Monday, June 17 – NY State Anti-Fracking Rally

NY CROSSROADS RALLY

New York Crossroads: Rally to Stop Fracking and Demand Renewable Energy
New York stands at a crossroads; this is our moment to decide the course of history.

Come to our No to Fracking/Yes to Renewable Energy Rally:

What: New York Crossroads: Rally to Stop Fracking and Demand Renewable Energy
When: Monday, June 17th, 12pm-3pm
Where: Rally and March in East Capitol Lawn, Albany, NY
Transportation: SIGN UP FOR BUSES HERE
Car Pool:
If you would like to set up a car pool please email Corinne Rosen at crosen@fwwatch.org

Please sign up HERE to RSVP.

Please sign up HERE to RSVP on FACEBOOK and SHARE.

Download the NY CROSSROADS FLYER.

Download the NY CROSSROADS POSTER

On Wednesday, June 17, 1885, the Statue of Liberty arrived in New York Harbor, where she has stood as our nation’s symbol of freedom ever since.

On Monday, June 17, 2013, citizens from across New York—from Long Island to Niagara Falls—will arrive in Albany to demand freedom from dirty energy, calling on Governor Cuomo to reject fracking and lead the nation in constructing a renewable energy economy here and now in New York.

At this march and rally, the anti-fracking movement will, for the first time, join with business leaders, faith leaders, health professionals, elected officials, farmers, and youth to demand the renewable energy jobs that our families and communities want and deserve. New York is at a crossroads. In one direction: more ruinous dependency on dirty, dangerous fossil fuels. This path requires we blow apart the bedrock of our state and inject it with toxic chemicals. Providing only temporary, dangerous jobs, it leads to accidents, explosions, poisoned water, polluted air, contaminated food, public health disasters and climate catastrophe. This road chains us to the past and ransoms our children’s future. Running in the other direction is the road to renewable energy based on wind, water, and sunlight. This path leaves our communities unfractured and provides long-term, safe jobs to New Yorkers. This path creates an infrastructure that will not cost us the water we drink, the air we breathe or the health of our children. This path will make New York a leader in energy independence and, once more, a beacon of hope for the world. This path is the one we demand because our lives literally depend on it.

Governor Cuomo has said, “We will not allow the national paralysis over climate change to stop us from pursuing the necessary path for the future.”

We agree. Here in New York, where we have watched our subways fill with seawater and witnessed Hurricanes Irene, Lee and Sandy wash away our communities, we now call on our governor to reject the climate-destroying practice of fracking and take aggressive strides towards a 100% renewable energy economy.

On June 17th, we invite people from every corner of New York State to gather at the State Capitol in Albany. Here, we will stand united to demand that Governor Cuomo reject fracking and blaze a trail to a renewable energy future.

Join us for this historic event as we rally in the East Capitol Lawn and march in the streets surrounding the Capitol building.

The moment of power is now!

What: New York Crossroads: Rally to Stop Fracking and Demand Renewable Energy
When: Monday, June 17th, 12pm-3pm
Where: Rally and March in East Capitol Lawn, Albany, NY
Transportation:  Sign up for buses here
Car Pool:
If you would like to set up a car pool please email Corinne Rosen crosen@fwwatch.org

Please sign up HERE to RSVP.
Please sign up HERE to RSVP on FACEBOOK and SHARE.

Sponsored by: New Yorkers Against Fracking, Americans Against Fracking, Food & Water Watch, Frack Action, Catskill Mountainkeeper, 350.org, United for Action, Riverkeeper, New York State Sustainable Business Council, Citizen Action-NY, NOFA-NY, Working Families Party, Democracy for America, Alliance for a Green Economy, Greenpeace, New York State Breast Cancer Network, Catskill Citizens for Safe Energy, Otsego 2000, Save the Southern Tier, MK Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence, Center for Health, Environment and Justice, Environmental Advocates, NYH2O, Damascus Citizens, Citizens Campaign for the Environment, Chefs for the Marcellus, Citizens Environmental Coalition, Sierra Club-Atlantic Chapter, Environment NY, NYPIRG, Two Row Wampum Renewal Campaign, Concerned Citizens of Covert, ROUSE, Shaleshock, Capital District Against Fracking,  Greenstar Cooperative Market, Green Party of NY, Brooklyn Food Coalition, Jews Against Hydro-fracking, Syracuse Cultural Workers, Neighbors of the Onondaga Nation, Shaleshock CNY, Syracuse Peace Council, Kirkland Committee to Prohibit Hydro-fracking, Western NY Drilling Defense, WNY Peace Center, R-CAUSE, Cattaragaus-Chautauqua For Clean Water, New York Interfaith Power & Light, Protecting Our Water Rights, Nurse Rise-Nurses for Safe Water,   CWA District One Healthcare Coordinating Council, Frack Free Genesee, The Interfaith Alliance of Rochester, Grassroots Environmental Education, New York State Council of Churches, Lower East Side Coalition to Stop Hydraulic Fracturing, Three Parks Independent Democrats, NY Contra el Gasoducto, Trinity Lutheran Church of Brooklyn, City of Binghamton Residents Against Fracking, Sullivan Area Citizens for Responsible Energy Development, WESPAC, Croton Watershed Clean Water Coalition, Westchester for Change, West 80′s Neighborhood Association, Sharon Springs Against Hydro-fracking, New York Society for Ethical Culture, Progressive Democrats of America, South Shore Audobon Society,  New York Solar Energy Society, Light Alliance Foundation, Hudson River Sloop Clearwater and more!

