Wednesday, April 22, 2026

May Day Organizing. National Education Committee

 solidarity and to push for progress.



Across the country—from fruit fields in California to classrooms in Chicago, from kitchens in Queens to loading docks in Atlanta—working people are rising up. NEA members are joining other laborers, parents, education workers, immigrants, students, and neighbors demanding stronger, safer, and more dignified communities. 

NOT Business As Usual.  NEA Community Organizing Kit. 

 NEA Toolkit: https://www.nea.org/mayday-toolkit.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Timothy Snyder : Super Power Suicide.

substack.com/pub/snyder/p/superpower-suicide?


https://superpower-suicide?open.substack.com/pub/snyder/p/superpower-suicide?


War and AI; Bernie Sanders

 

Choosing Democracy.blogspot.com
Senator Bernie Sanders, author and filmmaker Naomi Klein and Congressman Ro Khanna, both Sanders Institute Fellows, are charting the progressive vision for artificial intelligence and robotics,...

May Day Mobilization -NEA

 A step toward unity. 

Monday, April 20, 2026

A Day Without Immigrants + Sacramento


 

Friday, May 1 @10am: NorCal Resist 20th Anniversary of A Day Without Immigrants march and rally. Gather at Southside Park at 10 am. The event will include a rally at Southside Park, a march to the John Moss Building, as well as an art action with community speakers, musical performances, and food and beverages with NO ICE!


Call them detention centers or concentration camps -- whatever you call them, they’re inhumane, morally bankrupt, and political liabilities. Trump's trying to expedite construction of new camps, but because of the public outcry, he’s hoping to keep the whole business out of the headlines.

So let’s get loud about it. Let’s start with some facts and context.

Detention expansion is key to Trump’s goal of one million deportations. Last week, we finally got the Department of Homeland Security’s 161-page 2027 budget proposal. In it, DHS brags about a record-breaking 440,000 deportations last year, and promises to more than double that to one million of our neighbors deported annually. 

Deportation camps are central to how they get there. DHS itself says the new camps are “critical to meeting…[the] tasked goal of arresting and removing one million aliens per year.” Detention Watch Network’s toolkit explains that the agency is looking to construct a couple dozen to house upwards of 10,000 people each, often for months on end in cramped and horrific conditions.

These camps are moral abominations. Since Senator Jon Ossoff started an investigation into ICE’s camps last year, he's received more than a thousand “credible reports of human rights abuses": mistreatment of pregnant women, separation of children from parents, physical and sexual abuse, overcrowding, and unsanitary conditions. One grim statistic captures the scale of this horror: The death rate in ICE detention is increasing. In 2026, we’re seeing an average of more than one death every week.

These camps are also a political liability for Trump and his allies. The regime is trying to keep the escalation quiet because the more people hear about these camps, the more they oppose them. That backlash is a real problem for the GOP.

The peak number of detentions in US history came on January 24, the same day DHS agents murdered Alex Pretti for exercising his First Amendment rights to defend his neighbors. Public opposition exploded, the political winds shifted, and Trump made a tactical retreat. After their defeat in the Twin Cities, the White House advised Republicans to stop talking about mass deportations, and the number of detainees has dropped -- but the DHS budget proposal makes clear the regime still plans a massive escalation. 

Grassroots activists are throwing sand in the gears, though, successfully rallying public opposition to the camps, including in red states. We’ve seen successful grassroots and legal campaigns in Mississippi, Oklahoma, Utah, Texas, Virginia, New York, New Hampshire, Maryland, and Michigan -- in Tennessee, the opposition of GOP candidates for governor and two dozen local GOP officials successfully killed a project. 

On April 25, we're making a big stink. On Saturday, we’re joining Detention Watch Network and other partners on a national day of action against these camps. The regime can try to dramatically increase construction, but they can’t make us be quiet. As long as we have First Amendment rights, we intend to use them in defense of our neighbors. Read on for more ways to stand Indivisible with your community.

