INDIVISIBLE Lambertville NJ / New Hope PA

Author: Indivisible Lambertville / New Hope

  • In Pennsylvania: Ann Marie Mitchell becomes official Democratic Candidate for State Representative

    In Pennsylvania: Ann Marie Mitchell becomes official Democratic Candidate for State Representative

    Contributed by Lisa Bergson.

    On Tuesday night, February 3rd, Ann Marie Mitchell became the official Democratic candidate for state representative of PA’s 178th District.  She is challenging Trump supporter, Wendi Thomas, a Republican known for her conservative positions, who issued nasty attacks in her campaign to defeat ILNH constituent Helen Tai in 2018. 

    Ann Marie has lived in Northampton Township for 20 years, with her husband and children, who were educated in the Council Rock School District.  With degrees from the Wharton School and Penn Law, where she studied bankruptcy with then-professor Elizabeth Warren, Ann Marie stands as an experienced, grounded, and ethical candidate, very much worth our full support.

  • Personal Perspectives: Resistance Then and Now

    Personal Perspectives: Resistance Then and Now

    Contributed by Lisa Bergson.

    You can be in The Resistance and still have a life!  That’s one of the great things about our movement today, as opposed to my experience as a leftist back in the late Sixties and early Seventies. In that era, we were mostly young, single, and determined to “live the revolution”, as is easiest if you are young, single, and open to a fun, but spartan lifestyle. By contrast, our local ILNH is largely comprised of established middle-aged and older folks, who are predominantly white, educated women.  

    Instead of smashing the state, we are writing postcards with multi-colored pens, softly chatting in friendly clusters around the tables of the suburban homes and quaint hamlets where we live.  Rather than overthrow the government, we seek to reform it by promoting Democratic candidates who reflect our values, which range from liberal to progressive, depending. In an increasingly polarized and partisan nation, we wish to heal the divide and are working on ways to respectfully “Change the Conversation”.  We are firmly committed to non-violent, passive resistance. And, while we don’t have flowers in our hair, our meetings have been known to open with meditation or playful dance!

    Seeing women at the helm and the multitude of opportunities this poses for us is another major way our local movement departs from my Sixties experience.  In that era, women like me were engaged in powerful, revelatory, life-changing consciousness-raising groups and bonding with one another. That said, we were still decidedly not “in the room where it happens” to quote from the musical, “Hamilton” (and Bolton’s book title!).  In the New Left, by and large, men still ran the show, with women functioning as purveyors of food and other comforts. 

    I will never forget when I excitedly went to a speaking engagement downtown to hear my idol, Abbie Hoffman, founder of the Yippies, which took a playfully subversive approach to protest that I found enchanting. I stood by the exit door to greet my hero, only to have him reach out and pinch my 18-year-old belly!  I couldn’t articulate how disappointed and demeaned I felt.

    Determined to participate fully in the counterculture and the revolution many of us saw as inevitable, I moved to The Bay Area, where, as a non-student activist, I found lots of opportunities to engage and to grow, from exploring communal life to working on an underground paper to running Radical Therapy groups, based upon Claude Steiner’s Transactional Analysis Techniques.  What I didn’t realize was that I arrived too late. 

    By 1970, the Vietnam War was winding down; Nixon and Kissinger (of all people) opened up China; and an event that was supposed to mark the beginning of a new political order fizzled. Among some 30 or so, gay, straight, black, and white women from the Bay Area, I helped to renovate an old yellow school bus to ferry us across the country to DC for the Black Panther Party’s Revolutionary People’s Constitutional Convention. The trip was not without incident, but somehow most of us made it, smelly lot that we were.  Remember, however, that this was long before the Internet, and it was only when we arrived in the Capital that we learned that the event was basically cancelled.  

    Soon after, I moved to Marin County to think about what to do with the first days of the rest of my life.  Like many of my Sixties cohorts, returning to school, embarking on careers, and starting families, in the context of a more peaceful and globally interdependent era, lulled us into a certain complacency.  For my part, I helped to organize the National Writers Union and later protested the Iraq War, but I did not engage in any sort of on-going activism. When it came to governmental politics, I voted in national elections, but that was about it. 