Thank you and see you in Albany!

***** MORE POSTS ABOUT FRACKING HERE *****

Popular Resistance Newsletter

Popular Resistance Newsletter – What’s Your Breaking Point to Take Action?

When Edward Snowden reached his breaking point, the world saw the truth about the vast extent of spying by the NSA on Americans and people around the world. In an act of conscience, Snowden released secret information, saying “My sole motive is to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them.”

Snowden sparked protest, lawsuits, criticism of the administration and US intelligence.  His action shows the power that comes when someone inside the system break ranks and tells the truth. Successful movements depend on people breaking ranks: questioning,emurring, disobeying, defecting and withdrawing support. As Ken Butigan writes, the impact can start a metamorphosis for all of us:

the individual conscientious objector, the abstainer, and the resister — the one who, as Gandhi said, pits ‘one’s whole soul against the will ofa tyrant.’ Not only do the Edward Snowdens of the world help the rest of us see more clearly the realities we are up against — in this case, he institutionalization of unfettered, massive data collection on and profiling of the population — they can shock us into realizing that part of our job description as human beings is our obligation to withdraw our passive or active consent from such policies.

What is your breaking point? This is the question we must all ask ourselves, especially those who have not yet taken action. As whistleblower Sibel Edmonds wrote this week, the inaction and apathy of people is our greatest enemy: “Apathy is a must ingredient for any police state, authoritarian regime, dictatorship, for abuses of power, for corruption, national atrocities, genocide. . . .

1This week, we read the sad story of Brandon Bryant, the 27 year old who served as drone operator from 2006 to 2011 at bases in Nevada, New Mexico and Iraq and who helped to kill 1,626 people. He now suffers from PTSD. Bryant told NBC News “I don’t feel like I can really interact with that average, everyday person. I get too frustrated, because A, they don’t  realize what’s going on over there. And B, they don’t care.”

Imagine how much better off he would be if he had taken action years ago and told the truth about drone killings then. We hope he will continue to speak out about his experience. He will find that many people do care and may inspire other drone killers to stop what they are doing.

One or a few people can make a tremendous difference. Sam Smith, the editor of Progressive Review, reminds us of the unpredictable power of action, recalling: “there was the time in early 1960 when four black college students sat down at a white-only Woolworth’s lunch counter in Greensboro, NC. Within two weeks, there were sit-ins in 15 cities in five southern states and within two months they had spread to 54 cities in nine states. By April the leaders of these protests had come together, heard a moving sermon by Martin Luther King Jr. and formed the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. Four students did something and America changed. Even they, however, couldn’t know what the result would be.”

Turkish lawyers protestJust as we are seeing in Turkey, it is often the response to an act of conscience that betrays the regime, shows the regime for what it is, and in a reversal, all of the power of the state boomerangs against itself. Prime Minister Erdogan issued threats followed by extreme police violence, but the result has been more people joining the protests.  Yesterday, thousands of lawyers joined the protests and Erdogan issued another threat. And today when Erdogan called for parents of children who are protesters to take them home, their mothers formed a human barricade to protect them instead.

Another result has been solidarity protests around the world and people asking “what can I do for Turkey?” In the United States, people crowd sourced the funds for a full-page ad in the NY Times. Photo journalist Jenna Pope tells Acronym TV Turkey is part of a global revolution. “Everything is connected,” Pope says, “people all over the world are fighting against these governments who are only interested in making the very rich even richer.”

We are also seeing solidarity with whistle blowers. Up to a thousand people are expected to protest in support of Snowden in Hong Kong this Saturday, showing that he may have been right in picking Hong Kong.  Protests in support of Snowden and against the NSA’s Internet spying and collection of phone records are also being held in the United States. Scores of civil liberties groups, Internet companies and others (including Popular Resistance) are demanding an end to NSA spying. Sign up at StopWatchingUs.org to get involved.

