Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Upcoming Community Events

1. Venezuela: The Challenge of 21st Century Socialism - Feb 28th
2. Toronto Women Against Poverty Collective Squat Meeting - March 5th
3. Rebel Film Series - March & April

1. Venezuela: The Challenge of 21st Century Socialism

An open and fraternal discussion among friends of Venezuela on the meaning for Canada and the world of President Hugo Chavez's call for "21st Century Socialism."

To lead off the discussion, short presentations from:
  • Prof. Greg Albo, York University
  • Dr. Maria Paez Victor
  • Robin Breon, Vice-Presdient, steelworkers Local 1998
  • And audience participation

Moderators: John Riddell and Amparo Torres

Wednesday, February 28, 7 p.m.
Bahen Centre,
40 St. George Street, Rm. 1180
Just north of College


For information: cvec-tor@yahoogroups.com

Sponsors: Coalition Venezuela We Are With You (CVEC), Hands Off Venezuela (HOV), Latin American Solidarity Committee (LASC), Louis Riel Bolivarian Circle, Manuelita Saenz Bolivarian Circle.


2. Community conversations about women, violence and affordable housing.

Monday March 5th at 9:00 am at Parkdale Community Legal

The Toronto Women Against Poverty Collective is a relatively new group that is planning a squat this spring. They would like to get more low-income women from Toronto involved and are also looking for women's organizations and groups to help organize the event. Contact information is below.

Poverty is one of the biggest concerns on the minds of women living with violence, and coupled with a lack of access to housing, it keeps women stuck in abusive situations. The Women Against Poverty Collective (WAPC) is a group of women and trans people who are working together to advocate for safe, affordable, and accessible housing for women experiencing violence.

Based on the ideas of women in the community, the WAPC is planning an action in for Spring 2007 to bring public and governmental attention to the issues. It will involve a housing takeover where women dealing with violence will create the safe, affordable housing that has been traditionally denied them and their children.

The WAPC would like to get more input from and involvement of women. We would like to know more about what they want and need, as well as what they may be willing to do to support the action. If you have an existing women's group that meets in your organization's space or can set up a meeting in your space, representatives of the Collective would like to visit and:

- Introduce the WAPC and what we are doing
- Encourage women to get involved and raise their voices
- Gather feedback and ideas about specifics of the planned action

Please contact Jen Plyler at 416.417.8962 for more information.

And ... If you would like to join us to help with organizing, please come to our next meeting on Monday March 5th at 9:00 am at Parkdale Community Legal Services, 1266 Queen St. West (west of Dufferin). Women and transpeople are welcome to attend. Wheelchair accessible.


3. Toronto Socialist Action Presents: Rebel Film Series
  • Friday, March 9 - 7 p.m. The U.S. versus John Lennon, 2006, 96 min. How the musician became an anti-war activist.
  • Friday, March 16 - 7 p.m. The Road to Guantanamo, 2006, 95 minutes - The story of the arrest of 3 innocent Britons and their torture in the world’s most notorious prison.
  • Friday, March 23 - 7 p.m. The Iron Wall, 2006, 59 min. Documents the history of Zionist colonization and the building of the Apartheid ‘separation’ wall across Palestine.
  • Friday, March 30 - 7 p.m. Battle of Algiers, 121 min. Pontecorvo’s classic 1966 film depicts an episode in the war for Algerian independence from France, and asks ‘What is terrorism?’
  • Friday, April 6 - 7 p.m. Grain of Sand, 2005, 87 minutes Reveals the struggles of the citizens of Maclovio Rojas in Tijuana, Mexico against the global corporate agenda.
  • Friday, April 13 - 7 p.m. The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power, 120 minutes. A 2003 Canadian documentary.
  • Friday, April 20 - 7 p.m. Darwin’s Nightmare, 2004 - 107 min. Shows the impact of globalization on ecology and human society.
Each film will be preceded by a brief introduction, and will be followed by a commentary, and an open discussion.

OISE, 252 Bloor St. West, Room 2-212
at the St. George Subway Station.


Everyone welcome. $2 donation requested.

For more information, visit the SA web site at:
www.socialistaction.org/ca.htm or call 416-535-8779.
Posted by Spunn at 13:46:03 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Friday, February 16, 2007

Derrick Jensen in Hamilton! (and other awesome community events!)

Amazing stuff coming up everyone :)

In this post:

1. Derrick Jensen in Hamilton: Civilisation is Killing the Earth (March 1st)
2. Film Screening: Negative Effects of a Privatized Money Supply (February 20th)
3. Second Annual Toronto the Better Movie Series (February 22nd)
4. 10th Annual International Day Against Police Brutality (March 15th)
5. Seedy Saturday (March 17th)
6. Conference: The Real Dirt on Food: Unearthing the Controversies behind the Food We Eat (March 17th)
7. The Toronto Haiti Action Committee Presents: An evening of talk, music and solidarity with legendary SÒ Ann (March 2nd)


1. Students for A Renegade Society an OPIRG Working Group presents:
DERRICK JENSEN
Civilization is Killing the Planet. What are you going to do about it?
Thursday March 1st, 2007


An evening with renowned author and activist DERRICK JENSEN, brought to you by the Students for A Renegade Society.

