Additional items might be added later.
Solidarity with Cuba and Alex Saab November 15th
ANSWER is calling for a national day of action November 15th to oppose the Biden administration's continuing campaign to overthrow the Cuban government, by harming the Cuban populace through economic and diplomatic means and through subversion and possibly terrorism. The State Department, CIA, NED, and other arms of the US government are organizing counter-revolutionary protests within Cuba to be held the same day, following up on the violent protests of July 11th, widely publicized in US government-allied media. November 15th is also the day Cuba plans to again allow international tourism and re-open schools, having vaccinated most of the population. While Obama improved relations with Cuba, hoping to foment counterrevolution through softer means than past presidents, Biden has continued Trump's hardline policies regarding Cuba as well as China, Iran, and other countries. Around November 10th NPR talked about how the US under Biden is no longer actively waging any wars, papering over the US occupation of part of Syria; US material support for the Saudi war against Yemen, Israeli aggression, and civil wars; bombings; economic warfare and sabotage; the creation of a new arms race and cold war with China, etc.
There is also continued talk in the media of a supposed "Havana Syndrome," which seems like an excuse to downgrade relations with Cuba and tar Russia. When it was first announced it sounded like a false flag attack on Americans organized by the Trump administration or other elements of the US government, assuming Havana Syndrome objectively exists.
According to the Alliance for Global Justice there will be rallies to free Venezuela diplomat Alex Saab, currently held by the US, November 15th in Chicago, Miami, New York City, and Vancouver: afgj.org/alba-news-11-12-2021
Activists and organizations compromised themselves to urge support for Biden and Harris, because Trump was said to be an extraordinary and existential "ultra right" and "fascist" threat to bourgeois democracy and the current order, but said nothing about what they would do to oppose a rightist and imperialist Biden administration beyond what they have been doing during the years that led up to Trump. Now Biden is continuing many Trump policies and cancelling or failing to deliver on his campaign promises, despite the Democratic Party's control of Congress, and Republicans are likely to do well in Congressional elections next year and in 2024. And every four years people will be urged to vote for the Democrat, no doubt a rightist "moderate" or "centrist," as opposed to a "progressive" or a pro-capitalist "democratic socialist," until something truly disastrous happens.
Climate Emergency Rally
There will be a rally demanding that Governor Cooper declare a climate emergency, oppose Duke Energy's increased use of fracked gas, and assist low-income and BIPOC communities facing climate change driven storms and high electricity rates Friday, November 19th 12-1:30pm at the Governor's Mansion (200 North Blount Street, Raleigh); organizations are invited to co-sponsor: www.ncwarn.org/event/climate-emergency-rally/
Industrial chemicals in the Haw River
A wastewater treatment plant in Greensboro again released a large amount of the most likely carcinogenic chemical 1,4 dioxane into South Buffalo Creek, which flows into the Haw River, a source of drinking water, November 3rd and issued a warning November 8th. The original source of the 1,4 dioxane is unknown.
The Haw River Assembly and NC State University are seeking volunteers, who will be compensated, for a study of human exposure to GenX and other PFAS industrial chemicals released into the Cape Fear River (the Haw River, source of drinking water for Pittsboro and potentially for Durham and other cities in the Triangle, if they withdraw from Jordan Lake, is a tributary of the Cape Fear): genxstudy.ncsu.edu Researchers will also be at the Chatham County Agriculture and Conference Center November 13 - 14th.
Proposed removal of 23 species from the endangered speecies list
Public comments are due by November 29th to oppose ending endangered species protection for the ivory-billed woodpecker and many other species, on the ground that they are already extinct:
www.counterpunch.org/2021/10/20/requiem-for-bachmans-warbler/
Statement against the USA's anti-China propaganda war
Friends of Socialist China is circulating a Statement opposing the propaganda war on China that people and organizations can co-sign: socialistchina.org/2021/10/09/statement-opposing-the-propaganda-war-on-china/ There is no mention of the questionable status of Chinese socialism in the document.
Medical Aid to Cuba
IFCO/Pastors for Peace is seeking donations for its 31st Friendship Caravan taking medical aid to Cuba on November 15th: fs24.formsite.com/IFCO7120/form2/secure_index.html It would help if the Biden administration ended the sanctions against Cuba and other countries during a worldwide pandemic and stopped talking like the USA doesn't use aid to gain leverage against other countries.
