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The Age of Roe: Voices from the Front Lines

Posted by jj on May 09, 2023 in News, Reproductive Rights, Social Justice, Intersectional Issues, Women's Health & Reproductive Rights
The Age of Roe: Voices from the Front Lines
The Age of Roe: Voices from the Front Lines

Harvard Radcliffe Institute held a major public conference January 26–27, 2023, to probe the complex and unpredictable ways that Roe v. Wade and its aftermath shaped the United States and the world beyond it for nearly half a century. The existential issue of abortion—and the galvanizing impact of Roe in particular—transformed the nation’s politics and public policy and its social movement energies, as well as the operations of the courtroom and the clinic. This opening session of the conference featured speakers with a range of perspectives from the front lines of debates about abortion, birth, and birth disparities. Each told stories from their work and talked about the work of stories in their own social movement and thought leadership.

Program, Thursday, January 26, 2023

Welcome Jane Kamensky, Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Foundation Director, Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Harvard Radcliffe Institute, and Jonathan Trumbull Professor of American History, Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences 4:28 Framing Remarks Michele Bratcher Goodwin, Chancellor’s Professor of Law and founding director, Center for Biotechnology and Global Health Policy, University of California, Irvine School of Law Presentations 20:32 Renee Bracey Sherman, founder and executive director, We Testify 36:36 Catherine Davis, founder and president, The Restoration Project 48:46 Getty Israel, founder and CEO, Sisters in Birth, Inc. 1:04:48 Moderated Conversation with Speakers Moderator: Michele Bratcher Goodwin Close of Program Jane Kamensky

For information about Harvard Radcliffe Institute and its many public programs, visit https://www.radcliffe.harvard.edu/. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RadcliffeIns... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/radcliffe.i... LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/radc... Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/RadInstitute

 

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HOW a TRIBAL RIGHTS LAWYER IS WINNING BACK the RIGHTS of NATURE

Posted by jj on Apr 30, 2023 in Environment, Social Justice, Background
HOW a TRIBAL RIGHTS LAWYER IS WINNING BACK the RIGHTS of NATURE
HOW a TRIBAL RIGHTS LAWYER IS WINNING BACK the RIGHTS of NATURE
Attorney Frank Bibeau found a way to legally protect nature by suing the state of Minnesota in the name of manoomin, or wild rice, sacred to the Ojibwe people.
 
By Aric Sleeper
 

The United States was founded on the declaration that all people are inherently endowed by their Creator with the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, but what about the rest of life on the planet?

With climate-change-fueled droughts and environmental exploitation in the form of oil pipelines causing the depletion and contamination of watersheds and endangering plant and animal species, some in the legal community have decided to swim against the current of conventional law. They are fighting not only for the inalienable rights of humans but for the legal protection of nature.

Proponents of the Rights of Nature movement, which has been gaining momentum since 2006, believe that legal systems should ensure the rights of Earth’s natural environment, which includes all the flora and fauna in any given ecosystem, and put an emphasis on protection, restoration, and stewardship of nature instead of exploitation.

“Rights of Nature is cutting edge,” says tribal rights attorney Frank Bibeau. “It’s not the old paradigm, and people aren’t prepared for it.”

Bibeau, a member of the Anishinaabe or Ojibwe people, based in the White Earth Indian Reservation of northern Minnesota, has become an effective champion for the Rights of Nature because the concept is also a tenet of the Anishinaabe’s spiritual beliefs.

“When we were spiritual beings, the Creator petitioned all of the living creatures—the plants, animals, birds, and fish—and asked if they would be willing to give us substance and flesh, and they agreed,” says Bibeau. “So we have a covenant to watch out for each other because they make sure that we have everything that we need, so in turn, we watch out for them.”

After serving as a journalist for nearly two decades, Bibeau was encouraged by his friends to switch gears and attend law school.

“Sometimes your friends can see the logic better than you can see it yourself,” says Bibeau. “I had so many questions when I went to law school, and I found out that those professors did not know the answers.”