Join us on March 1st at 7.30pm in room 1A1 of the Ewart Angus Center for what promises to be a fascinating, inspiring, and enraging talk with the "philosopher poet of the environmental movement". "Speaking in an almost improvisational style, Jensen explores the nature of injustice, of what civilizations do to the natural world and how, in the face of the
resulting horror that is one of the all too apparent consequences of grave injustice, civilized human beings create intricate systems of denial, silence, abnegation, deception and self-hatred to keep it at bay." His critique is not to be missed, nor is his urgent message for change.

Room 1A1 of the Ewart Angus Center (part of the Health Sciences Building)
McMaster University
1280 Main St. West, Hamilton, ON.
7.30pm
donations $5 or $10 or PWYC


Learn more about Derrick at www.derrickjensen.org. And email Marya at marya.bee@gmail.com for more information about the SRS and the lecture.

2. Video: Negative Effects of a Privatized Money Supply,
Tuesday, February 20, 2007, 7:30
30 Gloucester St


Canadians are in debt. The City is in debt. The Province is in debt. The Federal Government is in debt. If we're all in debt, who's got the money? Come and find out.

Location: The recreation building accessed through 30 Gloucester St - 2 blocks north of the Wellesley subway station. The buzzer code is 333. This month's video is from Sydney White's lectures at the University of Toronto's Free University, The Negative Effects of a Privatized Money Supply.

Bring a food bank donation.

For info call Anne or Paul: 416 536 9789

3. Second Annual Toronto the Better Movie Series
Feb.22, 7.30pm
Tinto Coffee Shop (89 Roncesvalles)


movies/discussion/action on everyday economic decisions for a Better Toronto and a Better world - starts 7.30pm Feb.22nd.at Tinto Coffee Shop (89 Roncesvalles). Series features movies on factory farming in South America and Canada, women activists in the Maquiladoras and Toronto rappers speaking up about their music.

PWYC, cash bar and organic food menu, Guest Speakers, Free Books/CDs for first 10 arrivals.

For details see:
http://www.torontothebetter.net/2tgbd-2007movies.html

Taodhg (Tim) Burns for LIBRA KNOWLEDGE AND INFORMATION SERVICES CO-OPERATIVE INC., o/a Libra Information Services, a Toronto based co-operative business since 1989 and creators & operators of TORONTOTHEBETTER.NET, Toronto's socially responsible business directory and home for progressive enterprise.

We are: Arnold Alfonso, Usha Agrawal, Taodhg Burns, Musonda Kidd, KamlynNg-See Quan, Rachel Rosen, Miko Schechter, Greg Taylor


4. March & Speak Out Against Police Brutality
10th Annual International Day Against Police Brutality

Thursday March 15, 4:00pm,
College and Lansdowne


Every day OCAP works hand in hand with communities that have been under attack by the Police. Under attack because they are poor, homeless, people of colour, First Nations or new immigrants. Under attack because it is the job of the police to maintain the power of the wealthy and upper class.

When we struggle to improve our lives and the lives of our children and communities, it is these same police that attack us and keep us beaten down.

March 15th 2007 marks the 10th Anniversary of the International Day Against Police Brutality. A day to bring awareness to the violence, torture, intimidation and harassment inflicted on citizens' by our governments' Police Forces. A date set by the people, the victims, the survivors, to raise their voices to show that they won't stay silent!!

As part of this internationally observed day, a march and speak out has been organized for Thursday March 15th. We will be meeting at the southeast corner of College & Lansdowne and marching on to 14 Division headquarters.

OCAP invites all people to come out and show support for those whose lives have been affected by the police and remember those whose lives were brutally ended by the police.

Ontario Coalition Against Poverty
10 Britain St. Toronto, ON M5A 1R6
416-925-6939 ocap@tao.ca www.ocap.ca


5. Seedy Saturday

Seed exchange & vendors, displays and information from environmental groups, great food from local vendors, raffle, workshops and hands-on demonstrations.

March 17, 10 am - 3 pm
Location: Scadding Court Community Centre, 707 Dundas St. W
(southeast corner of Dundas West & Bathurst)


Info: rhonda@thestop.org or 416-652-7867 x 222


6. The Real Dirt on Food:
Unearthing the Controversies behind the Food We Eat

March 17, 9 am - 5 pm
Hart House Student Centre, University of Toronto,
7 Hart House Circle


The conference is organized and run by students at the University of Toronto, who are simply passionate about health and sustainability issues.

