On May 19, 11:06=A0am, "*Anarcissie*" <anarcis...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> From: =A0 =A0"Keith McHenry" <foodnotbo...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Date: =A0 =A0Sat, May 17, 2008 6:46 pm
>
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>
> HAPPY BIRTHDAY FOOD NOT BOMBS
> Twenty eight years of cooking for peace.
>
> The May 24, 1980 Occupation Attempt of Seabrook
> Nuclear Power Station in New Hamp****re marks the
> birth of Food Not Bombs. =A0Food Not Bombs cofounder
> Brian Feigenbaum was arrested at =A0the May 24th direct
> action to stop the nuclear station. =A0He and his
> friends held bake sales to raise money for his
> defense and thus Food Not Bombs began.
>
> This year Taos Food Not Bombs will be celebrating
> the 28 year history of Food Not Bombs with free vegan
> meals and a not so vegan birthday cake at the Taos
> Plaza from 2 to 4 on Saturday, May 24th. In the past
> many groups have organized a free out door concert
> where the local chapter provides free meals to
> everyone that comes. Food Not Bombs calls their
> birthday concerts Soupstock. The largest such
> celebration was on the 20th anniversary when Soupstock
> drew over 20,000 people to Dolores Park in San
> Francisco.
>
> Reflecting on our nearly three decades of organizing
> it is really amazing that an all volunteer effort
> could grow from eight young anti-nuclear activists
> in Cambridge, Massachusetts to a global movement
> active in over 1,000 communities. It is fitting that
> one of our news chapters would start in Cambridge,
> England almost 28 years to the day of the action
> that inspired the movement.
>
> The accomplishments are truly inspiring. =A0Food Not
> Bombs worked for two years to help promote the June
> 12, 1982 March for Nuclear Disarmament in Central
> Park, New York where our Cambridge chapter provided
> meals to some of the over one million people who
> participated. =A0On August 15, 1988 nine volunteers
> of the second Food Not Bombs group where arrested
> in at the entrance to Golden Gate Park in San
> Francisco marking the first arrest for sharing free
> food. =A0The city of San Francisco made over 1,000
> arrests for feeding the hungry inspiring the movement
> we have today. =A0Food Not Bombs volunteers were
> declared "Prisoners of Conscience" by Amnesty
> International.
>
> Each time the San Francisco police made more arrests
> people would contact Food Not Bombs to see how they
> could also start a new group and get arrested feeding
> the hungry. =A0Food Not Bombs had its first gathering
> in October of 1992 in San Francisco and its second
> gathering in 1995 during the 50th anniversary
> Celebration of the founding of the United Nations.
> Food Not Bombs volunteers helped start the current
> underground radio movement with San Francisco
> Liberation Radio and Free Radio Berkeley in 1993
> when the media refused to re****t on the police
> violence against Food Not Bombs. In preparation for
> the 1995 gathering the idea of Indymedia was born.
> San Francisco Food Not Bombs also called together
> the activist community to form the October 22nd No
> Police Brutality Day Actions after nearly 200 people
> protesting against police violence were arrested.
> Food Not Bombs groups helped organize and provided
> food at huge protests against Desert Storm. The Food
> Not Bombs banner lead the blockage of the Bay Bridge
> in San Francisco as volunteers provide meals to
> hundreds blockading the federal building.
>
> Food Not Bombs organized several tours including
> the Rent is Theft Tour where a tofu spread cooking
> demonstration was broadcast on a 5 watt FM radio
> transmitter and the audience was invited to open an
> abandon house and enjoy tofu spread sandwiches the
> grand finally. =A0Food Not Bombs chapters all over
> the United States started illegal FM radio stations
> in several hundred cities. =A0The UnFree Trade Tour
> of 1997 visited 60 cities in the U.S. and Canada
> informing the public about the human cost of free
> trade agreements and the dangers of the World Trade
> Organization. =A0Participants attending planned to
> organize an effort to stop the WTO if it ever came
> to North America. In November of 1999 Food Not Bombs
> volunteers from all over North America came to
> Seattle and helped set up the convergence center
> and provided meals to thousands of anti-globalization
> protesters. =A0Food Not Bombs became a regular
> participant in many anti-globalization actions from
> then on. =A0One volunteer was shot and arrested in
> Sweden at a G-8 meeting. Volunteers were injured at
> the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas protest in
> Miami. =A0Volunteers also provided meals at the last
> three =A0Democratic and Republican National Conventions
> and many Earth First! and first nation blockades.
> Food Not Bombs volunteers provided the meals to the
> protesters at Cindy Sheehan's Camp Casey in Crawford,
> Texas. =A0 Food Not Bombs has also provided free meals
> at many major disasters. New York and New Jersey
> volunteers fed the 9/11 rescue workers, provided
> the food after the Loma Prieta Earthquake in San
> Francisco and the movement organized the food relief
> effort for the survivors of Katrina.
