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Pacifica
Campaign Report Back on the National Association of Home Builders
and Pacifica Vice-Chair Ken Ford
1)
National Day of Action in 12 Cities
2) Homebuilders "Booze Cruise"
Gets That Sinking Feeling
3) One Million E-mails
NEW
YORK (July 24) -- The growing campaign for free speech and community
radio took a dramatic turn this month with a series of coordinated
nationwide protests against Pacifica National Board Vice-Chair Ken
Ford and his employer the National Association of Home Builders
(NAHB), the Washington, D.C.-based anti-environmental and anti-disability
rights group.
On
July 10th alone, demonstrations, pickets, and other peaceful actions
were carried out in front of NAHB offices in 12 cities around the
United States. They were peaceful, autonomous actions that were
locally organized and coordinated by the Pacifica Campaign. Several
NAHB offices were shut down in anticipation of the protests. Meanwhile,
more than 11,000 e-mail letters were sent to affiliate offices of
the NAHB on July 10th, according to Progressive Portal, an Internet
service for activists.
As
well as calling for the resignation of Ken Ford, demonstrators protested
recent threats made by the NAHB against the Progressive Portal web
site, as well as NAHB attacks on environmental protections and disability
rights. Cities where protests occurred included: New York City,
Atlanta, Minneapolis, Washington DC, Nashville, Boston, New City
(New York), Piscataway (New Jersey), Whippiny (New Jersey), Walnut
Creek (near Berkeley), and Diamond Bar and Calabasas in the Los
Angeles area.
The
national action marked the inauguration of a new coalition between
environmental, disability rights, and Internet activists.
Numerous
media, including globest.com, the premier real estate Internet news
service, covered the protests. See: http://www.globest.com/RMWIWT3QMEOC.html
More
than 100 people protested in New York City and Walnut Creek, California.
In New York, chanting demonstrators marched in a spirited picket
line for more than two hours at the entrance of the local NAHB affiliate,
accompanied by drums and Irish pipes. Disabled in Action, an activist
group calling for an end to NAHB lobbying against state guidelines
for housing accessibility for the disabled, made up a sizable amount
of picketers and was represented by a banner. Activists in wheelchairs
passed out flyers. The NAHB affiliate offices were closed due to
the demonstration.
Bay
Area demonstrators, in Walnut Creek, California, rallied in front
of the business offices of Bruce Smith, NAHB president. The crowd
was estimated to be more than 120 people, included approximately
six staff members of KPFA-Pacifica Radio and several LAB members,
as well as Pacifica historian Mathew Lasar, who spoke to the group.
Some of the protestors held a discussion with Mr. Smith after the
protest. Mr. Smith acknowledged that the protests were causing difficulties
for the NAHB but continued to defend Mr. Ford.
In
the Los Angeles area, protesters held an informational picket, handing
out flyers to pedestrians, passengers in cars, and leafleted car
windshields in the parking lot. Since the offices were locked and
the telephones were shut off, a letter to the management was slipped
under the door. Later that same day, another group of LA activists
attended an NAHB meeting in Calabasas. Their presence was anticipated
and NAHB members balled up and threw away flyers the protesters
handed out.
Several
labor groups, Greens, the Sierra Club, and media activists were
represented at the picket held in Atlanta, Georgia, while in Nashville,
Tennessee, a surprising 15 people showed up to demonstrate in front
of their NAHB affiliate offices. In Washington DC, a racially diverse
group leafleted the national headquarters of the NAHB, where Mr.
Ford works. Many people they encountered said that they knew who
they were "because you are the folks who hung the banner off
our building."
In
Minneapolis, a group of two picketers were met by police and barricades
in anticipation of their arrival, and in Boston, an activist delivering
a letter to the local office had his letter thrown away and was
told to get out. In Rockland County, New York, protesters picketed
at the NAHB office in New City, and later handed out flyers on New
City's Main Street.
