From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject Tidbits – June 6 – Reader Comments: Trump No Longer Invincible; Mexico: ¡Viva La Presidenta!; the Sympathizer on Hollywood’s Vietnam War Stories; Leonard Peltier Parole Hearing June 10; Webinar: Organizing, Collective Action, the NLRB; More…
Date June 7, 2024 12:00 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
[[link removed]]

TIDBITS – JUNE 6 – READER COMMENTS: TRUMP NO LONGER INVINCIBLE;
MEXICO: ¡VIVA LA PRESIDENTA!; THE SYMPATHIZER ON HOLLYWOOD’S
VIETNAM WAR STORIES; LEONARD PELTIER PAROLE HEARING JUNE 10; WEBINAR:
ORGANIZING, COLLECTIVE ACTION, THE NLRB; MORE…  
[[link removed]]


 

June 6, 2024
xxxxxx
[[link removed]]

*
[[link removed]]
*
[[link removed]]
*
*
[[link removed]]

_ Reader Comments: Trump No Longer Invincible; Mexico: ¡Viva La
Presidenta!; The Sympathizer on Hollywood’s Vietnam War Stories;
Leonard Peltier Parole Hearing June 10; Feminist Foreign Policy for
Peace; Webinar: Organizing, Collective Action, the NLRB _

Tidbits - Reader Comments, Take Action, Resources, Announcements AND
cartoons - June 6, 2024, xxxxxx

 

* RE: TRUMP’S STUNNING GUILTY VERDICT SHATTERS HIS AURA OF
INVINCIBILITY  (ROBERT LAITE)
* RE: NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW – TRUMP GUILTY ON 34 COUNTS – NOW
A CONVICTED FELON  (GEORGE LESSARD)
* IT'S TIME  --  MEME
* WHAT A DIFFERENCE 8 YEARS MAKES  --  MEME
* GOP FELON  --  CARTOON BY ROB ROGERS
* RE: NYU NURSE IS FIRED AFTER CALLING THE GAZA WAR A ‘GENOCIDE’
IN SPEECH  (CHARLENE MITCHELL-RODGERS)
* JUST DEFENDING OURSELVES  --  CARTOON BY MAX GUSTAFSON
* RE: HANDLING HARDSHIP: DATA ON ECONOMIC INSECURITY AMONG AMAZON
WAREHOUSE WORKERS  (DANIEL MILLSTONE)
* RE: GLOBAL LEFT MIDWEEK – JUNE 5, 2024  (ETHAN YOUNG)
* ¡VIVA LA PRESIDENTA!  --  CARTOON BY LALO ALCARAZ
* RE: FORCED LABOR VS. FORCED IDLENESS  (NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT LAW
PROJECT)
* RE: THE MILITARY’S MYTH OF BLACK FREEDOM  (JOHN WOODFORD)
* GOP LIKES THIS FLAG  --  CARTOON BY DR. JAMES MACLEOD
* RE: TRIAL RESULTS FOR NEW LUNG CANCER DRUG ARE ‘OFF THE
CHARTS’, SAY DOCTORS  (SAM ANDERSON)
* RE: CALIFORNIA COMMUNISM AND ITS AFTERLIVES: ON ROBERT W.
CHERNY’S “SAN FRANCISCO REDS”  (TRACY ANN ESSOGLOU)
* RE: THE SYMPATHIZER TAKES ON HOLLYWOOD’S VIETNAM WAR STORIES
 (DAVID BACON)

.

TAKE ACTION:

* LEONARD PELTIER PAROLE HEARING JUNE 10

.
 

RESOURCES:

* FEMINIST PEACE SUMMIT RECAP: BUILDING A MOVEMENT-DRIVEN U.S.
FEMINIST FOREIGN POLICY FOR PEACE  (FEMINIST PEACE INITIATIVE AND THE
INCLUSIVE GLOBAL LEADERSHIP INITIATIVE)

* LIST OF UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES WITH ENCAMPMENTS AND PROTESTS -
AS OF JUNE 01

* THE RADICAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED ELECTRICAL WORKERS - AN
INTERVIEW WITH JAMES YOUNG  (BENJAMIN Y. FONG  / JACOBIN)

.
 

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

* WEBINAR ON ORGANIZING, COLLECTIVE ACTION, AND THE NATIONAL LABOR
RELATIONS BOARD  --  JUNE 11  (ECONOMIC POLICY INSTITUTE - EPI)

.

.