Rescheduled BAJ Plowshares talk:
Chapel Hill Town Council meeting October 13th
According to a last minute email from Friends of Bolin Creek ( bolincreek.org/blog/ ), Wednesday, October 13th the Town Council ( www.townofchapelhill.org/government/mayor-and-council ) will receve an assessment of the dangers posed by the toxic coal ash buried under the sort of futuristic-looking police headquarters, and the plan is to sell the site to the Belmont Sayre company for a mixed office and residential project, without removing the coal ash. Friends of Bolin Creek is concerned that too a high level of risk was deemed acceptable in the study and that the problem is not being adequately and permanently resolved, leading to a continued risk of exposure to toxins such as arsenic on the Bolin Creek Trail. The risk assessment and meeting agenda can be found here.
Durham Planning Commission meeting October 12th
The Planning Commission, an appointed citizen board that holds hearings before a rezoning proposal goes to the City Council or Board of County Commissioners, will be hearing requests for frezonings at 518 Martin Luther King Jr Parkway, 2211 Page Road, and NC55 and Hopson, as well as receiving a presentation on a 2050 transportation plan. All rezoning requests need public attention, but I am most concerned about the vast proposed business park, zoned Industrial Light, around the intersection of Highway 55 and Hopson Road and extending far west (I previously posted about it at durhamspark.blogspot.com/2021/02/the-starry-sky-stolen-and-estranged-and.html ). Reportedly it also might include a road connecting 55 with Grandale Road further west, potentially blasted through another scenic and possibly igneous rock-rich ridge, and widening Grandale. There is mixed information about what is planned, but a road is definitely shown in the application. An Industrial Light zoning also allows for many different uses, from the biomedical research discussed at the community meeting back in January to recycling, freight, junkyards, wholesale trade, (large agribusiness research greenhouses that will light up the sky for miles?) etc. and the application requests rezoning, but without specifics on what would actually be built or where. Without an actual site plan many of the progressive things required in the zoning process, such as open space, impervious surface information, etc. become irrelevant; they might be addressed later, but after the public hearings are over. The application also only covers the area not already zoned Industrial Light. I think the abandoned claypit on this site is where researchers have found important fossil bones, and fossils can occasionally be found where the sedimentary bedock is exposed in the Triassic Basin of southern Durham County. I think a new road and widening would violate the spirit of the NC Natural Heritage Program's recommendations, which included not building new utility easements across the Northeast Creek bottomlands and preserving the adjoining uplands, which is where this project and any road are proposed. There are many other potential concerns. There is still the question of what might happen to the private land along Grandale, and with the added issue of a possible new road. There will be at least one more hearing, before the City Council, though it is possible there will be multiple Planning Commission hearings if there is opposition. [The proposal was rejected by the Planning Commission, for now.][Changing to a textual application with modifications was discussed, but it would have required at least a 60 day delay, so the original application was voted upon and rejected 12 to 0. Despite the complete rejection by the Planning Commission, the next step will probably be a hearing before the City Council.]
In other zoning news nearby, the proposal for a public works office at the southeast corner of 55 and TW Alexander Drive, near the above site, still seems to be going, and there is a residential project planned to the east between it and the Social Security Administration plant. The land has really been torn up along MLK Parkway in recent years, as at Ellis Road.
The meeting will be online through Zoom starting at 5:30pm; register at:
zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Az71ESRRSPumnJMjRXPEMg
Details on how to participate:
durhamnc.gov/4062/Participate-in-a-Virtual-Public-Hearing
Details about each item can be found in the agenda:
durhamnc.gov/AgendaCenter/Planning-Commission-15
Durham also has a new Social PinPoint website:
durham.mysocialpinpoint.com/land-use/map#/sidebar/tab/about
Sierra Club presentation
There will also be a rescheduled Orange-Chatham Sierra Club presentation on how to evaluating candidates for local office on the 12th:
"Ever wonder how to effectively question a local candidate about what they would do to create a sustainable community? Or evaluate what they say they will do or have done at a local level to advance climate action besides pass resolutions and ask staff for plans? Do you know how to look past the buzzwords to evaluate their real understanding of local or state climate action?
Come hear EPA alums Melissa McCullough and Kathy Kaufman talk about what can be done with local decisions and to be prepared to seize opportunities with expected federal dollars for local environmental and climate benefit. Q and A to follow!