    Fast forward to November 8th, 2016, a defining moment for so many of us. After participating in an improvised protest, which was a bit scary, with an unmarked car, driven by a large, menacing man, who hemmed us in when we got to New Hope’s Bridge Street and filmed each of us in passing, I didn’t know what to do. There was no call to action by the event’s organizer.  I turned to the Newtown Democrats, whose first post-electoral meeting was literally mobbed, with folks lined up out to the bitterly cold street. The local organization was totally ill-prepared and went ahead with its usual, droning, bureaucratic meeting, while collecting everyone’s name and number. All I know is, I never heard from them.

    And then, out of nowhere there was our Indivisible Lambertville/New Hope. The first Community Gatherings that I attended were jammed.  There was a plan, a structure, and clear direction. We could work in different interest groups – environmental, ethics, civil rights, and more —  with a central reporting team open to folks with the time and commitment to show up regularly and to participate respectfully. I was, to say the least, ecstatic to meet so many thoughtful and enthusiastic people right here, finding a community where I had long felt so isolated.  It took a while to find the right niche for an outspoken, old activist like me, but working in the Civil Rights Group and contributing to our newsletter are where I belong.

    Soon, our new movement will be tested as never before. Our methods and our fortitude will face severe challenges as we ramp up to the coming elections. With the tragic result of the impeachment trial in the Senate, we are on notice that the Republican party will stop at nothing, and there is nothing to stop them from corrupting our democracy and continuing to destroy our planet.  Nothing, that is, except we the people. It is vital that we become more inclusive, more organized, and more united with other like-minded groups and organizations, if we are to end this nightmare. And, taking a page out of the Sixties, I wish for music, art, and poetry to foster new dreams.

    In the meantime, postcard party, anyone?

  • Good Reads –  “American Carnage:  On the Front Lines of the Republican Civil War” by Tim Alberta.  Published by Harper Collins, 2019.

    Contributed by Liza Watson.

    Gone are the days of the Republican party as the party of free trade and balanced budgets, immigrant-friendly and capable of compromise…or are those days going to return?  Tim Alberta, currently a reporter for Politico, has laid out the evolution of the GOP through a detailed examination of power shifts and historically key moments in congress.

    John Boehner, Paul Ryan, Eric Cantor…and then along came Kevin McCarthy and his Tea Party buddies.  The author’s narrative begins with Sarah Palin’s appeal, which was a revelation to the aristocratic class.  It describes the emergence of the Tea Party, which uncorked an unexpressed energy that captured the mood of the electorate. On the left, by the time the Occupy Movement sprang up, the insurgency on the right had already taken root and influenced the governing class.  Where the GOP landed was with candidates who specialized in picking fights, rather than dealing with nuanced policy ideas.

    What a trajectory!

    The author poses the awful notion that there is no “normal” to which America can return.  Paul Ryan is quoted as saying, “Trumpism is a moment, a populist moment we’re in, that’s going to be here after Trump is gone.” (p. 595)  Trump was the battering ram that broke down the GOP palace gates. And according to Raul Labrador, a former Tea Party congressman, we shall see whether he holds the loyalty of his base if they don’t see the changes they want – better wages for everyday people and a functioning immigration policy, and disillusionment with a federal budget drowning in trillions more debt. (p. 610).

    While a long read, the book provides insight into how and why the GOP changed.  Readers who are political junkies will relish the stories of how members of the House of Representatives pressure its Speaker and how policy actually survives power struggles.  Well-written, very careful and thorough, a case study of a transformed political party.

  • ILNH FYI

    ILNH FYI

    Environmental Art Show to Bring Attention to Climate Crisis

    Do you want to get inspired about the environment? Then check out Love Mother Earth 2020, an environmental art and performance show on Saturday Feb. 29 from 12 – 5 p.m. at Prallsville Mills in Stockton.

    A joint venture between Indivisible and the Sunrise chapters of Hunterdon and Lambertville, the show will feature local artists in any medium, poets and performers whose topics are based around the environment. The exhibit will include traditional visual arts such as drawings, paintings, and sculpture, as well as song, dance, poetry and spoken word.

    More than twenty artists have already committed to the show. More are encouraged to participate. The deadline to submit an application to participate is Feb. 15.

