pre-weekend update, with Jon Stewart and free T-shirts for HK on J

February 26th, 2010

Hey Tractivists,

Lots of big headlines this week, what with racy Olympians, yesterday’s bipartisan-curious health care summit, today’s gorgeous weather and tomorrow’s HKonJ…

If you missed yesterday’s health care reform summit and you’re bipartisan-curious (like Jon Stewart), see the Daily Show here where Stewart condenses seven-plus hours into ten minutes.  Preview: he’s optimistic, saying “That sh*t was Jedi!”

For all of us going to H K on J tomorrow (Saturday), it’s going to be beautiful!  Make sure to get your free Traction T-shirt.  Write hkonj@getTraction.org to join up with Tractivists or to get in on the T-shirt offer, and read below for more info.

And coming up not this Sunday but NEXT Sunday (March 7th), mark your calendar for Blood Done Sign My Name, a film based on Tim Tyson’s memoir about the murder of a black Vietnam-era veteran in Tyson’s hometown of Oxford, NC, and the uprising that followed.  We’ll head out to a Sunday matinee.  Write blood@getTraction.org to let us know you’re interested.

Enjoy this beautiful day,
Lanya

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HK on J info:

The HK on J rally starts at 9:30am is taking place in front of Estey Hall, which is #7 on this map of Shaw’s campus.  Then we’ll all walk to the General Assembly on Jones St.

To carpool from Durham, meet at Traction HQ (1018 Broad St.) at 8:15am.  To meet up in Raleigh, one of us will be waiting at the corner of South St. and Blount St. (next door to the McDonald’s) at 9:30am.  And if all else fails, call the Traction cell (919-Traction or 872-2846).

Because there’s always a lot of Tractivists there, spread out across the many different progressive organizations that you support, and we want you to meet each other, Traction is offering free T-shirts to any Tractivists who will be marching tomorrow.

What YOU need to do:

1) Write hkonj@getTraction.org to confirm that you’ll meet us, and at which point (Durham or Raleigh), so we know when/where to look for you.  And include a cell # if you have one.

2) If you want a Traction T-shirt to wear, figure out the following and include that in your email:
- size
- standard vs. tight fit
- color (white, purple or gray)
- sleeve length (long or short, or tight tank) (Long sleeves not available in purple.)
No promises that we’ll be able to get the perfect one for you but we’ll try!

3) If you’re NOT meeting us at Traction HQ in the morning, but you want us to bring you a T-shirt to wear that day, you must email your preferences to hkonj@getTraction.org by 11pm.

4) Hold on to the Traction cell #: 919-Traction (872-2846).  Call if you’re there and can’t find us, or if you change your plan from whatever you’ve confirmed in step #1.

Still more HK on J info here…  See you tomorrow!

the potluck that keeps on giving: homemade meals straight from the freezer

February 19th, 2010

Dear Tractivists,

I love to eat. I also love being healthy, supporting our local economy, and making conscious choices that help reduce my ecological footprint. One of the ways I express these passions is by making and eating healthy homemade meals. But I don’t always have the time or energy to cook. So I came up with a way to get homemade meals even when I can’t cook…

WHAT: Potluck-turned-freezer-stock-up party
WHO: health-, eco- and money-conscious Tractivists
WHEN: Monday, Feb 22, 7:30pm
WHERE: Traction HQ (1018 Broad St. in Durham)
RSVPs appreciated (and for more details): freezer@getTraction.org

Here’s how it works: You bring a big dish to share (like a soup or casserole), the recipe, and empty tupperware containers. You taste lots of other dishes made by fellow Tractivists and take home the ones you want, along with the recipes. (We’ll have PB&J to supplement the tasting so you don’t go home hungry.) The next time you’re too busy or tired to cook, voila! you have healthy, homemade options right in your freezer.

Why is this a great idea? In addition to having convenient frozen dinners without all the packaging, you save on money, time, and dirty dishes! You get to make one dish once, yet enjoy the flavors and nutrition from many different meals over many days. You get to meet other Tractivists who like to cook but, like you, don’t always have the time to do it.  I’ve hosted a freezer-stock-up party before, and it was a huge success. I ate delicious homemade meals for weeks from my freezer.

