A busy week presenting a webinar on direct actions at war industry facilities Thursday night and then yesterday organizing a stand out in Farmington with around 30 people bringing a pro-Palestine message to the downtown area near a University of Maine campus.
My buddies Ken Jones and Melody Shank organize Resist Raytheon actions in North Carolina and elsewhere, and helped found the War Resisters Network that offers monthly webinars on related topics. You'll see Ken introducing me and then moderating the Q&A.
Ken and Melody used to live in Maine when they taught at the University of Southern Maine. I often joke that Maine is one big small town because our sparse population means most of us engaged in resisting imperialism and the war machine know each other. We get excited when new people show up and that's been happening a lot this past year.
I thought that was happening yesterday when I stood next to a UMF worker who seemed familiar. Turns out she had come to stand with us in Farmington last year and signed up to get email announcements, but never received any. My bad, I'm sure I misread or mistyped her email address from that sign-up sheet. After we'd stood downtown for a couple of hours we circled up in the town gazebo to share why we were there. Once she heard my last name she realized that I was an old friend of her extended family, and I realized that we'd been at Occupy Augusta together many years ago.
You meet the nicest people standing up to the war machine.
A less than nice person who passed us on the street yesterday started shouting that all problems would be cleared up in no time if we would just vote Republican like he did (many of us are finding 47's victory has emboldened his supporters to challenge our protests on various pretexts). Eventually my friend Bruce Gagnon said, "We're not Democrats" and the man returned a few minutes later for dialogue with some more of us. There was some concern about the safety of a woman in that conversation (which was too far away for us to hear) but I noted it was my friend Mary Beth Sullivan who just retired from a long career in social work. If it can be de-escalated, MB will de-escalate it! She reported that they found common ground in the belief that the U.S. should not be funding "all these wars."
An organizer local to Farmington has been holding standouts for Palestine weekly on Saturdays at noon in front of the post office. Several attendees yesterday want to join in and contact info was shared; later over lunch people with connections to the university strategized about what each of them could do to build the movement in their town. Students and members of the public can, for instance, engage in organizing that instructors are restricted from doing by the terms of their contract.
Everyone is concerned about legislation passed in the House last week that would enable the Treasury to designate non-profits as supporting "terrorism" and rescind their tax-free status. My own odious representative, Democrat Jared Golden, voted for it -- his advocacy for Republican causes contributed to his very narrow re-election win this week after ranked choice voting tabulations concluded.
Liberals will use this law as an excuse to curtail their own advocacy for Palestine. I'm happy to know lots of well-informed people who will continue full steam ahead taking action to say no to genocide and no to trashing 1st amendment protections for political speech. We'll continue our monthly coalition stand outs at big intersections in Maine (next up: Freeport Sat Dec 21) in addition to weekly protests in many locations, and a steady stream of direct actions.
Use it, or lose it.
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