Friday, November 30, 2018

Some events and anniversaries in December

This calendar lists mostly local events of general left interest and cultural events, along with historical anniversaries.  More items will be added later in December. 

December is Human Rights Month.

Black Alliance for Peace is petitioning for US Africa Command (AFRICOM) to be abolished: www.change.org/p/house-armed-services-committee-put-an-end-to-the-u-s-africa-command-africom   (in 6 languages).

Annual Haw River Assembly Holiday Sale

Support this conservation group by buying a t-shirt, books, etc. during this sale December 3 - 21st (weekdays 10am - 4pm, and Saturday, December 8th and 10th 10am - 2pm, but call 919 542 5790 beforehand to make sure someone will be there) at the HRA's office (143 Bynum Church Road). 

Solar Panel Leasing in North Carolina

Last year House Bill 589 Competitive Energy Solutions for North Carolina was passed, allowing the leasing of solar panels and making some Duke Energy customers (residential, commercial, and non-profit) eligible for NC Solar Rebates through 2022.  October 15th Eagle Solar and Light became the first company licensed by the NC Utilities Commission to do solar leasing in the State.   

Cool Congregations Challenge

December 15th is the deadline for religious groups to join Interfaith Power and Light's annual Cool Congregations Challenge, a chance for religious groups doing work on climate change or sustainability to get recognition and a $1000 dollar prize ( www.coolcongregations.org/ ). 

Library booksales

The last Friends of the Durham Library book sale of the year will be December 1 - 2 (10am - 12pm is members only on the 1st, and 12 - 4pm is open to all; the 2nd is a bag sale, from 1 - 4pm) at the usual Northgate Mall location ( durhamcountylibrary.org/friends/ ). 

The sales in 2019 will be February 2 - 3, April 6 - 7, June 1 - 2, August 3 - 4, October 5 - 6, and December 7 - 8, and the hours for all of these sales will be 10am - 12pm members only and 12 - 4pm open to all on Saturdays and 1 - 4pm $10 paper grocery bag sales open to all on Sundays. 

The Friends of the Chapel Hill Public Library will have a sale December 7 - 9th.  December 7th is 3 - 5:30pm and for members only (I think people can join at the door, as they can at the FODL sales above), December 8th is 10am - 5:30pm, and the bag sale December 9th is 11am - 3pm.  There will also be a Holiday Sip and Shop event, free for members and guests, December 7th 7 - 9pm with wine, appetizers, and dessert.  Next year there will be sales April 5 - 7, September 13 - 15, and December 6 -8 ( friendschpl.org/FCHPLevents ).  I wonder if the CHPL has become more rightist or less open to the community (such as free newspapers) since it was renovated and even the Durham County Library's branches, while offering many amenities, often seem more impersonal and unconnected to the community than their older incarnations, sometimes in rented commercial buildings. 

The Wake County Public Libraries' Annual Book Sale will be at the State Fairgrounds around May.

Rendition Revisted and NCCIT

Part one of the Al Jazeera documentary Rendition Revisited, covering North Carolina's role in the extraordinary rendition and torture programs and the NC Commission of Inquiry on Torture (www.nccit.org), will be broadcast November 28th and streamed online at: www.aljazeera.com/programmes/peopleandpower/  

The NCCIT will brief members of Congress and their staff in Washington December 5 - 6th, and will present a former military interrogator and a doctor who treated survivors of the CIA torture program, and could use donations.  This is the Commission's last official event. 

Russian Marxist Georgi Plekhanov was born November 29, 1856 and was upheld as a founder of the Russian Marxist movement, but was an opponent of the Bolsheviks. 

In the Sand Creek Massacre, starting November 29, 1864, Federal soldiers attacked peaceful Cheyenne and Arapaho villagers camped along Big Sandy Creek in what is now Colorado (where they had asked them to gather, displaying a US flag and a white flag), killing about 230 Indians, predominantly women, children, and elders, as well as committing torture and mutilation, before leaving the area December 1st.  Some soldiers refused to attack the village, but the perpetrators received little punishment and no criminal prosecution (from Wikipedia as well as www.nps.gov/sand/learn/historyculture/index.htm ).

Mark Twain (Samuel L Clemens), acclaimed author as well as vice president of the American Anti-Imperialist League, was born November 30, 1835 in Florida, Missouri.

Rendition and torture discussed on The State of Things

WUNC 91.5FM's program The State of Things ( www.wunc.org/programs/state-things#stream/0 )will look at the US government's recent torture program Friday, November 30th (12 - 1pm Friday and broadcast again Saturday, December 1st at 6am, otherwise it would be re-aired the same day at 8pm).  Guests will include Joe Margulies, a defense attorney, and Dr Kate Porterfield, who treated survivors, some with connections to the NC component of the program [this program might have been moved to a different date]. 

Toxins in the Kitchen:  A Practical Guide to Safer Food

Rob Coffin and Elizabeth Miller will talk about toxins that get into the food supply, especially Roundup (or glyphosate, a common herbicide invented by Monsanto, to which GMO crops are immune) and BPA (Bisphenol A, a common endocrine disrupting chemical used in cans, receipts, and many other everyday items and spread into recycled materials), and show an excerpt from Bill Moyers' documentary Trade Secrets Friday, November 30th at 6:30 at the Ecolounge in Durham (2811 Hillsborough Road; communecos.org/recyclique-shop/ ).  There will be light refreshments and there is a suggested donation of $5 dollars, but it is not required to attend. 

December 1st is World AIDS Day, the first global health day ( www.worldaidsday.org/about/ )

Waste Not :  Living the Low Carbon Life

Learn about the connections between greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the soil, food waste, and how to have a positive impact at this conference Saturday, December 1st 9am - 2pm at the Church of the Good Shepherd in downtown Raleigh (125 Hillsborough Street).  For more information and registration, see:  www.zerowastechurch.org/2018/11/21/save-the-date/ and www.eventbrite.com/e/waste-not-living-the-low-carbon-life-tickets-47025647979?aff=efbeventtix

Durham Tree Giveaway 2018!

Keep Durham Beautiful will give 250 free tree seedlings to residents of Durham, one per person, December 1st 1:30 - 4:30pm.  People can reserve their tree, but it is also first come, first served ( keepdurhambeautiful.org/events/ ).  Several businesses will offer specials to people who have a receipt from KDB and a selfie with their planted tree.  The event will be in East Durham Children's Initiative's parking lot (2101Angier Avenue). 

Peace With Iran Summit 2018

Discuss the situation and how to oppose the Trump Administrations sanctions and push for a major war with Iran Saturday, December 1st 9am - 5pm at the First Congregational United Church of Christ (945 G Street NW in Washington, DC.  Registration is on a sliding scale, $100 to $10 dollars.  Organized by CODEPINK, with many cosponsors.  For more information, see www.codepink.org/iransummit or www.facebook.com/events/390712754800268/

Help pull English ivy in Greensboro

The Triad Chapter of the NC Native Plant Society and the Pearson chapter of the NC Audubon Society are organizing a cleanup of invasive English ivy in a bog garden in Greensboro (along the Nell Lewis Trail) Saturday, December 1st 9:30am - 12pm, meeting at the Starmount Farms Drive entrance.  The site is a slope and participants might want to bring food, water, work gloves, and a shovel.  For more information, email annwf7 at gmail period com. 

Remembering Bolin Forest

Friends of Bolin Creek is organizing a memorial for the 40 acres of Bolin Forest being clear-cut in Orange County on Sunday, December 2nd 4 - 5pm in Smith Middle School's auditorium (9201 Seawell School Road, Chapel Hill) for people to share their memories, followed by a candlelight/flashlight walk and silent vigil at the entrance to the Chapel Hill North Woods, 5 - 5:30pm].  The Paperhand Puppets will also be there.  For more information see:  bolincreek.org/blog/join-us-at-the-vigil/ 

Important hearings at the Durham City Council meeting December 3rd

Among other things, there will be a quasi-judicial hearing (meaning comments are sworn testimony with cross-examination and so can't be sent in before the meeting) on the Durham Public Schools Elementary School C Major Site Plan (D1600105), for a 86,325 square foot, two-story facility on 17.70 acres of the 46.30 acre site on the south side of Scott King Road near its east end at Grandale Road.  There is also an attendant Special Use Permit (M1800003) and Transportation Special Use Permit (T1600001).  There was an uproar over plans for residential construction (Scott Mill) at this former homestead or farm, bordering a large area of forested Jordan Lake Gamelands along Northeast Creek and near the American Tobacco Trail several years ago, so a deal was made to use it for a school instead.  There was a small two-story house, seemingly self-built, and a small dark-colored farmpond with bladderworts in the center, and another house nearby.  Some of the land is cleared and crossed by powerline and gas pipeline corridors, and the soil seems very poor or degraded, but there are still rare sights around the edges.  On the edges of the site there are what seem to be pink ladyslipper orchids and milk-vetch, and there have been indigo buntings and something like a whippoorwill was nesting, so it is more than just eroded and exhausted former farmland, and the DPS doesn't seem to have taken this into consideration in its plans.  Building a school there might be a good use of the site, if something has to be built there, but was it planned with due consideration for the ecological value of the site?  Scott King Road can also be dangerous and needs work. 

