Category Archives: Upcoming events

OMJP, Olympia Social Forum Meeting

Olympia Movement for Justice and Peace (OMJP) will next meet   Wednesday, May, 12th  at 7 P.M.  at the Olympia Center, 222 N. Columbia.  We are working on a People’s Movement Assembly for  Saturday, May 8th at the Olympia Center.  The schedule is posted on our website, OMJP.

We will  discuss Olympia’s participation in the U.S. Social Forum at our next South Sound Social Forum Group meeting, Tuesday, May 4th at 6 P.M. at the CCBLA at Evergreen, 2nd floor, seminar 2, E wing.    You are very welcome to attend and participate.

Rally in Support of Honduran and Haitian People

Rally in Support of the People of Honduras and Haiti

Wednesday, January 27th, 6 P.M.

Percival Landing, 4th and Water, Olympia

For more info on what you can do,  call Peter Bohmer, 867-6431;  email, bohmerp@evergreen.edu,

This Wednesday, January 27th, 2010 there are two major protests in Honduras against the illegitimate inauguration as President of Porfirio Lobo and smaller protests throughout Latin America and the United States. In Olympia, we are rallying with our sisters and brothers in the Americas in support of the people of Honduras and Haiti.

Last June 28th, a military coup overthrew the democratically elected President of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya. No country in the world has recognized the government of the Honduran elites.  Working with the growing social movements in Honduras, Zelaya had raised the minimum wage, made education free, had joined the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) and had called for a referendum on whether a new constitution should be written by the people beginning in 2010. For this, he was overthrown. The leaders of the military coup organized an election on November 29th, 2009 that the large majority of the population did not take part in and the major unions, student groups, community organizations and women’s groups boycotted. The protests in Honduras and ours in Olympia are calling for the non-recognition of  the government that will try to take power, today,  Jan. 27th; and for the restoration of Zelaya as President of Honduras in order to organize fair elections and  a referendum on whether there should be a popular assembly to propose  a new constitution.  Although victims of assassinations and major repression, the National Resistance Front of Honduras, which is organized throughout Honduras and consists of 40 organizations that are leading the protests there today, and  have organized protests of millions of Hondurans. We call for the end of repression against them.

A 7.0 magnitude earthquake has recently struck Haiti and put this country already in crisis into further turmoil. The people of Haiti have long been disadvantaged by extreme inequality, lack of available public services, exploitative neoliberal policies, and the U.S. sponsored coup government. The U.S. has sent 12,000 troops in response to the earthquake. We want to ensure these troops are there to support the people of Haiti and not there for permanent military occupation. We call for support of the Haitian people, by giving generously to groups such as Partners in Health, http://www.standwithhaiti.org/haiti, who are effectively delivering health care in an efficient and respectful manner.

Come join us this Wed. January 27th at  6 P.M. at Percival Landing, downtown Olympia!
We stand in solidarity with the people of Honduras and Haiti and their popular movements such as the National Resistance Front of Honduras.
We call for the U.S. to not recognize the illegal and illegitimate inauguration in Honduras of Porfirio Lobo and to not support it.

We call for the U.S. to close its large military base in Honduras, Palmerola.

We support the call by the National Resistance Front of Honduras for a Constitutional Assembly to restore and deepen democracy and economic and social justice there.

We call for much more U.S. government aid to go to the people of Haiti with no strings attached!

Honduran Labor Leader to Speak in Olympia

Jose Luis Baquedano, Secretary General of the United Workers Federation of Honduras, will be speaking on the resistance by the labor and popular movements to the June 28th military coup that overthrew President Manuel Zelaya, and the current situation in Honduras.  Baquedano will be speaking on Friday, Jan 22nd at 12:30 at TESC. Lecture Hall 1;  and   on Saturday, January 23rd at 5 P.M. at the Olympia Unitarian Church, 2200 East End St., NW, Olympia.  For more information, see the flyer:

Honduran Labor Leader, Jose Luis Baquedano, in Olympia

Stop the Budget Cuts & Tuition Increases in Higher Ed

WE CAN WIN!, SI SE PUEDE!–In today’s, January 7, 2010,  New York Times, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s chief of staff, Susan Kennedy said, “Those protests on the UC campuses were the tipping point. Our university system is going to get the support it deserves.” Kennedy made these comments immediately after Republican Governor, Schwarzenegger proposed a California Constitutional amendment, cutting spending  for California prisons and putting the money saved into higher education.  Right now, 11% of the California budget goes to prisons,  and only 7.5% goes to higher education.  Schwarzenegger proposed that at least 10% of the state budget go to California universities and colleges, and no more than 7% be used for prisons. This shows the value of the militant protest and the  student movement with faculty and staff and community support in California leading to the growing possibility  of  stopping  and reversing the budget cuts.