His legal questions centered not around constitutional law but Indian law, which serves as a way for Native Americans to govern themselves and interact legally with the U.S. government on a federal and state level.

Bibeau points out that although his people are the Anishinaabe, “Indian” is still the catch-all title used in the U.S. legal system for Indigenous Americans, however inaccurate.

“All of the treaties with my tribe refer to us as Chippewa, but we don’t call ourselves Chippewa,” says Bibeau. “We’re usually called the Ojibwe, or we call ourselves the Anishinaabe, but as far as Congress goes, they call all of the tribes collectively ‘Indians.’”

Early in his career, Bibeau was encouraged by his friend Winona LaDuke and Rights of Nature attorney Thomas Linzey to fight for the rights of the Mississippi River against the Line 3 pipeline replacement project, but for all of his effort, Bibeau couldn’t find a legal foothold to stop it.

“Sometimes you’re on the wrong road,” says Bibeau. “I was talking with Winona about it, and I told her this doesn’t make sense to me, and she said, ‘How about the rights of manoomin?’ I said to her, ‘I can do that easily.’”

Manoomin, or wild rice, is a culturally and spiritually significant plant for the Anishinaabe and serves as a staple food source alongside fish and maple syrup.

Through an 1837 treaty between Bibeau’s ancestors and the U.S. government, the Indigenous people ceded large portions of their land to the nascent country but kept the right to hunt, fish, and gather wild rice there.

“Wild rice is reserved specifically in the 1837 Treaty,” Bibeau says. “Article Five says that we reserve the right to hunt, fish, and gather wild rice on the lakes, rivers, and lands being ceded.”

Wild rice then became the legal foothold that Bibeau was searching for because as he learned in law school, treaties are recognized by the federal government as the supreme law of the land.

“It made wild rice, to me, invincible, in terms of the Rights of Nature,” says Bibeau.

Bibeau and others were able to codify manoomin’s rights into law in December 2018, when the White Earth Band of Ojibwe adopted the rights of manoomin tribal law, which recognized wild rice as having the right to exist, flourish, regenerate, and evolve, as well as establishing its inherent rights to restoration, recovery, and preservation.

Later in August 2021, the Tribal Court of the White Earth Band of Ojibwe filed an action on behalf of wild rice, the White Earth Band of Ojibwe, and several tribal members, represented by Bibeau and Linzey, to stop the State of Minnesota from allowing Enbridge Inc. from using 5 billion gallons of water for the construction of the Line 3 pipeline.

The plaintiffs argued that the diversion of the water for the oil pipeline would interfere with the rights of manoomin, and the rights of tribal members to use the land covered in the treaty to hunt, fish, and gather wild rice.

“That threw everybody off,” says Bibeau. “What we were able to demonstrate is that the federal courts will hold off and not dismiss our actions because we have a valid tribal court, we’ve made a law, and now it’s time for the court to determine whether or not we have jurisdiction over the state and over the water.”

Bibeau’s legal strategy to use treaty law and tribal law to sue entities outside of tribal land in the name of a sacred plant or animal has little legal precedent, and ultimately the case was dismissed by the White Earth Tribal Court of Appeals. Bibeau filed for reconsideration of the case, but that was denied in the summer of 2022.

Bibeau and his colleagues are now back in the legal library, trying to dial in the Rights of Nature law and judicial procedure.

“It’s almost like the pieces have been left here for me to find,” says Bibeau. “Our elders put different protections into place that have lasted and come back in a strong way.”

Rather than citing wild rice, Bibeau is devising ways to fight for nature’s rights on behalf of animals, specifically fish, which are sacred to a number of Indigenous groups and more well known to the general public than manoomin. He says the public can expect to see a legal action filed on behalf of fish in the next year, against a yet-to-be-determined target.

“The thing that I like about fish is that almost everyone knows what a fish looks like, and everyone knows what a dead fish looks like, and everyone knows what 1,000 dead fish look like,” says Bibeau. “They are the canary in the mine, except they are the fish in the water. As long as we can protect the fish, we’ll have good water, and the animals and plants will have good water and resources, and we’ll have a better chance to survive on the planet.”