There will also be a hearing on rezoning for a Rail Operations and Maintenance Facility (ROMF) for the light rail project.  The Durham People's Alliance is mobilizing people to attend in support of the ROMF rezoning and asking people to email Duke President Vincent Price, asking that Duke support the project.  The meeting will start at 7pm at City Hall ( durhamnc.gov/AgendaCenter ).   

The first Plowshares direct action disarmament in Europe and 7th in all was December 4, 1983.  Carl Kabat, one of the Plowshare Eight defendants from the first action, in Pennsylvania, and Herwig Jantschik, Dr Wolfgang Sternstein, and Karin Vix of Germany cut through a fence at a US Army base in Schwabisch-Gmund, West Germany and damaged a Pershing II missile launcher.  The deployment of these American intermediate-range nuclear missiles in West Germany was apparently very unpopular and they no longer exist, thanks to the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, which Trump wants to withdraw from (Russia and China support the INF Treaty).  Kabat left the country while the three Germans were charged with trespassing, attempted sabotage, and destruction of property.  The defendants had the option of imprisonment or fines, so Jantschik was imprisoned for 90 days, Vix for 60 days, and Dr Sternstein paid 1800 Deutsche Marks.  Similar direct actions are still going on today.  See Swords Into Plowshares:  Nonviolent Direct Action for Disarmament, edited by Arthur J Laffin and Anne Montgomery, published in 1987.     

24 Hours of Reality

This streamed documentary on the impact of climate change on human health around the world will start with the USA December 3rd at 9pm, gets to Europe at 9am on the 4th, and will look at this country again on the 4th at 7 - 9pm.  It is online at:  www.24hoursofreality.org

Monthly Earth Justice Potluck and film

This event will be December 4th, with a potluck meal at 6pm and a showing of the documentary HOPE [Healing Of Planet Earth] What You Eat Matters, which looks at the food system in Europe, India, and the USA, from 6:30 - 8pm.  Apparently there are potentially disturbing descriptions and video of the way animals are treated in industrial agriculture.  This will be at the Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship's fellowship hall (4907 Garrett Road, Durham); for more information contact jonsheline at gmail period com. 

Consider This ... Artificial Intelligence

There will be a panel discussion on economic, legal, and ethical aspects of artificial intelligence and machined learning Tuesday, December 4th 6:30 - 8pm at the Friday Conference Center (100 Friday Center Drive, left/south off of NC 54 going into Chapel Hill from Durham).  There might not be a working class perspective offered, but if advances in computing and robotics occur as predicted, especially under capitalist economic relations, artificial intelligence will be a major problem for the working class and all of humanity in the 21st century.  On the other hand maybe advances are being exaggerated for corporate purposes and something with general human capabilities won't be invented anytime soon or ever.  This is a public and free event organized by the UNC General Alumni Association.  For more information or registration, see:  alumni.unc.edu/events/consider-this-artificial-intelligence/

Soviet Constitution Day was December 5th from 1936 until 1977, when a new constitution was promulgated (October 7th, the more recent Soviet Constitution Day).

Imprisoned Japanese anti-imperialist Tsutomu Shirosaki was born December 5, 1947 in Toyoma, Japan.  A few years ago he was released from US custody, but is now finishing a previous prison sentence somewhere in Japan.  It might be possible to write to prisoners in Japan, but I haven't come across any information about where he is being held.  For background, see a previous post ( durhamspark.blogspot.com/2015/01/tsutomu-shirosaki-japanese-anti.html ) and denverabc.wordpress.com/prisoners-dabc-supports/political-prisoners-database/tsutomu-shirosaki/ .  If there is any news, it would probably be posted at: throwoutyourbooks.wordpress.com/tag/tsutomu-shirosaki/

Monthly tours of the South Wake Landfill and Sonoco Recycling Facility

There will be free one hour tours of these facilities near Apex once a month from December through May on Wednesdays or Saturdays (and private tours for groups with 5 to 14 people can be arranged).  The December tour will be Wednesday, the 5th at 9:30am.  For more information and registration see:  www.wakegov.com/recycling/outreach/Pages/tours.aspx     

Wild Ideas for Tomorrow, Today

Organized by the Triangle Land Conservancy, 5 speakers will each give 5 minute presentations on 5 issues in land conservation in the Triangle region, such as local population trends and climate change.  There will also be an expo featuring related organizations and businesses.  The next event will be Wednesday, December 5th 5:30 - 8pm at The Frontier at RTP (800 Park Office Drive in RTP 27709).  For more information and registration, see:  www.triangleland.org/explore/wild-ideas

Conserving North Carolina's Imperiled Plants

Lesley Starke, Plant Biologist of the NC Plant Conservation Program, will talk about what this program is doing to conserve rare or threatened plants and their habitats, in this free Lunchbox Talk Thursday, December 6th 12 - 1pm at the NC Botanical Garden.  For more information and registration, see:  ncbg.unc.edu/calendar/

National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day

The Japanese Empire attacked the US Navy base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii December 7, 1941.  Apparently National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day isn't new, but this is the first year I noticed it on a calendar.  There have been charges that FDR allowed the attack to happen so he would have a justification to officially enter WWII.  Before the attack the US was pressuring Japan economically.  The Trump Administration might have a similar plan today, to put so much pressure on Iran that they react militarily, giving Trump an excuse for the war he and many others in Washington seem to want.  During WWII both the US and Canada put ethnic Japanese citizens in concentration camps, at least in the case of the US, continuing a West Coast tradition of racism against people of East Asian ancestry (for example, see:  www.counterpunch.org/2018/11/27/the-dark-side-of-the-new-deal-fdr-and-the-japanese-americans/ ).       

NC Green Party 2018 Statewide Fall/Winter Gathering and Celebration

The NC Green Party's annual meeting will be December 7 - 9 [moved to January 11 - 13th due to an early and heavy snowstorm] at The Seedbed (6602 Nicks Road, Mebane, just inside Alamance County from Orange County).  The meeting is free and open to all supporters, though voting is limited to people who have paid dues and donations are welcome.  The Seedbed has some space for people to stay overnight Friday and Saturday.  There will a celebration and music December 7th starting at 7pm and there will be meetings (plus meals) December 8th 9am - 5pm and December 9th 10am - 3pm.  For more information or to RSVP, see:  ncgreenparty.nationbuilder.com/2018_fall_gathering

Durham's annual Holiday Parade will be Saturday, December 8th [starting at 10am], and includes contingents from Keep Durham Beautiful and other organizations.  www.dprplaymore.org/309/Holiday-Parade-and-Fun-Fest   

The Chapel Hill Holiday Parade will also be December 8th, 10am - 12pm [rain or shine] ( www.chapelhillholidayparade.com/ ). 

Saxapahaw Holiday Market

This event at the Haw River Ballroom (1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Road, Saxapahaw, in Chatham County) December 8 - 9th will offer local art and handicrafts and there will be food and live music.  It will be 9am - 6pm on the 8th and 10am - 5pm on the 9th. 

Winter Seed Share and Social

The Southern Piedmont Chapter of the NC Native Plant Society's Winter Seed Share and Social will be Sunday, December 9th at 2pm at the Reedy Creek Nature Center (2900 Rocky River Road, Charlotte), and is free and open to the public.  Participants are asked to "bring a sweet or savory snack to share."  For the seed share, bring clean seeds of plants native to the Southeast, with labelled their common and scientific names.  Coin envelopes will be offered, up to 10 per person, and each can contain about 1 teaspoon.  People can receive seeds even if they don't have any to share. 

Donations to NCNPS on Giving Tuesday next week and during the last few weeks of the year will go to grants and scholarships ( ncwildflower.org/about/grants_and_scholarships ). 

Human Rights Day is December 10th, marking the UN General Assembly's adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 ( www.un.org/en/universal-declaration-human-rights/index.html ).  There are some related events below. 

From NC Stop Torture Now:

"
CALL-IN FOR HUMAN RIGHTS DAY, Monday, Dec. 10, 2018:  No More North Carolina Torture Taxis!

Please call or send a message to AG Josh Stein and Gov. Roy Cooper -- Sample Message:
 
Today, Dec. 10, is International Human Rights Day.  Please take action in response to the report from the North Carolina Commission of Inquiry on Torture (NCCIT), which your staff have had for weeks.  At least 49 human beings were flown to torture by aircraft based in Smithfield and Kinston.  Supporting torture has left a stain on our reputation, and hurt our national security. 
 
Make a public statement.  Work with other law enforcement officials in our state to start an investigation of Aero Contractors.  Acknowledge North Carolina’s role and take steps for transparency and accountability.  Otherwise, our state may continue to play a role in torture.
 
