Adding to My Campaign Platform

I did a lot of thinking over the weekend, while I was camping and hiking, about things I’d like to add to my campaign platform. One idea that came as a result of my hiking experience this weekend is one that I plan to formalize this more for my campaign website:

  • ATV use in recreational areas:
    Continue reading
  • Carnival of the Green #40

    COTG #40 is being hosted by Camden Kiwi who writes:

    This week, we have a pot-pourri of green ideas, issues and news from using solar energy in Alaska, to greywater in London and wind farms in the Western Isles as well as commentary on the environmental consequences of the war in Lebanon and attempts by climate change deniers to get their message across.

    Free Speech Zone in Today’s News

    My good friend and fellow activist and sister cheerleader has her shop featured in today’s news:

    The Free Speech Zone outfits progressives and extremists
    Activists ‘R’ Us; Free Speech Zone outfits progressives

    By Stephen Hunt
    The Salt Lake Tribune


    Activist proprietors Nate Smith and Raphael Cordray sit in the Free Speech Zone, a shop selling items related to left-wing ideas and issues. The merchandise includes bumper stickers and T-shirts with political slogans, and even toilet paper printed with President Bush’s face. Smith and Raphael named their store the areas to which protesters were restricted during the 2002 Olympics. (Ryan Galbraith/The Salt Lake Tribune ) after


    The Free Speech Zone is not your garden-variety Sugar House retail outlet.
       Never mind the rock music, patchouli scent and posters of Malcolm X side by side with John Lennon, Martin Luther King Jr. and Utah’s own martyr, Joe Hill.
       You can tell you’re somewhere left-of-center by the large, leering puppet of President Bush in the front window – his bloody hands crushing toy soldiers bearing stickers that shout, “Bring me home!”
       The store promotes politics, protest and what owners Raphael Cordray and Nate Smith call “radical info.”
       “We are an outpost and haven for insurgent social activists deep in the heart of ultra-conservative Utah,” says Smith. Located at 2144 S. Highland Drive, the store is named after the designated “free speech zones” where protesters were obliged to gather during the 2002 Olympic Games, a restriction Cordray considers a “crackdown” on First Amendment rights.
       Since opening in April 2005, the owners say they have gained the support of local artists, activists and organizers for peace and justice, labor and human rights.
       Cordray and Smith say they played “an essential role” in organizing antiwar demonstrations in Salt Lake City last fall, and the store continues to be a rallying point for demonstrators.
       Cordray and Smith say they are currently gearing up to protest President Bush’s Aug. 30 visit to the Beehive State.
       “We intend to go beyond just business as usual,” says Smith. “It’s radical. Radical politics and social-movement building are at the foundation. A spirit of ’60s activism exemplifies what we are doing.”
       The store sells T-shirts, hats, purses, fleece baby booties and other items. Much of the clothing, as well as the bumper stickers, buttons and pins, carry political messages.
       Cordray says rolls of toilet paper with a picture of Bush on every square are particularly popular right now.
       “You lay it on the surface of the water and take aim,” she says with a smile.
       Cordray calls her shop “the anti-Wal-Mart. There’s stuff here that you can’t find anywhere else in the world.”
       She carries only fair trade products that are made in America. “The people producing the products are getting the reward,” Cordray says.
       Her suppliers include local independent artists, worker collectives and union shops. Cordray herself makes many of the clothing and jewelry items on display.
       She also sell books, including the latest incarnation of the infamous Anarchist Cookbook, titled Recipes for Disaster.
       You can also find The Heretic’s Guide to the Bible,



     

    A Trouble Maker’s Handbook: How to Fight Back Where You Work and Win and $2 pocket editions of the U.S. Constitution. There are free pamphlets about civil rights, gender equality and alternative media publications.
       They are also screening free films on Friday nights at 7 p.m. through Aug. 25. They recently showed documentaries about antilogging activists in Oregon and protest actions at the 1999 Seattle World Trade Organization Convention.
       Cordray, 36, and Smith, 28, met at a protest planning meeting and are now partners in life as well as business, they said. Both work for the state and take turns at the store, which is not yet breaking even.
       “It’s not about becoming a millionaire,” says Cordray. “But I’ve got to pay the rent.”
       Cordray started out selling fleece baby booties and other handmade items at the Sunday drum circle in Liberty Park. She says she accomplished two goals by opening the store: She got in out of the weather and found an outlet for her vocal political opinions, which became more strident prior to the 2000 election, in which she supported Ralph Nader.
       Working at the store allows her to converse with like-minded people. “People come in all day long and talk about the war,” she says.
       Cordray does not support such organizations as the National Rifle Association. But she strives to sell products and promote messages that are inclusive of most other groups, including Latinos, Native Americans and the gay and lesbian community.
       Not everyone is appreciative.
       “During Gay Pride I do rainbows, and I’ve gotten lots of spit on the windows,” she says. “That’s OK.”
       But as long as it is nonviolent, Cordray supports self-expression.
       “I want people to think and feel and engage in things,” Cordray says, even things that make them angry.
       “This business is about being outspoken,” she says.
       Hey, it’s the Free Speech Zone: Say what you want to say.