I will personally try to use the most local and sustainably-grown ingredients in my dish (even some from my own garden!). But you don’t have to.  Homemade food made with conventionally grown ingredients is still healthier and more eco-conscious than pre-processed frozen dinners. So whatever your angle, we welcome your creative culinary license!

Keep it real, keep it homemade, keep those taste-buds jumping,

Jayme Johnson
homesteader, bike commuter, Tractivist

P.S. Don’t forget: this FRIDAY the 19TH we’re screening the documentary The Order of Myths. RSVP to mardi@getTraction.org or we’ll be short on moonpies!

P.P.S. More upcoming events:
Fri Feb 19TH: The Order of Myths film screening.

Mon Feb 22nd: Freezer party foodshare event. freezer@getTraction.org
Sat Feb 27th: Historic Thousands on Jones St. aka HK on J (new date). hkonj@getTraction.org

plus Blood Done Sign My Name, conversation circles on race, a trip to the brand new Civil Rights Museum in Greensboro and more!

behind the masks: Mardi Gras and the persistence of segregation

February 16th, 2010
Tractivists,
Until last year, I thought Mardi Gras was just about getting drunk at a crazy parade and catching as many beads as you can. Turns out, there’s a lot more to it for people engaged in Mardi Gras culture — balls, mystic societies, coronations, and more.

Unfortunately, as is too frequently true when you dig into the history of Southern culture, there’s an underbelly of harsh racial and class divides. The city of Mobile, Alabama, has been celebrating Mardi Gras since 1703, longer than anywhere else in the country (including New Orleans). More than 300 years later, the celebration is still very much divided along lines of black and white. A documentary film made by a member of one of Mobile’s old families calls it “the last stronghold of segregation.”
What: Film screening of “The Order of Myths
When: Fri, Feb. 19th, 7pm
Where: Traction HQ (1018 Broad St.)
RSVPs appreciated: mardi[at]getTraction[dot]org
I first saw this film last year in Mobile itself, while on a road trip through the South. Some of you may have seen it at Full Frame a couple years ago. I’m looking forward to sharing it with more folks, and doing some thinking about the places in our lives that are still strongholds of segregation.
Luke Hirst
Pancake Day celebrator, first-time Lent observer, Tractivist
p.s. Upcoming events:
2/19, Fri: Mardi Gras movie mardi@getTraction.org
2/22, Mon: freezer party foodshare event (email coming soon) freezer@getTraction.org
2/27, Sat: Historic Thousands on Jones St. aka HK on J (resched. to 2/27 due to snow) hkonj@getTraction.org
plus conversation circles on race and a trip to the brand new Civil Rights Museum in Greensboro!

10 reasons to be at HK on J this Saturday

February 11th, 2010
Each year, lots of Tractivists march at HK on J, either with Traction or another group that they’re involved with.  What’s HK on J and why be there?  Rob Schofield lays it out, below.  (Rob is the awesome progressive activist and writer who blogs at Progressive Pulse.)

Bonus: ANY Tractivists going (no matter who you march with) can have a free Traction T-shirt to wear.  Write hkonj[at]getTraction[dot]org for T-shirt info OR carpool/meet up info.

Stay tuned for info on a movie night later next week, a freezer-pleaser food share event on Monday the 22nd, and a conversation circle on race…  And congrats for helping raise nearly $2000 for Haiti relief last weekend!

Keep hope alive, Lanya

Ten reasons to attend the fourth annual “HK on J” event

This coming Saturday morning, thousands of North Carolinians will gather in Raleigh for the fourth annual HK on J march and rally. Here’s how the organizers describe what this event is all about:

“Three years ago this week, a diverse and extraordinary collection of thousands of North Carolinians gathered in Raleigh for what the group called a “People’s Assembly.” The Assembly took place on Jones Street, in front of the State Legislative Building, where our elected representatives craft state laws and choose how to spend our tax dollars.