Enforce state, federal, and international law.  Stop hosting Aero at our public airports.  Torture is always wrong.  Don’t let North Carolina be home to “torture taxis.”
 
ATTORNEY GENERAL JOSH STEIN
North Carolina Department of Justice
Phone:  (919) 716-6400 (NCDOJ general line; leave a “Bill of Rights” comment)
 
GOVERNOR ROY COOPER
Phone:  (919) 814-2000 
Twitter: @NC_Governor

 
Background
 
North Carolina still hosts the CIA-affiliated Aero Contractors at the Johnston County Airport.  The 2018 report from the NC Commission of Inquiry on Torture lists 48 men and one woman who were rendered to torture aboard Aero jets.  SeeTorture Flights:  North Carolina’s Role in the CIA Rendition and Torture Program” (www.nctorturereport.org).
 
Governor Cooper and Attorney General Stein have had the report for weeks.  It outlines how they can and should investigate Aero and end the era of “torture taxis” in North Carolina. 
 
Does Aero continue to help the CIA violate human rights?  We don’t know.  And top U.S. government officials have defended or even helped lead the torture program.  Over 40 prisoners still languish without rights at Guantanamo."   

Chapel Hill activist calendar events:

"Four Civil/Human Rights Actions/Events in Triangle December 10 to 15, 2018

CALL-IN FOR INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS DAY Call or send messages to Governor Roy Cooper and Attorney General Josh Stein to remind them at least 49 human beings were flown to torture by aircraft based in Smithfield and Kinston and supporting torture has left a stain on NC’s reputation and hurt our national security (ncstn.org/content/take-action/ ).  Make NC a “No Torture State.”  Governor:  919-814-2000; AG: 919-716-6400. Monday, December 10, 2018.  
 
DURHAM POLICE ACCOUNTABILITY, WHERE ARE WE NOW?  Speaker Dawn Blagrove, Executive Director, Carolina Justice Center.  1:15 - 2:15 p.m., Monday, December 10, Carol Woods Assembly Hall, 750 Weaver Dairy Road, Chapel Hill. Presented by Forum for Peace and Justice, judybellin [at] gmail [period] com.  Submitted by Peace & Justice Committee

 
SHOW SUPPORT FOR ORANGE COUNTY'S NCCIT RESOLUTION County Commissioners consider a resolution to urge action to make NC a “No Torture State,” following Carrboro and Chapel Hill this week. If unable to attend, join call-in on Human Rights Day, December 10, to Governor Roy Cooper (919-814-2000) and NC Attorney General Josh Stein (919-716-6400) with same message or sign here (ncstn.org/content/take-action/).  Attend 7 p.m., Tuesday, December 11, Southern Human Services Center, 2501 Homestead Road, Chapel Hill. NCCIT (www.nccit.org).
 
ANNUAL READINGS ON BILL OF RIGHTS DAY: Proclamations read by Penny Rich, Chair of Orange County Commissioners; Jessica Anderson, Chapel Hill Mayor Pro Tem; Lydia Lavelle, Mayor of Carrboro.  Raging Grannies. Come read one of first 10 Amendments of United States Constitution. Note 8th Amendment citing cruel and unusual punishment relates to use of solitary confinement and treatment of detainees flown by NC pilots of Aero Contractors (www.nccit.org).  Noon,  Saturday, December 15, Peace and Justice Plaza, corner of East Franklin and Henderson Streets, Chapel Hill.  Orange County Bill of Rights Defense Committee and Orange County  Peace Coalition. 919-942-2535."

The DPRK launched its Kwangmyŏngsŏng [Bright Star or Lodestar]-3 Unit 2 Earth observation satellite into polar orbit December 11, 2012, making it one of the few countries able to independently carry out activities in space.  There is tracking information online at  www.heavens-above.com if you want to look for it. 

Balance and Accuracy in Journalism

Below is BAJ's announcement email for this meeting featuring a censored Al-Jazeera documentary on Israeli meddling in British politics, to overthrow Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbin, who seems to be far more progressive, at least on foreign policy and militarism, than just about any US Democratic politician at the national level (thus many in the UK are trying to get rid of him, I think even including threats of a coup if he were to become prime minister):

       7:30 PM Wednesday December 12, at the 
Community Church of Chapel Hill, 106 Purefoy Road
          Balance & Accuracy in Journalism
                         presents
 
                     THE LOBBY
     an Al Jazeera Investigations feature
 
An undercover investigator is deemed a potential leader
and welcomed into the Israeli London embassy’s efforts 
to manufacture opposition to bring down UK Labor Party 
leader Jeremy Corbin and other elected officials over 
their support for equal rights for Palestinians.
 
Accusations of Anti-Semitism figure prominently in the tactics. 
Historian Ilan Pappe is one of the people interviewed, plus 
extensive recorded discussion, mostly of young recruits
and their handler.
 
Its broadcast was censored after Qatar, the gas-rich Gulf emirate 
where Al Jazeera is based, was subjected to intense pressure 
by allies and representatives of the state of Israel.
 
The 4 half-hour segments were recently leaked and posted on Youtube
with the title, "The Lobby – USA", where viewing is frequently interrupted 
by ads. (Our DVD is free of ads.)  It’s not clear why the “USA” reference 
is on the Youtube posts.
 
Depending on audience preference, 
we will screen three of the four segments, or all four.
 
See what you think!  We will have several DVD copies
available at the meeting.
    [  ]
  For Balance & Accuracy in Journalism
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
More censorship... this time about the plight of America’s newspapers.
 
"Author, commentator and activist Jim Hightower has been 
fighting the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought to Be 
for over four decades."
 
Some years ago, columnist Jim Hightower spoke at the 
Community Church, where he talked about “astroturf,”
the term for false grassroots organizations created by
corporations fending off environmental or other groups.
The Hightower Lowdown has been a staple of 
humorous, aware and colorful advocacy for decades.
 