The main goal of the conference is to address controversial issues about sustainable eating, access in Toronto, nutrition, vegetarianism, organics, local food and slow food. There will be 8 workshops (2 at a time, 4 over the course of the day with one keynote speaker to open and conclude the conference)

Cost: $20 (students $10) - includes a sustainable lunch
Info: www.therealdirt.ca


7. The Toronto Haiti Action Committee is pleased to present:
An evening of talk, music and solidarity:
SÒ Ann - legendary Haitian folksinger, political activist and grandmothe
r

Friday, March 2, 7:00pm
Earth Sciences Centre - Room 1222
5 Bancroft Street, University of Toronto
(north of College, west of Huron)


Annette "SÒ Ann" Auguste was forcibly detained by US marines in April, 2004. She was held in prison without charge for more than two years by the Canadian-backed coup regime in Haiti, along with scores of other political prisoners. She was finally released in August, 2006. She continues to campaign to free political prisoners from Haiti's overflowing jails.

This event is a fundraiser for MOFAVA, an organization struggling in defence of Haiti's women's political prisoners.

Suggested donation: $5

Organized by:
Toronto Haiti Action Committee
E-mail: toronto-haitiaction@riseup.net
Web: www.canadahaitiaction.ca and www.ijdh.org

Posted by Spunn at 21:43:35 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Community Events - David Suzuki, Isreali Apartheid Week, The Fight for True Farming

David Suzuki's 'If you were Prime Minister' Tour presents:
A conversation with
Dr. David Suzuki with Stephen Lewis


Winter Garden Theatre (Yonge at Queen)
Monday February 12 ~ 7:30pm ~ Doors at 7pm
$20 / $15 Students


This is the biggest tour of David Suzuki’s life and it comes at a time when voters are saying the environment is their number one election issue.

"The good news is, there are all sorts of solutions out there," Suzuki says. "The bad news is, our political leaders don't seem to be looking at them. Our job as citizens is to make sure they listen. That's what this tour is all about."

www.ticketmaster.ca ~ 416-872-5555
Box Office: Winter Garden Theatre - 189 Yonge Street - 11 to 5pm. (mon to sat)


ISRAELI APARTHEID WEEK, Toronto, Ontario
February 12-17, 2007

www.endisraeliapartheid.net

For the third consecutive year, Israeli Apartheid Week will take place in Toronto from February 12-17, 2007. This year we continue to work towards building a collective understanding of the Zionist ethnic cleansing, colonization and occupation of Palestine. The series of events will include nightly talks and presentations from some of the leading activists and analysts in the anti-apartheid movement such as Bonita Lawrence, Joel Kovel, Walter Lehn, and Jamal Zahalka. The week will culminate in a day of action on February 17th as part of the growing boycott, divestment, and sanctions campaign against Israeli Apartheid.

The apartheid analysis put forward during Israeli Apartheid Week in previous years has played an important role in raising awareness and disseminating information about Zionism, the Palestinian liberation struggle, as well as the connections with the Aboriginal sovereignty struggle on Turtle Island and the South African Anti-Apartheid movement.
Rapidly spreading on a global scale, this year, Israeli Apartheid Week will be taking place simultaneously in Toronto, Montreal, New York, Oxford, Cambridge and London.

As Israel and its global backers like "Canada" and the "United States" tighten the strangulation hold on the Palestinian people in an attempt to provoke Palestinian infighting; and while the Israeli military continues its brutal daily assault on Palestinian life, it is crucial that people in the rest of the world wake up to the apartheid nature of the Israeli state, and realize that it is our collective responsibility to expose and isolate this racist regime until apartheid is dismantled.

Students Against Israeli Apartheid (SAIA) Proudly Presents:
Israeli Apartheid Week 2007


Monday Feb 12

7:00 pm
"Apartheid: Turtle Island, South Africa, Palestine"
Speakers: Bonita Lawrence, Shaheen Ariefdien, Hazem Jamjoum
Moderator: Judy Rebick

Location: Ryerson University (Main Building) LIB 72
Directions: 350 Victoria Street. Exit at Dundas Station. Walk East on Dundas, and then North on Victoria Street)


Tuesday Feb 13

12:00pm
Film Screening: "Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance"

Location: Sidney Smith (room 2128)
Directions: 100 St. George Street (Exit from St. George subway Station and walk South a little past Harbord)

7:00pm
"The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine"
Speakers: Azada Rahi, Zac Smith, Issam Al Yamani
Moderator: Kole Kilibarda

Location: University of Toronto, Tanz Neuroscience Building, Room 6/7 (Theatre)
Directions: 6 Queen's Park Crescent West (On the North-East Corner of College and Queen's Park (right next to Queen's Park Subway Station)


Wednesday Feb 14

12:00pm
RALLY AGAINST RACIST POLICE INACTION AND IMPUNITY!
Hundreds of Indigenous women have been murdered or have gone missing over the last 30 years. Today we come together to demonstrate against the complicity of the colonizer state and its institutions - police, RCMP, coroners offices and the courts, in the ongoing genocide against First Nations. Indigenous communities are over-policed and indigenous girls make up the fastest growing prison population yet their deaths go uninvestigated and their killers unpunished.
Organized by NO MORE SILENCE

Location: Outside Police headquarters at Bay and College
Directions: Exit at College Subway Station and walk half a block west.