 

RE: TRUMP’S STUNNING GUILTY VERDICT SHATTERS HIS AURA OF
INVINCIBILITY
 

I can't wait for the rest of his trials. Unfortunately I'm certain his
game plan all along has been to say and do whatever he wants, deny
everything, and hopefully die before he runs out of appeals. He will
end up with the last laugh when he's gone and all those who've won
judgements against him go to collect and find out it was all smoke and
mirrors and he's been broke the whole time.

Robert Laite
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
[[link removed]]

 

RE: NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW – TRUMP GUILTY ON 34 COUNTS – NOW A
CONVICTED FELON
 

Today a jury found ex-president Donald Trump guilty on all 34 felony
counts of falsifying business records in an effort to subvert the 2016
election. Following the decision, Trump called it a rigged trial, by a
corrupt judge. He had also called the 2016 and 2020 elections rigged.
The 2024 election is now clearly an election between democracy and
fascism, between the rule of law and the attempt to subvert and
overturn our imperfect democracy.

George Lessard
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
[[link removed]]

 

IT'S TIME  --  MEME

 

 

ON THE DAY THE NAZI DIED (Chumbawamba)
from Ratatude Demos by Rogue Rats
Free Download
[[link removed]]
from Ratatude Demos
[[link removed]],
released March 13, 2012

 

WHAT A DIFFERENCE 8 YEARS MAKES  --  MEME

 

 

GOP FELON  --  CARTOON BY ROB ROGERS
 

Rob Rogers
June 4, 2024
robrogers.com [[link removed]]

 

RE: NYU NURSE IS FIRED AFTER CALLING THE GAZA WAR A ‘GENOCIDE’ IN
SPEECH
 

I hope she sues her employer and wins!!

Charlene Mitchell- Rodgers

 

JUST DEFENDING OURSELVES  --  CARTOON BY MAX GUSTAFSON

 

Max Gustafson
March 1, 2024

 

RE: HANDLING HARDSHIP: DATA ON ECONOMIC INSECURITY AMONG AMAZON
WAREHOUSE WORKERS

(posting on xxxxxx Labor
[[link removed]])
 

Are happy days here again? Are the skies above clear again? Well for
some of us not so much. Jobs like those at Amazon do not pay enough to
keep body and soul together. How long can workers keep up with
Amazon's ever increasing demands for moving stuff faster. Here, via
xxxxxx
[[link removed]]
and Ann Fawcett Ambia [[link removed]] a look at
how many of us can be working and sinking at the same time.

Daniel Millstone
post on Facebook

 

RE: GLOBAL LEFT MIDWEEK – JUNE 5, 2024

(posting on Global Left
[[link removed]])
 

Some interesting stuff this week.

Ethan Young
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
[[link removed]]

 

¡VIVA LA PRESIDENTA!  --  CARTOON BY LALO ALCARAZ

 

Lalo Alcaraz
June 4,2024
pocho.com [[link removed]]

 

RE: FORCED LABOR VS. FORCED IDLENESS
 

Tyler Bowman, an #incarcerated
[[link removed]] #worker
[[link removed]] in #NorthCarolina
[[link removed]], speaks about working
inside prisons and how their exclusion from employee status deepens
structural disparities in the U.S. economy for xxxxxx
[[link removed]].
#PrisonLabor [[link removed]]

National Employment Law Project
[[link removed]]
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
[[link removed]]

 

RE: THE MILITARY’S MYTH OF BLACK FREEDOM
 

Who are you to declare what Black people are or aren't? Those Black
people who see themselves as patriots are just as genuine and
honorable as you are. And plenty of them may be more broad-minded than
you and less presumptuous.

John Woodford

 

GOP LIKES THIS FLAG  --  CARTOON BY DR. JAMES MACLEOD

 

 

Dr. James MacLeod
June 4, 2024
MacLeodCartoons
[[link removed]]

 

RE: TRIAL RESULTS FOR NEW LUNG CANCER DRUG ARE ‘OFF THE CHARTS’,
SAY DOCTORS
 

There's no mention of Cuba's multiyear success in
halting/slowing/reversing lung cancer with its CIMAVAX vaccine. They
were the first to offer such a vaccine.

Sam Anderson

 

RE: CALIFORNIA COMMUNISM AND ITS AFTERLIVES: ON ROBERT W. CHERNY’S
“SAN FRANCISCO REDS”
 

Reviewers Ray and Wranovics call this book "a welcome contribution,
and hopefully an opening towards further study of this significant and
neglected part of California history."