>
> Tel Aviv Food Not Bombs has been active in working
> against the occupation. They provided meals at peace
> camps on the West Bank and joined Anarchist Against
> the Wall in cutting through the gates between Israel
> and Palestine. =A0Slovakian chapters started animal
> rescue shelters in 24 communities.
>
> Food Not Bombs feed the protesters at the Orange
> Revolution in Kiev, Ukraine and a 600 day farmers
> vigil in Sarajevo. Australian chapters work with
> the aboriginal people, at Baxter Refugee center,
> provided meals at =A0actions against U.S. Australian
> military training and at efforts to stop gold mining.
>
> The last Global Food Not Bombs Gathering was held
> in the Ukraine in August 2007. =A0That location was
> chosen because it is center to the growing Food Not
> Bombs movement in Europe. =A0Several Food Not Bombs
> volunteers have been stabbed by Neo Nazis in Russia.
> Two volunteers have died in these attacks yet there
> are over 50 chapters in Russia and the movement is
> popular across every country of eastern Europe.
>
> Many of our volunteers are honored by local
> organizations for their work with Food Not Bombs.
> The Copenhagen chapter was awarded the Danish Peace
> Award and the Kuala Lumpur Chapter was just recognized
> with the Malaysian Human Rights Award.
>
> Our volunteers in Orlando and West Palm Beach, Florida,
> Victoria, British Columbia, and Kitchener, Ontario
> have been facing arrest by local governments. =A0The
> Kitchener chapter recently negotiated with the
> business community to continue its work outside City
> Hall.
>
> Federal agencies in the United States have placed
> Food Not Bombs on a number of Terrorist lists. =A0The
> Pentagon has included the group on its TALON list.
> The FBI claims Food Not Bombs is a terrorist group
> and Homeland Security has Food Not Bombs and some
> of its founders on their terrorist watch list. =A0Food
> Not Bombs volunteers have been taken off of
> international flights, questioned and the contents
> of their wallets have been input into computer data
> bases. Food Not Bombs volunteers have been arrested
> on terrorism charges since the Oklahoma Bombing and
> a number of those arrested have won payment for
> their mistreatment by the U.S. Government. One
> volunteer took his own life shortly after his arrest
> in Arizona. The government has yet to tie Food Not
> Bombs to any crime of violence yet maintains our
> work is a threat.
>
> As Food Not Bombs starts its 29th year the movement
> is growing more than ever. =A0Along with the creation
> of the Cambridge, England group volunteers are busy
> organizing new chapters all over the world. =A0Other
> new chapters include Alice Springs, Australia,
> Beijing, China, Bangkok, Thailand and Cairo, Egypt.
> In response to the growing economic, political and
> environmental crisis Food Not Bombs groups are
> starting to grow food with "Food Not Lawns." =A0Really
> Really Free Markets are becoming popular and many
> other exciting projects are being developed by the
> Food Not Bombs Movement.
>
> Taos Food Not Bombs is proposing that we organize
> a World Gathering the weekend before the 2009 World
> Peace Conference. =A0The Mayor =A0asked the Taos Peace
> House to organize a conference to develop a strategy
> for building a united effort towards ending war,
> poverty and exploitation. =A0The volunteers at the
> Taos Peace House met May 1st and agreed to help
> organize the World Peace Conference. =A0Taos is one
> of the oldest towns in North America with tow 900
> year old pueblos. =A0For centuries Taos has worked
> for peace and sustainability. Today many innovative
> experiments in alternative living are under way in
> Taos making it a perfect location to celebrate the
> 29th anniversary of Food Not Bombs and assist in
> creating a unified effort for peace, social justice
> and a sustainable future.
>
> It is wonderful to see that this all volunteer
> movement is having such an impact all over the world.
> This movement is united around the principles of
> nonviolence, the use of a horizontal decision making
> structure of Formal Consensus organized around the
> idea of independent autonomous groups without leaders,
> that collects unsold food to provide vegan and
> vegetarian meals free to anyone without restriction.
> This simple model is providing a hopeful example
> during these times of cataclysmic catastrophe. Tell
> everyone you know that there is something positive
> they can do and invite them to participate in Food
> Not Bombs. =A0Food is a right, not a privilege.
>
> THE 28TH BIRTHDAY OF FOOD NOT
BOMBShttp://www.foodnotbombs.net/happy_birth=
day_fnb.html
Truely Amazing!!!! We are going through a FNB struggle in seattle
right now, where the mayor wants all outdoor meal programs in one
place and time, rather than spred trhought the community. Are
Dedication is still there just as much as the founders... and we will
never give up! Peace and Solidarity!


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