His November 27 column 
“Free the free press from Wall Street plunderers"
was censored by Creators Syndicate.
See the story and the column, at the FAIR website
or at the Austin Chronicle, where clicking on the link downloads the column -
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
DIRECTIONS TO BAJ MEETING SITE
106 Purefoy Road, Chapel Hill
  Community Church, Unitarian Universalist       
  FROM EITHER DIRECTION ON THE CHAPEL HILL BYPASS:
  take 15-501 [or 54] to the 15-501 Pittsboro exit
  As you exit, TURN at the traffic light toward Chapel Hill.
  Almost immediately TURN RIGHT just short of the convenience store.
  That's PUREFOY ROAD, and you take it almost half a mile,
  passing two stop signs as it curves left  up the hill
  until you can - just - see the third stop sign ahead of you.
  At that point, there is a driveway on the left
  with a subtle, tan sign for the church.
  That driveway takes you to the parking lot and the Community Church.
  ~~~~~~~~ 

December 13, 1980 Peter De Mott damaged the USS Florida (SSBN-728), an Ohio-class submarine originally equipped with Trident nuclear missiles, just before it was launched at the General Dynamics Electric Boat shipyard in Groton, Connecticut.  DeMott was a member of Jonah House in Baltimore, Maryland and a former seminarian and Vietnam veteran.  During the launch ceremony for the USS Baltimore (SSN-704), a Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine, DeMott came upon a security van left unlocked and with its keys in the ignition, and spontaneously used it to dent the USS Florida's rudder.  He was convicted of criminal mischief and criminal trespass and was imprisoned for one year (Swords Into Plowshares).  According to Wikipedia, the USS Florida launched cruise missiles to disable air defenses at the start of Obama's war on Libya in 2011, the first military action by that submarine or any of its sister ships.  For more on DeMott see: www.commondreams.org/news/2009/02/21/peace-activist-peter-demott-dead-after-fall and www.ncronline.org/blogs/road-peace/committed-life-peter-demott

MERI:  Stop the detention of Aboulie Sowe!

A press conference by the Movement to End Racism and Islamophobia demanding that Abdoulie Sowe from Raleigh be freed from ICE detention, has been rescheduled due to the snow to Thursday, December 13th, 4 - 6pm at the Terry Sanford Federal Building in Raleigh ( 310 New Bern Avenue ).  He is from an immigrant from The Gambia, but has lived in Raleigh for over 25 years and is the primary breadwinner for his family, including 3 children, and his youngest daughter (6 years old) has special needs.  He has kidney disease, diabetes, and hypertension, and has been hospitalized once while in detention and could die because of  inadequate treatment if deported.  People are being asked to contact Congressman David Price, Senator Thom Tillis, and Sean Gallagher, the director of the ICE office in Atlanta (404 893 1206) to ask that Sowe be given a stay of removal and that his medical treatment in detention be investigated (see:  southernvision.ourpowerbase.net/civicrm/mailing/view?reset=1&id=547 and MERI's website is:  merinc.org/ .

Koryo Tours Christmas Party and Winter Sale

If you're in Beijing, China this week you can join the Christmas Party at Koryo Tours' office at 27 Bei Sanlitun East Courtyard (next to Yashow Market), Chaoyang District, Dongzhimen, Beijing 100027 Thursday, December 13th 16:00 - 20:00.  Hear from Nick Bronner, who made the BBC documentary Crossing the Line, on US personnel who defected to the DPRK.  There is also a winter sale, with hand-painted posters from the DPRK, starting at 400 RMB.  They are also offering a discount at www.nkshop.org/ and nknews.org is offering a discount at the same online store.  Koryo Tours offers various trips to the DPRK, Mongolia, Kazakhstan and other ex-Soviet republics in Central Asia, and Russia.  For more information see koryogroup.com/ or call +86 10 6416 7544

Secrecy and the Slaughterhouse talk

UNC Religious Studies PhD candidate Joanna Smith will discuss the connections between animal sacrifice in religion and the practices in modern meat production Friday, December 14th at 6:30 at the Ecolounge in Durham (2811 Hillsborough Road; communecos.org/recyclique-shop/ ).  There is a suggested donation of $5 dollars, but it is not required to attend. 

Muntadhar al Zaidi threw his shoes at George W Bush December 14, 2008 in Baghdad, among other things saying "This is for the widows and orphans and all those killed in Iraq!"

Bill of Rights Day is December 15th (the US Bill of Rights was ratified December 15, 1791).  Durham City and County used to make annual proclamations for December 15th, thanks to a campaign by the Durham Bill of Rights Committee, but that might not be done now.  The DBORDC no longer exists, but there might still be an Orange County BORDC, and there is a national organization (it changed names in 2016):  rightsanddissent.org/news/bill-rights-day-celebrate-mobilize-remember/     

Orange County's annual reading of the Bill of Rights will be December 15th at noon at Peace and Justice Plaza (in front of the post office at the corner of Franklin Street and Henderson Street, across from UNC. 

December 15, 1970 the Soviet space probe Venera 7 (Venus 7) was the first human spacecraft to land on another planet and send telemetry, confirming that Venus is a hell of runaway greenhouse warming, sulfuric acid, and crushing atmospheric pressure, rather than a pleasant and watery, cloud-covered world. 

Tarek el-Tayeb Mohamed Bouazizi setting himself on fire in protest outside a government office in Tunisia December 17, 2010, setting in motion the protest movement that overthrew authoritarian President Ben Ali January 14, 2011 and spread to other countries, becoming the Arab Spring.  Bouazizi was left comatose and died January 4, 2011.  Many others in Tunisia and a few people in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Europe set themselves on fire in similar acts of protest in early 2011. 

In Operation Linebacker II the Democratic Republic of Vietnam was heavily bombed (with about the same explosive force as the two nuclear bombs used on Japan) from December 18th to 29th in 1972, hitting a hospital, residential areas, dikes, electrical facilities, etc. and killing over one to two thousand civilians just weeks before the Paris Peace Accords were signed ( revcom.us/a/574/american-crime-case-number-34-1972-christmas-bombings-of-north-vietnam-en.html ).   

George HW Bush attacked Panama December 20, 1989, resulting in hundreds to thousands of civilian deaths, including American civilians and a Spanish journalist.  Poor neighborhoods were burned and demolished, thousands were deprived of work, and churches, embassies, unions, and other institutions were violated by searches and seizures ( revcom.us/a/540/american-crime-case-43-the-US-invasion-of-panama-1989-1990-en.html ).  The war also allowed the US government to test new weapons, including the Humvee, AH-64 Apache attack helicopter, and F-117A Nighthawk stealth fighter.    

Georgian revolutionary and Soviet statesman Joseph Stalin was born December 21, 1879 or 1878 in Gori, Republic of Georgia, then part of the Russian Empire. 

Thomas Sankara, born December 21, 1949, was President of Burkina Faso from 1983 until he was assassinated October 15, 1987, and is known as Africa's Che Guevara. 

December 21st is the winter solstice. 

Sen Katayama, co-founder of the Japanese Communist Party and an official in the Comintern, was born December 26, 1859.  He was also one of the first members of the CPUSA and is buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis. 

Chinese revolutionary and statesman Mao Zedong (or Tsetung) was born December 26, 1893 in Hunan Province. 

December 26, 1862, following the Dakota War, 38 Dakota or Dakota Sioux were hung, the largest mass execution in US history.  303 Dakota were convicted of murder or rape, some in trials lasting less than 5 minutes, and without defense attorneys, but Lincoln commuted 264 prisoners and one more received a reprieve.  They were buried in a mass grave, possibly after skin was taken from some of the bodies, and graverobbers later stole some of the bodies for anatomy specimens.  Except for a group that helped the American settlers, the rest of the Dakota lost their reservation and were exiled from Minnesota over the next few months, and many died during the journey.  Any Dakota found in Minnesota could be killed for a bounty of $25 dollars.  The unrelated Ho-chunk tribe was also expelled.  Some Dakota remained in Minnesota or returned 20 years later.   

The USSR intervened in Afghanistan December 27, 1979, killing President Hafizullah Amin, accused of conspiring with the CIA, and installing Babrak Karmal.  The Afghan government had previously requested additional Soviet military support, but obviously not the overthrow of the Khalq faction of the People's Democractic Party of Afghanistan, in favor of Karmal's Parcham faction.  The US and other countries were materially supporting Afghan Islamists before December 1979, later leading to the creation of al-Qaida, the Taliban, the Afghan branch of ISIS, and fueling the civil wars that destroyed Afghanistan.  Getting involved in Afghanistan was also disastrous for the USSR.  During this period the US, UK, China, Pakistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt aided anti-government forces, often brutal Islamic fundamentalists and warlords, though there were also Maoists.         