7:00pm
"Apartheid in Present-day Palestine"
Speakers: Walter Lehn, Jon Elmer, Nimer Sultany
Moderator: Zein Ayoub

Location: University of Toronto, Tanz Neuroscience Building, Room 6/7 (Theatre)


Thursday Feb 15

7:00pm
"Ideologies of Genocide and Apartheid"
Speakers: Gabi Piterberg, Joel Kovel
Moderator: Navid Anvari

Location: University of Toronto, Tanz Neuroscience Building, Room 6/7 (Theatre)


Friday Feb 16

7:00pm
"Debunking the Myth of Israel as a Democracy"
Speaker: Jamal Zahalka
Moderator: Rafeef Ziadah

Location: OISE Auditorium (Ontario Institute of Secondary (Education)
252 Bloor Street West, Next to St. George Subway Station (exit on Bedford Street),


Saturday Feb 17

1:00pm
BOYCOTT CHAPTERS/INDIGO DAY OF ACTION
Please join CAIA and allies to protest Israeli Apartheid and highlight the support it receives from the Heseg Foundation. Please visit www.caiaweb.org for more information about Heseg and the Chapters/Indigo connection.
Organized by the Coalition against Israeli Apartheid

Location: Israeli Consulate at 180 Bloor Street West
St. George Subway Station and walk East on Bloor St.

WWW.ENDISRAELIAPARTHEID.NET


Premiere Video Screening of:
"The Fight For True Farming" (2005) - 90 mins.

GENEaction General Meeting
Wed, February 14, 7:30pm


Metro Hall, 55 John St, Room No. 303. south of King St.

Cost: Donations Welcomed - $2 to $5 Suggested or PWYC

Who's trying to control our Food Supply and Why?
And why are they also trying to sell us "GMO Terminator Suicide Seeds"?
The shocking truth that affects both Farmers and Food Consumers.

Filmmaker/Director: Eve Lamont
Produced by: N.Hubert, S. Van Brabant (Rapide Blanc) & C. Loumede(ONF)

In this documentary, crop and animal farmers in Quebec, the Canadian West, the US Northeast and France offer solutions to the social and environmental scourges of factory farming. Driven by the forces of globalization, rampant agribusiness is harming the environment and threatening the survival of farms.

The proliferation of GMO crops is a further threat to biodiversity as well as to farmers' autonomy.

In Europe as well as North America, a current of resistance bringing together farmers and consumers insists that it is possible--indeed imperative--to grow food differently.

The Fight for True Farming is a film of grim lucidity but also irrepressible hope.
http://www.nfb.ca/trouverunfilm/fichefilm.php?id=53662&v=h&lg=en

<http://nfu.ca/seedsavercampaign/>
<http://biotech.indymedia.org>]
<www.banterminator.org>
<http://www.etcgroup.org/article.asp?newsid=500>
<http://www.activistmagazine.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=217>

<geneaction@yahoo.ca>

Posted by Spunn at 13:06:47 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Al Gore Lecture

 

An Inconvenient Truth
A Public Lecture By Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore

February 21st 2007
7.00pm

University of Toronto Convocation Hall
31 King's College Circle

Tickets Available via www.uofttix.ca or call 416.978.8849

 

Posted by Spunn at 10:31:00 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Community Garden Workshop

The Food Animator Project is offering series of community gardening workshop. The courses are geared towards community organizers (agencies) and community leaders who are interested in starting a community garden.

Session: Gardening
February 7, 2007, 7.00pm - 9.00pm

Session: Fundraising (Where and how to get money for gardens)
February 21, 2007, 7.00pm - 9.00pm

Session: Unified Groups (How to run a group so that people are satisfied and the garden is successful)
March 7, 2007, 7.00pm -9.00pm

All workshops are at the Lawrence Heights Community Centre, 5 Replin Road, near Lawrence and Allen

Registration Fee: $25. Leadership scholarships are available.

To register please call Ravenna Barker at 416-363-6441 ext 225 or email
Ravenna@foodshare.net
Posted by Spunn at 18:32:00 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

EVENTS: Citizens Against Global Warming; Revolutionary Healthcare: The Case of Barrio Adentro in Venezuela

Participate in the biggest mobilization of Citizens Against Global Warming!
The 1st of February 2007:

The Alliance for the Planet [a group of environmental associations] is calling on all citizens to create 5 minutes of electrical rest for the planet. http://www.lalliance.fr

People all over the world should turn off their lights and electrical appliances for 5 minutes on the 1st of February 2007,
18:55 for London, and
19:55 for Paris, Bruxelles, and Italy.
1:55pm in Toronto, Montréal and Ottawa
10.55am on the Pacific Coast of North America.

