Protecting the Rights of People & Nature From the Local Up  
Hi,

I am deluged by pleas for my money and my online signature every single day - from organizations led by well-meaning people who are either not able or not willing to take a step back from their daily frenzy, to take some long deep breaths, and to honestly analyze whether what they and their organizations are doing is working or not. And if it's not working, to STOP! RE-THINK!

The Community Rights movement is offering a different approach - dismantling the legal structures that give corporations protection to keep harming us - from the local up. Here's an invitation to everyone reading this...

  • Consider pulling together a solid working group of organizers and others where you live, and launch a campaign to pass bold climate protection ordinances in your town, city, or county. Check out my nationally broadcast speech filled with dozens of local climate protection ordinance ideas that could be run as local ballot initiatives in many states.
  • Are you trying to stop factory farms from destroying your rural community? Pull together a group of people where you live and launch a campaign to pass THIS ban on factory farms
  • Worried about the poisoning of your county's forests and farms from the spraying of pesticides? Check out THIS local ordinance that has already been passed in a rural Oregon county. YOU could organize your community and ban corporate spraying of pesticides.
  • Excited about the Green New Deal? So are we! You don't have to wait for our sluggish and corporatized state and federal governments to pass the laws we urgently need. You can pass them locally, after just one good solid year of effective local community organizing and public education. And once you do, your entire state will take notice. Then in Year Two you can teach other communities in your state how to replicate your win. (And by the way, we're currently searching for a US community to host our next nationally broadcast speech on how a Community Rights strategy can most effectively and rapidly kick-start a Green New Deal transformation of this nation. Please contact us if you're interested in hosting!)
  • Pollinator Bill of Rights? Ban on 5G cell towers? Real police accountability? Neighborhood Bill of Rights? We can help you to conceptualize and organize towards these powerful goals, starting locally. 

The Community Rights movement has been blazing a new pathway for advocacy groups for two decades, with hundreds of local wins under our belts.

It is essential that our activism be as effective as possible . Follow the latest Community Rights developments on our homepage NewsFeed . Check out our Ordinances Database . Let's do this!

This is an excerpt from my recent Patreon post. To read more, please:
Onward.
Paul Cienfuegos
Founding Director,

Reflections on Community Rights
from Rural America
Dusting off the Declaration of Independence
by Curt Hubatch

Reflections on Community Rights from Rural America is a monthly column by CR activist and organizer Curt Hubatch. Curt runs the CRUS newsfeed homepage and is an unschooling father of two young children and one young adult. Currently he works as a substitute rural letter carrier for the USPS. He lives in a cordwood house that he built with his family and friends in Northwestern Wisconsin.

As a father who wants his children to inherit a livable planet full of potential and possibility , this statement written by Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence has great significance:
"He [the king] has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public Good." 

In today's terms, the king's priority wasn't supporting the public good.
I read a statement recently by Tom Goldtooth who does care about the public good. He is executive director of the Indigenous Environmental Network (IEN) and has been fighting for a better world for Indian and non-Indian people most of his life. Paraphrasing him, he said that we are at war with the earth and need to keep the remaining oil in the ground. Tom is an active, traditional Native American elder. When a guy like this talks, you sit up, pay attention, and listen... at least I do. 

Like Tom Goldtooth (listen to him   HERE ) I think most of us know at some level that we are at war with what gives us life. We've known we are at war..... since we were children. However, over time we've had it conditioned out of us, and business interests and bottom-line thinking have won the day.

I believe that the reality of our current environmental predicament – pick your poison: climate destabilization, human overpopulation, accelerated species extinction – has brought us to a second revolution in our country's history. As hard as it is to imagine it is as equal to the first American Revolution, it is one that future generations, if there are any, will learn and talk about as we did about the first American Independence movement and Revolution.

The world has blown open the window to revolution. There is no reversing the irreversible. We as a species and nation can only adapt to an ever increasingly chaotic and collapsing world. We cannot go on thinking and acting like we have since the dawn of civilization and believing that it is the greatest and best way to live.

You might be wondering where my facts and stats are in this column. I'm not including any, because I'm speaking to the part of me and you that knows the truth. To the small part that doesn't take a chance to speak its truth as to how we feel. Tragically we feel justifiably powerless in our public and private thoughts much of the time.

But is it true that we are powerless?

Essential CR News from the Web
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"Hidden in Plain Sight" Exhibit
We have produced a captioned photography exhibit titled, “ Hidden in Plain Sight ”, exploring the myriad of ways that business corporations exercise their constitutional “rights” everywhere under our very noses.

Pictured here, coming in for a landing at Los Angeles International Airport. This is what urban land use planning and design looks like when the primary decision makers have been corporate leaders from the automobile, oil and construction industries over the past century. Given that most of us have been raised in corporate landscapes, can We the People even still imagine what an ecologically and social sustainable urban landscape might look like?

YOU could host this exhibit in your own community’s library or community center or coffeehouse or gallery or college campus. It has already appeared in numerous communities in Iowa, Wisconsin, California and Oregon. Find out more  HERE.
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