Although the manoomin case was dismissed, Bibeau feels that it has brought much-needed attention to him and other Indigenous people fighting for nature’s rights, such as the Tohono O’odham people of Arizona who gave the saguaro cactus legal personhood in their tribal court in May 2021.

He says that with the growing number and interest in these cases, the Rights of Nature movement will continue to exist, flourish, and evolve into the future.

“I think there’s a whole other wave that’s going to come,” Bibeau says. “We’re going to make a difference. It just takes time.”

Author:  Aric Sleeper is an independent journalist whose work, which covers topics including labor, drug reform, food, and more, has appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, the Santa Cruz Sentinel, the East Bay Times, the San Jose Mercury News, and other publications local to California’s Central Coast. In addition to his role as a community reporter, he has served as a government analyst and bookseller.

Source: Independent Media Institute
This article was produced by Local Peace Economy, a project of the Independent Media Institute.
 
EDITORS NOTE: A biography of Winona LaDuke can be found in the Herstory blog of
www.womensvoicesmedia.org
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AMERICANS WANT CHANGE ON GUNS. IT COULD SHAPE THE 2024 ELECTION

Posted by jj on Apr 26, 2023 in Violence, Health and Safety, Politics & Elections
AMERICANS WANT CHANGE ON GUNS. IT COULD SHAPE THE 2024 ELECTION
AMERICANS WANT CHANGE ON GUNS. IT COULD SHAPE THE 2024 ELECTION

Many women, young people and people of color are motivated to organize and vote by the drumbeat of gun violence.

 

 By Errin Haines

 

Students shot to death at a Christian school in Tennessee. Employees killed at a bank in Kentucky. Black teenagers killed and wounded at a birthday party in Alabama. A 16-year-old boy shot in the head in Missouri after ringing the wrong doorbell. A 20-year-old woman killed after pulling her car into the wrong driveway. 

To be an American citizen is to endure the daily drumbeat of gun violence. In the first 109 days of 2023, there have already been more than 160 mass shootings in the United States. 

Some lawmakers offer only thoughts and prayers, and others insist that something must be done. But the unrelenting toll of gun violence across the country has resulted in incremental change at best in a sharply partisan Congress and inaction more broadly, particularly in red states. The nation’s status quo is unacceptable to many Americans, while talks of reform only affirm others’ commitment to the Second Amendment.

The fight is also a gendered one. Nearly twice as many men as women own guns, and men outnumber women nearly 3 to 1 at the National Rifle Association’s annual meetings; this year’s gathering was held last weekend in Indianapolis. America’s mass shooters are overwhelmingly White men. And among America’s teachers, who have found themselves on the front lines of our country’s gun violence epidemic, three-quarters are women. 

The founding fathers authored the Second Amendment that has made the right to bear arms political doctrine for centuries. Today, men are still the majority of the lawmakers with power to make policy on guns at the local and federal level. 

But women candidates are running and winning on the issue of gun violence, including 140 Moms Demand Action volunteers elected in the 2022 midterms, and Democratic governors including Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Katie Hobbs of Arizona. In the wake of the March 27 mass shooting in Nashville, Run for Something announced that nearly 700 women signed up to run for office — noting that 10 percent were from Tennessee and nearly half were born after 1994.

Single-issue voters are rare, but headed into another consequential election year, it is clear that guns will be on the ballot in 2024.

On March 27, three children and three adults were killed in a mass shooting at a private Christian school in Nashville. The thirteenth school shooting in 2023 and the most deadly school shooting of the year so far prompted Democratic Tennessee state Reps. Justin Jones, Justin Pearson and Gloria Johnson — a former educator — to demand action on the floor of the state House. Because their actions violated the chamber’s rules, Republicans voted to expel Jones and Pearson, both Black men, who were both reinstated within days. Johnson, a White woman, narrowly avoided expulsion. 

The incident highlighted the link between race and the fight for gun safety, said Moms Demand Action founder Shannon Watts.