This is not just about saving 5 minutes worth of electricity; this is about getting the attention of the media, politicians, and ourselves.

Five minutes of electrical down time for the planet: this does not take long, and costs nothing, and will show all political leaders that global warming is an issue that needs to come first and foremost in political debate.

Why February 1st? This is the day when the new UN report on global climate change will come out in Paris.

This event affects us all, involves us all, and provides an occasion to show how important an issue global warming is to us. If we all participate, this action can have real media and political weight.


Hands Off Venezuela! Presents:
Revolutionary Healthcare: The Case of Barrio Adentro in Venezuela
Sponsored by: The University of Toronto Students' Union, UofT NDP Club, Fightback

Thursday February 1st, 2007, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm

McLennan Physical Labs: Room 203 (MP 203)
255 Huron Street (@ Russel St.)
University of Toronto

Before Hugo Chavez's election as President of Venezuela and the beginning of the Bolivarian Revolution, millions of Venezuela's working poor went in want of medical treatment and no where was harder hit then the sprawling slums (the barrios) of the major cities. But as the new Bolivarian Republic begins to construct Socialism of the 21st century, medical care is for the first time being extended to the Barrios in a meaningful way.

We invite you to learn more about Venezuela's Medical Revolution and the achievements of Barrio Adentro Mission and Socialized Medicine.

Sponsored by: The University of Toronto Students' Union, UofT NDP Club, Fightback and Hands Off Venezuela!

Speakers:

* Dr. Maria Paez Victor, MA, PhD

Dr. María Páez Victor is a Venezuelan-born sociologist and consultant who has taught Sociology of Health and Medicine at the University of Toronto for a number of years.

She will deliver a presentation on the history of the Barrio Adentro program and its social and political impacts.

* Dr. Carles Muntaner, MD, PhD

Dr. Carles Muntaner is the chair in psychiatry and addictions nursing research in the social policy and prevention research department at the Centre for Addictions and Mental Health (CAMH). He is also a professor at the faculty of
nursing with a cross-appointment in the department of public health sciences, faculty of medicine, University of Toronto.

Dr. Muntaner recently completed the only epidemiological evaluation of the Barrio Adentro program and its accomplishments in terms of health.

The event will be followed by a open discussion by the audience.

Posted by Spunn at 14:15:14 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Friday, January 26, 2007

Upcoming Events: Rally Against Racist Police Inaction and Impunity, Law Union of Ontario Annual Conference

Stop the impunity surrounding the deaths and disappearance of indigenous women in Canada!

Rally Against Racist Police Inaction and Impunity

February  14, 2007, 12 noon, Outside Police Headquarters at Bay and College

Speakers and drumming, followed by a social at the Native women's resource centre.

Hundreds of Indigenous women have been murdered or gone missing over the last 30 years. We come together in defense of our lives and to demonstrate the complicity of the colonizer state and its institutions - police, RCMP, coroner's offices and the courts, in the ongoing genocide against First Nations'.  Indigenous communities are over policed and Indigenous girls make up the fastest growing prison population- while their deaths go uninvestigated and their killers unpunished.

We call on all people in this country to take a stand - NO MORE SILENCE!!

Bring your drums!

No More Silence aims to develop a national network of local, Indigenous led coalitions, in solidarity with allies to support the initiatives of independent Indigenous women working to stop the disappearances and end impunity.


LAW UNION OF ONTARIO ANNUAL CONFERENCE

February 9-10, 2007

The 2007 conference of the Law Union of Ontario is open to everyone (no one will be turned away for lack of funds) and registration will open on Friday, February 9, at 6:30 p.m. and on Saturday, February 10, at 8:30 a.m. (with sessions running from 9:15 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.).


1) Justice For A Dying Planet

Friday, February 9, 2007, 7:00 – 9:00 pm
Bloor Street United Church, 300 Bloor St. W. (at Huron)
$10 ($5 students and unwaged or PWYC)


This is an evening about "climate justice."  What is the problem?  What are the fights that are underway (what fights need to happen!)?  What are the solutions – what can law do; what can the community do?

* Gord Perks, Toronto City Counselor – to speak about the City's direction on climate change;

* Keith Stewart, Manager, Climate Change Campaign, WWF – Canada – to speak about "the problem";

* Don Goldberg, Senior Attorney (Climate Change), Centre for International Environmental Law – to speak about international efforts and climate justice litigation;

* Elizabeth May, Leader, Green Party of Canada – for closing remarks.


