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    Invitation to One Billion Rising Event

    by Thea

    Joining thousands of women and men around the world, we invite you, your colleagues, neighbors, friends and family to a Community Speakout to End Violence Against Women being held under the auspices of Eve Ensler’s international One Billing Rising project.

    On the 15th Anniversary of V-Day, a global activist movement to end violence against women and girls, the Arlington Speakout will take place:

    Time: Thursday, February 14, 2013 from 7-9 PM
    Location: Calvary Church United Methodist, 300 Mass. Ave. Arlington, MA 02474
    Directions: Near Spy Pond, street parking, 77, 79, 350 bus routes

    One Billion Rising will move the earth, activating women and men across every country. V-Day wants the world to see our collective strength, our numbers, our solidarity across borders.

    One Billion Rising is:

    • A global strike
    • An invitation to dance
    • A call to men and women to refuse to participate in the status quo until rape and rape culture end
    • An act of solidarity, demonstrating to women the commonality of our struggles and our power in numbers
    • A refusal to accept violence against women and girls as a given
    • A new time and a new way of being

    Please follow this link for more information and to RSVP to the Arlington Speakout: http://onebillionrising.org.

    FOIA Factoids

    by Steve

    On December 18, 2012, the FBI fulfilled a FOIA request (local copy here) from the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund (PCJF). Since then, several organizations have written articles about these documents. This post is another one of those articles. However, I’m going to focus on breadth more than depth; you can consider this a set of FOIA factoids.

    Page numbers reference material in the FOIA release.

    The FBI reviewed 387 pages of material, and released 99 (pg. 109).

    A significant number of reviewed pages were deleted by the FBI: 81 pages (pg 9); 8 pages (pg 30); 4 pages (pg 34); 58 pages (pg 39); 76 pages (pg 43); 60 pages (pg 107) = 287 pages total.

    The documents contains 577 redactions. If nothing else, the redactors are thorough.

    Eleven documents claim “statistical accomplishment” as part of their purpose (pages 16, 18, 35, 51, 59, 62, 72, 90, 101, 104, and 106).

    The FOIA documents mention a total of 21 different FBI offices:

    • Albany (pg 51)
    • Anchorage (pg 11, 54)
    • Birmingham (pg 16)
    • Boston (pg 57)
    • Charlotte (pg 18)
    • Denver (pg 20, 21
    • Indianapolis (pg 1)
    • Jackson, MI (Pg 25, 62)
    • Jacksonville (pg 64, 68, 70)
    • Los Angeles (pg 72)
    • Memphis (pg 75, 78)
    • Miami (pg 82)
    • Modesto (pg 99)
    • New York (pg 35)
    • Omaha (pg 85, 88)
    • Pittsburgh (pg 75)
    • Portland (pg 57)
    • Richmond (pg 90, 93)
    • Sacramento (pg 99),
    • Tampa (pg 101, 104)
    • Washington, DC (106)

    The FOIA documents mention at least eight collaborations between the FBI and financial institutions:

    • Bancorp South Bank (pg 62)
    • Federal Hall and Museum Of American Finance (pg 38)
    • Hancock Bank (pg 62)
    • Kessler Federal Credit Union (pg 62)
    • New York Stock Exchange (pg 35)
    • Peoples Bank (pg 62)
    • Regions Bank (pg 62)
    • Zions Bank (pg 41)

    The FOIA documents mention at least 27 different government agencies, including:

    • Border Enforcement Security Task Force/BEST (pg 32)
    • Charlotte Weapons of Mass Destruction Operations Unit/WMDOU (pg 59)
    • Customs and Border Protection/CBP (pg 32)
    • DC Fire Department/DCFD (pg 106)
    • DC Metropolitan Police Dept/MPD (pg 106)
    • Department of Homeland Security/DHS (pg 32)
    • Des Moines Police Department/DMPD (pg 88)
    • Domestic Security Alliance Council/DSAC (p 31)
    • FBI (many times)
    • Homeland Security Investigations/HSI (pg 32)
    • Immigrations and Customs Enforcement/ICE (p 32)
    • Iowa Fusion Center (pg 88)
    • Joint Terrorism Task Force/JTTF (many times)
    • Los Angeles County Sheriffs Dept/LASD (pg 72)
    • Metropolitan Transit Agency/MTA (pg 72)
    • Miami Command and Tactical Operations Center/CTOC (pg 82)
    • New York Police Department/NYPD (pg 60)
    • Portland (ME) Police Department (pg 57)
    • Richmond VA Federal Reserve Bank (pg 90)
    • Shelby County Sheriffs Office/SCSO (pg 79)
    • Stockton Port Police (pg 99)
    • Tampa Bay Area Intelligence Unit/TBAIU (pg 101)
    • Tennessee Governors Office (pg 75)
    • US Attorney General’s Office (pg 104)
    • US Coast Guard (pg 32)
    • US Secret Service/USSS (pg 106)
    • Virginia Fusion Center (pg 94)

    Five documents are concerned with west-coast Port Shutdowns (pages 31, 45, 47, 54, and 99).

