Sunday, February 22, 2009

Julian Shepherd: Biodiversity - Meaning and Importance to Our Planet


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A talk by Julian Shepherd
Associate Professor of Biology, Binghamton University

Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Binghamton
Binghamton, NY; February 22, 2009

This talk is from the series:


Ekos: Our Home, Our World, Our Environment:
Four Sunday Forums on Critical Environmental Issues
Sponsored by UUCB Green Sanctuary Education

Keywords: extinction, rainforests, IBM Glen, ecology

See related videos on Essential Dissent.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Liberty in Peril: The State of Freedom on Campus (1)


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How to Be Proactive About Student Rights


See Part 2 of Liberty in Peril: The State of Freedom on Campus.

Binghamton University
February 18, 2009


Speaker: Adam Kissel

Statement from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education:

Despite mission statements dedicated to free expression and free thought, college campuses across the country have betrayed their students by maintaining unconstitutional and illiberal policies that violate their students’ rights. Highlighted in the recent case of Andre Massena, the graduate student who was nearly suspended because of flyers he posted critical of a university department, and last year’s implementation of a harsh “failure to cooperate” policy, which violates students’ privacy and due process rights by requiring them to exit their dorm rooms at the request of a university official, Binghamton University and its administration have shown that Binghamton is no exception.

Adam Kissel, of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), will be coming to Binghamton on February 18th to discuss the state of freedom on campus and what we can do to preserve student rights.

He will be specifically talking about the university's disregard for Freedom of Speech, exemplified in the recent Andre Massena case. Also school policies like "Failure to Cooperate," which was implemented this year and violates our right to privacy and due process will be touched on and equally importantly, Adam will be talking about how we students can be proactive about student rights to ensure that our liberties are protected.

Related Links:

Binghamton University Department of Social Work Declares War on Student for Posters Criticizing Department and Government Agency

‘Binghamton Review’ Blasts Binghamton Social Work Department in Activism Case

PDF: The Scandal of Social Work Education

"Justice Speaks" Poster

Keywords: Andre Massena, free speech, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, FIRE, student's rights, David Tanenhaus, Binghamton Housing Authority, Binghamton University Department of Social Work, academic freedom

Liberty in Peril: The State of Freedom on Campus (2)


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How to Be Proactive About Student Rights


See Part 1 of Liberty in Peril: The State of Freedom on Campus.

Binghamton University
February 18, 2009


Speaker: Adam Kissel

Keywords: Andre Massena, free speech, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, FIRE, student's rights, David Tanenhaus, Binghamton Housing Authority, Binghamton University Department of Social Work, academic freedom

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Understanding the Conflict: Israel's War on Gaza (Part 1 of 3)


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See all three parts of Understanding the Conflict: Israel's War on Gaza.

Binghamton University
February 12, 2009
Moderator: Susan Pollock, Professor of Anthropology


A panel discussion with:

Nada Khader - A Palestinian-American activist and Executive Director of Westchester People's Action Coalition. Nada served as a consultant to the United Nations Development Program in the Gaza Strip and served for two years as a Fulbright Scholar in Tunisia.

Jonathan Karp - Associate Professor of History and Judaic Studies at SUNY-Binghamton. Professor Karp has written extensively on Jewish cultural and economic history, and teaches courses on Jewish responses to Zionism.

Ali Mazrui - Ranked by Prospect Magazine (UK) as among the top 100 public intellectuals in the world, Dr. Mazrui currently directs the Institute of Global Cultural Studies at SUNY-Binghamton, where he's the Albert Schweitzer Professor of Humanities. Among his many positions include the Vice-President of the World Congress of Black Intellectuals and a member of the Pan-African Advisory Council to UNICEF.

Omar Baddar - The [former] Executive Director the Massachusetts American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, Omar is a Palestinian-American who grew up throughout the Middle East. He is a graduate of the University of Memphis Political Science program, where he earned his MA in International Relations and Comparative Politics. He was also recently elected to the Steering Committee of the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation.

Statement from the Binghamton Political Initiative:

For over 25 days, Israeli forces - using U.S. supplied weapons - pummeled the beleaguered population of the Gaza strip, killing nearly 1,400 people, including 437 children. In turn, Hamas rockets killed three Israeli citizens. During their campaign, Israel shelled three United Nations schools and other civilian infrastructure, later rescinding their claims that militants were using the facilities to launch attacks.
Israel has come under scrutiny from Amnesty International, the International Red Cross, Human Rights Watch, the UN and B'Tselem for their use of experimental weapons on civilian populations, including white phosphorous and Dense Inert Metal Explosives (DIME), which can burn through skin to the bone.
Eight Israeli human rights groups have called on the Israeli government to investigate the scale of the casualties, describing the number of dead Palestinian women and children as “terrifying.” UN humanitarian chief John Holmes called the casualty toll “shocking.”
Within the United States, however, coverage of the conflict in the mainstream media has been marred by simplistic understandings and imperial overtones.What passes for analysis often little more than platitudes. A conflict of this magnitude, especially one in which the United States is deeply implicated, demands informed discussion. This event will serve as a step in that direction.