The new movement that was launched that day (”HK on J” for “Historic Thousands on Jones Street”) was and is the first modern coalition of its kind – a movement organized by the state’s 100 NAACP Branches and featuring for the first time since the 1960’s, a broad Black, White and Brown progressive agenda supported by over 88 state and local organizations, with more than one-million members.

Now, the HK on J People’s Assembly gathers each February on the Saturday nearest the NAACP’s anniversary and Abraham Lincoln’s birthday to witness the miracle of God’s diverse human race, to feel the warmth and strength of thousands of our friends and allies gathered together in a common purpose, and to push forward the People’s Agenda for poor and working people across the State.

This year’s event will be especially uplifting, with celebrations of important victories and the unveiling of new plans to bring home more progressive change this coming spring and summer – both through direct advocacy on Jones Street and the work oflocal People’s Assemblies across the state.”

In other words, HK on J is North Carolina’s most visible and important public event dedicated to progressive policy change - the place where the state’s often fractious and too-frequently-divided progressive movement can come together to march under one common, reform banner.

And if this fact alone is not enough to assure your attendance this weekend, here are ten more reasons to devote a couple of hours to the cause this Saturday:

#10 - To respond to the assorted “Tea Party” nuts – We all know that this noisy and misguided group represents much of the worst in modern America and receives more coverage and attention than it deserves. What better way to demonstrate to the world what truly patriotic political activism looks like?

#9 – To connect to (and carry on) the 20th Century civil rights movement - This year’s HK on J event will start at Shaw University on the south side of downtown Raleigh. The Shaw campus, of course, was the birthplace of one of the stalwart organizations of the American civil rights movement, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee or SNCC. This connection is especially appropriate in 2010 because it marks the 50th anniversary of both SNCC and the Greensboro lunch counter sit-ins.

#8 – To stand up for health care reform - Despite the bizarre case of inside-the-beltway myopia that seems to have afflicted large segments of official Washington, one quirky special election in Massachusetts has not altered the underlying facts that a) Americans desperately want and need health care reform, and b) elected officials are in the position to deliver it. Come to Raleigh and help convey this message once and for all.

#7 – To show that most Americans are not anti-immigrant haters - The United States is a nation of immigrants. Immigration is in many ways the bedrock of our republic. Unfortunately, one need not look too far beneath the surface to see the kind of grip that fear, intolerance and even hate, have on those who want to halt progress in its tracks. Courageous people of all races and ethnicities owe to our future to speak up for comprehensive immigration reform.

#6 – To learn more in a few hours than you might normally absorb in as many weeks.Though HK on J is first and foremost about speaking out, it is also about education. For progressive North Carolinians looking for a “hands on” crash course in what’s really at-issue in the 2010 policy debates, there is no better place to hear from a large collection of passionate and informed speakers or collect large quantities of insightful, to-the-point literature and talking points.

#5 – To feel like you’re truly a part of something big and good – Face it, in our busy, computerized, cell “phone-ized” society, how many opportunities does the average North Carolinian really get to walk down the middle of the street, arm in arm, with an incredibly diverse crowd of thousands of people (rich and poor, young and old, Black, Brown and White) for the purpose of building a better world. There’s almost guaranteed to be a moment that sends chills down your spine. Speaking of which…

#4 – To hear the President of the North Carolina NAACP, the Rev. William Barber II, speak – Right now, there simply is no other public figure in the state of North Carolina with the passion, presence or oratory skills of the NAACP’s dynamic president. If you have a caring bone in your body, it’s impossible to hear Barber address a crowd on the issues of the day in his inimitable style and not to feel inspired and more determined to keep fighting for what’s right.

#3 – To demand better and fairer economic policies – Last year’s federal recovery legislation has made an important impact in blunting the worst effects of the Great Recession. Unfortunately, the light at the end of the tunnel remains a long way off. North Carolina’s unemployment and poverty rates remain at unacceptable levels even as bailouts and giveaways to large, profitable corporations continue unabated. Come and show your support for aggressive, intentional solutions that put the creation of jobs and the strengthening of the social safety net ahead of tax breaks for corporations and the wealthy.