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3691397002
Meeting ID: 369 139 7002
Register at bit.ly/africomnc"
Renewed FBI targeting of anti-war activists
The FBI is apparently investigating anti-war activist Joe Lombardo of the United National Antiwar Coalition, UNAC, and local groups in New York state: stopfbi.org/news/solidarity-with-joe-lombardo/ Under Obama there was similar Federal government intimidation of anti-war activists. [See also: www.fightbacknews.org/2021/10/3/solidarity-longtime-anti-war-activist-joe-lombardo and nepajac.org/fbiharassment.htm ]
Nicaragua events online
Defend Nicaragua, a press conference live from capital Managua October 8th at 3pm Eastern Time, with members of a US delegation investigating the situation before the November 7th elections; the delegation included representatives from UNAC, IAC and AFGJ: iacenter.org/2021/10/07/defend-nicaragua-urgent-press-conference-friday-10-8-live-from-managua/
There will be an webinar on gender equality in Nicaragua October 10th at 3pm Eastern: afgj.org/webinar-gender-equality-in-nicaragua
Julian Assange days of action in October
UNAC is calling for actions October 23-24 in support of journalist Julian Assange, who will have a hearing appealing his extradition to the US October 26th. It has recently come to light that the US considered violating Ecuador's UK embassy to kidnap Australian citizen Assange or just assassinating him and the FBI coerced a witness in the extradition trial. If I recall correctly Hillary Clinton openly suggested assassinating Assange [or it could have been Edward Snowden][Apparently she suggested using a drone to extrajudicially kill Snowden, a US citizen: www.counterpunch.org/2021/10/11/daniel-ellsberg-on-the-cia-plan-to-kidnap-and-possibly-kill-julian-assange-the-end-of-the-afghanistan-occupation-and-the-ongoing-us-drone-war/ ; there are also many detailed articles on the plot against Assange on Counterpunch.]. It should be recalled that while "Western" countries were so outraged in May that Belarus used subterfuge to cause a foreign airliner carrying two anti-government activists to land so they could be arrested, in 2013 the US and EU countries conspired to force Bolivian president Evo Morales to land in Austria on his way back from Russia, because they thought Edward Snowden might be onboard. "Western" mainstream journalists like to posture about alleged attacks on journalists or speech in countries targeted by the US government, such as Belarus, Nicaragua, and China, or statements by Donald Trump, but say little or nothing against actions by the US government, the UK, Israel, etc., including the killing of journalists or the staff of media organizations, and the silencing of alternative views.
Free Venezuelan diplomat Alex Saab, imprisoned in Miami: afgj.org/free-alex-saab
Build Back Fossil Free week of action October 11-15: peoplevsfossilfuels.org
Municipal Elections in North Carolina
There will be local elections this fall; there will be a non-partisan primary October 5th in Durham for some city council seats and mayor, with early voting September 16th - October 2nd, and if necessary general elections will be November [actually on the 2nd, including in Durham] 5th: www.ncsbe.gov/voting/upcoming-election [Early voting for the general election in November begins October 14th and ends on the 30th.] In some places the elections have been postponed. There are some Durham endorsements and candidate questionnaires here (generally Democratic Party-leaning to more Republican-leaning, though the Democrats are the dominant party in local politics): www.peoplesalliancepac.org/ , indyweek.com/elections-2021/durham-county/endorsements-2021-durham-city-council-primary/ , www.dcabp.org/ , www.friendsofdurham.com/ Sometimes there are also endorsements by the NC AFL-CIO or individual unions, state environmental groups, etc. [Apparently the NC AFL-CIO (as well as the Durham Association of Educators) did make endoresements, but this was not prominently advertised. See also the Chapel Hill Alliance for a Livable Town: www.chalt.org/]
Renaming military bases
Provide input (by December 1st) on the renaming of Fort Bragg and eight other Army bases named for Confederate officers: home.army.mil/bragg/index.php/fortbragg-renaming ; www.thenamingcommission.gov ; www.stripes.com/branches/army/2021-09-12/fort-bragg-name-change-braxton-bragg-confederate-general-2864606.html ; Aside from the local economic impact, the Federal land could be put to better use.
Opposition to Chapel Hill's Booker Creek plans
Chapel Hill wants to build seven small flood-control reservoirs along Booker Creek, which joins Bolin Creek to form Little Creek, which flows through Durham (I don't think flooding is much of a problem along the Durham section). One reservoir has already been built between East Frankin Street and 15-501, behind Village Plaza, and a large semi-wooded area along the creek was cleared, as well as at least one small beaver pond on a small tributary [always full]. I was aware of the area before and after construction, but I thought it was just the creation of a park for new, probably expensive, high-rise residential projects being built in former commercial areas lining Booker Creek in that area. It wasn't an extensive forest, but the weedy, vacant area was probaby valuable habitat in an otherwise built-up area and I liked to look at it after nearby anti-war protests. The project would take up 50 acres of valuable riparian habitat and cost $22 million in all, provided that it doesn't continue to go over budget. Opponents will attend a Zoom meeting with the Town Council September 13th at 6pm. For more information and a petition see preservebookercreek.org/index.htm ; the Town's presents its side here and here. Chapel Hill seems to have much more organized environmentalists than Durham. Even Wake County seems to have more organization, though possibly compromised.
