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A is For

A is For
Posted by jj on Mar 05, 2022 in Reproductive Rights, The Arts

https://www.aisfor.org/

 

A is For is a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing reproductive rights, and ending the stigma against abortion care. Founded in 2012, A is For emerged as a response to the ever-escalating legislative attacks on access to safe reproductive healthcare. We passionately stand against the culture of shaming which fosters that legislation.

 Hester Prynne’s Scarlet A, intended as a symbol of shame, is reappropriated. You decide what your A is for: Advocacy, Autonomy, Abortion, etc.

 A is For amplifies art and artists working to end the stigma against abortion. We envision a world in which every person has access to the full spectrum of reproductive healthcare free from judgment, scrutiny, and obstruction.

 Working at the intersection of the arts and social justice, we believe art is a powerful tool for change, and through our creative initiatives we seek to elevate the human experience of abortion.

 The A is For Playwriting Contest is designed to engage playwrights who are passionate about supporting abortion rights and reproductive justice, and offers audiences the opportunity to see those stories represented on stage.

Theatre is an especially powerful platform with which to share stories, debunk myths, and disempower fears. The stories we bring to the fore are diverse in perspective as well as imagination. They reflect the great variety of experiences that reproductive justice demands we all recognize.

In 2021, the A is For Playwriting Contest received 252 original, one-act plays about reproductive justice from all around the world.

A talented panel of judges including Cris Eli Blak, David Cromer, Jill Filipovic, Jonathan Marc Sherman, Lindy West, and Rhiana Yazzie selected the 2021 contest winners. A is For is proud to present this play festival to the public free of charge.

SisterSong : Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collection

SisterSong : Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collection
Posted by jj on Mar 05, 2022 in Reproductive Rights, Contraception

https://www.sistersong.net/reproductive-justice/

SisterSong’s mission is to strengthen and amplify the collective voices of indigenous women and women of color to achieve reproductive justice by eradicating reproductive oppression and securing human rights.

SisterSong is a Southern based, national membership organization; our purpose is to build an effective network of individuals and organizations to improve institutional policies and systems that impact the reproductive lives of marginalized communities.

SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective was formed in 1997 by 16 organizations of women of color from four mini-communities (Native American, African American, Latina, and Asian American) who recognized that we have the right and responsibility to represent ourselves and our communities, and the equally compelling need to advance the perspectives and needs of women of color.

Indigenous women, women of color, and trans* people have always fought for Reproductive Justice, but the term was invented in 1994. Right before attending the International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo, where the entire world agreed that the individual right to plan your own family must be central to global development, a group of black women gathered in Chicago in June of 1994. They recognized that the women’s rights movement, led by and representing middle class and wealthy white women, could not defend the needs of women of color and other marginalized women and trans* people. We needed to lead our own national movement to uplift the needs of the most marginalized women, families, and communities.

These women named themselves Women of African Descent for Reproductive Justice, and RJ was born.  Rooted in the internationally-accepted human rights framework created by the United Nations, Reproductive Justice combines reproductive rights and social justice. The progenitors of RJ launched the movement by publishing a historic full-page statement with 800+ signatures in The Washington Post and Roll Call. Just three years later, in 1997, SisterSong was formed to create a national, multi-ethnic RJ movement.

 

POWERFUL VOICE FOR CIVIL & VOTING RIGHTS

POWERFUL VOICE FOR CIVIL & VOTING RIGHTS
Posted by jj on Feb 28, 2022 in Womens Rights, Newsworthy, Social Justice
POWERFUL VOICE FOR CIVIL & VOTING RIGHTS

Fannie Lou Hamer  (1917 - 1977)

Fannie Lou Townsend Hamer rose from humble beginnings in the Mississippi Delta to become one of the most important, passionate, and powerful voices of the civil and voting rights movements and a leader in the efforts for greater economic opportunities for African Americans.

Hamer was born on October 6, 1917 in Montgomery County, Mississippi, the 20th and last child of sharecroppers Lou Ella and James Townsend. She grew up in poverty, and at age six Hamer joined her family picking cotton. By age 12, she left school to work. In 1944, she married Perry Hamer and the couple toiled on the Mississippi plantation owned by B.D. Marlowe until 1962. Because Hamer was the only worker who could read and write, she also served as plantation timekeeper.

In 1961, Hamer received a hysterectomy by a white doctor without her consent while undergoing surgery to remove a uterine tumor. Such forced sterilization of Black women, as a way to reduce the Black population, was so widespread it was dubbed a “Mississippi appendectomy.” Unable to have children of their own, the Hamers adopted two daughters.