#2 – To say “no” to the re-segregation of North Carolina’s public schools – If there’s a candidate for “most disturbing public policy trend in North Carolina” in recent years, it’s been the steady, drip-by-drip abandonment of socioeconomic diversity in the state’s public schools. Most recently, the battle over this issue has been joined in Wake County, where a small faction of reactionaries has captured control of the local school board and sought to undo several decades of progress. Participants in this year’s HK on J event will be delivering a simple and straightforward message in response: “Well never go back!”

And #1 – To help celebrate past successes and to recommit oneself to a progressive agenda for change – Last year, despite a record $4.6 billion budget hole, state leaders made some progress on the H K on J 14-point agenda – including the passage of the Racial Justice Act, modest advances on compensation for forced sterilization victims, expansion of Children’s Health Insurance, and real progress on a number of important housing and consumer protection laws. Most of the agenda, however, remains a work in progress.

Come to Raleigh this Saturday to help make sure that next year’s march in February of 2011 has a shorter agenda to champion.

For more information about the event, including logistics, click here.

See ya’ Saturday!

unidos hagamos la diferencia para Haiti

February 4th, 2010

Amig@s,

It’s been a while… Let’s go dancing this Friday! Don’t let the snow stop you!

What: Latin dance party benefit
When: Fri, Feb 5th 10pm-2:30am
Where: Club Luna in Durham
Why: to help our brothers and sisters in Haiti

Enjoy Salsa, Merengue, Bachata and other Latin beats — including LIVE MUSIC! Your donation will support Partners in Health (Paul Farmer’s organization) — providing direct medical services to the survivors in Haiti.

If you have not given yet or if you just can’t give enough, come donate, volunteer, and dance!

Volunteers are needed! This party is part of a 2-day effort. Please help for a 2-hour shift at some point. Volunteers get T-shirts, maybe food and definitely a huge warm feeling for doing the right thing!
Fri, Feb 5: 1pm-10pm — donations accepted at the door and 10pm-2am — latin dance party
Sat, Feb 6: 11am-2pm — carwash

No, I have not given yet… but not because I’m a slacker. Because I was waiting for the right opportunity – and here it is! What will you be doing this Friday night? Nothing can be better than coming out to donate and dance the night away for a great cause!

Invite your friends, and I’ll see you Friday night!

Yesenia Polanco Galdamez
attorney, warrior for social justice, Tractivist

your move, Barack

January 27th, 2010
It’s President Obama’s move.  Tonight in his State of the Union address, he’ll signal his intentions on many of the key issues.  What do YOU hope to hear?

What: Hoping for Audacity watch party — food, drink, community
When: TONIGHT, Jan 27 at 8:15pm
Where: Traction HQ (1018 Broad St., Durham)
RSVP: sotu[at]getTraction[dot]org or on facebook

Whatever Obama says, this speech is just one move, and it’s only talk.  The key is action.  Tonight  — between beers and popcorn — you’ll be able to take a few simple actions on your top issues.  And you’ll meet two incredible people who roll up their sleeves and work for change every day: Rep. Grier Martin of Wake County (endorsed by Traction Action Fund in 2008) and Jenn Frye of Democracy NC.  (Did I mention they’re both hot??)

I’m not going to lie — with health care reform up in the air and the economy still struggling, it’s been rough lately.  But we WILL move this country forward.  Tonight is Barack’s move.  Tomorrow, it’s all of ours.

Go Team, Lanya

P.S. Looking for inspiration?  Take 10 min. to watch this fantastic video of my one of my heroes, the much-maligned Van Jones.  Short-cut: start from the 3:00 mark.

P.P.S. Upcoming:
Fri Feb 5: Latin dance party for Haiti at La Luna – haiti[at]getTraction.org
Sat Feb 13: HK on J in Raleigh – hkonj[at]getTraction.org
Interested in playing co-ed volleyball?  volley[at]getTraction.org