We're Still Here! march and rally
Tuesday, August 11, 6pm
Goodale Park Facebook Event
BLM march. Meet with me at Goodale park and let's march to campus to let everyone know we're still here.
BQIC Speak Up: Spoken Word & Open Mic
Tuesday, August 11, 8-9:30pm
Zoom Facebook Event
Amplify Their Voices
Sunday, August 9, 2020, 12:00 - 3:00 PM
This event is to honor, celebrate, and amplify the voices of black women and the black LGBTQ+ community! My name is Rachel Thurman, and some other students and I have put together this event. The event will not only be a space to raise awareness about the ongoing fight for black lives in the United States, but also a place where we will have performances of all kinds to express the thoughts and experiences of black women/members of the LGBTQ+ community. We will have speakers and performers from a multitude of backgrounds to help spread the important message: black lives matter! Location: Franklin Park Conservatory, 1777 E. Broad St., Columbus. Facebook.
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing call-in numbers and other information to join the meeting via computer, phone, or other device.
Convened by Harvey “Sluggo” Wasserman & Joel Segal
Engineer: Mike Hersh
Special thanks to Dr. Paul Zeitz and the COVID-19 response coalition
PRELIMINARY AGENDA:
NORTH CAROLINA: Amazing organizational progress; Hendersonville soliciting students to work polls at $15-20/hour? Joel Segal
Join Zoom Meeting: https://zoom.us/j/222255972
Meeting ID: 222 255 972
Join through your computer or phone.
Since we can't get together in person, we can gather for a couple hours on the second Saturday night of each month from 7-9pm on Zoom.
Speakers: Lynn Tramonte of the Ohio Immigration Alliance Miriam Vargas, in Sanctuary in Columbus Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman on the bribed nuke bailout and other environmental and election issues SPECIAL GUEST -- Greg Palast, New York Times best-selling author on his new book How Trump Stole 2020
Q & A included.
Submitted by fightback on Fri, 08/07/2020 - 10:27am
Bob interviews Asian American professor and activist Phil Tajitsu Nash about the 75th anniversary of Hiroshima-Nagasaki bombings, immigration, the pandemic, Trump and the pedagogy of the oppressed.
Former Columbus City Council Candidate Joe Motil states that it is finally time for construction industry leaders to begin addressing the racist, sexist, and homophobic environment on construction projects here in Central Ohio. Columbus Business First reported (Facebook data center construction halted in New Albany after "racist graffiti" found on site) today that Turner Construction halted work activities at the Facebook Data Center construction site in New Albany due to “racially charged graffiti” that was scrawled on six portable toilets on the site. The Facebook construction project is currently the largest project in Central Ohio.
The company said, “This is totally unacceptable. We suspended work to send a message about how serious we take this behavior and to provide time for every single person on the site to participate in anti-bias training. Work will resume when training is complete.”
Senator Rob Portman’s Office, 37 West Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
On Friday, August 7, 2020, if no reasonable agreement is extended to the Federal Pandemic Unemployment Insurance, a group of concerned Ohio citizens will gather outside Senator Rob Portman‘s Columbus office. We will tell the Senator and the rest of the political establishment that we need to #savethe600! Hundreds of thousands of Ohioans are out of work from the crushing combination of a global pandemic and a collapsing economy that was already rigged to benefit the richest of the rich.
“Cutting off the $600 boost to unemployment benefits would be both cruel and bad economics.” Economic Policy Institute
In the next three months, a dozen states will determine whether Donald Trump wins another four years as president. Those swing states should be central to the work of progressives who are determined to prevent that outcome.
With so much at stake, we can’t afford the luxury of devoting time and energy to endless arguments about whether progressives should vote for Joe Biden if they live in California or New York, or Alabama or Alaska, or other states where the electoral votes are sure to all go to Biden or Trump.
What will matter are the swing states, generally understood this time around to include Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and Wisconsin. (Also in play are “swing districts” in two states where the statewide winning candidate doesn’t automatically get all of the state’s electoral votes: Maine’s second congressional district and Nebraska’s second congressional district.)
30 large posters, with photos telling the story of the people in Hiroshima and Nagasaki on those fateful days in 1945, will be on display at the park, starting at 2pm; the program will begin at 6pm.
• We are a diverse group of people who share the common goals of ridding the world of the threat posed by nuclear weapons and bringing justice to communities that are affected by nuclear weapons testing, production and use. We recognize that people of color were the target of the 1945 bombs and subsequent bomb testing. We acknowledge the suffering of Japanese Americans ripped from their homes and placed in internment camps during the war.