In late September the NC Division of Environmental Quality will hold virtual hearings about permits for asphalt or quarry facilities in Caswell County, being opposed by Protect Caswell, and Sunrock is sueing the individuals opposing them: www.protectcaswell.org and www.facebook.com/Protect-Caswell-105727088325440/
New Raleigh policy for bird conservation
Some high-rise buildings in Raleigh will beginning turning off lights at night when birds are migrating through, a first in North Carolina (but not in other states). Huge numbers of migrating songbirds are killed due to light pollution during their annual migrations; here are some pictures of the hundreds killed in a two and a half hour period early last Tuesday, September 14th in New York City and picked up by an NYC Audubon Society volunteer: gizmodo.com/i-was-just-in-shock-mass-bird-death-reported-in-new-1847682742 ; smaller numbers of birds killed by collisions can be found here and maybe even outside your own home.
Leave the Leaves: xerces.org/blog/leave-leaves-to-benefit-wildlife
Also watch for copperheads and other reptiles as well as salamanders lying on the still warm roads or migrating as the nights become cool.] [The leaves are beginning to change color in earnest at the end of October here; observing the fall color isn't only an American tradition, for example Japan has Momijigari in October, combining a word signifying both maple tree and red leaves, and maples are often red, and the word for hunting.]
Proposed removal of protections for wetlands and riparian buffers in NC
Library booksales
There will be a Friends of the Durham Library in-person book sale August 27 - 28th 10am - 4pm at the new location of Books Among Friends, 3825 South Roxboro Road, #131, zipcode 27713, but it is limited to members and people who want to attend will have to join before the event. For more information and the membership form, see: fodlnc.org/book-sales/ FODL also has an online store, at: www.shopfodlnc.org/
The Friends of the Chatham County Library was supposed to have a book sale August 7th 9am - 2pm, but it has been postponed to a later date, TBA. There is still supposed to be an in-person weekend sale September 23 - 25. For more information see: friendsccl.org/Coming-Book-Sales [As of September 5th, all sales have been postponed and book donations are not being accepted.]
Friedrich Engels died August 5, 1895 in London, UK of throat cancer. His ashes were spread in the English Channel off of the high white chalk sea cliffs of Beachy Head in East Sussex, England, UK.
The bombing of Hiroshima
The US dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima a little after 8am on August 6, 1945. The UK consented under the Quebec Agreement.
The USSR and Mongolia entered the war against Japan very early on August 9th, as had long been requested by the other Allies, and quickly advanced deep into Japanese-held areas.
The bombing of Nagasaki
A second atom bomb was dropped on Nagasaki August 9, 1945 after 11am when the cloud cover that would have saved the city broke (Wikipedia articles say that the primary target August 9th was Kokura and that it had been the alternative target on August 6th). The bomb used on Hiroshima was set to explode as it fell, while the bomb used on Nagasaki exploded at ground level, but hills deflected some of the force and unlike in Hiroshima there was not a firestorm. Hiroshima and Nagasaki were both hit by nuclear fission-based atomic bombs (as opposed to more destructive hydrogen or thermonuclear bombs based on nuclear fusion and first developed by the USA for use during the Cold War), but the designs were different.
August 9th was the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples ( www.un.org/en/observances/indigenous-day ) and this year's theme is "Leaving no one behind: Indigenous peoples call for a new social contract." 2022 - 2032 is the International Decade of Indigenous Languages (www.un.org/en/observances/international-decades ). I might try to learn Classical Nahuatl or another North American indigenous language in that time.
International Youth Day is August 12th: www.un.org/en/observances/youth-day
The Mexica or Aztec capital Tenochtitlan fell 500 years ago to a force of several hundred Spaniards and tens to hundreds of thousands of indigenous allies under Hernando Cortés following a long siege and attacks by land and water (the city was on an island in Lake Texcoco, in a series of lakes, and crossed by many canals). Mexica leader Cuauhtémoc (his predecessor Cuitláhuac, who replaced Moctezuma II, had died of disease in 1520) was captured as a flotilla attempted to escape the final assault on Tlatelolco, a connected sister city. Some claim Cuauhtémoc intended to surrender that day. Many sources give the date as August 13, 1521 (noted as the feast day of Saint Hippolytus), which is the date by the calendar Spain used at the time, while others say August 21, which must be the corrected date in the modern calendar. Possibly hundreds of thousands died in Tenochtitlan and neighboring cities during the war due to fighting, epidemics, and starvation. Killings, rape, and looting continued after the Mexica had lost. Most of the city was levelled in the fighting and it was further razed as Mexico City was built over the ruins, creating a situation similar to Baghdad's Green Zone, where the Spanish lived apart from the Indians. While it took place over a longer period, the death and destruction is comparable to what happened to Hiroshima and Nagasaki in early August 1945. In all, several thousand Spanish and native allies were killed (the vast majority of the casualties were among the allies). The Spanish force included some non-Spaniards and women. In subsequent years Spain conquered the other states in Mesoamerica and in South America, though there was protracted struggle in the Yucatan and the Andes and against less settled groups.