Israel attacked Gaza from December 27, 2008 to January 18, 2009 (Operation Cast Lead), killing or displacing thousands of Palestinians, mostly civilians, while 10 Israeli soldiers were killed, four by friendly fire, and rockets fired by various armed resistance groups killed three Israeli civilians and injured or scared hundreds.  Israel was accused of using white phosphorus as a weapon, as well as depleted uranium, and birth defects and blood cancer became more common after the war.  Palestinian civilians were used as human shields, Israeli soldiers robbed homes, etc. though there was some prosecution in Israel later.  Agricultural, fisheries, and humanitarian aid facilities, universities, schools, mosques, hospitals, and civilian shelters were damaged or destroyed, including the UN Relief and Works Agency headquarters in Gaza City where tons of food, medicine, and fuel for refugee relief was stored (hit by white phosphorus munitions, and the chemical fires could not be extinguished).  As in Yemen today, much of this was done with American weapons, which supposedly are not to be used to commit war crimes.  December 29th a Free Gaza ship carrying relief supplies, doctors, journalists, and others, including former Congresswoman and Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney was intercepted by the Israeli navy.  Free Gaza says their ship was in international waters when shots were fired and it was rammed after refusing to turn back. Another Free Gaza ship was intercepted January 15th.  The Gaza War was followed by a joint Israeli and Egyptian blockade.  At the time, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said "We support Israel, very strongly as a national policy, because it is in our national interest to do so" (and the Democratic Party still has this in its platform, as well as an "undivided" Jerusalem that is the capital of Israel, giving Israel state of the art weapons, and condemnation of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions Movement:  democrats.org/about/party-platform/#middle-east ).  In June 2010 Chuck Schumer endorsed Israel's policy of collective punishment, saying "...since the Palestinians in Gaza elected Hamas, while certainly there should be humanitarian aid and people not starving to death, to strangle them economically until they see that's not the way to go, makes sense."  He also said Hamas was waging "total war."  Pelosi and Schumer both have long advocated moving the US embassy in Israel to disputed Jerusalem.  In the summer of 2008 and again in 2013 Obama went to southern Israel and said war is justified over rockets fired from Gaza, while doing little to end the suffering of the Palestinian people ( revcom.us/a/574/american-crime-case-30-us-armed-backed-massacre-in-gaza-en.html and Wikipedia).              

The Wounded Knee Massacre was December 29, 1890 in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.  US soldiers went to disarm a camp of Miniconjou and Hunkpapa Lakota and it became a massacre of 300 men, women, and children, with an additional 51 wounded, some fatally.  25 soldiers were killed and 39 wounded, some fatally.  Many of the soldiers received the Medal of Honor.   

NC Green Party Statewide Winter Gathering and Celebration moved to January 11 - 13th in Mebane ( ncgreenparty.nationbuilder.com/2018_fall_gathering )

George HW Bush's Gulf War began January 16, 1991. 

January 27,  1973 'our' Vietnam War came to an end with the signing of the Paris Peace Accords, though the struggle in Vietnam was not over.

The annual HKonJ (Historic Thousands on Jones Street) march in downtown Raleigh will be February 9, 2019 ( www.hkonj.com/ ). 

Creek Weeks in 2019

According to the Haw River Assembly, there will be creek weeks in the region:

Durham County (March 16 - 23)
Forsyth County (March 23 - 30)
Guilford County (March 23 - 30)
Alamance County (April 6 - 13)

And I think there is something similar around this time for Swift Creek in Wake County.

The HRA's annual Clean-Up-A-Thon will be March 16th. 

The HRA will be doing water testing December 15 - 16th and March 23 - 24th.

There is a tradition of New Year's Day hikes at state parks, and the HRA is organizing a hike at the Lower Haw River State Natural Area on January 1st ( see www.hawriver.org or email info at hawriver ).   

Support Palestine in DC 2019 will be March 24th in Washington ( www.facebook.com/events/322305558560731/ ). 

A Call for a Mass Mobilization to Oppose NATO, War and Racism

Gather in Washington, DC's Lafayette Square, across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House, at 1pm Saturday, March 30th and there will be other events Wednesday, April 4th at the start of the NATO summit in DC.  For more information or to endorse the United National Antiwar Coalition's call to action, see:  nepajac.org/april4rally.html

Pyongyang Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Conference April 18 - 25 (register by February 10th; this is an international conference and Americans and others are welcome to attend):  www.korea-dpr.com/dprk-blockchain-conference-2019.html

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Check out Unity and Struggle #37

Issue #37 of Unity and Struggle, the journal of the International Conference of Marxist-Leninist Parties and Organizations (ICMLPO, www.cipoml.net/ available in English, Spanish, and Turkish) was published earlier in November and is a special issue marking the bicentennial of Karl Marx's birth May 5, 1818 in what is now Germany.  To order a copy in the USA send $5 (check, money order, or cash) to:

George Gruenthal
192 Claremont Avenue, #5D
New York, New York 10027 

Contact him for the price if mailed outside of the US or for backissues (#30, 32, 33, 35, 36, and others are available) [add $2 dollars per issue], contents posted online at:  www.revolutionarydemocracy.org/icmlpo/index.htm

In the current issue:

Benin
On the Bicentenary of the Birth of Karl Marx
Communist Party of Benin
 
Bolivia
The Relevance of the Thought of Karl Marx
Revolutionary Communist Party – PCR
 
Brazil
Karl Marx and the Importance of the Construction of the Communist Party
Revolutionary Communist Party - PCR
 
Burkina Faso
The Thought of Karl Marx Remains Young and Immortal
Revolutionary Communist Party of Volta – PCRV
 
Denmark
Karl Marx – Communist Revolutionary
Workers’ Communist Party of Denmark –  APK
 
Dominican Republic
Karl Marx: On the Theory of Crises in Capital
Communist Party of Labor – PCT
 
Ecuador
Class consciousness in the doctrine of Karl Marx
Marxist-Leninist Communist Party of Ecuador – PCMLE
 
France
Marx and France
Workers' Communist Party of France – PCOF
 
India
On the Bicentenary of the Birth of Karl Marx
Revolutionary Democracy
 
Italy
Karl Marx, Leader of the International Workingmen’s Association
Communist Platform – for the Communist Party of the Proletariat of Italy
 
Mexico
Karl Marx’s Capital: a weapon of struggle of the workers and peoples
Communist Party of Mexico (Marxist-Leninist)
 
Spain
Karl Marx and Women
Communist Party of Spain (M-L)
 
Turkey
Money: the World Upside-Down
Party of Labour – EMEP
 
Venezuela
200 Years since the Birth of the Prometheus of Trier: Marxism Continues to Grow
Marxist-Leninist Communist Party of Venezuela – PCMLV

Friday, November 02, 2018

Some November events and anniversaries

This calendar lists mostly local events of general left interest and cultural events, along with historical anniversaries.  More items will be added later in November. 

November is American Indian Heritage Month in North Carolina, and the theme this year is "Sacred Places:  Gifts of Our Land," encouraging everyone to learn about the places in North Carolina that are important to native groups and support the preservation of native heritage and traditions ( Governor Cooper's proclamation is online at:  files.nc.gov/governor/documents/files/American%20Indian%20Heritage%20Month.pdf ).  According to the proclamation, NC recognizes 8 tribes, and there are four urban Indian organizations on the NC Commission of Indian Affairs.  North Carolina has the 8th largest native population in the US and the largest population east of the Mississippi (over 122,000 people identify as American Indian). 

November is National American Indian or Native American Heritage Month in many places, or sometimes there is only a Heritage Day, November 23rd, after Thanksgiving or National Day of Mourning (or Buy Nothing Day).  The modern US Thanksgiving national holiday was declared during the Civil War, in 1863. 

Solar Panel Leasing in North Carolina

Last year House Bill 589 Competitive Energy Solutions for North Carolina was passed, allowing the leasing of solar panels and making some Duke Energy customers (residential, commercial, and non-profit) eligible for NC Solar Rebates through 2022.  October 15th Eagle Solar and Light became the first company licensed by the NC Utilities Commission to do solar leasing in the State.   

Cool Congregations Challenge

December 15th is the deadline for religious groups to join Interfaith Power and Light's annual Cool Congregations Challenge, a chance for religious groups doing work on climate change or sustainability to get recognition and a $1000 dollar prize ( www.coolcongregations.org/ ). 

UNC seeks input on what to do with Silent Sam

Send ideas to uncmonument at unc period edu (with the caution that the emails received will be classified as public records, though I'm not sure how easy it would be for the media, etc. to access them).  UNC - Chapel Hill's leadership has to offer a proposal to UNC President Margaret Spellings and the Board of Governors by November 15th [I think there has been a request for an extension]( www.unc.edu/posts/2018/09/24/message-from-chancellor-folt-and-the-board-of-trustees-on-the-confederate-monument/ ). 

The Durham City - County Committee on Confederate Monuments and Memorials will also release its recommendations this month. 

Library booksales

The last Friends of the Durham Library book sale of the year will be December 1 - 2 (10am - 12pm is members only on the 1st, and 12 - 4pm is open to all; the 2nd is a bag sale, from 1 - 4pm) at the usual Northgate Mall location ( durhamcountylibrary.org/friends/ ). 

The Friends of the Chapel Hill Public Library will have a sale December 7 - 9th.  December 7th is 3 - 5:30pm and for members only (I think people can join at the door, as they can at the FODL sales above), December 8th is 10am - 5:30pm, and the bag sale December 9th is 11am - 3pm.  There will also be a Holiday Sip and Shop event, free for members and guests, December 7th 7 - 9pm with wine, appetizers, and dessert.  Next year there will be sales April 5 - 7, September 13 - 15, and December 6 -8 ( friendschpl.org/FCHPLevents ). 

The Wake County Public Libraries' Annual Book Sale for 2019 will be at the State Fairgrounds around May. 

Studio tours

The 2018 Orange County Studio Tour will be November 3 - 4 and 10 - 11:  ocagnc.org/tour/

The 5th Durham Pottery Tour will be November 10 (10am - 5pm) and November 11 (12 - 5pm):  www.durhamcountypotterytour.com/

77th annual NC Gourd Arts and Crafts Festival will be at the State Fairgrounds November 3 - 4 ( www.ncgourdsociety.org/festival.html ). 

