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March 26, 2005

Civil Rights and the Patriot Act

The theme for our next meeting on April 11th will be Civil Rights and the Patriot Act. We are fortunate to have four exciting speakers including Chuck Michaels author of No Greater Threat: America After September 11 and the Rise of a National Security State, Meredith Curtis of the Maryland Chapter of the ACLU, and two talented students who are affiliated with the Howard County Muslim Council. Miss Hasan will speak about her experiences practicing her faith, and Mr. Shourbaji will speak about Martin Luther King.

This will be an exciting, thought provoking event. Please don't miss it!

Below is a link for a recent article from the New York Times

Coalition Forms to Oppose Parts of Antiterrorism Law

Posted by Melissa at 11:20 AM | Comments (0)

March 19, 2005

Updated List of Events

Please check out our now updated "List of Events" on the left column. Many thanks to Dawn.

Posted by Jim at 10:29 AM | Comments (0)

March 11, 2005

Welcome Governor Howard Dean to Washington

Support the DNC

March 23, 2005
7:00 - 10:00 PM
VIP Reception (for hosts and VIPs): 7:00 - 8:00 PM

$50 Ticket - $250 VIP Ticket - $1000 Host Committee

H20 on the Waterfront
800 Water Street SW
Washington, DC

Posted by Jim at 02:08 PM | Comments (0)

March 04, 2005

Public Forum on Election Reform on March 13

Election Reform: Paper Trails

Speakers: ELIJAH CUMMINGS, LIZ BOBO, LINDA SCHADE & OTHERS

March 13, 2005, 2-4 PM

Owen Brown Interfaith Center
7246 Cradlerock Way
Columbia, Md 21045

Admission: Free

For more information call 410-730-7605

Sponsored by the Howard County Coalition for Peace and Justice and TrueVote Maryland

Co-sponsored by: The Maryland Green Party, Howard Countians for Democracy, Grandmothers for Peace MD, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Columbia, Howard County Democratic Party, and League of Women Voters

Handicap Access

Posted by Jim at 12:08 AM | Comments (0)

March 02, 2005

Changing Unions to Change Workers’ Lives: An Interview with SEIU President Andy Stern

In case any of you are wondering why I'm posting so much on Andy Stern, it is because tomorrow could be a very big day in the labor movement whose leaders are currently meeting in Las Vegas. Read all about it at Unite to Win or Daily Kos

From Social Policy

(These are the last questions of the interview)

Social Policy: This debate within the labor movement – why should anyone outside the unions care about the outcome?

Stern: Because without strong and growing unions there cannot be a strong and growing progressive movement in America. In our country, unions are the only effective anti-poverty program that works, and it does not cost the government a dime. Unions insure that work is rewarded not just for CEOs and managers, but for everyone who works hard and plays by the rules. How do you fight for health care and a different kind of globalization and a different economic model than Wal-Mart’s without a strong union movement?

Look at the 2004 elections. Union members voted by 2 to 1 against Bush. Majorities of every category of union members voted against Bush – male, female, white, African American, Latino, religious, not religious, single, married. Why? Because union members are used to standing together for their common economic interests.

But the trouble is that in northern states like Ohio there aren’t nearly as many union members as there used to be, and in the South and Southwest there are hardly any.

SEIU was the largest contributor both of money and of people to America Coming Together and the other progressive coalitions. It is the money and the volunteer work in the streets by union members that elects candidates who stand up not just for workers but for the environment, for civil rights, for women’s rights, for putting people first.

So anyone who cares about progressive issues should be doing everything they can in the next four years to help more workers join unions.

Social Policy: How? How can people help?

Stern: Support workers who are trying to form unions. It is not acceptable, as far as I am concerned, to think you’re progressive because you are a Democrat or socially concerned. I don’t think you can be anti-union or lukewarm about unions and be progressive.

National polls always show that between 43 and 50 percent of workers in America say they would choose to have a union if they didn’t have to face intimidation and reprisals from their employer – not just risking being fired but direct pressure from the supervisors who control their work assignments and schedules and chances of promotion.

We need people to stand up for workers’ right to form their own organization and be represented in decisions that affect their work life. Not only because it’s right, but also because in the long run it’s the only way progressives in America can win.

And beyond that, when we revitalize the union movement and launch real campaigns on issues like health care and the Wal-Marting of jobs in our communities, it’s got to be a joint effort. As important as union members are to fights like that, we can’t do it alone. It takes everybody working together.

Changing America is not a matter of chance. It is a matter of choice. And now it’s time to decide.

Read the complete interview

Daily Kos also has an article with comments

Posted by Melissa at 05:48 PM | Comments (0)