2) Hot Environmental Issues & Updates

Saturday, 10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), 252 Bloor Street West,
Toronto (St. George Subway)


$10 per session or $30 for the day (students and unwaged PWYC)

The environment has risen to be the #1 concern of Canadians.  This panel will profile some of the latest break thoroughs, updates and important issues that are happening on the environmental front in Ontario.

* David McRobert, In-House Counsel & Senior Policy Advisor, Environmental Commissioner of Ontario - to speak about current issues of interest to ECO and the status of Ontario's Environmental Bill of Rights;

* Dayna Nadine Scott, Faculty at Osgoode Hall Law School – speaking about current legal and political aspects of environmental justice;

* Rick Smith, Executive Director, Environmental Defence Canada – speaking about legislative reforms at the federal level and how environmental issues are affecting the balance of power;

* Shawn-Patrick Stensil, Energy Campaigner, Greenpeace Canada – speaking about the coming of new sources of nuclear generation in Ontario; and,

* Hugh Wilkins, Staff Lawyer, Sierra Legal Defence Fund – to speak about the state of litigation and legislation protecting Ontario air.


3) Plenary: The Duty To Consult Aboriginal People: Step Forward Or Colonialist Trick?

Saturday, 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), 252 Bloor Street West


Everyone welcome to join this moderated conversation among lawyers, activists and Aboriginal people.

Moderator: Shin Imai, Professor, Osgoode Hall Law School

Opening & Closing Remarks: Murray Klippenstein, Barrister & Solicitor


ALSO AT THE CONFERENCE:

The Annual Conference of the Law Union of Ontario will also include:
International Law & Canada's Role in Afghanistan; The Ontario Citizen's Assembly on Electoral Reform; Chocolate, Other Comforts & Child Labour; Challenging Police Misconduct in Ontario; Precarious Employment: Gaps & Strategies; Solidarity & Rights from the Philippines to Columbia; Organizing Movement &  Movement Lawyers, and more!

The Law Union of Ontario, founded in 1974, is an association of over 200 progressive lawyers, law students and legal workers.

For more information: Sarah Dover
(416) 537-3966 or (416) 276-4020
sdover@magma.ca

About the LUO: http://lawunion.anarres.ca/
or  www.srglwg.blogspot.com

Posted by Spunn at 15:39:30 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Buy Nothing Day 2006

hey everyone, just reminding & informing you of actions taking place in toronto this weekend for buy nothing day.

tomorrow, friday night, there is going to be a direct action taking place in the early hours of the morning to adbust the hot commercial spots of toronto in the wee hours of the morning, afterwards, we will be meeting for a very early morning breakfast :) if you are interested and want more details, email spunnface (at) gmail (dot) com for more info :)

and dont forget the barter market saturday during the day!


for more info on Buy Nothing Day check out the official website
http://adbusters.org/metas/eco/bnd/
and
www.globalaware.org/affluence

Posted by Spunn at 15:10:39 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Upcoming Events

1) Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan: War resisters speak out!
2) Drop Fees, Not Bombs conference
3) Social Justice: From Rhetoric to Action conference
4) Al-Quds Day rally and march; Solidarity with Palestine
5) Community Iftar Dinner
6) Peggy Nash on the Lessons of Lebanon
7) Art in the Struggle Against War
8) Artists Against War panel discussion
9) Anti-War Slide Show and Presentation
10) Film Screening - Camden 28: What Would You Do to Stop a War?
11) A Matter of Conscience: Resisting War
12) Labour Peace Breakfast
13) Student Breakfast and Feeder March
14) Mississauga October 28 Rally and Transport to Toronto rally
15) Toronto October 28 Pan-Canadian Day of Action march and rally
NEWS:
16) Voices from Afghanistan
17) NATO strikes kill 9 Afghan civilians
18) Troops will be in Afghanistan for next 20 years, says commander


9) Anti-War Slide Show and Presentation

Slide Show Presentation on:
- Missile Defence
- Afghanistan
- Iraq
- Canadian Hypocrisy and Complicity in the Business of War

Speaker: Richard Sanders, coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade; editor, COAT¹s magazine, Press for Conservation!

Tuesday, October 24
7:30pm
St. Andrew¹s United Church
117 Bloor Street East (between Church Street and Yonge Street)
NOTE: Limited free parking-enter via Hayden Street, one way west, one block south of Bloor Street. Press button, say ³VANA² or ³Veterans².

Informative slide show, replete with many dozens of graphics illustrating Canada¹s complicity in the US-led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq as well as the biggest, weapons-development program in world history, namely Ballistic Missile Defense. This data-filled presentation is balanced with satirical social commentary and sprinkled with the biting it and wisdom of Mark Twain, Pogo and Oscar Wilde.