Native Plants Week 2018 in North Carolina is October 28 - November 3.  The proclamation by Governor Roy Cooper is online at:  files.nc.gov/governor/documents/files/Native%20Plants%20Week_0.pdf , and notes NC's very diverse flora (over 3900 native plant species, 26 of them Federally threatened or endangered), supporting, among other animals, over 350 bird species, a number of them harmed by human activity and climate change.  Speaking of birds and climate change, a few days ago there was a report on the BBC that several bird species found around a mountain in Peru 30 years ago aren't there now.  It wasn't entirely clear if they meant that the birds are presumed completely extinct, or just locally extinct around one mountain.  If an animal lives around a mountain, it might depend on a local climate and habitat, which will move up the mountain as the climate warms, and eventually it might reach a point where the conditions a species needs no longer exist on that mountain, and it goes extinct.  Many plants, birds, and other species typical of the northern US and Canada can live this far south, high in the Appalachians, and there are salamanders found around particular mountains that could go extinct because they can only migrate up as the climate changes.  It probably isn't exactly the same situation, but this could relate to the extinction of the golden toad in Costa Rica's mountain cloud forests, none being found since May 15, 1989.

Craig Tract logging in Orange County

A gravel road was constructed preliminary to clearcutting the old Craig Tract/Forest, a privately-held but publicly accessible forested area along Bolin Creek in the Chapel Hill - Carrboro area, October 31st.  For more information see bolincreek.org/blog/ and their Facebook page.  Durham could use more interest in preserving forest and urban treecover, though Chapel Hill has been cutting large street trees lately as well. 

There Will Be Blood showing

There Will Be Blood, based on the novel Oil, Upton Sinclair, will be shown at The Ecolounge (formerly Recyclique, 2811 Hillsborough Road, Durham; communecos.org/ ) Friday, November 2nd at 6:30pm.  There is a suggested donation of $5 dollars, but it isn't required. 

Syndicalist writer Georges Sorel was born November 3, 1847 in Cherbourg, France.  His most influential work is probably Reflections on Violence, published in 1908. 

Stream Cleanup at Apollo Heights Park

Raleigh's Stormwater Management Division is organizing a cleanup November 3rd 9- 11am at Apollo Heights Park (756 Lunar Drive).  For more information / signup, see: www.raleighnc.gov/home/news/content/CorNews/Articles/StreamCleanUp.html

Daylight Saving Time in the US ends early November 4th.  If you raise objections to DST with Congressman David Price, he will probably refer you to the NC General Assembly, but I imagine they would say talk to Congress.  The Federal government seems to control time standards, but local governments can opt out, though few do so, despite regular complaints.   

Jenny Elder Fitch Memorial Lecture

Brie Arthur, a horticulturist who has worked at local plant nurseries and is a correspondent on PBS' Growing a Greener World, will talk about foodscaping, landscaping with edible as well as ornamental plants, and her upcoming book Gardening with Grains, in this annual lecture at the NC Botanical Garden.  It will be Sunday, November 4th 2:30 - 3:30 and is free, but registration is requested (it also counts for continuing education credits).  For more information and registration, see:  ncbg.unc.edu/2018-events/

Somewhat related, there will also be a free tour of UNC's new Edible Campus program November 7th 11am - 12pm.  For information and registration, see:  ncbg.unc.edu/calendar/

Eugene V Debs, a founder of the Industrial Workers of the World and presidential candidate of the Socialist Party of America, was born November 5, 1855.  He was imprisoned for advocating draft resistance during WWI, and sentenced to a decade in prison and loss of suffrage November 18, 1918, but ran for president again in 1920, from a Federal prison in Atlanta.  President Harding commuted his sentence in 1921 and he died in 1926.   

North Carolina in the First World War

Lauren Menges, Head of the Durham County Library's NC Collection, will talk about Durham and North Carolina's experiences during World War I, using the Library's collections.  This event will be at the Durham's Stanford L Warren Branch Library (1201 Fayetteville Street) Saturday, November 5th 7 - 9pm.  For more information, see:  events.durhamcountylibrary.org/event/982681

General election

Candidates for local, State, and Federal will be on ballots in the general election Tuesday, November 6th, 6:30am - 7:30pm.  According to a mailing from the State Board of Elections ( www.ncsbe.gov/index.html ), the deadline to register to vote (and probably to change your information) is October 12th at 5pm, but early voting is October 17 - November 3, and allows same - day registration.  The regular deadline to request an absentee ballot was October 30th at 5pm.  Some dates were changed in some areas due to damage from the hurricanes.  Sample ballots are available at BOE and sometimes newspaper websites; for example, see the Durham County Board of Elections website at:   www.dconc.gov/government/departments-a-e/board-of-elections .       

The NC Green Party, which gained ballot access only this spring, is already fielding four candidates, two running for local office in Mecklenburg and Forsyth counties, one for the NC House of Representatives (in District 66), and one for the US House (in District 13), and is seeking donations and volunteers (see: ncgreenparty.nationbuilder.com/ ).  As always, people can join the NC Green Party, and it is now possible to officially register as a Green with the Board of Elections, but unlike with the Democratic and Republican parties, this is not the same as joining the Green Party. 

Some of what I wrote about the 2016 general election is relevant to this election ( durhamspark.blogspot.com/2016/11/the-election-conundrum.html ).  It would be good to have the deplorable Democratic Party do well in the elections, as a check on Trump or to cause deadlock in Washington, and as a symbolic rejection of Trump's policies.  On the other hand, there is a general bipartisan consensus on many issues, such as giving Israel almost everything it asks for and undermining left populism in Latin America, and many Republican bills and nominees get support from Democrats, so in many ways rejecting Trump by voting for Democrats is symbolic only, assuming the media gets the message.  Talk of impeaching Trump is used to energize the base on both sides, but there won't be any action (just like in 2006 - 2007 when the Democratic Party rejected principled calls to impeach Bush, and the result was that no one at a high level was held accountable for lying to the public for war, torture, etc. and so it can happen again now).  If they actually do impeach Trump in a few years, it probably won't be for progressive reasons.  On some issues the Democrats are becoming the more dangerous party, for example by vilifying and warmongering against Russia (while needing Russia's help just to get astronauts into space and negotiate in Syria) and undermining the recent talks with the DPRK.  If I'm not mistaken, US aid in the Saudi coalition's attack on Yemen began under Obama.   

According to a letter to the editor in the Independent Weekly October 24th in the House of Representatives, David Price voted against the Glass - Steagall Act, leading to the Great Recession, and GK Butterfield voted to give ICE more money (I assume under Trump, but I haven't verified this) and supported Obama's 2011 attack on Libya, bringing chaos and fundamentalist Islamist warlords to yet another economically relatively well-off and secular country in the Middle East.

There are endorsements and some candidate questionnaires online at:

www.indyweek.com
www.peoplesalliancepac.org/
aflcionc.org/nc-labor-2018-voter-guide/
www.seanc.org/voterguide

The 101st anniversary of the 1917 Great October Socialist Revolution in the former Russian Empire is November 7 - 8.

Russian Marxist Leon Trotsky was also born November 7th, in 1879, and had an important role in the pivotal events almost 40 years later, but also attacked the Bolsheviks/CPSU before and after the October Socialist Revolution. 

The Communist Party of Albania (later renamed the Party of Labor of Albania) was founded November 8, 1941 through a merger of earlier groups.  At the time Albania was occupied by fascist Italy.   

Soviet revolutionary and statesman Vyacheslav Molotov died November 8, 1986.

What's on Your Roadside?  History, Character, and Conservation of Piedmont Prairie Remnants

The eastern US is often thought of as having been continuous forest in Precolumbian times, so a squirrel could go from the Atlantic to the Mississippi without ever having to leave the treetops, but there were actually many savannas and open areas.  Many of the plants that grew in these sunny areas are now rare to endangered, and are threatened by urbanization of their last refuges.  In this free talk, part of the Garden's Lunchbox Talks series, UNC Herbarium Director Alan Weakley and ecologist Julie Tuttle will talk about these plants, how these prairielike habitats came to be, and how to conserve them Thursday, November 8th 12 - 1pm (I'm surprised they used the term Piedmont prairie, though, since the NCBG's staff seems to prefer to call the remnants around Penny's Bend on the Eno in Durham savannas).  For more information and registration, see: ncbg.unc.edu/calendar/

The Han-Ma-Dang Raleigh Korean Festival will be November 10th 10am - 8pm ( www.rkfest.com ).

[Durham's] First Tree Planting of the Season!

Join Keep Durham Beautiful in its first tree planting event of the season, Saturday, November 10th 10 - 11am at 403 East Main Street (parking is available at the St Philips Episcopal Church).  Fifty trees will be planted along Liberty Street,  between Dillard and Elizabeth streets.  For more information and registration see:  keepdurhambeautiful.org/events/

November 11 is Armistice Day, marking the truce that (more or less) ended World War I 100 years ago in 1918.  In the USA Armistice Day has became the more pro-war Veterans Day.

There will be events November 9 - 11 in Washington, DC to reclaim Armistice Day, including a vigil on the Mall, Veterans Occupy Washington, a Peace Congress:  End US Wars at Home and Abroad, and a March to Reclaim Armistice Day, Concert for Peace and Justice, etc., and events in other countries( notrumpmilitaryparade.us/ , www.facebook.com/events/132064824153363/ ). 

