Dear
Friend,
The March 29 second
annual Connecticut state civil liberties conference, One Nation—Under
Surveillance, is now less than two months away. The initiating
organizations—the ACLU of CT, CAIR-CT, United Action of CT, and the Stop
Indefinite Detention Coailtion--are working hard but we need your help to make
this a success! In order to proceed to book flights for our confirmed speakers
and make decisions about what additional speakers we can afford, we must begin
to collect contributions from those organizations that have chosen to be
sponsors or endorsers of the event today! If you want the conference to be a
success, we urge you to take the time to make your commitment and contribution
by check via snail mail or via credit card on the wordpress site listed below.
Organizations that become gold sponsors, sponsors, or endorsers before February
29, 2014 will be listed prominently on the final poster, community
announcements, and in the conference program. It is vital that we build visible
networks of solidarity and let the NSA and other agencies know that we will not
retreat from our efforts to strengthen the movements for social change. Please
lend your support now.
In
solidarity,
Chris
CT Coalition to Stop
Indefinite Detention
What You Can Do
Right Now!
√ Get your
organization to be listed as a gold sponsor & give $500.
√ Get your
organization to be listed as a sponsor & give $100 (table
included).
√ Get your
organization to be listed as an endorser & give $50(table
included).
√ Be listed as an
individual providing a scholarship for a student or underemployed attendee for
$25.
√ Reserve a
literature table for $25.
√ Forward publicity
to your lists and friends. Friend this event on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/746161628745630/?ref=2&ref_dashboard_filter=calendar
Send checks made
out to the CT Coalition to Stop Indefinite Detention, c/o Nancy Bowden, at 7
Scotland Rd., Bloomfield CT 06002, 860-212-9596 or register/donate online via
credit card at ctstopindefinitedetention.com.
For more
information, contact Isa Mujahid at imujahid@acluct.org 860-471-8473,
Daniel Adam at 860-985-4576, or Mongi Dahoudi at mdhaouadi@cair.com or
860-514-8038.
One Nation—Under
Surveillance
A One-Day
Conference about Building Networks of Solidarity in Defiance of NSA
Spying & the Erosion of Democratic Right
Saturday, March 29,
2014 –10:00 a.m
Torp Theater,
Davidson Hall, Central Connecticut State University
1615 Stanley
Street, New Britain CT
Sponsoring
Organizations: ACLU of CT; CAIR-CT, United Action of CT; and Coalition to Stop
Indefinite Detention.
Registration:
Solidarity Price: $25; Non-CCSU Students & Underemployed: $10.Scholarships
will be available.
CCSU Students
Admitted for Free.
Join us on March
29, 2014 at Central Connecticut State University for the second annual state
civil liberties conference sponsored by the CT Coalition to
Stop Indefinite Detention, the American Civil Liberties Union of CT, the CT
Council on American Islamic Relations, United Action of CT, and dozens of
other activists groups. We will explore the links between NSA spying, domestic
drones, and official Islamophobia, as well as the policies of mass incarceration
and mass deportation that are currently in place.
Confirmed speakers,
panelists, and workshop leaders include:
Robert King, One of
the Angola Three. Robert King is one
of the most famous former political prisoners in the world. He served 29 years
in solitary confinement before his conviction was overturned and was one of a
group of three African-American activists victimized for their political
activism as members of the Black Panther Party. King has spoken before the
parliaments of the Netherlands, France, Portugal, and Indonesia and met with
Desmond Tutu.
Hina Shamsi,
Director of the American Civil Liberties National Security Project.
The National
Security Project is dedicated to ensuring that U.S. national security policies
and practices are consistent with the Constitution, civil liberties, and human
rights. Shamsi has litigated cases upholding the freedoms of speech and
association, and challenging targeted killing, torture, unlawful detention, and
post-9/11 discrimination against racial and religious minorities. She is also a
lecturer-in-law at Columbia Law School, where she teaches a course in
international human rights.
Saru Jayaraman,
Author of Behind the Kitchen Door. Saru Jayaraman
launched the national restaurant workers' organization Restaurant Opportunities
Centers United and documented the undemocratic labor practices of the food
industry, the discrimination that plagues immigrant workers and people of color,
and the relationship of food sovereignty to the full democracy that we have not
yet achieved.
Dawud
Walid, Executive Director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-MI).
CAIR-MI is a chapter of America’s largest advocacy and civil liberties
organization for Muslims based in the hotspot of Detroit, a city at the
epicenter of the attacks on democratic rule. He has been prominent in the fight
against Islamophobia, racial profiling, and border stops. Walid has appeared on
Democracy Now and is a political blogger for the Detroit
News.
Salvatore
Sarmiento, Casa Maryland,
National Day Laborer Organizing Network. NDLON has been
central to the fight to stop the punitive deportation of over 350,000 persons
last year. In a recent press release NDLON said, “The five years of
criminalization the President has overseen blankets immigrant communities with
suspicion and causes people to live in fear. Until the historic mistake of
entwining local police with immigration enforcement is corrected, the country
will face a crisis of safety in our communities, confidence in the President,
and separation in our families.”
Professor
Khalilah Brown-Dean, Author of Once Convicted,
Forever Doomed: Race, Crime, and Civil Death (forthcoming, Yale University Press). Dean is an
associate professor of political science at Quinnipiac University and a powerful
critic of the system of mass incarceration. She was also awarded a 2005
Social Science Research Fund grant for the project: “Fighting From a
Powerless Space: The Impact of Crime Control Policies on Women.”
Lynne Jackson,
Project SALAM and the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms.
Project SALAM and
the NCPF are in the national leadership in the fight against the Orwellian
practice of preemptively prosecuting Muslim-Americans who have committed no
crime and the frame-up of hundreds of law-abiding Muslim-Americans as part of
the so-called War on Terror. Jackson recently led the Journey for Justice
across New York state in defense of Yassin Aref, an Albany imam entrapped by the
FBI whose case is described in Rounded Up: Artificial Terrorists and Muslim
Entrapment After 9/11.
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