Sponsored by:
Veterans Against Nuclear Arms, Ontario-Quebec Region (VANA)
Science for Peace (SfP)

For more information, please contact:
Audrey Tobias (VANA) tel: 416-398-7447 e-mail: atobias@primus.ca
Jean Smith (SfP) tel: 416-535-6605 e-mail: jsmith@chem.utoronto.ca

Or visit COAT¹s web page: http://coat.ncf.ca


10) Film Screening - Camden 28: What Would You Do to Stop a War?

Development and Peace, Homes not Bombs, and Science for Peace Present the Canadian premiere screening of the award winning-film Camden 28: What Would You Do to Stop a War?

Wednesday, October 25
7:00pm
Innis Town Hall
University of Toronto
(corner of St. George and Sussex, just south of Bloor Street)

³What do you do when a child is on fire, in a war that was a mistake? What do you do? Write a letter?² ­ Msgr. Michael Doyle, one of the Camden 28, who faced 47 years in prison for destroying government draft files during the war against Vietnam. Join us for a compelling evening of inspiring filmmaking.

For more information: Homes not Bombs (416-651-5800)


11) A Matter of Conscience: Resisting War

Thursday, October 26, 2006
7:30pm - 9:00pm
Trinity St Paul¹s United Church
Fireside Room
427 Bloor Street West
(south side of Bloor, east of Spadian; nearest subway station: Spadina)

Canadians are increasingly concerned about the impact of war in various regions of the world. What does resisting war mean to you? Join us for a panel discussion with:

Charlie Diamond came to Canada during the Viet Nam War with help from Quakers. A Quaker, Charlie works on housing settlement at Evangel Hall for the Presbyterian Church.

Stephanie and Chris Teske US War Resisters, will speak about the role of conscience in their decision. Chris served in Afghanistan for the US military; he and his wife, Stephanie, arrived in Canada in October 2006.


Nnancy Lessin is a founding member of Military Families Speak Out (USA). She will speak about the American experience in resisting the war, and the role of opposition within military communities.

Dr. Jane Pritchard is a Mennonite activist and doctor. She and her husband, Doug, have a long history of resisting paying taxes to support war.

Sponsored by the War Resisters Support Campaign
tel: 416-778-7872
web: www.resisters.ca
e-mail: resisters@sympatico.ca


12) Labour Peace Brunch and Labour Feeder March

Saturday, October 28
11:00am
Steelworkers Hall
25 Cecil Street
(1 block south of College between Beverly and Huron)
$5 suggested donation

Join trade unionists for a pre-rally brunch before heading out to the U.S. Consulate. Bring your union flags and banners

Organized by Steelworkers Toronto Area Council
Supported by Toronto and York Region Labour Council


13) Student Feeder March and Peace Breakfast

Saturday, October 28
Breakfast begins at 10:30am
Assemble for march at 12:30pm
International Student Centre
33 St. George Street

All students and youth from universities, colleges and high schools welcome!

Organized by Student Administrative Council at the University of Toronto
Supported by student groups across the city
For more information, please call 416-978-4911


14) Mississauga October 28 National Day of Action

Mississauga Coalition for Peace and Justice Demonstration
Troops out of Afghanistan
Bring the Troops Home
Canada Out of Afghanistan
Military Action Won¹t Create Stability

Saturday, October 28
10:30am
Revolution Square
Hurontario and Dundas (south east corner)

The Mississauga Coalition for Peace and Justice, along with other student, labour, faith and environmental groups will be joining cities across Canada in a nation-wide call for an END to our military role in Afghanistan. As the debate over Afghanistan grows and intensifies, it¹s crucial that the voices for peace are heard loud and clear! More than ever, the anti-war movement must remain an ever present, unwavering force that works to uphold peace and justice.

Continue to join us as we head downtown to march in solidarity with Torontonians later that afternoon. A bus from the Mississauga Rally will be heading downtown.

For more information,and to reserve a seat, please e-mail mcpj@resist.ca

 


15) BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
Canada out of Afghanistan march and rally

Rally and march
Saturday, October 28
1:00pm
United States Consulate
360 University Avenue
(between Dundas and Queen; nearest subways: St. Patrick and Osgoode)

On October 28, tens of thousands of people in dozens of towns and cities across the country are expected to demonstrate to bring Canadian troops home from Afghanistan. This pan-Canadian day of action has been jointly called by four major organizations: the Canadian Peace Alliance, le Collectif Échec à la guerre, the Canadian Labour Congress and the Canadian Islamic Congress. In addition, dozens more organizations - both national and local, including the Toronto Coalition to Stop the War - have joined the call and will be mobilizing for October 28.

Our demand is a simple one: "Support our troops and bring them home now!" Right now, the Stephen Harper government continues to support a NATO-led mission in Afghanistan that has made the situation in the country worse than it was in 2001. Fewer people have access to clean water and electricity than five years ago, reconstruction is at a standstill, opium production generates twice the amount of income than international aid, and Canadian troops are keeping in power a government that is dominated by war lords and drug lords - people who continue to commit war crimes and human rights abuses on a massive scale.