In solidarity,

Ezra Levin 
Co-Executive Director, Indivisible


Your weekly to-dos

  1. Keep telling Congress: Trump's war has to end. Despite his erratic announcements of victory/ceasefires/imminent war crimes, Trump's war on Iran grinds on, at the expense of thousands of lives across the region, the wholesale disruption of the world economy, and soaring costs for Americans. We must meet Trump's incompetence and inconsistency with a steady determination of our own to neither give up nor give in. Tell your Members of Congress: Either they do all they can to end the war that Trump and Israel launched, or the blood is on their hands, too. After sending an email via the above link, please call your representative and your sena

I had conversations with high schoolers and retirees alike who were looking to get into organizing for the first time. There was urgency in those conversations. There was clarity, and resolve — but also hope, and joy. A sense that it is we, together, who make our futures. That no one is coming to save us, and that this is not a cause for despair, but for action. We alone are responsible for our democracy. We alone can build a future of dignity, peace, and abundance for all the people of this city and state.

No Kings was not the struggle. It was a place to meet, to count ourselves, to feel in our bones that we are not alone. The struggle is what comes next: in your union, in your neighborhood association, in your DSA chapter, in your school board meeting, in the conversations you have with your coworkers about why things are the way they are and how they could be different.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

May Day and A Day Without Immigrants

 









May Day and No Kings 2026

A Day Without Immigrants 


by Harry Targ



This year May Day will continue the historic mass mobilizations for social and economic justice of recent historic No Kings rallies. The original May Day was designed to remember the May 1, 1886 rally in Chicago for the 8-hour day. At that rally more than 300,000 workers from 13,000 businesses walked off their jobs to demand justice for workers. 


At a subsequent rally two days later at another rally an unknown person threw a bomb, violence broke out, police and others were killed. Anarchist leaders of the rallies, the Haymarket Martyrs, were charged with the violence, which they had nothing to do with. Subsequently eight martyrs were convicted, four of whom were executed for crimes they did not commit. Three years later, a federation of socialists workers, the Second International, declared May 1 an International Workers Day to remember the Haymarket Martyrs and at the same time to continue to rally for worker rights, from social and economic justice to ending war. Almost 70 countries around the world honor May Day as an official holiday today, and workers in many more countries celebrate the day and workers’ rights even though it is not an “official” holiday.


Today working people, most of the population of the United States, still need social and economic rights, labor rights, and would benefit from dramatic cuts in military spending and increases in social spending. As a result, millions of people in the United States have marched and rallied for social and economic justice, defending democratic institutions, and against wars in recent No Kings rallies, the most recent being March 28. Given the threats of fascism at home and world war overseas, activists are asking “What do we do now?’ One answer is to step up the militancy while honoring May Day, the International Workers Day.


​“Coming off the heels of the massive energy from the No Kings mobilizations, people are ready to take action and keep fighting for a democracy of, by, and for the people,” says Indivisible Co-Founder Leah Greenberg, whose organization started the No Kings protest. 


On May 1, Indivisibles will be joining people across the country with a clear message: we demand a government that invests in our communities, not one that enriches billionaires, fuels endless war, or deploys masked agents to intimidate our neighbors.” 


https://paydayreport.com/no-kings-organizers-pivot-to-may-day-general-strike/


As Ralph Chapin. the lyricist of the industrial Workers of the World wrote in 1915 in the workers' anthem, “Solidarity Forever”:


“In our hands is placed a power greater than their hoarded gold,

Greater than the might of armies, magnified a thousand-fold.

We can bring to birth a new world from the ashes of the old.