That summer, Hamer attended a meeting led by civil rights activists James Forman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and James Bevel of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)). Hamer was incensed by efforts to deny Blacks the right to vote. She became a SNCC organizer and on August 31, 1962 led 17 volunteers to register to vote at the Indianola, Mississippi Courthouse. Denied the right to vote due to an unfair literacy test, the group was harassed on their way home, when police stopped their bus and fined them $100 for the trumped-up charge that the bus was too yellow. That night, Marlow fired Hamer for her attempt to vote; her husband was required to stay until the harvest. Marlow confiscated much of their property. The Hamers moved to Ruleville, Mississippi in Sunflower County with very little.

In June 1963, after successfully completing a voter registration program in Charleston, South Carolina, Hamer and several other Black women were arrested for sitting in a “whites-only” bus station restaurant in Winona, Mississippi. At the Winona jailhouse, she and several of the women were brutally beaten, leaving Hamer with lifelong injuries from a blood clot in her eye, kidney damage, and leg damage.

In 1964, Hamer’s national reputation soared as she co-founded the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP), which challenged the local Democratic Party’s efforts to block Black participation. Hamer and other MFDP members went to the Democratic National Convention that year, arguing to be recognized as the official delegation. When Hamer spoke before the Credentials Committee, calling for mandatory integrated state delegations, President Lyndon Johnson held a televised press conference so she would not get any television airtime. But her speech, with its poignant descriptions of racial prejudice in the South, was televised later. By 1968, Hamer’s vision for racial parity in delegations had become a reality and Hamer was a member of Mississippi’s first integrated delegation.

In 1964 Hamer helped organize Freedom Summer, which brought hundreds of college students, Black and white, to help with African American voter registration in the segregated South. In 1964, she announced her candidacy for the Mississippi House of Representatives but was barred from the ballot. A year later, Hamer, Victoria Gray, and Annie Devine became the first Black women to stand in the U.S. Congress when they unsuccessfully protested the Mississippi House election of 1964. She also traveled extensively, giving powerful speeches on behalf of civil rights. In 1971, Hamer helped to found the National Women’s Political Caucus.

Frustrated by the political process, Hamer turned to economics as a strategy for greater racial equality. In 1968, she began a “pig bank” to provide free pigs for Black farmers to breed, raise, and slaughter. A year later she launched the Freedom Farm Cooperative (FFC), buying up land that Blacks could own and farm collectively. With the assistance of donors (including famed singer Harry Belafonte), she purchased 640 acres and launched a coop store, boutique, and sewing enterprise. She single-handedly ensured that 200 units of low-income housing were built—many still exist in Ruleville today. The FFC lasted until the mid-1970s; at its heyday, it was among the largest employers in Sunflower County. Extensive travel and fundraising took Hamer away from the day-to-day operations, as did her failing health, and the FFC hobbled along until folding. Not long after, in 1977, Hamer died of breast cancer at age 59.

] Works Cited

  • Brooks, Margaret Parker. A Voice that Could Stir an Army: Fannie Lou Hamer and the Rhetoric of the Black Freedom Movement. (Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 2014).
  • "Fannie Lou Hamer."Dictionary of American Biography, Supplement 10: 1976-1980. Charles Scribner's Sons, 1995. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson Gale 2007 http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRChth
  • Sherr, Lynn. Jurate Kazickas. Susan B. Anthony Slept Here: A Guide to American Women’s Landmarks. 2nd Ed. New York: Times Books, 1994
  • Weatherford, Doris. “Fannie Lou Hamer.” A History of Women in the United States: A State By State Reference. Vol. 2. (Danbury: Grolier Academic Reference, 2004).
  • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/freedomsummer-hamer/
  • “Fannie Lou Hamer, Woman of Courage.” Howard University Library System, Biographical Essay. Accessed 6 June 2017. http://www.howard.edu/library/reference/guides/hamer/
  • PHOTO: Library of Congress
  • How to Cite this page
  • MLA – Michals, Debra. “Fannie Lou Hamer.” National Women’s History Museum, 2017. Date accessed.
  • Chicago – Michals, Debra “Fannie Lou Hamer.” National Women’s History Museum. 2017. www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/fannie-lou-hamer.

 

 

 

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Venezuela Can Bring Putin to his Knees by Greg Palast

Venezuela Can Bring Putin to his Knees by Greg Palast
Posted by jj on Feb 27, 2022 in Editor Byline, Newsworthy
Venezuela Can Bring Putin to his Knees by Greg Palast



Editors Note:  This report by investigative reporter Greg Palast is a real eye opener.  Oil supply and demand seem to be a key factor in so many things that happen throughout the world.

Here is Palast's report:

I’m sure Putin is laughing when he hears Biden list his new so-called “sanctions” which are as serious as canceling Putin‘s Walmart discount card.

