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'Rule of law' racism, C-51 and the coming resistance wave

Photo: Chris Yakimov/flickr

It's a sign of how utterly frightened they are of democracy when politicians and pundits start lecturing us about the "real" definition of civil disobedience. This usually happens during the sanitizing rituals of the January Martin Luther King Day holiday, when King's revolutionary calls to justice are erased in favour of saccharine, self-congratulatory events wholly unconnected to the civil rights movement's multiple, powerful legacies.

But public cautions around "acceptable" forms of dissent began hatching in late 2016 when the Trudeau government announced support for a slew of harmful pipelines that, along with other environmentally destructive projects like B.C.'s Site C and Muskrat Falls, will inspire increasing levels of direct action.

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Columnists

A victory for nuclear disarmament: Plowshares activists released from prison

Photo: Scott Schumacher/flickr

There is a vast military complex deep in the hills of eastern Tennessee called "Y-12." This is where all of the highly enriched uranium is produced and stored for the production of the U.S. nuclear-warhead arsenal. It is in Oak Ridge, the city that was created practically overnight during the Second World War, that produced the uranium for the atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945. Today, the facility, dubbed "The Fort Knox of Uranium," holds enough of the radioactive element to make 10,000 nuclear bombs.

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Columnists

'To Change Everything, We Need Everyone': Taking action on climate change

Photo: Paul Downey/flickr

"Unjust laws exist." So wrote Henry David Thoreau in his 1849 essay, "On the Duty of Civil Disobedience." The naturalist and pacifist asked, "Shall we be content to obey them, or shall we endeavor to amend them, and obey them until we have succeeded, or shall we transgress them at once?" His answer was simple: "I say, break the law."

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Direct action

direct actions can help a campaign in different ways

A direct action is any activity that strives for social, political or economic change outside of accepted political channels. It can be anything from a sit-in to a march, to graffiti. Non-violent direct action is one of the most effective forms of protests activists can use within an ongoing campaign. Actions with predetermined political contexts are often much more effective than unorganized gatherings. This guide includes:

Uses of direct action
Nonviolent vs violent
Resources

Uses
Direct actions are used as:

A form of alarm (a situation has changed or an injustice has been committed and the action alerts the general public)

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Book launch: Refusing to be Enemies: Palestinian and Israeli Nonviolent Resistance to the Israeli Occupation

Thursday, September 30, 2010 - 7:30pm

Location

Mondragon Bookstore and Coffeehouse
91 Albert St in the Exchange
Winnipeg, MB
Canada
Phone: 946-5241
49° 53' 51.6264" N, 97° 8' 24.918" W

Join author Maxine Kaufman-Lacusta as she launches her recent book Refusing to be Enemies: Palestinian and Israeli Nonviolent Resistance to the Israeli Occupation.

Maxine Kaufman-Lacusta's book offers us a compelling invitation to consider non-violent activism as a path to peaceful resolution in the  context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In a series of interviews,  essays and commentaries, and with contributions from notable peace activists such as Ghassan Andoni, Ursula Franklin, Jeff Halper, Starhawk
 and others, she explores many forms of creative non-violence and its powerful effects.

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