Finally,
New Jersey reported that during a picket in Whippany "a hardy
crew" went to deliver a beautifully prepared letter: "When
the manager realized who we were he requested to see us in his office,
despite the fact that he had a client in there. He chewed us out,
complaining bitterly about how the 1500 e-mails had crashed his
system and he angrily asked that we get Pacifica to fire him (Ford)."
Demonstrators also picketed offices in Piscataway, New Jersey.
New
people are continuing to contact the Pacifica Campaign about forming
new picket groups, from places such as Maine, Alabama, Colorado,
and New Mexico.
The
next national day of action is slated for Wednesday, August 8.
For
information and support materials for setting up your own picket,
go to http://www.pacificacampaign.org Photographs will also be posted
there when they are sent in from picket areas. For information,
call 646-230-9588.
PACIFICA
RESISTANCE MOVEMENT LAUNCHES NONVIOLENT NAVAL STRIKE AGAINST RENEGADE
PNB MEMBER KEN FORD
Homebuilders
"Booze Cruise" Gets That Sinking Feeling
Giving
a whole new meaning to the phrase "pirate radio," on Friday,
July 13, an ad-hoc maritime unit of the Pacifica/WBAI resistance
movement launched a twilight seaborne protest action against Pacifica
Board vice-chair Ken Ford. The activists took to the waters of New
York Harbor to race alongside a party boat chartered by local NAHB
affiliates and loudly announce their demand that Ford resign from
the PNB and cease his efforts to destroy community radio.
Acting
on intelligence that a "booze cruise" organized by the
Builders Association of Northern New Jersey and the Community Builders
Association (both NAHB affiliates) would be departing from Weehawken,
N.J., Friday evening on an excursion around lower Manhattan, a Pacifica
resistance activist call him "Ishmael" organized
a last-minute, "water-borne action." Ten hardy activists
crowded aboard a 26-foot boat along with its crew of three (who
shall remain nameless and who, in keeping with their radical
bent, refused any payment for the job). The nondescript vessel gave
every appearance of being a putt-putt working boat, but as soon
as it got out on the open water, its unsuspected 200-horse power
engines kicked in, and its passengers had to crouch down below the
gunwales to prevent being tossed overboard as the boat accelerated
and commenced bouncing across the waves like a Greenpeace Zodiac
racing toward a rendezvous with an illegal whaling ship.
(In
fact, Greenpeace conducted a seaborne action on Sunday the 15th
see http://commondreams.org/headlines01/0715-01.htm
for a report.)
Though
the party boat had a major head start, the speedy pursuit craft
caught up with the revelers as they reached lower Manhattan. At
approximately 7:53 p.m., as the activists pulled alongside their
quarry, they unfurled banners, raised signs, and began chanting
"Get Ken FordSOff Pacifica¹s Board!" amid the steady
beat of a drum and the shaking of noisemakers. Booming through a
loudspeaker, "Ishmael" explained to the befuddled homebuilders
why the protesters were demanding that Ford resign from the PNB
and cease sabotaging Pacifica Radio¹s historic, progressive
mission as the "voice of the voiceless."
Some
of the bemused partygoers on the two-story cruise ship responded
with rude gestures, while others actually applauded this entertaining
interruption of their alcohol-fueled, three-hour tour. Meanwhile,
in response to a radioed request from the ship¹s captain, another
double-decker party boat traveling in the opposite direction veered
dangerously close to the protesters, blowing its horn and attempting
to "squeeze" and scare off the activists.
It
was to no avail. The raucous protest continued for a nearly 25 minutes
as the pursuit craft shadowed its prey past the Brooklyn and Manhattan
bridges. The action was broadcast live via cell phone for 13 minutes
over the popular program Flashpoints with Dennis Bernstein, on KPFA,
Pacifica¹s flagship Berkeley, Calif., station. That was followed
by a hook-up to WBIX.org (WBAI in Exile), an Internet-based "global
gathering of audio refugees" working to keep the spirit of
WBAI alive. After the successful action, and amid a glorious sunset,
the unit returned to a hero¹s welcome at Pier 63, which it
turns out is definitely sympathetic territory for those fighting
for genuine, free-speech community radio.