“We’re seeing over and over again a spotlight shone on the white supremacy that underlies a lot of the lack of gun laws and also the gun tragedies in this country,” Watts said. “I felt like the whole nation was seeing this crisis illuminated in that moment. When these two Black lawmakers were being expelled from the legislature simply for supporting gun safety, we were able to see in a new way how systemic racism and gun extremism and all of the things that go along with that, that are part and parcel of our nation’s gun tragedy.”

A CBS/YouGov poll released last week showed that more than 3 in 4 Americans say mass shootings are something the country could prevent and stop if we tried. In the same poll, 64 percent of Americans — including 72 percent of women, compared with 55 percent of men — responded that gun violence was a “very important” issue in the country today. That was true for 80 percent of Black Americans, compared with 62 percent of White Americans and 64 percent of Hispanic Americans. 

For young people of color, gun violence is a particularly potent priority, said Noah Lumbantobing, spokesman for March for Our Lives, an organization founded by young people to advocate for measures to curb gun violence.

“When you think about voters of color, it’s notable and it’s important for anybody to think about in elected leadership, it’s a top issue,” Lumbantobing said. “It’s an issue that is front of mind for young people across the spectrum. Whether they’re afraid at school, at church, the grocery store, it is one of, if not the, issue that helps people decide who to vote for and drives people to vote.”

Adrianne Shropshire, executive director of the voter turnout organization BlackPAC, said gun violence was a top issue for Black voters in the 2022 midterm elections. That’s not likely to change, she said, because the prevalence of shootings remains. Crime was one of the top concerns for voters in the 2022 election, and in Black communities in particular, that equates to a call for gun reform.

“When we would talk to folks, there was this deep concern … about the daily oppression of gun-related crimes that people feel most galvanized around,” Shropshire said. “It’s an issue that is with us until Black communities feel like there has been some actual reprieve.”

Black voters, women in particular, aren’t looking for “tough on crime” rhetoric, Shropshire said, but rather candidates who can talk about their specific plans for reducing the number of guns and what to do about illegal guns.

Watts agreed.

“I do think these shootings have galvanized parents, students who have had to live this way their whole lives and Black and Brown communities who bear the brunt disproportionately of this crisis,” she said. “It has been a winning issue, but even more at the front of voters’ minds going into the next election cycle. People are fed up with gun extremist politicians who are saying there’s nothing we can do and yet we know they’re putting gun maker profits above public safety.”

Guns have long been a dividing line in our politics, but gun violence as a way of life in America is a more modern phenomenon that has further polarized the electorate and our leaders.

President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, both licensed gun owners, have continued to push for federal legislative action around guns. Biden has tweeted in recent days about mass shootings in Dadeville, Alabama, and Louisville, Kentucky, calling the incidents “outrageous and unacceptable” and urging congressional action on universal background checks, and a ban on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. On Monday, Biden called Ralph Yarl, the Black teenager shot in the head by an 84-year-old White man after he rang the wrong doorbell looking for his siblings. 

On the day after Pearson and Jones were ousted from the House chamber, Harris made a last-minute visit to Nashville in support of the Tennessee Three, delivering a fiery speech condemning the Republican-controlled legislature’s actions and calling for reform. And in remarks at the National Action Network conference in New York last week, Harris framed the debate not as a fight over gun safety, but over public safety and freedom, taking aim at the NRA members who said they were embracing freedom. 

“So, we must ask: ‘Freedom-filled’ for who, exactly? Because it’s not for parents who pray that their children will come home from school safe from a classroom in Uvalde or Nashville,” she said. “Not for those who pray that their loved ones will come home safe from a bank in Louisville, Kentucky, from a grocery store in Buffalo, or from everyday gun violence in communities across our nation.”

It’s a message that will likely resonate well with suburban women and independents in particular, said Republican strategist Susan Del Percio.

 “One thing that Democrats have wisely done is move away from gun safety to a public safety issue,” she said. “That resonates because voters in the suburbs tend to have kids or grandkids. And it’s really getting to the point that everyone’s at least one connection away from a mass shooting. I don’t think people are going to be voting for Joe Biden or whoever the Republicans are picking — they are coming out to vote for their position, and public safety is the conversation.”