    Volunteers are needed for set up on Friday, Feb. 28, parking during the event, and clean up on Sunday, March 1. If you are available and able to help, please sign up here:  https://docs.google.com/document/d/1iNYeW6A45S1A8xmWWTrKjceYMA40Q_p0zYOUccKnM08/edit

    Sunrise Movement is a youth organization to end the climate crisis and advocate for the Green New Deal. The Hunterdon and Lambertville chapters, called hubs, are part of an international organization.

    More information about the exhibit:

    The exhibit is free and open to the public. For more information and to sign up to attend, click here:  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/love-mother-earth-2020-tickets-91449025497

    If you are interested in participating as an artist or performer, please apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSepAIBmmcpQa-xTzLidW5Hk6EtKiAb386e5s4ekXCOgOE7lHA/viewform 

    Environmental or youth organizations are invited to have a table at this event.  Please apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc5kuZGOxfWyVyIR-ZtmlFRxQelizJHl1p298mPzZD1vE0HLw/viewform

    Did You See This? New York Times Covers Change the Conversation Bucks!

    Several of ILNH’s leadership team were captured and quoted in a recent NYTimes article that covered Change the Conversation Together and a recently held training and canvassing in Bucks County. In To Sway Swing Voters, Try Empathy, by Michael Massing, Cindi Sternfeld is quoted, Susan Shapiro and Elycia Lerman are in the photos. The piece has already heightened interest and attracted more people who want to join the cause. How about you? 

    Meet ILNH’s new co-Treasurer John Woods

    I started hanging around Indivisible LNH about a year and a half ago. I’m a 73 year old retired gay guy who worked in Human Services for many years. After the 2016 election results and what began to emerge, I became really worried about what was happening in our country. Our values as a democracy were under attack by super wealthy white guys who seemed to only care about money and power, no matter what. So I attended a couple of ILNH Community Meetings, got hooked up with a canvassing team before the 2018 elections, canvassed in Hunterdon and Bucks counties. I got involved early with Change the Conversation, a really unique way of connecting with potential voters. I got on the ILNH Slack site and began to be part of planning and feedback around various issues. 

    My experience with ILNH to date has been fantastic. I’ve been part of many kinds of organizations over my lifetime and I have never seen one with such constant, organic-like, communications that are so effective at accomplishing many objectives. I asked if there were other things I could do. The next day I was asked to help as an organization treasurer. Admittedly, I’m a bit overwhelmed at learning the specifics of the job, but feel great to be helping in an important way. Whether you are a joiner, a hermit, an angry citizen, shy, not a people person or whatever. . .there is an important place for you here, where you can make a difference in getting our democracy and values back. 

  • What Comes Next in an Uncertain World

    Contributed by Deb Kline.

    One of the difficulties in putting together a monthly newsletter is that just as you declare the deadline, important news floods into the gap between then and distribution. On Friday, we woke to find the US had taken aggressive action in the assasination of Iran’s top general, Qassem Suleimani. Suleimani, a man previously unknown to the majority of Americans, was known to the intelligence community and others as masterminding many attacks across the Middle East, resulting in hundreds of deaths.  

    According to the administration, the assassination prevented an imminent attack on Americans. However, our own intelligence community and others have said the evidence of such an attack was “razor thin,” and in fact, was offered as a far-out option in retaliation for the attack on the US Embassy in Iraq, in expectation that the other options would look better and more measured. 

    The timing couldn’t be more suspect. As the negative news of the president’s holding of the Ukraine military funds ratcheted up, and more Americans stepped into the Impeach and Remove camp, suddenly we are on the brink of war with a country that only a few short years ago it seemed we were reducing the potential for armed conflict. 

    Once again we are heartbroken and angry. Some of our troops are already being sent to the region. The inept, corrupt, manipulative baby-man in the White House has delivered what we most feared. 

    What comes next from the administration and now, our enemies in the  Middle East remains to be seen. But, you and I cannot wait to take action. Just as we did after the 2016 Election, it’s now more important than ever to call our legislators, to stand with those who oppose war and gather together in support of each other.  

    Remember the name of our organization: Indivisible. We are together in this fight. If you are in despair – and who isn’t – join us as we lock arms and take action. Together, we are stronger.