Tracy Ann Essoglou
Posted on xxxxxx's Facebook page
[[link removed]]

 

RE: THE SYMPATHIZER TAKES ON HOLLYWOOD’S VIETNAM WAR STORIES

(posting on xxxxxx Culture
[[link removed]])
 

The points raised by Li Zhou in her review of The Sympathizer about
the importance of Vietnamese people interpreting and analyzing their
own experience during and after the American War are good ones.  But
they are incomplete in an important way.

The Vietnamese experience in the U.S. includes the experiences of the
Vietnamese who were living here before and during the war as well.
 Overwhelmingly, they were opponents of the war and the U.S. role in
it.  The Vietnamese student association, for instance, campaigned
against it.  After the war, the most rightwing of the relocated
veterans of the Thieu regime organized a terror campaign against them.
 Some people were murdered by a group called the frogmen, operating
from military bases in southern California, and a hit list was
published of student association leaders.  The representative of the
NLF in San Francisco was attacked on the street and his wife killed.
 A newspaper publisher in Westminster was murdered, along with a
state university professor. David Truong was sent to prison, after the
war ended, on a charge of espionage that many viewed as a government
frameup.

An accusation of being sympathetic to the new government in Vietnam
was very scary and people were reluctant to speak out until a new
generation came of age, and relations with Vietnam were normalized.
Most refugees were poor, working class people, and had to adjust to
the reality of racism and exploitation in the U.S., which was not the
image people had of life here before they arrived.  Picturing the
community as well-off middle class makes invisible the efforts by many
Vietnamese working families to confront that discrimination, and to
reassess their own ideas about social justice.

It would be good to have an account of the experiences of Vietnamese
people in the U.S. that recognized the radical politics of many
people, and the price they sometimes paid for them.

David Bacon

 

LEONARD PELTIER PAROLE HEARING JUNE 10

 

COMPASSIONATE RELEASE FOR LEONARD PELTIER, NOW!
[[link removed]]

On February 6, 2024, Leonard Peltier began his 49th year of
incarceration, continuing his time as the longest-held Indigenous
political prisoner in U.S. history. Peltier was a member of the
American Indian Movement during the height of the Red Power Movement
and was convicted in an unfair trial that could not prove his guilt.
Since his arrest and nearly five decades of incarceration, he has
become a symbol of the fight against systemic racism and the
persecution by the federal government of community movements advancing
justice and equity.

Peltier, 79, has been in prison for the majority of his life,
following a trial filled with discrepancies and rooted in racism. NDN
Collective and other justice and human rights  advocates, including
Native Organizers Alliance, are demanding Peltier be granted
compassionate release based on his time served, advanced age, and
declining health...

On March 15, seven members of the United States Senate
[[link removed]],
including Senator Brian Schatz (D-HI) the Chairman of the Senate
Committee on Indian Affairs, submitted a signed letter to Attorney
General Merrick Garland calling for the release of Leonard Peltier.

“It is time that the federal government rectifies the grave
injustice of Mr. Peltier’s continued imprisonment, and strongly urge
you to allow for his compassionate release,” the letter states.
“Mr. Peltier, who has been imprisoned for the past 49 years and is
suffering from severe health conditions should be able to return home
and live out his remaining days among his own people.”

Additionally, more than fifty current and former Tribal leaders have
signed a letter urging President Biden to support a compassionate
release for Leonard. Those signatories include National Congress of
American Indians President, Mark Macarro; former NCAI President, Fawn
Sharp; Chairman of the Indian Gaming Association, Ernest Stevens Jr.;
Cheyenne River Sioux Tribal Chairman, Ryman Lebeau; Oglala Sioux
Tribal President Frank Star Comes Out and Traditional Chief, Timothy
Swallow; and Obama Medal of Freedom Recipient Suzan Harjo.

You can support by calling your Representatives and Senators and
asking them to contact Attorney General Garland and urge him to
support a compassionate release for Peltier.

Read more here
[[link removed]]
and here
[[link removed]]

 

FEMINIST PEACE SUMMIT RECAP: BUILDING A MOVEMENT-DRIVEN U.S. FEMINIST
FOREIGN POLICY FOR PEACE  (FEMINIST PEACE INITIATIVE AND THE
INCLUSIVE GLOBAL LEADERSHIP INITIATIVE)

 

 

May 28, 2024
Mobilizing Women for Peace in Korea
WomenCrossDMZ
[[link removed]]

Women Cross DMZ, along with our Feminist Peace Initiative
[[link removed]] partners and the The
Inclusive Global Leadership Initiative
[[link removed]] at the Sié
Center for International Security and Diplomacy, co-hosted the
Inaugural Feminist Peace Summit
[[link removed]] at the University of Denver. 

