Caplan’s life and work go to :

Paula Joan Caplan (July 7, 1947 - July 21, 2021) - Home (paulajcaplan.net)

 

 

 

 

 

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THE YOUNG FEMINIST PARTY (formerly known as Generation Ratify)

THE YOUNG FEMINIST PARTY (formerly known as Generation Ratify)
Posted by jj on May 18, 2024 in Girls & Young Women

https://youngfeministparty.org/

The Young Feminist Party is the political home for young feminists in the United States. We are building a powerful movement of young people, from communities and campuses across the country, to finalize the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) and advance gender justice for all.

We started out in 2019 as a handful of teenagers in Virginia working to secure the 38th and final state ratification needed to publish the ERA. Since Virginia’s ratification in 2020, we have grown into a nationwide movement of over 14,000 young people organizing for gender justice in our communities and Constitution. Through direct actions, legislative advocacy, electoral organizing, and judicial advocacy, The Young Feminist Party recruits, trains, and mobilizes young people to advance feminist policies–whether that’s strengthening our school’s Title IX policies or amending our nation’s most foundational document.

Become a member today to access party-wide resources, communication channels, and movement-building opportunities. Membership is free. Events and actions are open to everyone, regardless of membership status, but if you are down with the movement and want to take sustained action with us, become an official member of the Young Feminist Party.

 

https://youngfeministparty.org/

 

COMMENTARY FROM A BADASS WOMAN

COMMENTARY FROM A BADASS WOMAN
Posted by jj on May 12, 2024 in My Voice, Tech
COMMENTARY  FROM  A  BADASS  WOMAN

Think you have limitless media options with competitive pricing?

Read this report from FAIR  https://fair.org/   to understand how that "just isn't so":

AT&T was the dominate telephone provider for most of the 20th century. Because the company was so large, in 1984 the government forced it to break up into eight smaller companies. Today, almost all of those companies are once again part of AT&T, along with cellular carriers and cable providers. In fact, it is reported that today AT&T is more than twice the size it was before the break-up.

But while it may seem like you have limitless options, most of the media you consume is owned by one of six companies. These six media companies are known as The Big 6.

While independent media outlets still exist (and there are a lot of them), the major outlets are almost all owned by these six conglomerates. To be clear, “media” in this context does not refer just to news outlets — it refers to any medium that controls the distribution of information. So here, “media” includes 24-hour news stations, newspapers, publishing houses, Internet utilities, and even video game developers.

FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting) and its’ weekly radio show Counterspin

https://fair.org/

******************************************

The Big 6 Companies

  1. Comcast
  2. The Walt Disney Company
  3. News Corporation (ex Ceo Robert Murdoch)
  4. Paramount Global ( ViacomCBS owned by National Amusements)
  5. AT&T
  6. Sony

There can't be real competition if 90% of the media is controlled by only SIX media conglomerates!

 

 

 

 

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OPINION: My Home - Florida - Has Become Inhospitable

OPINION: My Home - Florida - Has Become Inhospitable
Posted by jj on May 11, 2024 in Reproductive Rights, Newsworthy, Social Justice, Intersectional Issues
OPINION:    My Home - Florida - Has  Become  Inhospitable

By Jared M. Meyers

#Florida is my home, that I love and protect. We have such a diverse group of Floridians...politically, culturally, ethnically, and every way you measure it...it makes us beautiful, powerful and resilient. This year, my home has become inhospitable and ugly, at the hands of the majority of our state's politicians ... seeking their personal political aspirations instead of the preservation our rights, such as Freedom of Expression and Freedom of Choice. 

This is troublesome to me as a life-long resident/community member, as a father with children in our school systems, and as a business leader of several Florida based businesses that employ hundreds of people and attract hundreds of thousands of Florida travelers.

Regardless of our political views, #Americans and #Floridians don’t like being told what they are allowed to say and read.

The Stop Woke Act has no place in a #democracy, in #capitalism, or in a free world.

You can read more in my Opinion piece from the Miami Herald.  If it resonates with you, I’d ask that you please share it widely.  I need your help, Florida needs your help, and the free world needs your help.

 

 

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: How a Neighborhood Co-op Started by Teens Helped Communities Around the U.S. Adopt Solar Power

: How a Neighborhood Co-op Started by Teens Helped Communities Around the U.S. Adopt Solar Power
Posted by jj on May 10, 2024 in Newsworthy
: How a Neighborhood Co-op Started by Teens Helped Communities Around the U.S. Adopt Solar Power

The nonprofit Solar United Neighbors (SUN) is one group working to help communities move away from fossil fuels toward solar power.

By April M. Short

In our time of climate crisis, there is an increasingly urgent need to quit using fossil fuels and adopt renewable energy sources.

“[T]he release of carbon dioxide (CO2) from burning fossil fuels is warming our planet faster than anything we have seen in the geological record,” notes a 2020 report by Brookings. A report by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) estimates that “90 percent of the world’s electricity can and should come from renewable energy by 2050,” points out the United Nations.

On Earth Day, celebrated on April 22, 2024, the Biden administration announced 60 recipients who received $7 billion in a solar power grant competition called the Solar for All program. The awardees were selected by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the program will help bring residential solar projects to more than 900,000 households in the U.S.