While this event will not serve as a debate between the "two sides" of the issue, not all panelists share the same perspective of the conflict or its foundations. Respectful discourse from differing views is encouraged. The event will also serve to connect attendees to ongoing human rights activism within the United States on this important issue.

Event Organizer/Sponsor: Binghamton Political Initiative

Co-Sponsors: Amnesty International, Middle Eastern Cultural Association, Experimental Media Organization/Student Action Collective, BU Turkish Student Association, Chinese Student and Scholar Association, Sociology Graduate Student Organization, Global Music and Dance Society, Muslim Student Association of Binghamton, Graduate Vice President for Multicultural Affairs

Understanding the Conflict: Israel's War on Gaza (Part 2 of 3)


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See all three parts of Understanding the Conflict: Israel's War on Gaza.
Binghamton University
February 12, 2009
Moderator: Susan Pollock, Professor of Anthropology


A Panel Discussion with Nada Khader, Ali Mazrui, Jonathan Karp and Omar Baddar

Israel: Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions

Event Organizer/Sponsor: Binghamton Political Initiative

Understanding the Conflict: Israel's War on Gaza (Part 3 of 3)


Subscribe to Essential Dissent

See all three parts of Understanding the Conflict: Israel's War on Gaza.

Binghamton University
February 12, 2009
Moderator: Susan Pollock, Professor of Anthropology


A Panel Discussion with Nada Khader, Ali Mazrui, Jonathan Karp and Omar Baddar

Event Organizer/Sponsor: Binghamton Political Initiative

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Rally Against the NY Budget Cuts at Governor Paterson's Town Hall Meeting


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Broome Community College
February 11, 2009


Sponsored by Citizen Action of NY and the Student Action Collective

With an appearance by Governor Paterson toward the end.

NY Governor Paterson is proposing massive budget cuts to vital services for New Yorkers, while refusing to ask the rich to pay their fair share.

We demand:
-- Full funding for health care
-- Affordable public education
-- A Fair Share Tax where the richest New Yorkers pay an appropriate tax rate
-- No tuition increases for SUNY & CUNY

For more information, visit fightthecuts.org

Statement from the Student Action Collective
:

Who We Are

The Experimental Media Organization/Student Action Collective (EMO/SAC) is a group of students seeking to broaden the media landscape of SUNY-Binghamton and the Binghamton community at-large. We define experimental media as forms of communication and participatory journalism outside the mainstream structures of present American society, including multiple mediums not necessarily considered part of the traditional media lexicon, including but not limited to forums, speeches, film-screenings and teach-ins. Most importantly, Experimental Media is a tool for social justice and is therefore inextricably linked to action-based projects and goals. As a subgroup of EMO, the Student Action Collective (SAC) will guide the process of turning experimental media into social justice action.

We are a radical-based group concerned with social, economic and environmental justice, self-determination, and student power. We organize on a consensus-based, non-hierarchical model. We are committed to building a movement that recognizes and opposes the inter-connected forms of oppression. Our membership is youth oriented in spirit but not limited by age, and includes a wide range of backgrounds and perspectives. We believe in autonomy and celebrating the strength all individuals bring to our movement due to their own unique life experiences.

What We Do

We believe strongly in the necessity of radical, progressive, systemic change in society, and we try to ensure that our work on specific issues advances that broad, overarching goal. Sometimes we work on massive campaigns involving dozens of events and months of organizing (such as our current anti-war/counter-recruitment work), other times we organize a single event to draw attention to an issue we feel is being neglected. We also work to create and nurture a web of mutual-aid and solidarity between groups; we support other struggles with people power and other resources. Our work drives us to organize protests, vigils, street theatre, concerts, teach-ins, petition drives, and more. In doing so we make flyers, talk to our neighbors and people on the street, go to city council meetings, build signs and banners, hold press conferences.,We also believe in sharing our skills and knowledge with one another, and learning together. We try to hold monthly potlucks to build a sense of community amongst ourselves, our allies, and those who want to become involved. We want to create a supportive community that puts into practice the values and ideas for which we struggle.

Keywords: Lea Webb, Ben Frisbie, Pat Donohue, Ana Shaello-Johnson, David Paterson, Mary Twitchell, David Lee, NYSUT, CSEA Local 648, GSEU, Broome County Urban League, Citizen Action of NY, NYS PEF