According to B’Telsem, for Palestinians, this was the deadliest year since 2014.

There are no statistics that can measure the pain and sorrow of their family members and friends of these victims of violence on both sides of this conflict.  What follows is just a snapshot of the human rights violations in 2021, and suggestions for actions that we can take to help bring an end to the violence for the benefit of all people in the region. 

 

Statistics from the United Nations Office of Humanitarian Affairs for 2021 (OCHA oPt)

Palestinian deaths - West Bank 82 (including 15 children); Gaza 264 (including 67 children)

Palestinian injuries - 17,895

Israeli deaths - 16 (including 2 children)

Israeli injuries - 158

Source:  https://www.ochaopt.org/data/casualties.

 

15 sign

Friday, January 21, 2022, 3:30 PM
Location:  OSU Ohio Union facing the South Oval.
We are demanding OSU increase the minimum wage for student workers to $15 an hour and improved working conditions for student workers.  For information about the Student Worker Organizing Group, contact sdsohiostate@gmail.com.  

The John Lewis and Freedom to Vote Acts have been officially stonewalled. Joe Biden must now enact them by Executive Order.

The key historic precedent is the Emancipation Proclamation, approved by Abraham Lincoln on January 1, 1863.

Today’s voting rights bills are essential to beat the uncivil war against democracy being waged by Donald Trump, Steve Bannon and their Jim Crow cult of autocracy.

Bannon says he’ll “take over the election process” and rob voting rights from millions of Americans of youth and color.

He leads an angry, aging cohort that’s lost its grip on the American electorate. By 2045, the US will be half non-white. Half is already born after 1981. In 2016 and again in 2020, Millennial/Zoomers under 30 rejected Donald Trump by more than 60%.

Thanks to America’s grassroots Election Protection movement, 2020 was our fairest, most reliably counted presidential contest. In the time of COVID, vote by mail, paper ballots, scanned ballot images and reliable audit/recount procedures---won by pro-democracy activism—made all the difference.

The first 911 call went out around 10:41. More than 200 local police and FBI agents responded to the scene and established telephone contact with Akram, whose responses were inconsistently coherent. The four hostages assisted with translation. Akram repeatedly said he was going to die. He also repeatedly called for the release of a US prisoner held in a nearby facility, Dr. Aafia Siddiqui, whom he referred to metaphorically as his sister.

Around 5 p.m., Akram released one hostage. According to the other hostages later, the negotiations deteriorated and Akram grew more agitated. Relying on previous training in handling hostage situations, Rabbi Cytron-Walker maneuvered the group closer and closer to an exit. Around 9:30 he decided the moment had come, he threw a chair at Akram, and the three hostages ran safely out an exit door.

Harvey Graff

Readers viewing this essay online may no longer recognize or appreciate how important a city’s daily newspaper is. It contributes to a city’s identity. It unites its readership in shared information, which is the potential for building a community of discourse and exchange. The best newspapers provide both a constructive critical voice and a forum for responsible airing of differences among members of the local population. This is not, and has never been, the function of the Columbus Dispatch.

Since childhood, I have avidly read my city’s daily newspaper(s) and the Sunday New York Times. From college, I subscribed in every city where I lived. In retirement, I read three dailies including two national editions. I have read the Columbus Dispatch since I moved to Columbus in 2004. I have witnessed a roller-coaster of journalistic and commercial ups and downs and published opinion essays and letters to the editor.

Long before intersectionality became a prevailing concept which helped delineate the relationship between various marginalized and oppressed groups, late South Africa’s Archbishop Desmond Tutu said it all in a few words and in a most inimitable style. “My humanity is bound up in yours, for we can only be human together,” he said.

 

Like other freedom and justice icons, Tutu did not merely coin the kind of language that helped many around the world rise in solidarity with the oppressed people of South Africa, who fought a most inspiring and costly war against colonialism, racism and apartheid. He was a leader, a fighter and a true engaged intellectual. 

 

SAVE AMERICAN DEMOCRACY 2022
A National Grassroots Campaign to Protect Our Elections

Precincts * Counties * Democracy Centers * SOS   Progressive Democrats of America & Grassroots Emergency Election Protection Coalition

Sunday, January 23 * 5-7pmET/2-4pmPT

Preceded 4-5pmET/1-2pmPT by PDA Meeting on COVID, Medicare for All, Congressional Candidates

Zoom Link: https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0tceuhrzsvHdymeeZRwb-i7X50FJa-HMR4

Flyer: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ycAfFFN2hsTWtNYSxVJc_n0RXltFpk2I/view?usp=sharing  
Details about event

Thursday, January 20, 6-7pm, this on-line event requires advance registration

Join us as we kick off the year by celebrating your commitment to abortion access and acknowledging the passing of the 49th anniversary of Roe v. Wade. We know we’re up against quite the fight this year and navigated relentless attacks last year. We deserve a moment to grab a drink, be in community, and look forward together.

Thursday evening will be a moment to ground ourselves in the fight we have ahead and get to know one another while we do so! A virtual happy hour, a place to connect with a new friend in this work, and a place to sign up for future actions.

Last year, we saw numerous attacks introduced at the state and local levels. Including six abortion bans, four anti-protest bills, four local anti-abortion ordinances, three anti-trans bills, two voter suppression bills, two major SCOTUS cases, and one state budget that includes attacks on abortion access and comprehensive sex ed.

Details about event

Thursday, January 20, 6-7pm, this on-line event requires advance registration

Join us as we kick off the year by celebrating your commitment to abortion access and acknowledging the passing of the 49th anniversary of Roe v. Wade. We know we’re up against quite the fight this year and navigated relentless attacks last year. We deserve a moment to grab a drink, be in community, and look forward together.

Thursday evening will be a moment to ground ourselves in the fight we have ahead and get to know one another while we do so! A virtual happy hour, a place to connect with a new friend in this work, and a place to sign up for future actions.

Last year, we saw numerous attacks introduced at the state and local levels. Including six abortion bans, four anti-protest bills, four local anti-abortion ordinances, three anti-trans bills, two voter suppression bills, two major SCOTUS cases, and one state budget that includes attacks on abortion access and comprehensive sex ed.

Billboard

They decided their life’s work was going to be saving other peoples’ lives. But no other group of professionals has had a reckoning during the pandemic as nurses and doctors have. And while they are expected to work long hours in horrendous situations, hospital executives are awarding themselves generous bonuses.

The turnover and resignations of healthcare workers is not entirely due to the pandemic’s crush. But how their employer has treated them during the (seemingly) worst healthcare crisis ever.

“Every hospital system in Ohio is standing on the back of all the staff demanding they work harder,” wrote a nurse.

At the start of the pandemic the Free Press wrote about the mind-boggling situation The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center was in when they set up an outdoor donation triage asking the community for extra masks and other PPE.

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