Unfortunately, Governor Schwarzenegger  is proposing to privatize more prisons rather than cut  the prison population.  Hopefully, this growing and important movement will continue to demand more money for and more access to quality and affordable higher education, while also demanding a reduction in the CA state prison inmate population which is  almost equal  in numbers to the entire population of the city of Tacoma. Let us in Washington State learn from our brothers and sisters in California and fight back! Let us also link the fight against budget cuts in higher educations to the fight against budget cuts for programs that benefit poor people and workers such as the Basic Health Plan.

Come here two leading activists  in this movement, Ali Tonak and Tim Simons, Wednesday., January 13th!

OCCUPY EVERYTHING!
Fighting Austerity on California Campuses

Wednesday January 13, 2010
The Evergreen State College, Seminar II, E1105
)

10:00am Presentation to Political Economy and Social Movements; Race, Class and Gender (all are welcome)*

1:30pm Public Presentation (also in Sem 2, E1105)

California is the tenth largest economy in the world and one of the states hardest hit by the current financial crisis. Although the effects of the crisis continue to be felt in real terms by those living in the state, there has been little to no resistance against the financial system responsible for the crisis and the concurrent austerity regime that is decimating social programs including public education.

The public universities of California have emerged as a possible front for confronting the restructuring that has arrived with the crisis. Faced with a 32% student fee increase, thousands of layoffs and pay cuts, students and workers have begun to organize on a mass scale to fight back. Amongst the repertoire of tactics, occupying buildings has shown to be one of the most effective, providing a fresh praxis for a new and contagious movement that has quickly spread across the state.

Come hear stories from this important struggle and watch video from some of the pivotal moments during the last months of 2009. We will focus on lessons learned and future strategies as well as provide space for discussion of possible connections with local organizing efforts connected with budget cuts and tuition increases at TESC.

Ali, a graduate student of environmental science at UC Berkeley, and Tim, a collective member of Inkworks Press, are both active participants in the California student/worker movement and are currently organizing in the Bay Area.

*Followed by a presentation from John Duda about the Wobblies’  Free Speech campaign in Spokane, WA in the early 20th Century

The struggle in Honduras continues

Lisa Sullivan, spoke in Olympia on the current situation in Honduras and Venezuela and the growth of the left throughout Latin America on Wednesday, September 30th at 1:30 and 7 P.M.

Right now, the elected President of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya is taking refuge in the Brazilian embassy in Tegucigalpa, Honduras after returning clandestinely to Honduras after being overthrown in a military coup. The U.S. right-wing is playing a major role in supporting this illegal coup.   Lisa Sullivan in her talks pointed out the aim by the right-wing of Honduras to stay in power until the next scheduled elections in Honduras, November 28th. What is exciting and positive is the growth h of the popular movements in Honduras who in spite of serious repression are calling for the return of Zelaya to the presidency.

Lisa Sullivan recently traveled to Honduras with Fr. Joe Mulligan and seven others to demand democracy be restored by reinstating the elected President Zelaya who had been ousted by a military coup. Sullivan had just been to Honduras the month prior to the coup, asking President Zelaya to stop sending his troops to the School of the Americas/ WHINSEC for training. Sullivan has already met seven Latin American Presidents making similar requests, with some success. Sullivan will share with us her overall impressions of the recent political and economic changes in Latin America and the U.S. role there.

Wednesday, September 30th:

Evergreen State College

Sem. 2, E 1105 at  1:30 P.M.

Talk:  The Latest Developments in Honduras!

and

Traditions Cafe  at 7PM

5th and Water-downtown Olympia

Talk: The significance of what is happening in Honduras and Venezuela for liberation and justice in Latin America

BIO: Lisa Sullivan directs the Latin American office of the School of the Americas Watch (SOAW) and leads its Partnership America Latina (PAL). Born, raised and educated in the United States, Sullivan studied and lived in Mexico and Guatemala during the 1970s. She married and moved to Bolivia to work among the poor as a lay Maryknoll community worker. She raised her three children living and working among the poor in the barrios of Bolivia and Venezuela. For the past 32 years she has lived in different countries of Latin America currently residing in Venezuela for more than 20 years.

NO Charge!

Event Sponsored by Latin American Solidarity Organization (LASO) and the Political Economy and Social Movements Program at Evergreen.

Call Peter at 867-6431 for more info.

Note:  Lisa Sullivan will also be talking at the Econvergence conference in Portland, October 3 and 4.

Observations on Obama’s health care speech

I watched President Obama’s health care speech last night, Wednesday, September 9th,  and it was about what I expected. There was no mention at all of a plan that would really mean universal and affordable health care coverage. The idea of a single payer plan where you could choose you health care provider and the government would negotiate how much they would pay to the hospital, doctor, dentist, etc. was totally absent in Obama’s discussion.