    The FOIA documents are worth reading. Yes, there are 112 pages, but it’s a relatively short 112 pages (large print, and many redactions). I’ll conclude with a list of things that caught my attention.

    • pg 2, 51, 64, 66, 73. Characterizations of Occupy protests as “peaceful”, or “not condoning violence”.
    • pg 19-22. The FBI had an interest in meetings conducted by a Bank Fraud Working Group in Denver, CO, including a discussion of “cyber threats in the financial industry, including what banks and their customers can do to thwart such threats”.
    • pg 31. This report describes protester attempts to shut down west coast shipping ports. “A few incidents of violence were reported by the Oakland Police Department; however, reported violence was not between the protesters and the drivers or longshoremen”. (The report says who wasn’t involved in the violent behavior, but doesn’t say who was.)
    • pg 35. Concern about “anarchist groups” that might wish to “disrupt, influence, and/or shut down normal business operations of financial institutions”.
    • pg 54. FBI Intelligence included Linked-in profiles, and printouts of Facebook pages.
    • pg 57. A Drano bomb was thrown in the vicinity of a Portland, ME Occupy encampment. This information was passed along to the FBI bureau in Boston. It’s the only mention of Boston I was able to find.
    • pg 61. Threats to kill occupy leaders in Austin, TX via sniper fire.
    • pg 64–67. “verbal grandstanding” on an www.ar15.com forum, where “some of the posters appear to be police officers”. http://www.ar15.com/forums/t_8_10/465172_hippies_want_to_occupy_datona_beach.html
    • pg 69. Threats to kill Occupy leaders in Jacksonville, FL via sniper fire.
    • pg 69. A recommendation to establish “tripwires” within the occupy event coordinators. (I’m curious to know what “tripwire” means in this context.)
    • pg 72-73. Mentions of prisoner mistreatment in LA Sheriffs Department jails.
    • page 86. An informant offers her email and Facebook account passwords to FBI agents. (The informant was advised that “law enforcement would not, and could not acknowledge her consent to access her social sites”)
    • pg 88. The DHS has a publication called “Law enforcement guidelines for first amendment protected events”. I should put this on my reading list.
    • pg 88. “… any intelligence received regarding criminal behavior that could be a thread to public safety should be reported to the Iowa Fusion Center”.
    • pg 89. FBI received word that Occupy Des Monies would be conducting “a gas attack (mustard-sulfur) on the Des Moines airport and other religious centers of corporate greed”. The report goes on to say that “the situation has been resolved without incident”.

    Battle to Stop the Keystone XL Pipeline Comes to New England

    by CASEJ

    Youth Climate Activists Arrested for Nonviolent Civil Disobedience at TransCanada Office in Massachusetts

    Westborough, MA- Eight youth climate activists staged a sit-in today at the TransCanada Corporation’s office in Westborough, MA to protest the Keystone XL pipeline. The students locked themselves to one another in opposition to a corporation whose business plan promises to “lock us into climate disaster.”

    The youth activists who organized the sit-in are current students or graduates of several New England universities including Brandeis, Boston University, Harvard, Tufts, and the University of New Hampshire. The group, ranging in age from 20-22, locked down with chains, locks and superglue in the Westborough office in an act of nonviolent civil disobedience. They describe themselves online as the “representatives of a desperate generation who have been forced [into civil disobedience] by the reckless and immoral behavior of fossil fuel corporations such as TransCanada.”

    The Westborough sit-in is part of a nationwide week of action against Keystone XL, including a large scale action today in Houston. The week was coordinated by activists from the Texas-based Tar Sands Blockade, a group that has been staging direct action for five months to prevent construction of the southern leg of the pipeline. The fight to stop Keystone XL first entered the national spotlight with a mass civil disobedience protest in August 2011, the largest of its kind in decades, coordinated by 350.org. Tar sands oil has also become a flashpoint for the Canadian climate movement, where First Nations communities, politicians, and citizens have united to block the Northern Gateway pipeline, which would carry tar sands oil to the coast of British Columbia for export.

