All posts by Peter Bohmer

About Peter Bohmer

Faculty emeritus in political economy at the Evergreen State College. Activist for economic, racial and global, justice. Advocate for participatory socialism.

Andrej Grubacic Speaking in Olympia, Friday, December 10th

Andrej Grubacic, will be speaking this Friday, December 10th on his just released book, “Don’t Mourn, Balkanize:  Essays After Yugoslavia“. Andrej Grubacic is a radical sociologist, an anarchist, an activist and a refugee from the former Yugoslavia. He is also the co-author of the important and outstanding book, “Wobblies and Zapatistas:  Conversations on Anarchism, Marxism and Radical History  “.


Friday, December 10th
3 P.M. Evergreen, Seminar. 2, A1105

7 P.M., Last Word Books, 211 E. 4th Ave., downtown Olympia

My Challenging of Cointelpro and Police Repression

Lessons from Cointelpro, Given at the forum on FBI repression, together with Jess Sundin (whose house and antiwar office in Minneapolis were raided by FBI on September 24, 2010) by Pete Bohmer, Faculty in Political Economy at the Evergreen State College, November 13, 2010 I have been asked to share my experiences and knowledge of government repression with you tonight not to scare you but so that we can deal with it and build stronger and more effective movements today for social and economic justice, locally, nationally and globally…

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Challenging Cointelpro and Police Repression

My Introduction of Noam Chomsky, November 1, 2010

Introducing Noam Chomsky by Peter Bohmer

Pittsburgh, PA- November 1st, 2010 at the Thomas Merton Center  Dinner Award to Noam Chomsky,

It is great to be back in Pittsburgh. I lived here from 1984-1987 and have fond memories of its people and the movements I was involved in—unemployed groups, anti-apartheid and Central American solidarity. The Thomas Merton Center was involved in all of them. The persistence and dedication of the Merton Center and its members in working on the most important issues of the day from 1972 to the present is inspiring and impressive.

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My Introduction to Noam Chomsky

Outstanding Speaker from Nicaragua, Friday, November 5th

Peasant leader. Augusto Obregon of Esteli, Nicaragua will be speaking on Friday, November 5th from 12:30 to 2:00 P.M. in Lecture Hall 1. He is part of the Fall Speakers tour, Migrating Towards Justice: Stories to Transform People and Policy, being organized by Witness for Peace Join us for a unique investigation into the root causes of migration and the impacts of free trade on Nicaragua.

Augusto Cesar Castillo Obregon is a campesino farmer from El Regadio, Esteli, Nicaragua. He has been a community leader in El Regadio for over thirty years and coordinator of the water committee, a community run organization which distributes potable water to the entire community. Three years ago, a tobacco factory designated as a free trade zone, was constructed in his community. While the factory has provided jobs to help mitigate the issue of migration, the increased cultivation of tobacco has threatened food security, the environment and the health of the community. Augusto works with the water committee to bring conservation projects to help protect El Regadio’s forests and water sources. Augusto is also the vice-president of the Federation for the Integral Development between Farmers or Federacion Para Desarrollo Integral entre Campesinos y Campesinas (FEDICAMP), a non-profit organization which works with small-scale farmers on sustainability.

“For me, free trade agreements, neoliberal policies and the conditions on the aid from the international financial institutions has brought our country to extreme poverty. And the people, the rural farmers, are desperate and don’t have any another alternative than to migrate to countries such as Costa Rica, Spain and the United States, with the only objective to work for their families. In my community, El Regadio, they installed a tobacco factory that is under the free trade zone, which generates employment, but the salaries are miserable and it is provoking a great contamination of our environment, principally to our water supply. It is also causing many diseases, of the skin and the organs of mainly women and children. The worst is that some farmers are selling their land to cultivate tobacco. This is causing less production of food, because the producers have dedicated their land to cultivating tobacco and this only serves to harm our health not to feed us.”- Augusto Obregon

Together with other outstanding speakers, Augusto Cesar Castilo Obregon, will  also be speaking on a panel Friday night, November 5th at 6:30 P.M. at the Fair Trade Sweat-Free conference at Traditions Cafe on the “Free Trade, Forced Migration and Sweatshops Panel”

my web-page: http://blogs.evergreen.edu/bohmerp

Student Originated Studies (SOS), Student Originated Studies: Community Based Learning, Practice and Theory Fall, 2010

We  meet each Wednesday from 10 A.M. to 1 P.M. in Sem 2. E2125 which is part of the Center for Community Based Learning and Action (CCBLA).  The first book we will read is Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, (recommended 30th year anniversary edition, Continuum). Students enrolled in this program should read Student Originated Studies (SOS), Fall 2010. For more info, go to the page, SOS fall 2010 SOS on this website or to the program page, SOS fall 2010

Participatory Socialism: There is an Alternative

This is the complete text of the talk, “Participatory Socialism: There is an Alternative!” that  I gave in Thessaloniki, Greece at the A-fest, Festival of Anti-Authoritarians on Thursday,  Sept 9th, 2010.  I give reasons why it is important to have a vision of the society that we want and need. Drawing on the work of Michael Albert and Robin Hahnel, I sketch out the principles and key institutions of a participatory socialist society.  I conclude with comments on Venezuela’s construction of “Socialism For the 21st Century”.

Participatory Socialism: There is an Alternative

Understanding and Responding to the Economic Crisis

This is the complete text of the talk, Understanding and Responding to the Global Economic Crisis that  I gave in Thessaloniki, Greece at the A-fest, Festival of Anti-Authoritarians on Wednesday, Sept 8th, 2010. In this talk I explain the causes and impact of the global economic crisis. I strongly criticize the austerity policies imposed on Greece by the IMF and European Union and  propose that Greece consider leaving the European Union and repudiating its foreign debt, and in the  longer-run the need for a radical transformation of the Greek economy and society.

Understanding and Responding to the Global Economic Crisis

Participatory Socialism: There is an Alternative, September 9, 2010

Delivered in Thessaloniki, Greece, September 9, 2010 at the A-Fest, Festival of the Anti-Authoritarians

Thank you for inviting me. I am honored to be with you in Greece at the festival in Thessaloniki put on by the anti-authoritarians. Although you are suffering severe economic hardship, you are providing hope for those around the world fighting back against unemployment, against cutbacks in social programs and poverty and who are committed to creating a better world where the dignity of all people is its organizing principle. I hope my talk will provide some useful insights into alternatives.
Capitalism is a failing and destructive system as can be so clearly seen from the global crisis in general and the crisis in Greece in particular. However, it will not collapse on its own and if does, the alternative is unlikely to be liberatory unless we have developed in theory and practice some real alternatives to it, and movements powerful enough to transform and revolutionize society.

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Participatory Socialism: There is an Alternative