Native societies far away were probably not aware of Tenochtitlan and the rest of the Valley of Mexico, but populous Tenochtitlan, one of the largest cities in the world at the time by population, and the surrounding region could be considered a cultural and political capital of North America in its time, similar to New York City, Washington, and Los Angeles today. I think objects from cultures in the area have been found as far away as the Southwest and Eastern US, though it is an open question whether people there knew where the objects originated. Maize formed the basis of the economy over much of the Pre-Columbian Americas and is thought to have been domesticated in what is now central Mexico, though that was long before the Mexica and might have begun in a different region.
Is this the former site of the mural (further to the left)? Torero's Mexican Restaurant (800 West Main Street, historicbrightleaf.com/dine/toreros/ ), at the northwest corner of Main and Duke streets, part of Brightleaf Square©. |
Karl Liebknecht was born August 14, 1871 in Leipzig, Saxony, Germany and was a founder of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (which he represented in Prussia's parliament and later in the German Reichstag), the Spartacist League, and the Communist Party of Germany. Along with Rosa Luxemburg he was tortured and executed by Freikorps rightists, supporting the Social-Democratic German government (the Weimar equivalent of the US Democratic Party or democratic socialism?) at the end of WWI.
In a recorded radio broadcast at noon on August 15, 1945 Emperor Hirohito announced domestically that Japan had surrendered to the Allies.
UNC-Chapel Hill began charging for parking on weekday nights August 15, 2019.
World Humanitarian Day is August 19th: www.un.org/en/observances/humanitarian-day
The International Day of Remembrance of and Tribute to the Victims of Terrorism Day is August 21st: www.un.org/en/observances/terrorism-victims-day
The International Day Commemorating the Victims of Violence Based on Religion or Belief is August 22nd: www.un.org/en/observances/religious-based-violence-victims-day
The International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition is August 23rd, commemorating the beginning the Haitian Revolution on the night of August 22 - 23, 1791 in what is now Haiti and the Dominican Republic on the island of Santo Domingo: en.unesco.org/commemorations/slavetraderemembranceday
German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel was born August 27, 1770 in Stuttgart, Germany; his thought was a major influence in the later development of Marxism.
The International Day Against Nuclear Tests is August 29th: www.un.org/en/observances/end-nuclear-tests-day The US detonated nuclear weapons as recently as 1992: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States%27_nuclear_weapons_tests In the Vela Incident on September 22, 1979 a possible nuclear test was detected in the Indian Ocean between South Africa and Antarctica. There were many theories, including that it was a joint test by South Africa and Israel (Israel is generally thought to have hundreds of nuclear weapons today and South Africa once had nuclear weapons).
The International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances is August 30th: www.un.org/en/observances/victims-enforced-disappearance
US and Canadian Labor Day, is Monday, September 6th. Unions called for the creation of a day for workers in the late 19th century, with some advocating a date in September, and the government supported a September date instead of May 1st, associated with revolutionary labor movements. May Day is labor day or an official holiday in many countries, such as Mexico, and that date also has roots in the American labor movement. Beginning under Eisenhower May 1st has been called Loyalty Day and Law Day and previously it was Child Health Day.
Mexico's Independence Day is September 16th, commemorating Miguel Hidalgo's Grito de Dolores (Cry of Dolores) in 1810.
The International Day for Preservation of the Ozone Layer is September 16th: www.un.org/en/observances/ozone-day September 16, 2009 agreements protecting the ozone layer became the first universally ratified UN treaties. The ozone layer (made of a form of oxygen) absorbs some ultraviolet light, but is depleted by industrial chemicals, such as CFCs, which are also potent greenhouse gases.