It’s about the oil, Mr. Biden. The price of oil. The more Ukrainians Putin kills, the higher the price of oil.

Right now, Russian tanks have pushed the price of oil past $100 a barrel. That’s a windfall worth an additional half a billion dollars a day to Russia’s treasury. With 43% of Russia’s entire federal budget coming from oil and gas royalties, Putin doesn’t care if his oligarchs are barred from getting tickets to see Hamilton.

The doubling of energy prices over the next year would bring Putin a quarter trillion dollar windfall.

Want to stop Putin‘s tanks? Turn off his war windfall.

How? Unleash the largest reserve of oil on the planet:  Lift the cruel, crazy, unjustified embargo of Venezuela.

Venezuela is capable of pumping 2 million barrels of oil a day for export.  If Biden announces an end to the embargo, the price of oil will nosedive in 20 minutes.  However, the US and Europe have laid siege to Venezuela, stopping everything from food to supplies of parts to get its oil industry back up and running.

Stop choking Venezuela’s economy and starving the Venezuelan people, who are no enemies of America, who invaded no one, and the price of oil will collapse.

The Biden administration continues to prosecute Donald Trump‘s mad embargo of Venezuela.  The embargo was triggered by Venezuela‘s insistence on taking back control of its oil industry—and, Heaven forbid, taxing Exxon.

The excuse I hear from Republicans and Democrats alike is that Venezuela is not a democratic state. As opposed to Saudi Arabia, Kazakhstan, Qatar and Russia? It’s fascinating to me that European Union blockades oil from Venezuela but continues to take oil from Russia.

We are paying the price of Trump‘s policy, now Biden’s, at the pump and Ukrainians are paying in Odessa.

When I was a BBC reporter covering Venezuela, I got to know its people and their presidents, including Hugo Chavez and Nicolas Maduro, as well as the opposition. Maybe Biden doesn’t like Maduro, and Exxon and BP certainly do not like Maduro, but he is the elected president. And I can tell you that while Maduro is not popular anymore because of the suffering imposed by the embargo, he was democratically elected.

And that’s more than can be said for the so-called “President“  that the US and Europe have recognized, Juan Guaido, who never even ran for president. Guaido is a rich white guy who has lived in Washington for years. The Venezuelan people, whatever they feel about Maduro, are not going to go back to white “Spaniard“ control of their mestizo nation.

So let’s make a deal: We recognize the elected government in Venezuela and Putin recognizes the elected government of Ukraine.

And if Putin doesn’t like that deal, we still recognize Venezuela, and unleash their oil, without doubt the greatest weapon on this battlefield.

Yes, the Germans have agreed (for this week at least) to cancel Nord Stream 2, the new gas pipeline from Russia.  But that’s one more cruel joke in which the Ukrainians are the punchline, ignoring Nord Stream 1. Germany continues to take Russian oil and Nord Stream gas, sending Putin nearly $1 billion a day.  This is the commercial equivalent of the Hitler-Stalin pact.

The US and UK governments have seized Venezuela’s oil revenues (and even its gold reserves), leaving its people to starve.  Yet, we are not holding back payments to Putin.

The fact that Germany has, by reports, vetoed banning Russia from the SWIFT international payments system is a clear indication that German industrialists are more than happy to send cash to Putin as long as the carbon keeps coming.

End the strangulation of Venezuela and tankers full of LNG (Liquid Natural Gas) from the South American nation could cut Putin’s pipeline noose from around Europe’s neck.

So there’s your choice, President Biden: Is maintaining Trump’s embargo of Venezuela so important that you will continue to let Germany fund this invasion?
 

 

 

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Vote Mama Foundation

Vote Mama Foundation
Posted by jj on Feb 24, 2022 in Politics

https://www.votemamafoundation.org/

Vote Mama Foundation​ is the leading source of research and analysis about the political participation of moms. We are breaking barriers moms face while running for office, normalizing moms running for office with young children, and enabling legislators to pass family friendly legislation.

Our mission is to achieve gender equity by:

  • Breaking barriers that moms face when running for office.
  • Normalizing moms of young children running for office.
  • Advocating for policies that allow working families to thrive.

When moms have a seat at the table, legislative priorities shift.

 Working moms in Congress write and pass more bills over the course of their tenure compared to other women, and their legislation is more focused on family-friendly policies. 

​More moms would mean:

  • Investment in childcare as a public good.
  • Paid family leave for everyone.
  • Leading the world in public education and healthcare instead of our current ranking as 27th worldwide.

We elevate these issues among candidates, elected officials, and the general public so that they are seen not as women’s issues, but as economic issues that affect all Americans.

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