    This week’s protests also foreshadow a cascade of actions planned against the tar sands for early 2013. A coalition of activists known as Tar Sands Free Northeast are preparing for actions on January 23rd and 26th to block a plan to transport tar sands oil through New England. Canadian activists with the Idle No More movement have protested the Keystone XL pipeline while 350.org has announced a 20,000 person rally against KXL to be held on February 17th at the White House.

    “The scientific and economic arguments against the Keystone XL pipeline are clear,” said Emily Edgerly, a sophomore studying at Tufts University. “The International Energy Agency reported in 2011 that constructing new fossil fuel infrastructure is locking us into irreversible global warming, which will have devastating impacts on our economy and our lives. We urgently need to be putting our society’s resources into building infrastructure that supports safe and renewable energy sources. We hope our peaceful civil disobedience today will add momentum to the increasingly powerful global movement to solve the climate crisis.”

    “The activities of corporations like TransCanada threaten the future of my entire generation,” said Benjamin Trolio, a senior studying at the University of New Hampshire. “We need our political leaders to do their job by standing up for us and taking action to solve the climate crisis. They can start by drawing a clear line in the sand and stopping the Keystone XL pipeline.”

    The Keystone XL pipeline is an export pipeline proposed by TransCanada to carry tar sands oil from northern Alberta across the Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico. The pipeline has been the subject of intense national controversy since its proposal in 2008. It has been widely protested for the risks it poses to the Ogallala aquifer, which supplies drinking water for 2 million people, as well as for its potential to dramatically worsen global warming by facilitating the extraction and burning of the tar sands.

    CASEJ’s blog has several more articles about the Westborough activists.

    Boston Occupier Arrested during Keystone XL Pipeline Protest

    by CASEJ

    We have just received word that Murtaza Nek, MIT graduate and active participant in 350 Massachusetts and Students for a Just and Stable Future was arrested in a protest against the construction of the southern leg of the Keystone XL pipeline. Readers may recognize him as the young man who has voiced the importance of climate justice at several Occupy Boston events.

    The southern leg of the Keystone XL is presently under construction with the intent to bring tar sands crude from Alberta, Canada to Huston ports. Last year, Dr. James Hansen, prominent climate scientist, head of NASSA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, and adjunct professor at Columbia University explained the risk in a New York Times Op Ed:

    Canada’s tar sands, deposits of sand saturated with bitumen, contain twice the amount of carbon dioxide emitted by global oil use in our entire history. If we were to fully exploit this new oil source, and continue to burn our conventional oil, gas and coal supplies, concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere eventually would reach levels higher than in the Pliocene era, more than 2.5 million years ago, when sea level was at least 50 feet higher than it is now. That level of heat-trapping gases would assure that the disintegration of the ice sheets would accelerate out of control. Sea levels would rise and destroy coastal cities. Global temperatures would become intolerable. Twenty to 50 percent of the planet’s species would be driven to extinction. Civilization would be at risk.

    The update on Murtaza comes from climate and social justice advocate Dorian Williams, who writes:

    Dear fellow proponents of climate justice,

    Many of you may know Murtaza Nek as he has been an active participant of 350 Massachusetts and Students for a Just and Stable Future. Recently he took a trip down to Texas to contribute to the Tar Sands Blockade’s fight against the construction of the southern leg of Keystone XL Pipeline.

    As of 11:50am on January 3rd, Murtaza was arrested in Texas while trying to provide direct support to his friends partaking in a particularly vulnerable tree sit for the Tar Sands Blockade.

    You can learn more and see the footage of the arrest here: http://tarsandsblockade.org/15th-action.

    For those of who have not had a chance to meet Murtaza, he has been an amazingly strong and dedicated ally in this movement. Having accomplished Climate Summer this past year, where he biked from town-to-town across Massachusetts supporting climate action and discussion, Murtaza brought back his organizing and bike power here. Every week, Murtaza would bike from Worcester to Cambridge and back to participate in SJSF and 350MA meetings, helping organize and participate in actions targeting fossil fuels like tar sands and natural gas.

    Now he needs our commitment and support in return. Please spread the word and consider donating to the legal fund that would enable his release: https://www.wepay.com/donations/tsbdonate.

    In Peace and Solidarity,
    Dorian

    First Night Photos

    First Night #1

    First Night #2

    Photos Courtesty of Michael Borkson,
    http://boston.indymedia.org/feature/display/217178/index.php

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