National Estuaries Week will be September 18 - 25: estuaries.org
The International Day of Peace is September 21st and this year's theme is "Recovering better for an equitable and sustainable world": www.un.org/en/observances/international-day-peace
The NC Museum of Natural History's in-person BugFest: Plan Bee will be September 13 - 18th and this year's theme arthropod is the many kinds of bees: naturalsciences.org/calendar/bugfest/
The International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons is September 26th: www.un.org/en/observances/nuclear-weapons-elimination-day There are about 13,080 nuclear weapons in existence, many more than would be required to threaten the extinction of humanity and many other species on the only planet known to sustain life. The USA, Russia, and other major nuclear powers demand that smaller countries completely and unilaterally denuclearize, and not develop rockets that could carry nuclear weapons, while they have thousands of nuclear weapons ready to destroy humanity and instead of beginning to get rid of them, they spend huge amounts to maintain their current weapons and develop new ones.
Iraq was accused of developing nuclear weapons, and was invaded in 2003, killing many civilians and leading to sectarian conflict and the creation of ISIS. Libya gave up its weapons program and was attacked in 2011, creating a wartorn "failed state" and allowing a flood of migrants through Libya to the EU. Democrats and Republicans accuse Iran of seeking nuclear weapons and it is under severe pressure and faces war, despite not seeking nuclear weapons while being threatened by nuclear powers, and agreeing to the JCPOA, which Trump tore up. Under the Non-Proliferation Treaty Iran has the right to develop peaceful nuclear technology. The DPRK developed nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, including submarine-launched missiles, and seems relatively safe from attack by the USA and other countries, though that isn't solely because of its nuclear arms, and nuclear weapons give the US another justification for its Korean policies. On the other hand, the US doesn't mind when its allies, such as the UK, Israel, and India, develop nuclear weapons and even helps them do it.
September 28th is also the International Day for Universal Access to Information: www.un.org/en/observances/information-access-day
October 1, 1984 five people went into the General Dynamics Electric Boat Quonset Point factory in North Kingston, Rhode Island and damaged six Trident II nuclear missile tubes. They also put blood and a Call to Conscience declaration on the tubes, put up a banner saying "Harvest of Hope - Swords into Plowshares, and left a pumpkin. They were arrested after less than half an hour and originally charged with possession of burglary tools (a felony with up to 10 years imprisonment), malicious damage, and criminal trespass. Their expert witnesses were qualified with the jury present, but their testimony was dismissed by the judge and a justification defense denied. The five viewed pleading guilty to the malicious damage charge as consistent with nonviolence, so the prosecution dropped the possession of tools charge. The trespass charge was dismissed. October 18, 1985 they were given a year in jail and a fine of $500 dollars. Four were freed after 6 months, while one protester was given an extra two months for refusing to tell the judge who drove them to Quonset Point. The first plowshares action was September 9, 1980. This account comes from Swords into Plowshares: Nonviolent Direct Action for Disarmament, published in 1987.
The most recent referendum on Catalonian independence from Spain was October 1, 2017, and has been followed by Spanish government and rightist repression against Catalonian self-determination.
Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi was killed and dismembered inside a Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey October 2, 2018. Among other roles, he was a columnist for the Washington Post. The Khashoggi assassination motivated parts of the US government and establishment to denounce and attempt to punish the government of Saudi Arabia, while they say little about the brutal Saudi-led war in neighboring and poverty-stricken Yemen (I had not heard anything about Yemen in what seemed like months until late August when the BBC mentioned a suspected Houthi attack that killed several soldiers). The US has materially aided the Saudi coalition's war under both Obama and Trump (and Biden?) and denounces alleged Iranian involvement, rather than the attacks by Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and others on the people of Yemen. I think it was Gates during the Obama administration who said something about the Saudis wanting the US to fight to the last man against their rival Iran, and other countries want a US-Iran war. More about Saudi instability, adventurism, and attacks on neighboring countries: www.counterpunch.org/2019/10/04/a-year-after-khashoggis-murder-saudi-arabia-is-lurching-toward-chaos/
The German Democratic Republic was absorbed by the Federal Republic October 3, 1990, and continuing economic and political marginalization of the former East Germany has led to electoral support for the "far right." The current and soon to retire prime minister is "center right" and grew up in the GDR. It is thought that the imperialist German Green Party will do well in coming elections.
The US repeatedly attacked a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan early on October 3, 2015, killing 12 staff, 10 patients (3 children), and wounding 37. The US, NATO, and Afghanistan were all informed where the hospital was and the NATO command was called when the attack started: progressive.org/dispatches/u.s.-airstrike-doctors-without-borders-hospital-war-crime/ The media loudly accuses unfavored countries of deliberately attacking hospitals and medical personnel, but I am not aware of the outcome of the investigations into this incident or nothing further has been said.