Novelist Kurt Vonnegut was born November 11, 1922 in Indianapolis.

Sun Yat-sen, a founder of the Republic of China, created by the Revolution of 1911, was born November 12, 1866.

The German air force bombed the city of Coventry, England, UK multiple times during WWII, but the largest and most damaging air raid was the night of November 14 - 15th in 1940.  515 Luftwaffe bombers, using both explosive and incendiary bombs, virtually destroyed the downtown area and its medieval buildings, destroyed thousands of homes, and damaged 2/3rds of the city's buildings, as well as killing about 568 people and wounding many more.  Some have suggested that the UK knew the attack was coming but didn't give a warning so that the German military wouldn't find out that its encryption had been broken.  Coventry had military value because of its industries, but it also might have been targeted for its cultural value, as revenge for the bombing of Munich a few days earlier.  The British used the attack as a pretext to start indiscriminately bombing or firebombing German cities, and later the US Air Force developed these techniques further, resulting in attacks such as the firebombing of Tokyo in March 1945 and the annihilation of entire cities with a single nuclear weapon. 

Faculty Lecture for the [UNC] Institute for the Study of the Americas

UNC professor Stephanie Elizondo Griest will talk about her new book, All the Agents and Saints:  Dispatches from the U.S. Borderlands ( stephanieelizondogriest.com/portfolio/all-the-agents-and-saints/ ), based on her work on the impact of borders and international migration in her native Texas, Wednesday, November 14th at 5:30pm at UNC's FedEx Global Education Center, Room 1005 ( isa.unc.edu ).

Enemies of Peace:  Preventing the Next War in the Middle East

This documentary will be shown at the next meeting of Balance and Accuracy in Journalism, November 14th at 7:30pm at the Community Church of Chapel Hill (106 Purefoy Road, south of UNC Hospital).  The trailer is online at:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=VyEwaKJEaM8

November 15th is America Recycles Day ( americarecyclesday.org )

Emerging Issues in Conservation

Misty Buchanan, Director of the NC Natural Heritage Program, will discuss conservation of ecosystems, because traditional conservation methods aren't adequate to preserve species such as red wolves and Venus flytraps.  This is a free Lunchbox Talk at the NC Botanical Garden, Thursday, November 15 12 - 1pm; for more information and registration, see:  ncbg.unc.edu/calendar/

VUSE Boycott Rally in Durham

In support of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee's boycott campaign against Reynolds American Inc, and its VUSE e-cigarette, Triangle Friends of Farmworkers is organizing a picket at the Circle K at 3301 Guess Road (near its intersection with Carver Street) in Durham Thursday, November 15th, 5 - 5:45pm.  There will be calls to Circle K's main office after picketing locally and giving the manager a letter, the same procedure as FLOC's successful Mount Olive Pickle boycott several years ago. 

Alternative Gift Market and Concert

The United Church of Chapel Hill is organizing an alternative gift market to benefit the Church World Service's Safe School Zones in East Kenya.  The Alternative Gift Market will be Friday, November 16th  5 - 8pm and the Chapel Hill Carrboro Peacmaking Concert will start at 7:30.  The Market will continue November 17th 9am - 3pm.  The events will be at the UCCH, 1321 Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard, Chapel Hill.

There will be a Conference Against US/NATO Military Bases November 16-18th in Dublin, Ireland ( nousnatobases.org/ ).

The School of the Americas Watch Border Encuentro 2018 will be the same weekend in Nogales, Arizona and across the border in Nogales, Sonora ( www.soaw.org/border/border-encuentro/ ). 

23rd Annual American Indian Heritage Celebration

There will be events 11am - 4pm at the North Carolina Museum of History in downtown Raleigh (5 East Edenton Street, admission is free) Saturday, November 17th.  There will also be a canned goods collection from 10am - 4pm for the Inter-Faith Food Shuttle, and people can get a $20 dollar coupon from the North Carolina Symphony for donating.  For more information, see: www.ncmuseumofhistory.org/aihc-2018  There is an Education Day for school groups Friday, November 16th, but at this point anyone who isn't registered can only watch the livestream:  www.ncmuseumofhistory.org/aihc-2018/education-day

Plogging Run/Litter Cleanup

Join The House That Running Built, a Habitat for Humanity house building project in Durham funded by a running group, in cleaning up litter around 123 Chestnut Street.  People can run or walk and pick up litter and recyclables as they go, helping the environment and health.  The cleanup will be November 17th 11:30 - 12:30; to register see:  keepdurhambeautiful.org/plogginglitter-cleanup-registration

Inaugural Black Farmers' Market

This event, organized by Black August in the Park, will be Sunday, November 18th 12 - 5pm at Mutual Plaza (411 West Chapel Hill Street, Durham).  For more information see:  www.facebook.com/events/187834582113416/ 

Russian revolutionary Mikhail Kalinin was born November 19, 1875 and was head of state of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and later of the entire USSR and a member of the CPSU's Politburo.  The Baltic port city of Kӧnigsberg was renamed Kaliningrad after his death June 3, 1946.  The city and its surrounding territory was formerly East Prussia, seized from Germany after WWII, and is now a Russian enclave cut off by NATO and EU states. 

November 20th is Mexico's Revolution Day (Día de la Revolución), a national holiday marking the beginning of the Mexican Revolution in 1910.   

VUSE Boycott Rally in Chapel Hill

Triangle Friends of Farmworkers is also organizing a picket at the Circle K at the corner of Fordham Boulevard (15-501) and Estes Drive in Chapel Hill (I think right next to University Mall) Tuesday, October 20th 5 - 5:45pm.    

Asheville Transgender Day of Remembrance

Marking the 20th International Transgender Day of Remembrance, there will be an event in Asheville Tuesday, November 20th 7 5 - 7:30pm; there will be a march from the Civic Center at 5pm to Pritchard Park, where there will be a candlelight vigil and reading of names of victims of transphobia this year.  This event is being organized by Tranzmission.  For more information see:  www.facebook.com/events/481875835658573/

Fast for Yemen / #NoTHANKSgiving

Pam Bennett fasted for 26 days in solidarity with the people of Yemen, and Cindy Sheehan has been fasting since November 4th, to call attention to the US-abetted and Saudi-led war on Yemen (under both Obama and Trump) that is causing mass starvation, in addition to the number of civilians, such as children on a school bus, killed by weapons often supplied by the US, delivered by planes refueled by the US, and even targeted with US input ( marchonpentagon.com/yemen-fast/ ).  There is also a petition, online at:  marchonpentagon.com/yemen-petition/

Demonstration against ICE deportation - #FreeSamuel

There was a rally 7 - 8pm Tuesday, November 27th at ICE's Cary office (119 Centrewest Ct, Cary, 27513) against the deportation of Samuel Oliver-Bruno, who left a church sanctuary after ICE assured Congressmen Price and Butterfield that it would not arrest and deport him.  There is also a campaign to call the secretary of Homeland Security (202 282 8000 or 202 282 8495), ICE's Atlanta Field Office (404 893 1206) and the Stewart Detention Center (229 838 5000), demanding he receive treatment for his diabetes while detained and that he not be deported while Butterfield and Price are calling for an investigation.  He supports his wife and son and is likely to be murdered if deported ( www.facebook.com/events/2221720868109054/ ).

Marxist philosopher and writer Friedrich Engels was born November 28, 1820 in what is now Wuppertal, Germany. 

Albania has two national days, November 28, 1912, when Albania gained independence from the Ottoman Empire, and November 29, 1944, when Albanian partisans drove out the German occupiers.  Subsequently the Albanians were unique in liberating their own country and then helping to liberate neighboring Yugoslavia. 

Wetlands Matter - A Networking and Information Sharing Event

Network, hear an update on the Waters of the US policy from guest speaker Derb Carter of the Southern Environmental Law Center, and learn about the Carolina Wetlands Association at this meeting Wednesday, November 28th 5:30 - 7:30pm at the Thomas Crowder Woodland Center at Lake Johnson in south Raleigh (5611 Jaguar Park Drive).  For more information, see:  carolinawetlands.org/index.php/event/wetlands-matter-2018/

Rendition Revisted and NCCIT

Part one of the Al Jazeera documentary Rendition Revisited, covering North Carolina's role in the extraordinary rendition and torture programs and the NC Commission of Inquiry on Torture (www.nccit.org), will be broadcast November 28th and streamed online at: www.aljazeera.com/programmes/peopleandpower/  

The NCCIT will brief members of Congress and their staff in Washington December 5 - 6th, and will present a former military interrogator and a doctor who treated survivors of the CIA torture program, and could use donations.  This is the Commission's last official event. 

Russian Marxist Georgi Plekhanov was born November 29, 1856 and was upheld as a founder of the Russian Marxist movement, but was an opponent of the Bolsheviks. 

In the Sand Creek Massacre, starting November 29, 1864, Federal soldiers attacked peaceful Cheyenne and Arapaho villagers camped along Big Sandy Creek in what is now Colorado (where they had asked them to gather, displaying a US flag and a white flag), killing about 230 Indians, predominantly women, children, and elders, as well as committing torture and mutilation, before leaving the area December 1st.  Some soldiers refused to attack the village, but the perpetrators received little punishment and no criminal prosecution (from Wikipedia as well as www.nps.gov/sand/learn/historyculture/index.htm ).

Mark Twain (Samuel L Clemens), acclaimed author as well as vice president of the American Anti-Imperialist League, was born November 30, 1835 in Florida, Missouri.

Rendition and torture discussed on The State of Things