Between May 1-3, 2024s, over 200 feminist scholars, activists,
movement leaders, and community members discussed ways to advance a
new U.S. foreign policy centered on feminist principles of peace,
justice, and sustainability, and led by people of color, diasporic
communities, and Indigenous Peoples. Plenary topics included why this
political moment calls for feminist peace, how feminist foreign policy
informed by diasporic wisdom can resolve global conflicts, what
anti-militarist grassroots organizing looks like in communities of
color, and how feminist strategies can confront growing
authoritarianism across borders. In addition, we held over a dozen
breakout groups on topics such as Palestine, migration and borders,
sex and care work, feminist foreign policy, preventing a new Cold War,
building intergenerational movements, Black and women’s nuclear
abolition, organizing against the Global Right, diaspora organizing,
climate and militarism, linking to policy, building narrative power,
and funding the feminist peace movement. 

It was deeply heartening to reconnect with longtime friends and meet
new ones, be inspired and challenged by new thinking, and, most
importantly, to be in a collective space to witness  and affirm the
power of the growing feminist and internationalist demilitarization
movement in the United States. 

THE SUMMIT WAS GUIDED BY THREE MAJOR THEMES:

1.  CHALLENGE U.S. MILITARISM AND WORK TO REPAIR HISTORICAL HARMS:
Feminist foreign policy must go beyond simply getting women into
existing patriarchal, militarist systems of violence. Instead, we need
a new U.S. foreign policy that advances genuine security by
prioritizing care, equity, sustainability, and being in “right
relationship” with people and the planet. It must also include
reparations for historical harms and injustices caused by U.S.-led
wars, coups, and neoliberal economic policies that have stifled
democracy and led to extensive violence and corruption around the
world. 

2. GROUND FEMINIST FOREIGN POLICY IN MOVEMENTS: In order to advance
our vision of a truly just feminist foreign policy, we must center the
voices and experiences of those most impacted by war and militarism,
democratize the process of shaping foreign policy, and build a popular
constituency. 

3.  BRIDGE THE DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN POLICY DIVIDE: To build a robust,
feminist, demilitarization movement, we must break down the divide
between domestic and foreign policy to advance new thinking and
organizing. This requires strengthening our understanding of how
militarism harms communities at home and abroad. For example, the
Biden administration continues to under-resource diplomacy and support
for feminist civil society while massively expanding the Pentagon
budget. This militarized approach reinforces state-sanctioned
violence, especially against communities of color, and siphons
resources away from basic human needs. We cannot achieve genuine human
security without building power across social movements working on
both domestic and foreign policy. 

Instead of hearing from foreign policy elites whose perspectives are
steeped in harmful, colonial and militarized thinking, the Feminist
Peace Summit amplified the expertise of feminist grassroots leaders
who have been most impacted by colonialism, imperialism, and
militarism and who are working against war, militarism, violence,
repression, and climate catastrophe. Their wisdom and experience are
essential to our collective understanding of conflicts and to advance
real community-based solutions for peace, security and justice. 

This gathering was a call to action: to strengthen our movement in
this moment of radical and transformative political awakening against
militarization, to collectively reimagine peace, security, and
liberation through feminist values of care, cooperation, and centering
the voices of those most impacted. Following the summit, and building
on our previous “A Vision for a Feminist Peace
[[link removed]],”
we plan to produce a _FEMINIST FOREIGN POLICY FOR PEACE ROADMAP_ to
outline our vision for bridging domestic and global movements for
peace and justice. 

We asked participants a series of questions at the conclusion of the
summit. Here are some of their responses:

“WHAT SHIFTED IN YOUR THINKING AFTER ATTENDING THE FEMINIST PEACE
SUMMIT?” 

* _To centralize an anti-militarization approach in our feminist and
foreign policy advocacy, activism, and relationship building_
* _More safe and sacred spaces like this to strengthen ourselves and
each other_
* _Diasporic organizing as a path forward! Building a coalition of
progressive feminist diaspora groups committed to demilitarizing the
US empire and moving our war economy to a green and caring one_
* _We need activists, academics, policy analysts involved and
together in this movement, to build connections across and between
movements, contexts and sectors_
* _Policy spaces can and should be guided by love – and we
shouldn’t be afraid to say this out loud! _

“WHAT LESSONS MUST WE LEARN IN THIS MOMENT TO EVOLVE THE FEMINIST
PEACE MOVEMENT?”