World Space Week is October 4th - 10th: www.un.org/en/observances/world-space-week
Party Foundation Day is October 10th in the DPRK, commemorating the 1945 founding of a predecessor to today's Workers' Party of Korea: www.naenara.com.kp/en/event/?part=20151010/
According to Wikipedia, October 10th is also Vietnam's Capital Liberation Day and Cuban Independence Day, commemorating the Grito de Yara at the beginning of the Ten Years' War in 1868. It took two more wars before Spanish rule was successfully overthrown in 1898, followed by a few years of occupation and decades of subservience to the USA.
The Outer Space Treaty, banning the placement of nuclear weapons in space, military activities on the Moon, claims of sovereignty over celestial bodies, etc., came into effect October 10, 1967.
Meeting ID: 859 6515 9342
Passcode: 985327
For phone access, dial your choice
+1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
+1 646 558 8656 US (New York)
https://covertactionmagazine.com/2021/04/26/james-bradley-author-of-flags-of-our-fathers-1-new-york-times-best-seller-speaks-out-against-the-u-s-military-encirclement-of-china/
This year Chapel Hill's annual Festifall will take the form of block parties in different locations October 15th, 23rd, and 30th: www.chapelhillarts.org/festifall-arts-market-more/ Durham's annual Centerfest won't be held this September, but is planned for 2022.
Up to 300 Algerian protesters, peacefully demonstrating against the Algerian War (November 1, 1954 - 1962), were killed by French police in the Paris Massacre of 1961, on October 17th. The related Charonne Massacre happened February 8, 1962, when the police killed nine trade unionists demonstrating against a French terrorist group. Only in recent years has France admitted that torture was systematic during the war, and even French citizens were tortured and killed extrajudicially.
The Million Worker March was October 17, 2004 in Washington, DC. Thousands participated (and there were one or more buses from the Triangle and elsewhere in North Carolina) and while there were not actually one million people there, according to the Wikipedia article the endorsing unions represented about 3.5 million workers.
National Opossum Day is apparently also October 17th, celebrating and raising awareness of the USA's last marsupial, a possibly misunderstood beneficial animal frequently hit on roads during the winter. Being a marsupial, a female possum could have young in her pouch or riding on her back, and even if the mother is killed, the babies might be able to be saved by a rehabilitator. Various people who should know have informed me that opossums either can't get rabies or are very unlikely to, so a good Samaritan is unlikely to get infected helping injured opossums, though it would still be best to wear gloves, wash afterward, etc. Unfortunately a few species are barred by law from rehabilitation in North Carolina because of the danger of rabies, but opossums are not on that list and I have handled injured opossums without any problems (I'm surprised that none used their teeth or claws).
Christopher Columbus first encountered the New World early on October 21, 1492 [using the modern Gregorian calendar]; apparently October 12th, Columbus Day, is the date under the old Julian calendar.
Tens of thousands of demonstrators (maybe 50,000) participated in the March on the Pentagon October 21st, 1967, protesting the Vietnam War. Rage Against the War Machine will be in Washington October 11-12th this year (see above).
American journalist and revolutionary John Reed was born October 22, 1887 in Portland, Oregon. He wrote Ten Days That Shook the World, a first-hand account of the Great October Socialist Revolution, and he is one of three Americans honored with burial in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis.
The USA under Reagan and a few forces from neighboring countries attacked the Caribbean nation of Grenada October 25 - 29, 1983 with some US losses, but killing more Grenadan soldiers, civilians, and Cubans, as well as injuring Soviet citizens and many others.
The Soviet-Japanese Joint Declaration of 1956 was signed October 19th, formally restoring peace between the two countries.
Disarmament Week is October 24th - 31st, beginning on United Nations Day, when the UN was founded: www.un.org/en/observances/disarmament-week October 24th is also World Development Information Day: www.un.org/en/observances/development-information-day
The Greensboro Massacre was November 3, 1979. KKK and American Nazi Party members fired on a Death to the Klan demonstration organized by the now disbanded Communist Workers' Party, killing 5 people and wounding others. Some police were present and the local police and Federal agencies had infiltrated the KKK and neo-Nazi groups. For more information see: www.greensboromassacrelessonstoday.org/
November 3rd is Culture Day (Bunka no Hi) in Japan, celebrating the arts, culture, and scholarship; the Apollo 11 astronauts are among the recipients of the Order of Culture presented on this day. The post-war Japanese constitution, which the ruling rightist Liberal Democratic Party wants to amend, was announced November 3, 1946.