Obama did mention that he favored a public option where people who did not have health care coverage and maybe small businesses could pay a monthly fee to the government and in return would have their health care covered.  Even here Obama mentioned that he was willing to compromise further on this idea  and that the plan would have to be self-supporting.  Insurance companies are likely to increase their profits as more people will be required to have coverage and  the public plan will be limited. The subsidies to low and moderate income are likely to be quite low meaning that health care will still be unaffordable for many people.

Obama excluded abortions from his proposals and excluded any money going to undocumented immigrants.  Both of these are things we need to fight for.

The behavior of many of the Republicans was reprehensible, it looked like the white citizens councils of the 1960’s–overwhelmingly white and male and reactionary.

On a more hopeful note on Tuesday, September 8th, I joined the Mad as Hell Doctors Tour which was a caravan of mainly doctors that started in Portland, went to Seattle and will caravan to D.C. demanding Single Payer Health Care. The main group sponsoring the caravan is Physicians for a National Health Plan. (Check out their excellent web-site). At a very exciting town hall meeting that   these two group organized, a group of very persuasive doctors talked about how the for profit health system prevented them and other health care providers form carrying out their mission of curing people.

Single Payer makes so much sense. Doug Henwood in the latest issue of Left Business Observer examines why the capitalist class, the corporate elite, so strongly opposes single payer. He argues that the big health insurance companies are  only a small part of Corporate America and not very significantly interlocked with them. They should not have the power by themselves to stop single payer.  He concludes that major corporations in other sectors fear the loss of profits that would occur to the large health insures like Aetna,  Humana, etc might happen to them next and thus oppose it.  Henwood also adds that if  workers had good health care independent of their jobs they would be less afraid to lose their jobs and more willing to fight for better working conditions and wages which could reduce profits. To these reasons i would  add that the insurance companies and the pharmaceuticals are fighting against it with all their energy and power and the rest of the elite does not want to oppose them.

We need to build a grass roots movement to fight for single payer health care. The next meeting of the newly formed Olympians for Single Payer Action is Tuesday, September 15th at 7 P.M at the Olympia Center, downtown.

Organizing for Health Care for All

There is a rally at 5 P.M today Monday, August 31st  at Sylvester Park calling for Health Care for and a Town Hall Meeting at 7 P.M. at the Washington Center meeting called by Congressperson Brian Baird.

There will also be an meeting to organize for single payer health, tomorrow, Sept., 1 at 7 PM at the Olympia Center (see below)

My thoughts on the current health care debate and reform plans follow.

It is important that we stand up to the right-wing attack on health care reform. We should challenge the lies of the right and their love of our current  broken health care system with 50 million uninsured and many millions more with inadequate coverage.  This does not mean that we should support Obama’s and the House and Senate Democrats health care plan no matter what they propose.

A decent health plan would cut out the insurance companies and include dental care, mental health care, prescription drugs and alternative medicine and be affordable to low and moderate income people and include coverage for immigrants. This together with a lot of federally funded and community controlled free clinics could make for a quality health care system for all, real universal health care.

Single Payer or Medicare for all is not even being considered by the Democratic Party leadership. It should be and should be raised by us in all forums including Town Halls, in rallies, in letters to the editor. We should not just support Obama and Congressperson  Baird because their  inadequate health reform plans are being attacked by the insurance companies and Fox News.

The so-called public option would permit people not being currently covered by their employer or by already existing public programs to choose a Medicare like plan where they would pay a monthly fee to the federal government and they could choose their doctor, hospital, etc. If the government could negotiate lower rates they would pay to hospitals, doctors, pharmaceutical companies this public option plan could be quite a bit cheaper than one from a private insurance company. One growing problem is that the public option may either be removed from the proposed legislation or so weakened with restrictions that it will basically be meaningless. For example, if the government cannot try to get sharply reduced prices for prescription drugs or hospital stays, and/or if it disproportionately covers the sickest people who have the most needs and costs and the public option choice  must break even and not cost the government any money,  its price to people who purchase it will be very high. The price of this public option will be even higher if it has to break even immediately and/or hold large reserves. With these possible restrictions, compromises the public option will not be affordable and will not put much pressure on insurance companies to reduce its prices.  These are the restrictions on it being proposed in Congress by influential Democrats such as Senator Schumer of New York.

So let us build a movement for a health-care plan that really is accessible to all and affordable  and that is paid for by taxes on the wealthy and on corporations.  This is what we should organize and educate for rather than supporting the positions of President Obama, Congressman Baird and Senators Cantwell and Murray because the Republicans are attacking them. Their plans will leave many people without health coverage and the insurance companies will continue to make billions.

Let us make our voices heard today for a single payer health care system for all.
Monday, August, 31st 5 P.M–Rally at Sylvester Park for Health Care
7 P.M–Town Hall meeting with Brian Baird  at the Washington Center

Let’s organize locally for a single payer system for all:
Tuesday, Sept. 15th, from 7 – 9 pm
Olympia Community Center in downtown Olympia,  Room 204
222 Colombia St. NW

Also check out the music video that follows.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UU8cPNcjKs