* _We cannot shy away from the halls of power but must understand
that change in policy is far more than change in personnel_
* _Lean into being uncomfortable and build bridges with groups
working on different issues as they are all interconnected_
* _We have to learn how to sustain ourselves through care & embrace
growing pains as not divisive, but transformative_
* _Need more non-aligned mass movement based on feminism to hold
liberal feminist structures that serve the state accountable_
* _Decenter the self, elevate the community, our source of power_
* _Resource this movement and map the ecosystem so that we can
prioritize where to lift up power in key positions_
* _Be more thoughtful and nuanced than those whose power we are
trying to undo_

“WHAT COMMITMENT ARE YOU WALKING AWAY WITH TO SUSTAIN OUR
MOVEMENT?”

* _Becoming more active in supporting Palestine as it is a
flashpoint interconnected with all of our struggles_
* _Don’t discount people just because we don’t see 100%
eye-to-eye on something_
* _Hold space for grief but to also experience joy like Yanar
Mohammed reminded us!_
* _Remain true to my values and actions of base building and
centering directly impacted people on the front lines_
* _To keep seeking out radical spaces and connections, to keep
expanding the network of comrades engaged in this multipolar work _
* _Build stronger relationships with each other to FREE PALESTINE
and all oppressed peoples _
* _Raise feminists_

SPEAKERS AT THE FEMINIST PEACE SUMMIT INCLUDED: 

* CHRISTINE AHN (Women Cross DMZ)
* MARIE BERRY (University of Denver)
* LINDA BURNHAM (Project 2050)
* DIANA DUARTE (MADRE)
* CYNTHIA ENLOE (Clark University)
* KITZIA ESTEVA (Grassroots Global Justice Alliance)
* NANA GYAMFI (Black Alliance for Just Immigration, Justice Warriors
4 Black Lives)
* TONI HAASTRUP (University of Manchester)
* SARA HAGHDOOSTI (Win Without War)
* LARA KISWANI (Arab Resource and Organizing Center)
* XOCHITL LARIOS (CURY J)
* DIANA LOPEZ (Southwest Workers Union)
* YANAR MOHAMMED (Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq)
* MARGO OKAZAWA-REY (San Francisco State University)
* KAVITA RAMDAS (Princeton University)
* SANDY SHAN (Justice is Global)
* HALEMA WALI (Afghans for a Better Tomorrow)
* JANENE YAZZIE (NDN Collective)

Thank you to all of our co-sponsors and donors who made this gathering
possible, including the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and Pax Sapiens. We
left the Feminist Peace Summit smarter, sharper, and filled with new
energy and determination to realize a truly just and peaceful world
for all.  

Watch Conference Videos Here
[[link removed]]

 

LIST OF UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES WITH ENCAMPMENTS AND PROTESTS - AS
OF JUNE 01

 

You can remove encampments from their campuses but you will never
remove Palestine from their hearts 💕
USA heroes list 🍉✊‼️ updated June 1st
 

 

THE RADICAL HISTORY OF THE UNITED ELECTRICAL WORKERS - AN INTERVIEW
WITH JAMES YOUNG BY BENJAMIN Y. FONG  (JACOBIN)

 

The United Electrical Workers emerged in the 1930s as a democratic
union with an independent fighting spirit. It represented the promise
of the Congress of Industrial Organizations — until it split from
the CIO in an atmosphere of anti-communist red-baiting.

 
Placards spell out the demands of striking CIO United Electrical
Workers as employees of the General Electric and Westinghouse plants
in Bloomfield hold a mass meeting on the town green on January 15,
1946.  (Photo: Bettmann  //  Jacobin)
An Interview with James Young by Benjamin Y. Fong
May 30, 2024
Jacobin
[[link removed]]

_This interview was conducted for Organize the Unorganized
[[link removed]], a podcast from
the Center for Work & Democracy
[[link removed]] and Jacobin magazine about the Congress of
Industrial Organizations (CIO)._

_Subscribe to Jacobin Radio
[[link removed]] to listen to the series (and
don’t forget to rate us five stars so we can reach more people)._

James Young is professor emeritus of history at Edinboro University
and the author of _Union Power: The United Electrical Workers in
Erie, Pennsylvania_
[[link removed]] (Monthly Review
Press, 2017). This interview focuses on the history of the United
Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers, or UE for short, which was one
of the three largest unions in the CIO at its peak, along with the
auto and steel workers’ unions.