The ACLU has filed suit against the program. But we need to rely more on our own actions than the security-state friendly courts to stop this attack on democracy. And, Snowden also exposed, once again, how the New York Times and other corporate media report from the perspective of the security state.

stpats2Another high profile whistle blower, Bradley Manning, is also garnering support from many people.  His court martial, which Chris Hedges describes as a ‘judicial lynching,’ began with the perfect symbolism: supporters of Manning wearing a shirt that said “Truth” had to hide that dangerous word on the first day of his trial. They were ordered to turn their shirts inside out before entering the courtroom.

Though the corporate media continues its inadequate reporting, there is a lot of citizen’s media writing about the case. You can keep up with details at www.BradleyManning.org.  Many of Bradley’s supporters are veterans who explained their support for exposing the war crimes of US Empire.

Veterans are also among those leading the protests against the Guantanamo Bay prison camp.  Three veterans are on a solidarity hunger strike in support of Guantanamo prisoners being held in indefinite detention without trial.  We are impressed with many Americans who put their lives on the line to challenge militarism, especially nuclear weapons, and those are seeing through the sham of ‘humanitarian war’ in which military attacks kill innocent people and destroy countries.

This week, we continue to report on the escalation actions of front-line environmentalists who are challenging the extraction economy.  The clarity of thought of those on the front lines, compared to the big environmental groups, was evident recently in Illinois. While some applauded the regulation of hydro-fracking, others who are more clear in their thinking said, we need to ban hydro-fracking because it cannot be done safely.

1prThe solidarity of “Fearless Summer” with its epic protests against radical energy extraction is taking shape and promises to help end the silence on dirty energy.  Activists continue to protest at Obama fundraisers. We’ve reported on actions in New York and San Francisco, and now in Los Angeles climate change protesters and immigrants who called for an end to deportation protested Obama.

The reaction of the extraction industry shows their fear of organized militant resistance. TransCanada, the corporation seeking to profit from the tar sands pipeline, is telling the police that protesters should be treated as terrorists.  They are calling Nebraska ranchers aggressive and abusive. And, protest also helps people take actions of conscience. A TransCanada whistleblower has come forward to report on the shoddy pipeline practices describing the company as “organized crime” that is “a “culture of noncompliance” and “coercion,” with “deeply entrenched business practices that ignored legally required regulations and codes” and carries “significant public safety risks.”

Another big area of continuing and escalating activism is around labor.  The week began with the Walmart shareholders meeting where a Bangladesh activist addressed shareholders about unsafe working conditions and Janet Sparks, a Louisiana worker, pointed out “our CEO Mike Duke made over $20 million last year more than one thousand times the average Walmart associate, with all due respect, I have to say, I don’t think that’s right.” Then she quoted Walmart founder Sam Walton: “Listen to the Associates!” Activists say the campaign is working – building consciousness among workers and consumers; and affecting sales at Walmart which have been stagnant. The number two retailer, Costco is seeing rising sales and rising stock values while paying employees good wages. On the contrary, Walmart workers need government services to get by.

3prLabor struggles are not only at Walmart. Target contract janitors announced they would be going on strike in Minneapolis.  Photographers at the Chicago Sun-Times are picketing the newspaper after it laid them off.  Labor leaders are calling for a boycott of Labatt beer as scabs have been working in place of workers on strike since April at the St. John’s brewery. General Motors workers in Colombia have been striking due to unfair working conditions.  They sewed their mouths closed in hunger strikes and occupied in front of the US embassy as well as bringing their concerns to the Detroit shareholders meeting.  More than ever, it is an imperative to rebuild an aggressive labor movement that is independent of the Democrats and stands for working people.  In Europe labor unions are rallying on Juneteenth against austerity and for tax justice.

Like many cities that have a problem with abandoned homes, in Baltimore, MD there are 40,000 of them. An activist group, Slum Lord Watch, is using an interesting tactic, artwork.  They teamed up with an artist, Nether, to beautify the buildings and call out the owners. They have 15 murals so far and each includes a QR Code which links people to information about the owner of the vacant building.

Another protest people may want to emulate is the Carnival Against Capitalism.  This event began with the WTO protests in 1999, and is being used this year in the run-up to the G8 meeting in London.  Activists worked in several sections of the city including taking over an abandoned police station.

More and more people are becoming active. What holds others back?  Perhaps their breaking point has not been reached or they do not have the time or resources to understand what is going on. One of our jobs in building a mass movement is to educate people in several areas. We can start by listening and bringing facts to explain their feelings about how bad our situation has become.