One Million
E-mails - Progressive Portal Reports Back on the New E-Activism
This
report is broken into a number of sections in order to summarize
responses to the waves of email on the Ken Ford/Pacifica situation.
Numbers
of emails Received
Jim Folkman of New Mexico said he got 600 to 700 at the point where
he responded. Sam Anderson of Bellevue, WA, sent out several replies,
in one of which he notesd getting over 300 emails. Tim Underwood
(no location given) mentions over 500, as does Gina Hill of Gainesville,
FL, and Tobey J. Chappell. Bary Simon claims 960, but champion was
Jerry Rombach, who says he got over 1000 emails about Ford. Naturally
all this email had some effect, leading to our next section.
Disrupting
Work
Jerry Rombach said all this email ruined his day and he hoped karma
would inflict a rotten day on everyone involved in emailing him.
Simple complaints about disrupting work came from Gina Hill, Connie
Valliere (no location given), "Shannon", John C. Cone,
Mark Ailsworth of Virginia, Judy Carlson of Wisconsin, and Judy
Barnes, who wrote, this campaign "is causing grief all over
the country and must stop now."
Please
Stop The email!
At least 40 people sent pleas for the email campaign to omit them
from further distribution. This included Melissa Leighton, who maintains
an NAHB distribution site called EOCListserve (EOC is NAHB's Executive
Officers Council). Most requests can be represented by Jenny Malone's
"I would greatly appreciateit if you would remove [me] from
your email list. I am not familiar with Mr. Ford and have no personal
or professional opinion on this issue.
Rude
A couple people got rude about it, though. [Name withheld] wrote
"Bite me you spamming asshole." Channing Bates wrote "I
don't appreciate having my email cluttered by a bunch of socialists."
And Bob User of Columbus OH contributed "This is about the
stoopidest [sic] thing ever. Lazy activists suck." Perhaps
more snotty than rude (or maybe intended seriously[!]) was Richard
Tremaine's "May God have mercy on your troubled soul."
Not
In NAHB
About a half dozen indicated they wer emailed erroneously because
they were neither NAHB members or staffers. They were sent apologies
and deleted. Lisa Scott of Peoria IL is an example.
Tried
to Dialog
Two people tried to enter dialogs, however briefly. Richard B..
Kramer (location not given) and Shannon Roden of Texarkana, TX,
both asked questions about Ford and his involvement with Pacifica,
e.g. how he got on the Board and specifics of why people dislike
him.
Cynic
Jack Waugh (no location given) asked "Why will they care about
my opinion?"
Forwarding
emails
Two said they were forwarding all emails. One without a name or
location said they were being sent to "Pacifica", while
Phyllis Osborn of NAHB's Executive Officers Council said she was
sending all emails to Bessie Wash, Pacifica National Director.
Knows
Ford
M. Hoyt sent out three emails that got progressively more hostile,
in which he indicated knowing Ford personally. In the first Ford
is "gentle, kind, hard working...married 25 or 26 years...has
a daughter {about to enter] medical school." In the second
he says "this is race bateing [sic]". And in the third,
"Pacifica is dragging Mr. Ford's name through the mud."
Balanced
Responses
Janie Cherry wrote "they [NAHB staff] are aware of the effects
of good and bad press and will make sure due diligence is done."
Larry Coppolo of Pt. Orchard WA wrote "It may very well be
that Mr. Ford has no business on you Board and is doing NAHB more
harm than good, in which case I will encourage him to resign. However,
it may also turn out that your group simply has no tolerance for
a difference of opinion. If that is the case, I will encourage him
to stay."
http://www.progressiveportal.org
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