For the union makes us strong”

Monday, April 13, 2026

Trump is in Trouble

 Heather Cox Richardson. Letter from an American.

https://open.substack.com/pub/heathercoxrichardson/p/april-10-2026?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email


https://open.substack.com/pub/heathercoxrichardson/p/april-10-2026?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email


There is a great deal of important organizing in defense of democracy going on including the mass marches and hundreds of local actions of March 28.  The next mass national action is scheduled for May 1, 2026. These events offer opportunities to connect with new people and groups, to deepen their engagement, to advance the advocacy for democracy within these movements and to build cooperative relationships between national and local resistance

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Trump's Assault on Democratic Media

Last fall, Donald Trump signed a terrifying presidential directive called NSPM-7, ordering the FBI and other federal law enforcement agencies to investigate and disrupt progressive organizations and activists as potential “domestic terrorists.”

Now Trump is asking Congress to provide a huge increase in funding to ramp up the NSPM-7 crackdown.

This comes after the New York Times reported that the IRS and FBI have formed a joint task force under NSPM-7 to “attack the funding” of progressive groups, and leaked emails from inside the FBI indicate that state and local police are being enlisted to target progressive groups as well.

Friends, this is one of the biggest threats to democracy that almost no one is talking about.

The corporate media are so cowed by Trump’s bullying that they’ve barely even mentioned NSPM-7, so Inequality Media Civic Action is using our massive following across social media to sound the alarm and demand that Congress reject funding for these attacks on our First Amendment rights.

Under NSPM-7, the Justice Department is directed to create a secret list of organizations and individuals who hold any one of a long list of vaguely defined left-of-center views, including “anti-capitalism,” “anti-Americanism,” “extremism on migration, race, and gender,” or opposition to “traditional American views on family.”

Trump’s budget proposal further states that counterterrorism funding will be used to target progressives who “exploit a variety of popular social media platforms, smaller websites with targeted audiences, and encrypted chat applications.”

In other words, if you’re on the internet and oppose Trump’s agenda in any way, you could be on Trump’s secret domestic terrorist blacklist and get a knock on the door from the FBI.

These are the actions of an unhinged authoritarian dictator, and Trump must be stopped.

Unfortunately, the corporate media has been utterly silent about the threat of NSPM-7, so we’re ramping up our public education campaign and mobilizing opposition to Trump’s massive new funding request to implement this draconian assault on speech.

Robert Reich, 

Wednesday, April 08, 2026

Teachers Defending Immigrants and Democracy

Teachers: Work Together to Defend Democracy.





As pressures on faculty from the Trump regime increase, 

I am working on a project Defend Democracy  using Google doc to assist teachers and faculty to work together standing up in  support public education and our constitutional rights and responsibilities. 

There is a great deal of important organizing going on. 

We  are gathering materials, resources, and lessons plans for teachers and faculty to assist  in presenting   knowledge, skills and attitudes which engage in and promote democracy.   For example, there are  important materials on the role of immigrants in the U.S. and how to support immigrant students  during the current political  assault are  available.  At times this part of the approach to promotion of democracy  has been known as civic education. 

Example of existing policy on dealing with Immigration Enforcement,  Twin Rivers Unified School District.  Sacramento, California. 

https://www.f3law.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Responding-to-Immigration-and-Customs-Enforcement-on-School-Grounds.pdf

 

Immigrants and Immigration Resources and Lesson Plans.

Association of California School Administrators. 

https://content.acsa.org/immigrants-immigration-resource-guide/

Many more in the Google doc.  Including Share my lesson plans from the American Federation of Teachers. 

A first step is to consider: How are students understanding the current political/economy and the political forces advancing  the authoritarian agenda in this age of  AI and social media dominating more balanced news coverage. 

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1CrLpHJXDvu87NS5VrwqUuvidD8dtVlNshImkg6ikrIE/edit?usp=sharing

If readers know of additional sources, please post links in the comments area of this blog. 

In our defense of democracy, there is no neutral ground. 

Teachers. Don’t give up on democracy.

Your participation is needed In this crisis of democracy.   Lets work together. 

Posted by D.Campbell

  

 
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