Last summer, the Supreme Court’s decision in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization that ended federal protections for abortion angered and mobilized millions of women, who make up the majority of the American electorate. Democrats capitalized on their outrage, casting the Republican position and the candidates who embraced it as extreme as a winning strategy.

Could the same happen next fall on guns? How will the issue intersect with a broader conversation around personal freedom and rights? The issue could be especially motivating for the Democrats’ base: women, young people and voters of color.

Politicians can’t afford to leave anyone out, said March for Our Lives’ Lumbantobing.

“Young people know that it doesn’t have to be this way,” he said. “It’s important for our leaders to recognize that in the absence of action, you’re going to lose a whole generation of people — both electorally, but also, thousands of kids will die, literally.”

This column first appeared in The Amendment, a new biweekly newsletter by Errin Haines, The 19th’s editor-at-large.

 

 

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MAGA’s heinous plan to strip benefits

Posted by jj on Apr 25, 2023 in Politics & Elections, Social Justice, Background
MAGA’s heinous plan to strip benefits
MAGA’s heinous plan to strip benefits

This is an update from INDIVISIBLE about what RepubliKKKans in the House are up to this week

House Republicans plan to force a vote on their horrific “Limit, Save, Grow Act of 2023,” as early as Wednesday this week.

The aptly-named legislation will limit our ability to address climate change, save corporations from paying their fair share of taxes, and grow the pockets of big oil and special interests as it strips away benefits from hard-working Americans.

Extremist Republicans know that this bill will never pass in the Senate or be signed by President Biden. Their goal is not for it to pass. This is a power play from the most extreme members of the Republican party to exert their control over Kevin McCarthy and the rest of their caucus, committing all of them to a suite of toxic policies and a scheme to blow up the economy through the MAGA Default Crisis. 

This bill would:

  • Create mountains of arbitrary paperwork that would strip life saving Medicaid and Food Stamps from millions of seniors, families, and children
  • Make it easier for big corporations and the ultra wealthy to cheat on their taxes by revoking IRS funding 
  • Saddle millions of working people with student debt 
  • And make huge cuts to climate, public health, and infrastructure funding just to name a few.  

Currently, no Democrats have expressed any intention of voting for this bill, and it is so extreme that even a few Republicans have come out against it (as always, we’ll believe them when we see them vote). Republicans know full-well that passing this bill would harm their constituents -- it’s just that they think they can get away with it. They are posturing to bolster their position in the in the MAGA Default Crisis fight. 

We need Democrats to stand united during this vote and make it clear they oppose the Republican plan to cause a MAGA Default Crisis. The vast majority of House Dems have already committed to no cuts for Social Security and Medicare, check this list to see if your Rep is one of the handful who has not. 

As for House Republicans, with a few claiming that they will vote against this bill, we want to turn up the pressure on all Republicans to oppose it. We don’t know if any Republicans will stick to their word, but that can’t stop us from working to chip away at their ranks. If you have a Republican representative, call them and demand they oppose Kevin McCarthy’s disastrous default bill.

Now is the time to stand united against MAGA legislation. We send people to Washington to help the American people, not line the pockets of their friends and donors. This extreme bill is just one small volley in this ongoing fight to prevent the MAGA default. Make sure your Rep knows where you stand. 

DO YOUR PART!

Use the links in this post to tell your Congresswoman or Congressman you vehemently oppose their actions!

 

 
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SIX QUESTIONS for a WORLD THAT SEEMS to BE LOSING INTEREST in DEMOCRACY

Posted by jj on Apr 24, 2023 in Background
SIX QUESTIONS for a WORLD THAT SEEMS to BE LOSING INTEREST in DEMOCRACY
SIX QUESTIONS for a WORLD THAT SEEMS to BE LOSING INTEREST in DEMOCRACY

What do we know, and what can we support about the following?