With its astounding growth in the late 1930s and early ’40s, its
radical leadership and democratic structure, and its devastation
during the later communist purge, the UE represents well the promise
and limitations of the CIO project.

BENJAMIN Y. FONG: How did the United Electrical, Radio, and Machine
Workers come to be?

JAMES YOUNG: The UE began largely because of the activities of people
at different independent work sites. A General Electric (GE) plant in
Massachusetts, another one in upstate New York, a radio plant in the
Philadelphia area and also in Buffalo, New York, and so on. These, and
some machine shops along the way too, were organized basically
independently of each other and scarcely knew anything about each
other. But the American Federation of Labor (AFL) refused to work with
any of them, and their common rejection from the AFL caused them to
start working together more and more.

Read Full Interview Here
[[link removed]]
 

 

WEBINAR ON ORGANIZING, COLLECTIVE ACTION, AND THE NATIONAL LABOR
RELATIONS BOARD  --  JUNE 11  (ECONOMIC POLICY INSTITUTE - EPI)

 

From Hollywood to auto plants in the South, worker organizing is on
the rise. These actions were facilitated by the NATIONAL LABOR
RELATIONS BOARD (NLRB) under the Biden administration, which has made
significant strides in demolishing the barriers to worker organizing
constructed by the Trump administration. 

Please join the ECONOMIC POLICY INSTITUTE (EPI) on TUESDAY, JUNE 11,
2024, 2:00–3:00 P.M. ET, 11:00 A.M.–12:00 P.M. PT for a webinar
discussing recent developments at the National Labor Relations Board
(NLRB) and their impact on worker organizing.

NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo will deliver opening remarks on
the significant reforms her office has undertaken. A panel discussion
about those reforms and their impact on workplace organizing will
follow General Counsel Abruzzo's remarks.

The webinar will also discuss a recent EPI report that illustrates
measures the NLRB has taken to support workers' organizing and
bargaining rights under the Biden administration.

REGISTER HERE
[[link removed]]

Featuring:

* GENERAL COUNSEL JENNIFER ABRUZZO, National Labor Relations Board
* LARRY COHEN, Past President of the Communications Workers of
America, Board Chair Our Revolution
* CINDY ESTRADA, Strategic Advisor to the President for the Center
for Transformational Organizing, AFL-CIO
* Worker Organizer (TBD)
* LYNN RHINEHART, Senior Fellow, Economic Policy Institute
* Moderated by SAMANTHA SANDERS, Director of Government Affairs and
Advocacy, Economic Policy Institute

TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2024, 2:00–3:00 P.M. ET, 11:00 A.M.–12:00 P.M.
PT

REGISTER
[[link removed]]

* Reader Comments
[[link removed]]
* Donald Trump
[[link removed]]
* 2024 Elections
[[link removed]]
* Trump Guilty
[[link removed]]
* Trump Corruption
[[link removed]]
* MAGA
[[link removed]]
* Mexico
[[link removed]]
* Claudia Sheinbaum
[[link removed]]
* the sympathizer
[[link removed]]
* television
[[link removed]]
* Vietnam War
[[link removed]]
* Vietnamese immigrants
[[link removed]]
* Leonard Peltier
[[link removed]]
* foreign policy
[[link removed]]
* US Foreign Policy
[[link removed]]
* peace movement
[[link removed]]
* Women
[[link removed]]
* Labor Organizing
[[link removed]]
* Labor Movement
[[link removed]]
* Trade Unions
[[link removed]]
* NLRB
[[link removed]]
* National Labor Relations Board
[[link removed]]
* military recruitment
[[link removed]]
* U.S. armed forces
[[link removed]]
* Communist Party
[[link removed]]
* CPUSA
[[link removed]]
* Cartoons
[[link removed]]
* resources
[[link removed]]
* Announcements
[[link removed]]

*
[[link removed]]
*
[[link removed]]
*
*
[[link removed]]

 

 

 

INTERPRET THE WORLD AND CHANGE IT

 

 

Submit via web
[[link removed]]

Submit via email
Frequently asked questions
[[link removed]]
Manage subscription
[[link removed]]
Visit xxxxxx.org
[[link removed]]

Twitter [[link removed]]

Facebook [[link removed]]

 




[link removed]

To unsubscribe, click the following link:
[link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Portside
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: United States
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • L-Soft LISTSERV