NSA-Surveillance-ProgramRight now an issue that is driving some people is their concern about the security state. Conor Friedersdorf’s article explains that Presidents Bush and Obama have put in place all the infrastructure that a tyrant would need.  The author says that his article “is an attempt to grab America by the shoulders, give it a good shake, and say: Yes, it could happen here.”

It also helps to show people that protest and campaigns of resistance work. There are so many examples throughout history. Harvey Wasserman provides a recent example, showing how the anti-nuclear movement worked to stop nuclear power plants and how the recent closure of San Onofre is part of an ongoing movement in the United States and around the world.  And Bill Moyer wrote about the eight stages of a successful social movement.

Finally, we have to show people that we have a strategy that can win. There are now 100 years of history of civil resistance, so we know what is more likely to work and what is less likely. We wrote an article describing a strategy to create a mass movement that can succeed, including what groups in the power structure we need to divide and pull to the movement to build our strength and weaken the status quo.

2007 - 34 001Carl Gibson, founder of US Uncut, recently spoke about the uprising in Iceland as a model for a mass movement in the US. Many of the ingredients are in place in the US such as growing wealth inequality and a government corrupted by big finance. Though it seems we are up against a powerful opponent, we have the information and tools we need to create the society in which we want to live.

Sam Smith reminds us that “The key to both a better future and our own continuous faith in one is the constant, conscious exercise of choice even in the face of absurdity, uncertainty and daunting odds. “ He tells us that change starts with action, that each of us has a way to contribute, and that when “we will have thrown every inch and ounce of our being into what we are meant to be doing which is to decide what we are meant to be doing. And then to walk cheerfully over the face of the earth doing it.

31 Years Ago – June 12, 1982 – Over 1 Million People Come to Central Park to Say to to Nuclear Weapons – Join the Campaign for a NYC Council Resolution to Shut Down Indian Point Nuclear Power Plant NOW!

Organized by Todos Somos Japon & The Manhattan Project

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Until our elected “leaders” call for the IMMEDIATE phasing out of nuclear power (and nuclear weapons), our entire city, country and planet will continue to be at grave risk.

Ask yourself WHY they are not talking about this in the debates. Also ask yourself WHY mainstream media doesn’t talk about it!

The nuclear industry could never exist without massive subsidies by our corrupt federal government and a mainstream media that keeps it OFF PEOPLE’S MINDS. What most people don’t realize is that the mainstream media ARE the nuclear industry and the military industry! And guess what? GENERAL ELECTRIC isn’t going to tell you on NBC that their reactors are threatening the very survival of our species!

Even Wall St. won’t even insure or finance or insure nuclear power! So why is this allowed to continue? There are lots of sane, safe solutions (that can create hundreds of thousands of much needed GREEN JOBS!) The people of Germany, France, and certainly Japan are quickly waking up to the alternatives. Why aren’t we?? Please New York, DO SOMETHING to remedy this situation NOW before it’s too late! Our future depends on the safe, immediate, permanent shutdown of this plant and other plants like it! Fukushima & Chernobyl are for real!

June 12, 1982 – One Million People In Central Park… WE CAN DO THIS AGAIN!

Find your city Council member here: http://www.tinyurl.com/YourCouncilMember Make an appointment along with a other concerned residents and schedule a prompt meeting. Ask them if they will support this resolution. And if they will not, ask why? Explain how dangerous this “Fukushima‐on‐the‐Hudson” is to the NYC public and that NYC can obtain all the energy it needs from the solar, wind, water power, and basic conservation. Tell them about the Synapse Report that explains the possibilities for clean energy in NY. See: Indian Point Alternatives – Synapse Report – Indian Point Replacement Analysis: A Clean Energy Roadmap – A Proposal for Replacing the Nuclear Plant with Clean, Sustainable Energy Resources

Click below to see the entire PDF. Please Print / distribute / translate! Tell all your friends, neighbors and co-workers to do same! There are 50 NYC Council members representing 50 districts in NYC. Find out who your council member, get a few neighbors together and GET TO WORK. Organize a meeting and organize your district!

And let your Governor & President know how you feel about nuclear power! Wouldn’t you rather be active today than RADIOACTIVE tomorrow?


NYC Council Resolution to Shut Down Indian Point

If you like below film “Women of Fukushima”, please DONATE to: http://women-of-fukushima.com !! And SHARE this link!

Example of NON-VIOLENT DEMONSTRATION AGAINST NUCLEAR POWER:

MORE ABOUT THE NUCLEAR PLANT THAT IS ONLY 30 MILES FROM NYC!!! INDIAN POINT