Thin tall white man with white hair smiling holding a coffee cup standing outside a store with a outdoor chair

So, you have an idea for a way to make your neighborhood better, create social change, or join the resistance. You and others have hit the streets a couple of times, gone to public and community meetings, and want to reach out to others and take the next step to make things happen. A friend says his cousin is a lawyer who could give you advice. You have been online and learned a little something. It must be time to incorporate your idea so that you can build a “real” organization.

Whoa, Nelly, not so fast! Before your knee jerks and you incorporate, you have to figure out the “what” and “when” that would lead you down that path and answer the threshold question of “to incorporate or not to incorporate?”

 

By David Swanson

Fifty years ago, Bobby Kennedy was about to win the Democratic presidential primary in Indiana. He would soon lose in Oregon and in a few weeks win in California, practically clinching the White House, and be murdered the same night. The film RFK Must Die and book Who Killed Bobby? leave little doubt that the CIA killed him. And of course there is no doubt that many have always suspected as much, which has had a damaging effect on U.S. politics whether or not true. But the major impact of RFK’s killing is separate from the question of who killed him.

 

Blue blackground with words Early Voting in white

Monday, May 7, 8am-2pm
Franklin County Board of Elections, 1700 Morse Road
The Columbus Community Bill of Rights Ballot Initiative is gathering Columbus Voter Signatures to put this Ordinance on the Nov 2018 ballot. 
Contact Us w/ Availability: ColumbusBillofRights@gmail.com

SAFE WATER FOR OUR KIDS.
COLUMBUS -
NO PLACE FOR FRACK WASTE!

ColumbusBillofRights.org
https://www.facebook.com/ColumbusBillofRights/

 

Blue background with three legs walking at top, one white, one gray and one black and the words below March for Freedom Columbus

Sunday, May 6, 2-3:30pm
Columbus City Hall, 90 W. Broad St.
The 2018 March for Freedom, is our 4th annual human trafficking awareness event. We are hosting our 4th Annual March for Freedom in Columbus to raise awareness of the human rights violations of prostitution and trafficking on Sunday, May 6, 2018 at 2 p.m. We will meet at Columbus City Hall, 90 West Broad St., and walk to the Ohio Statehouse where we’ll hear several heart stirring messages and take a pledge to personally fight human trafficking.

Lots of different types of Xs and checkmarks

Technology has bestowed a stunning twist of fate in the arcane world of counting how America votes.

A decade ago, activists railed against private companies who made the computer-driven “black boxes” that tabulated election results. That opacity, to protect their trade secrets, fueled sore losers, conspiracy theories and thwarted journalistic investigations of miscounts or tampering.

But today, the voting machine industry’s newest devices are producing digital images of individual paper ballots, accompanied by devices that mark the ballot or its image, and include audit systems that can trace disputed ballots back to their precincts—by using technology that’s akin to how banks allow smart phones to securely deposit checks.

These newest systems vary—some are better than others. Yet taken together, they suggest technology in on the brink of ushering in a new era of vote counting transparency. This is before winners are certified, not afterward as an academic exercise or audit.

Black person's face with a red hat on their head peering over a sign that they are holding that says Let The People Vote

As the mid-terms loom, Democrats could regain control of Congress in 2018, and make a move for impeachment of Trump. But will progressive-minded voters be denied their constitutional right to vote, especially minorities? Or what about younger voters, who are energized to vote against candidates who support the National Rifle Association?

Citing a recent a study by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the national office of the ACLU recently told the Free Press that 16 million people experienced difficulty voting in the 2016 presidential election. Of the 16 million, an estimated 1.2 million were turned away or their vote not counted.

The ACLU says over two-hundred thousand walked away from a long line, but an equal amount were denied because they lacked proper photo ID due to stricter voter ID laws. Registration issues resulted in 300,000 votes not being counted, and 250,000 votes were “lost”, which means the voter refused to vote provisionally or their provisional ballot wasn’t counted.

Lots of people with their backs to the camera sitting and watching someone standing at the mic, with art on a table in the foreground

Saturday, May 5, 7-10pm
It Looks Like It's Open, 13 E. Tulane Rd.
Join us for a night of political music, poetry, speeches, dance and other art!

Too often political movements and works of art are separated into different spheres, the public and the personal, where each is only tangentially related to the other. But art and politics have always been bound up together. Art isn’t just often about political movements–it’s a living part of them.

A People’s Open Mic is meant to intentionally celebrate the political side of art and the artistic side of political movements. Bring your own art, or bring somebody else’s. We are living in a unique political moment, and we want to find the art that moves us, that speaks to this moment.

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Man lying on the ground dead a woman screaming over his body, others looking on

Back when “tin soldiers and Nixon” were “cutting us down” in 1970, a group of Ohio State University students and campus activists started an underground newspaper in Columbus. Driven mostly by the murder of four students at Kent State – Allison Krause, Jeff Miller, Sandy Scheuer and Bill Schroeder – shot during a demonstration that was opposing President Nixon’s illegal attack on Cambodia and the Vietnam War, the Columbus Free Press was born.

Not surprisingly, the Free Press was the first western newspaper to expose Cambodia’s killing fields thanks to international law professor John Quigley’s reporting from Southeast Asia. In the first issue of the Free Press, the October 11, 1970 issue, a Free Press opinion attacked a special grand jury’s decision not to indict Ohio National Guardsmen for the Kent State killings.

Sign that says Welcome to the Historic Near East Side and the words superimposed below Food Desert

Food Deserts.  The definition by Merriam-Webster is “an area where little fresh produce is available for sale.” In rural areas and urban areas alike, food deserts are a concerning problem in communities everywhere. Columbus is not immune to food deserts. Communities like the South Side and Franklinton are stepping up to bring fresh produce to their inner-city neighborhoods.

On April 17, residents and stakeholders of the Near East Side packed together in the Community Room of Poindexter Place for a meeting on the “State of Retail” for that neighborhood.

The idea of a grocery store in the Near East Side has been a long soap opera unfolding, since the launch of Partners for Achieving Community Transformation (PACT) in 2012. In 2013, the original blueprint proposal from PACT called for a grocery store on Broad Street, between Ohio and Champion. However, after vocal opposition from Near East Area residents, and guidelines that were cited in the City’s 2005 Near East Area Plan on commercial zoning, that idea was scrapped.

Words Columbus Media Insider with the M looking like broken glass

Thanks to State Sen. Joe Schiavoni, the Columbus Dispatch stepped up its coverage of the ECOT scandal on April 24.

"Schiavoni wants criminal probe of ECOT attendance claims" the online headline screamed atop dispatch.com. It did not make the front page of the early print edition, but was relegated to the first page of the second section.

It turns out that a whistleblower contacted both the state auditor and the Ohio Department of

Education nearly a year ago with evidence that ECOT apparently was falsifying attendance figures in order to collect millions of dollars of state subsidies.

Schiavoni, the longest-running Democratic candidate for governor, is locked in a three-way race for the nomination with Richard Cordray and Dennis Kucinich. He is making the case the he is best qualified to clean up the Republican corruption being revealed on an almost daily basis.

By the way, the state auditor who was informed in May 2017 about the whistleblower's complaint is none other than Dave Yost, the erstwhile Republican candidate for attorney general and poster child for Dispatch favoritism. Keep reading.

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