Musician and recording engineer Malachi Ritscher burned himself to death in condemnation of the Iraq War November 3, 2006 near the Kennedy Expressway in Chicago. His final statement is included in: chicago.indymedia.org/archive/newswire/display/74806/index.php and he wrote his own obituary at: www.savagesound.com/gallery100.htm
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.
Business interests and the local American Legion attacked an IWW hall in Centralia, Washington November 11, 1919, using an Armistice Day parade as cover, resulting in several deaths on each side. Wesley Everest, a logger and International Workers of the World member, was taken from jail and lynched later that day. Only the IWW and supporters were prosecuted and convicted of crimes. Other attacks preceded the events of Armistice Day, including an attack on an IWW hall during a Red Cross parade April 30, 1918. For a more detailed account see: www.counterpunch.org/2019/11/11/class-war-violence-centralia-1919/
American novelist Kurt Vonnegut was born November 11, 1922 in Indianapolis. See for example: thedailyvonnegut.com/ and blogs.cofc.edu/vonnegut/vonneguts-life/
Sun Yat-sen, a founder of the Republic of China, created by the Revolution of 1911, was born November 12, 1866.
Silo Pruning Hooks
November 12, 1984 four people entered a Minuteman II ICBM silo operated out of Whiteman Air Force Base in Knob Noster, Missouri. Using a jackhammer and air compressor, they damaged the silo's lid, offered Eucharist and left Christian and Native American condemnations of the US government and mainstream Christianity over nuclear war. An hour later they were arrested by military security authorized to kill and were held in preventive detention without bail. In a Federal jury trial they were convicted of destruction of government property, conspiracy, intent to damage the national defense, and trespass. They were sentenced to 8 to 18 years in jail, 3 to 5 years of probation, and each had to pay the government $2932.80. A few months later the 18 year sentence was reduced to 12 years, but when the others appealed they were denied.
Plowshares Number Four
November 14, 1982 seven people entered the General Dynamics Electric Boat shipyard in Groton, Connecticut. Three hammered and put blood on several of the USS Georgia submarine's ICBM hatches. Four others hammered and put blood on parts in the south storage yard. They were soon placed under arrest. In a jury trial they were not able to make a justification defense and were convicted of criminal mischief, conspiracy, and criminal trespass, and sentenced to two months to a year in prison.
The Indians of All Tribes occupied Alcatraz Island November 20, 1969 to June 11, 1971.
President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated November 22, 1963 in Dallas.
November 24, 1983 (Thanksgiving Day) seven people entered Griffiss Air Force Base in Rome, New York and proceeded to hammer and put blood on a B-52 bomber modified to carry cruise missiles and on some B-52 engines. They left a statement condemning Griffiss and the US government for nuclear war preparation and condemned the violation of constitutional rights and punishment of acts of conscience under what they called the state religion of "nuclearism." No one came to arrest them for hours, so they looked for the guards themselves. This was the first Federal trial of Plowshares activists. A justification defense and expert testimony were barred. The jury found them innocent of sabotage but convicted them of conspiracy and destruction of government property, with prison sentences of two to three years and an appeal was denied. This account and the others in this post come from Swords Into Plowshares: Nonviolent Direct Action for Disarmament, edited by Arthur J Laffin and Anne Montgomery, and published in 1987. There have been more recent actions.
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. [A British account of the Albanian independence days as marked this year in Gjirokaster, in southern Albania, Enver Hoxha's hometown: michaelharrison.org.uk/2021/12/independence-day-29th-november-2021-in-gjirokaster/ ]
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 Indians 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 ).
November 29th is also International Jaguar Day ( www.internationaljaguarday.org/ ); long ago these big cats included the Appalachians in their vast range while today a border wall along an arbitrary boundary dividing the continent could finish the job of exterminating the USA's few remaining jaguars, as well as other species ( www.biologicaldiversity.org/species/mammals/jaguar/ ; www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2019/jaguar-04-24-2019.php ; biologicaldiversity.org/w/news/press-releases/trump-bulldozes-new-wall-through-wildlife-refuge-jaguar-country-2019-10-31/ ) .
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.
The Winter War between the USSR and Finland began November 30, 1939.
The People's Republic of Southern Yemen (South Yemen) gained independence from the UK November 30, 1967. North Yemen had been independent since the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire after WWI.
The People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen), the first and so far only Arab Marxist state, was founded December 1, 1970. It merged with the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen) in 1990, creating the Republic of Yemen. There is currently a civil war and armed intervention by other Arab states and the USA and there are still Southern Yemen secessionists.
The DPRK's Korean Central New Agency (KCNA) was founded December 5, 1946 ( www.kcna.kp ; includes sections in English, Chinese, Russian, Spanish, and Japanese).
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