    Desert Greens Green Party of Utah’s Report

    Released yesterday to the Green Party of the United States:

    Desert Greens Report: What Really Happened in Utah in 2004

    This was sent to as many contacts as possible in every affiliated state so that the facts could be laid out once and for all for everyone to see, and especially to dispel the myths put forth in the document that the other Utah group disseminated at the National Committee Meeting in Tucson.

    It is the hope, now, of the Desert Greens Green Party to get this behnind us and continuing trying to move forward.

    U.S. Senate Candidates Debate this Saturday

    This Saturday, August 12, there will be a public debate with these Utah U.S. Senate candidates:

  • Julian Hatch, of the Desert Greens Green Party of Utah
  • Roger Price, of the Personal Choice Party
  • Pete Ashdown,of the Democratic Party
  • Scott Bradley, of the Constitution Party
  • Libertarian chair Rob Latham who will represent candidate Dave Seely

    The debate will begin at 10:30 a.m., Salt Lake City Main Library Auditorium, 210 East 400 South, Salt Lake City.

  • The World Remembers: Hiroshima and Nagasaki

    Yesterday was the 61st anniversary of Nagasaki Atomic Bombing. A service was held at Nagasaki’s Peace Park yesterday where a moment of silence was held at 11:02 am, the moment the bomb was dropped. Over 200,000 people died in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    In Cuba, to commemorate the anniversaries of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,members of the Cuban community project Callejon de la Paz issued a call on Tuesday in Havana for world peace.

    Eight members of the Santa Cruz Weapons Inspection Team (SCWIT) ,performed a street theatre skit to commemorate the 61st anniversary of the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima. The group, all dressed in white clothes, assembled at noon on the corner of Pacific Ave and Cooper St. in downrtown Santa Cruz for a dramatized reenactment of the nuclear bombing interspersed with a mock inspection and symbolic dismantling of a Trident II D5 nuclear submarine missile.

    Tonight in Salt Lake City, the Salt Lake City Film Center will show The Last Bomb at the Salt Lake City Library Auditorium – 210 East 400 South SLC (Free Admission). After the film there will be a performance of a Butoh dance (a post-modern Japanese dance) by the Red Junket Butoh Troup on the Library Plaza.

    The World has not forgotten those terrible events of 61 years ago. Yet when it comes to nuclear proliferation, the U.S. and other dominating countries seem to forget.

    Other links to information on the bombings:
    (Warning, some articles may contain graphic photos)

  • THE BOMBS OF AUGUST:In Remembrance of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
  • Why the U.S. dropped nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
  • The Nagasaki Principle

    CANCEL THE DIVINE STRAKE! STOP WEAPONS TESTING ON ANY LAND! END NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION!

  • GOING TO CAMP CASEY!

    Yes, it’s true!

    Camp Casey has opened again this week in Crawford, Texas, to continue a constant vigil near George W. Bush’s ranch. It will be open until September 2nd when it will then become Camp Democracy in Washington DC.

    Tom and I are going to go there from on August 17 and will return August 21. We will be meeting Bill Holloway, Texas Green Party of the United States delegate and fellow Green Party Peace Action Committee member. Bill is blogging about his experiences at Camp Casey on his blog, Oliver’s Arrow.

    We will be working at the Crawford “Peace House” there and in the Green Party tent. Bill referred to “Rena” working there, a Texas Green. Is this the same Rena from the Green Commons?

    One thing we may be doing is helping some folks there build wooden crosses as memorial
    headstones of fallen US soldiers. I’m sure there will be other work to do – we’ll be ready to pitch in and do whatever needs to be done.

    Most of all we are looking forward to meeting new people and being part of Camp Casey for a few days. I’ll be sure to take lots of photos (as usual) and post them.

    Excuses, Excuses

    I’ve been quite consumed with “stuff” since arriving back in town after nearly three weeks away. I now think I”m back on track (well, almost) and should start blogging regularly fairly soon.

    There’s lots of things to blog about and events coming up and issues that need to be addressed!

    Carnival of the Green #39

    You can read this week’s COTG at City Hippy, one of the originators of Carnival of the Green.

    Happy Reading!

    Catching Up – Carnival of the Green

    Since I have been on vacation, I am totally out of sync with my routine blogging. I wasn’t able to announce the weekly Carnival of the Green Hosts, so I am doing this retroactively.

    July 24 COTG, #37, was hosted by Mykesweblog

    July 31 COTG, #38, was hosted by Treehugger

    Lots of great stuff in both of those – read and get informed and inspired!