And as Stephen Harper pours billions of dollars more into George Bush's war in Afghanistan, he continues to cut billions from social programs here in Canada. Money that is badly needed for healthcare, childcare, education, the environment, social programs and other services is being diverted to war and militarism. For every dollar the Canadian government spends on the Afghan mission, fully 90 cents goes towards the military operation. Only ten cents goes to aid.

On October 28, the anti-war movement has an unprecedented opportunity to challenge Harper's support for Bush's war. In addition, we also have the opportunity to challenge Harper's pro-cuts, pro-corporate agenda. As much of the national press have already noted, the war in Afghanistan is Stephen Harper's Achilles heel. We hope that you will join us on October 28 as we take the first steps together to stop the war and to stop Stephen Harper.

For information about actions in other locations, please contact the Canadian Peace Alliance: www.acp-cpa.ca.

For information on the Toronto march and rally, please contact TCSW:
stopthewar@symaptico.ca.


16) Voices from Afghanistan

Exclusive Video Clips of Afghan MP Malalai Joya now available (cut and paste link into your browser).

Malalai Joya comments on women¹s rights:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rmWcw5eJ_A

- on children¹s rights:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ClkmXoAvuec

- on Karzai¹s warlord government:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wO7Zpm6mySo

- on how Canada should support Afghanistan:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOb6ASTOZB4

Background on Malalai Joya:
Malalai Joya, a women¹s rights advocate, is the youngest member of Afghan parliament at 27 years old. She has been an outspoken critic of the majority presence of warlords and drug lords in the Afghan government, including known human rights abusers. Malalai has survived physical attacks in Parliament, as well as numerous death threats. She is outspoken, independent and fearless ­ but has been all but ignored by mainstream press in the West.

More info: http://www.malalaijoya.com/

Video Footage Presented by Intrinsic Audiovisual Productions © 2006
Released in honour of Media Democracy Day: October 18


17) NATO strikes kill 9 Afghan civilians

By Kathy Gannon
Associated Press

Airstrikes by NATO helicopters hunting Taliban fighters ripped through three dried mud homes in southern Afghanistan as villagers slept early Wednesday. At least nine civilians were killed, including women and children, said residents and the provincial governor.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061018/ap_on_re_as/afghanistan


18) Troops will be in Afghanistan for next 20 years, says commander

The Independent

The commander of the British forces returning from Helmand said that his forces were having to make up for the time lost by the decision of the US and UK to invade Iraq instead of concentrating on post-Taliban Afghanistan.
http://egyptelection.com/index2.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=623&Item
id=38&pop=1&page=0


Toronto Coalition to Stop the War

TCSW is Toronto¹s city-wide anti-war coalition, comprised of more than fifty labour, faith and community organisations, and a member of the Canadian Peace Alliance.
www.nowar.ca stopthewar@sympatico.ca 416-795-5863

Posted by Spunn at 12:46:02 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Friday, October 13, 2006

Tibetans Protest Killing of Unarmed Refugees by China

[Toronto, CANADA]

Tibetans and Tibet supporters will be demonstrating outside the Chinese Consulate to protest against the recent fatal shooting of unarmed Tibetans as they tried to escape across the Himalayas from Chinese occupied Tibet into neighboring Nepal. 

Shocking eyewitness reports have confirmed that Chinese forces opened fire on the group on September 30’ 2006, killing a 17-year-old nun. Up to five more Tibetans are feared dead after the soldiers, stationed at the Nangpa Pass between Tibet and Nepal, opened fire on the caravan of more than 70 escaping Tibetans, which included children as young as seven. The news first broke on the popular mountaineering website www.mounteverest.net. Foreign mountaineers at the nearby Cho Oyu advance base camp witnessed the incident and described how the soldiers took careful aim and fired repeatedly on the defenseless Tibetans, even as they attempted to escape.

Forty-three people from the group have successfully crossed into Nepal and have now reached the United Nations sponsored Tibetan Refugee Reception Centre in Katmandu. The fate of the other Tibetans, including at least 14 children, remains unknown. There is concern that many of them may have been injured during the shooting and apprehended by the security forces.

Tibetans and Tibet supporters are organizing similar protests in New York, Paris, Zurich, London, San Francisco, Toronto, New Delhi and Dharamsala, the exile home of the Dalai Lama in India.


WHEN: Monday, October 16, 2006 (5:00 – 7:00 pm)

WHERE: Chinese Consulate (240 St. George St. Toronto)

WHO: Tibetans and their supporters

WHAT: Demonstration at Chinese Consulate



Jointly organized by Tibetan Women Association – Ontario, Tibetan Youth Congress – Toronto, Students for a Free Tibet – Toronto, Canada Tibet Committee - Toronto
Posted by Spunn at 21:22:18 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |
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