The nonprofit Solar United Neighbors (SUN) worked closely with 12 applicants of the Solar for All program and will continue the process with grant recipients as funds are dispersed. In an interview with me for the Independent Media Institute on April 26, SUN’s communications director, Ben Delman, said that it had been an “exciting week” as their organization put significant work into the Solar for All program. He says this will “infuse money to local governments to help expand solar access” to low-income communities.

“We’ve been working specifically on expanding solar access and helping low-income families go solar for about half a dozen years or more now. Developing a series of pilot project models has really served, I think, as proof of concept for what we’re going to end up seeing here down the road now,” he says.

SUN works to help communities around the U.S. move away from fossil fuels and toward solar power. They do so through public education and by establishing neighborhood-based cooperatives, which can help to bring the price of installing solar panels down significantly through group purchasing and negotiation support.

The project was started by two preteen friends who were moved to action after watching the documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth,” in 2007. Twelve-year-old Walter (the son of Anya Schoolman, SUN’s founder and executive director), and his friend of the same age, Diego, decided to go door to door in their neighborhood of Mt. Pleasant in Washington, D.C. In two weeks, the boys gathered about 50 neighbors together who also wanted to go solar. This was the foundation of Mt. Pleasant Solar Cooperative and the start of what would become SUN. From there, the kids—supported by Anya Schoolman—worked to get legislation passed to improve solar policies in the Washington, D.C., area.

The Mt. Pleasant Solar Cooperative started a MoveOn petition for legislation to require Washington’s primary utility company, the Potomac Electric Power Company, to use renewable power and support adding solar panels in the region. More than 2,000 Washington, D.C., residents signed the bill, which helped move it to a vote. It passed unanimously in 2011. Simultaneously while working on the legislation, the cooperative made an effort to spread the word about their fight for clean energy rights at the community level. “Soon after, other neighbors from across the region started organizing solar co-ops and fighting for better solar policies together,” the SUN’s website says. The organization has since expanded to areas across the U.S., with on-the-ground projects to help support communities to move to solar energy.

In 2023, for example, SUN established the Phoenix Metro Solar Co-op in Arizona, in an effort to educate residents about solar energy and teach them to bargain as a group in order to reduce the price of purchasing solar power.

“Imagine walking into a solar company’s office with 50 or 100 of your neighbors and saying, ‘We all want to get solar. What kind of deal can you give us?’” SUN’s website states.

SUN cooperatives also include a team that requests and reviews proposals from solar companies on a neighborhood’s behalf. Here’s how it works, according to the website: “First, Solar United Neighbors requests bids on your behalf. Then, a committee of your fellow co-op members meet to assess the pros and cons and select the best installer for the group.”

SUN has created a video to explain the benefits of joining a local solar cooperative, and how joining a solar co-op is “free, and open to anyone” in a given designated co-op area. The Phoenix Metro Co-op, for example, is available to residents in Maricopa County, San Tan Valley, and Queen Creek.

Solar cooperatives organized by SUN gather between 50 and 100 neighbors in a group to go solar together at a given time, supported by experts from SUN at each stage of the process.

Arizona in particular has the potential to lead the world down the path toward solar energy use and move away from fossil fuels, given its sunny weather. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s state energy profile analysis of Arizona in 2022, it ranked second in the nation in solar energy potential (after Nevada). The state was found to be “one of the top five states in the nation in total solar-powered generating capacity from both utility- and small-scale installations, with more than 5,483 megawatts.”

Delman also shares that one of SUN’s focuses is on bringing solar access to rural areas, specifically via the Renewable Energy for America Program. This is a federal program run through the U.S. Department of Agriculture that provides both grants and loans to farms and rural small businesses wanting to adopt renewable energy systems.

“We’ve been coaching folks through that program,” he shares. “We’ve developed a series of guides and webinars to help folks with solar.”

Delman says another project SUN is enthusiastic about is their Solar Help Desk—launched in late 2023—which is a free service aimed at helping answer people’s solar-related questions. He says it’s designed for people who are “just starting to research solar, who may need help comparing proposals.” The service is also for people who have already gone solar and have “questions about their installer or something that’s not working right.”

“We’re able to coach folks through that process as well,” he says. “And I think as more people get interested in solar and want to learn about it, I think the desk is something that will be a really useful resource.”

Delman says there are many reasons people want to go solar—from saving money to using a clean energy source—and that the SUN has found that people are more likely to go solar if their neighbor or someone they know has gone solar. And, he says, often people who may like to go solar are unable to access it due to costs.

“In this business, we talk about this idea of ‘energy burden’—and all that really means is that oftentimes the folks who are the least well-resourced are paying more, or a higher percentage of their monthly income, on energy,” he says. “This is because, for instance, they’re often in housing stock that’s less efficient or they’re in areas where electricity is more expensive. By helping these families go solar we’re able to alleviate that energy burden so we’re excited for that opportunity as well.”

He says with the new federal funding through Solar for All, there is more hope to expand access to solar for people experiencing this energy burden.

Author: April M. Short is an editor, journalist, and documentary editor and producer. She is a co-founder of the Observatory, where she is the Local Peace Economy editor, and she is a writing fellow at the Independent Media Institute. Previously, she was a managing editor at AlterNet as well as an award-winning senior staff writer for Good Times, a weekly newspaper in Santa Cruz, California. Her work has been published with the San Francisco Chronicle, In These Times, LA Yoga, the Conversation, Salon, and many other publications.

This article was produced by Local Peace Economy.

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