WUNC 91.5FM's program The State of Things ( www.wunc.org/programs/state-things#stream/0 )will look at the US government's recent torture program Friday, November 30th (12 - 1pm Friday and broadcast again Saturday, December 1st at 6am, otherwise it would be re-aired the same day at 8pm).  Guests will include Joe Margulies, a defense attorney, and Dr Kate Porterfield, who treated survivors, some with connections to the NC component of the program. 

Toxins in the Kitchen:  A Practical Guide to Safer Food

Rob Coffin and Elizabeth Miller will talk about toxins that get into the food supply, especially Roundup (or glyphosate, a common herbicide invented by Monsanto, to which GMO crops are immune) and BPA (Bisphenol A, a common endocrine disrupting chemical used in cans, receipts, and many other everyday items and spread into recycled materials), and show an excerpt from Bill Moyers' documentary Trade Secrets Friday, November 30th at 6:30 at the Ecolounge in Durham (2811 Hillsborough Road; communecos.org/recyclique-shop/ ).  There will be light refreshments and there is a suggested donation of $5 dollars, but it is not required to attend. 

December 1st is World AIDS Day, the first global health day ( www.worldaidsday.org/about/ )

Waste Not :  Living the Low Carbon Life

Learn about the connections between greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the soil, food waste, and how to have a positive impact at this conference Saturday, December 1st 9am - 2pm at the Church of the Good Shepherd in downtown Raleigh (125 Hillsborough Street).  For more information and registration, see:  www.zerowastechurch.org/2018/11/21/save-the-date/ and www.eventbrite.com/e/waste-not-living-the-low-carbon-life-tickets-47025647979?aff=efbeventtix

Durham Tree Giveaway 2018!

Keep Durham Beautiful will give 250 free tree seedlings to residents of Durham, one per person, December 1st 1:30 - 4:30pm.  People can reserve their tree, but it is also first come, first served ( keepdurhambeautiful.org/events/ ).  Several businesses will offer specials to people who have a receipt from KDB and a selfie with their planted tree.  The event will be in East Durham Children's Initiative's parking lot (2101Angier Avenue). 

Peace With Iran Summit 2018

Discuss the situation and how to oppose the Trump Administrations sanctions and push for a major war with Iran Saturday, December 1st 9am - 5pm at the First Congregational United Church of Christ (945 G Street NW in Washington, DC.  Registration is on a sliding scale, $100 to $10 dollars.  Organized by CODEPINK, with many cosponsors.  For more information, see www.codepink.org/iransummit or www.facebook.com/events/390712754800268/

Help pull English ivy in Greensboro

The Triad Chapter of the NC Native Plant Society and the Pearson chapter of the NC Audubon Society are organizing a cleanup of invasive English ivy in a bog garden in Greensboro (along the Nell Lewis Trail) Saturday, December 1st 9:30am - 12pm, meeting at the Starmount Farms Drive entrance.  The site is a slope and participants might want to bring food, water, work gloves, and a shovel.  For more information, email annwf7 at gmail period com. 

Remembering Bolin Forest

Friends of Bolin Creek is organizing a memorial for the 40 acres of Bolin Forest being clear-cut in Orange County on Sunday, December 2nd 4 - 5pm in Smith Middle School's auditorium (9201 Seawell School Road, Chapel Hill) for people to share their memories, followed by a candlelight/flashlight walk and silent vigil in the woods.  For more information see:  bolincreek.org/blog/join-us-at-the-vigil/ 

For whatever reason Bolin Creek at 15-501 was very brown and opaque November 26th, more like the turbid state of many creeks in Durham.  The silt was probably coming from somewhere upstream, and there are several large construction projects going on in the basin, but there is surprisingly little forested buffer between the Creek and new construction on 15-501. 

24 Hours of Reality

This streamed documentary on the impact of climate change on human health around the world will start with the USA December 3rd at 9pm, gets to Europe at 9am on the 4th, and will look at this country again on the 4th at 7 - 9pm.  It is online at:  www.24hoursofreality.org

Monthly Earth Justice Potluck and film

This event will be December 4th, with a potluck meal at 6pm and a showing of the documentary HOPE [Healing Of Planet Earth] What You Eat Matters, which looks at the food system in Europe, India, and the USA, from 6:30 - 8pm.  Apparently there are potentially disturbing descriptions and video of the way animals are treated in industrial agriculture.  This will be at the Eno River Unitarian Universalist Fellowship's fellowship hall (4907 Garrett Road, Durham); for more information contact jonsheline at gmail period com. 

Consider This ... Artificial Intelligence

There will be a panel discussion on economic, legal, and ethical aspects of artificial intelligence and machined learning Tuesday, December 4th 6:30 - 8pm at the Friday Conference Center (100 Friday Center Drive, left/south off of NC 54 going into Chapel Hill from Durham).  There might not be a working class perspective, but if advances in computing and robotics occur as predicted, especially under capitalist economic relations, artificial intelligence will be a major problem for the working class and all of humanity in the 21st century.  This is a public and free event organized by the UNC General Alumni Association.  For more information or registration, see:  alumni.unc.edu/events/consider-this-artificial-intelligence/

Imprisoned Japanese anti-imperialist Tsutomu Shirosaki was born December 5, 1947 in Toyoma, Japan.  A few years ago he was released from US custody, but is now finishing a previous prison sentence somewhere in Japan.  It might be possible to write to prisoners in Japan, but I haven't come across any information about where he is being held.  For background, see a previous post ( durhamspark.blogspot.com/2015/01/tsutomu-shirosaki-japanese-anti.html ) and denverabc.wordpress.com/prisoners-dabc-supports/political-prisoners-database/tsutomu-shirosaki/ .  If there is any news, it would probably be posted at: throwoutyourbooks.wordpress.com/tag/tsutomu-shirosaki/

Monthly tours of the South Wake Landfill and Sonoco Recycling Facility

There will be free one hour tours of these facilities near Apex once a month from December through May on Wednesdays or Saturdays (and private tours for groups with 5 to 14 people can be arranged).  The December tour will be Wednesday, the 5th at 9:30am.  For more information and registration see:  www.wakegov.com/recycling/outreach/Pages/tours.aspx     

Conserving North Carolina's Imperiled Plants

Lesley Starke, Plant Biologist of the NC Plant Conservation Program, will talk about what this program is doing to conserve rare or threatened plants and their habitats, in this free Lunchbox Talk Thursday, December 6th 12 - 1pm at the NC Botanical Garden.  For more information and registration, see:  ncbg.unc.edu/calendar/

Durham's annual Holiday Parade will be Saturday, December 8th, and includes contingents from Keep Durham Beautiful and other organizations. 

Saxapahaw Holiday Market

This event at the Haw River Ballroom (1711 Saxapahaw-Bethlehem Church Road, Saxapahaw, in [Alamance County on the Haw River, west of Carrboro]) December 8 - 9th will offer local art and handicrafts and there will be food and live music.  It will be 9am - 6pm on the 8th and 10am - 5pm on the 9th. 

NC Green Party 2018 Statewide Fall/Winter Gathering and Celebration

The NC Green Party's annual meeting will be December 7 - 9 at The Seedbed (6602 Nicks Road, Mebane, just inside Alamance County from Orange County).  The meeting is free and open to all supporters, though voting is limited to people who have paid dues and donations are welcome.  The Seedbed has some space for people to stay overnight Friday and Saturday.  There will a celebration and music December 7th starting at 7pm and there will be meetings (plus meals) December 8th 9am - 5pm and December 9th 10am - 3pm.  For more information or to RSVP, see:  ncgreenparty.nationbuilder.com/2018_fall_gathering

Winter Seed Share and Social

The Southern Piedmont Chapter of the NC Native Plant Society's Winter Seed Share and Social will be Sunday, December 9th at 2pm at the Reedy Creek Nature Center (2900 Rocky River Road, Charlotte), and is free and open to the public.  Participants are asked to "bring a sweet or savory snack to share."  For the seed share, bring clean seeds of plants native to the Southeast, with labelled their common and scientific names.  Coin envelopes will be offered, up to 10 per person, and each can contain about 1 teaspoon.  People can receive seeds even if they don't have any to share. 

Donations to NCNPS on Giving Tuesday next week and during the last few weeks of the year will go to grants and scholarships ( ncwildflower.org/about/grants_and_scholarships ). 

Secrecy and the Slaughterhouse talk

UNC Religious Studies PhD candidate Joanna Smith will discuss the connections between animal sacrifice in religion and the practices in modern meat production Friday, December 14th at 6:30 at the Ecolounge in Durham (2811 Hillsborough Road; communecos.org/recyclique-shop/ ).  There is a suggested donation of $5 dollars, but it is not required to attend. 

Georgian revolutionary and Soviet statesman Joseph Stalin was born December 21, 1879 or 1878 in Gori, Republic of Georgia, then part of the Russian Empire. 

Thomas Sankara, born December 21, 1949, was President of Burkina Faso from 1983 until he was assassinated October 15, 1987, and is known as Africa's Che Guevara. 

December 21st is the winter solstice. 

Sen Katayama, co-founder of the Japanese Communist Party and an official in the Comintern, was born December 26, 1859.  He was also one of the first members of the CPUSA and is buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis. 

Chinese revolutionary and statesman Mao Zedong (or Tsetung) was born December 26, 1893 in Hunan Province. 

The annual HKonJ (Historic Thousands on Jones Street) march in downtown Raleigh will be February 9, 2019 ( www.hkonj.com/ ). 

Support Palestine in DC 2019 will be March 24th in Washington ( www.facebook.com/events/322305558560731/ ). 

Pyongyang Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Conference April 18 - 25 (register by February 10th; this is an international conference and Americans and others are welcome to attend):  www.korea-dpr.com/dprk-blockchain-conference-2019.html