By Colin Greer

1. The Psychology of the Scarcity Experience

Humans across all evolutionary forms have faced scarcity—from the impact of weather on the food supply to competition with nonhuman animals for food and shelter.

The experience of material scarcity of this scale generated an individual psychological dynamic and societal reflex of fear and loss. The perennial uncertainty of survival was also magnified by interhuman aggression, conflict, and hierarchy.

2. Historical and Transhistorical Trauma

What we call trauma—emergency response, risk, and loss—follows and has a multigenerational impact on individuals, families, social groups, and nations that is carried into all lives through the imposition of extreme fight-or-flight-response-triggered behaviors.

These dynamics inform the tendency in humans to impose a “scarcity experience” on nonmaterial scarcity situations. The scarcity experience has permeated across history into our institutions, conventions, expectations, and beliefs.

3. Variety Within the Human Population

Add to the uneven distribution of inherited trauma (and social responses to the scarcity experience) the genetic differences of human populations, which are combinations of distinct groups of human ancestors, and we can be sure that just as there are demonstrated physical markers of difference among populations with regard to biological systems, there are also key behavioral markers.

Understanding these behavioral markers may help unpack the crisis of legitimacy facing democratic nations in which extreme partisanship regarding values and politics has produced culture wars. Legitimacy and illegitimacy are essentially about the conflict between bonding nests of insular common sense, fear, blame, belief, and expectation.

4. The Uneven ‘Fight-or-Flight’ Response

These traumatic experiences have been unevenly distributed over populations and individuals over time and geography. This might be a part of the explanation for the fight-or-flight polarity of behaviors seen in the human population in response to fear, risk, and danger. The responses can produce a wide range of social environments, from calm and cooperative to conflictual and antagonistic.

5. Negative/Positive Human Bonding

“Good enough” bonding is key to cooperative and considerate social relations, and an overall society based on goodwill.

We know that when life is uncertain—when birthing and infancy are high-risk and death is so common that the naming of children was often delayed—blame for loss is rampant, and, as a result, multiple complex patterns of bonding fractures replace bonding with longing (selfishness, greed, violence, blame, hoarding) in likely individual and group behavior.

All this is processed through personal and cultural temperaments, and so a fairly wide range of action, values, and empathy exists and can be exaggerated in one or another direction—a sense of kin, widely or narrowly shared.

6. The Uneven History of Human Collaboration

There is widespread evidence stretching over centuries in different parts of the planet of goodwill and visions of shared well-being, of cooperative discourse and reparative ideals that might be called on with new vigor. These have long aimed to counter the dominance of extreme fight-or-flight/scarcity panic psychology, blaming and maiming communication and political engagement in the long and ongoing story of human society.

Making Use of It

Perhaps this perspective on scarcity and bonding can help us see ourselves differently and find our way.

Currently, we are witnessing the failure of the historic progressive agenda, and a dramatic decline in the legitimacy of democracy as a governing ideal.

At the same time, the right wing has, for over 50 years, rooted itself in key political positions and popularized regressive ideas and ideals through coercion, shaming, and exclusivity.

The power of the right is based on having gained the trust of people. As the public has lost its sense of higher purpose, the progressive agenda has become delegitimized. Ironically, rich people are lionized by working people—despite the damage to their own lives because wealth stands for strength and prospect.

The damaging philosophy of neoliberalism has morphed into something more sinister. We are witnessing the capture of the public sphere by dangerous politicians promoting destructive ideologies often built on lies and disinformation. These ideologies have led to a worldwide spread of authoritarianism, which some argue is a zeitgeist more capable than democracy for handling economic, environmental, and social crises. How do we shape a democratic future living in a zeitgeist that is tightening its grip across the globe?

 This article was produced by Human Bridges, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

Author:   Colin Greer is the president of the New World Foundation. He was formerly a CUNY professor, a founding editor of Social Policy magazine, a contributing editor at Parade magazine for almost 20 years, and the author and coauthor of several books on public policy. He is the author of three books of poetry, including most recently Defeat/No Surrender.

 

 

 

 

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