INDIVISIBLE Lambertville NJ / New Hope PA

Author: Indivisible Lambertville / New Hope

  • Protesters: Know Your Rights

     From the ACLU.

    • Your rights are strongest in what are known as “traditional public forums,” such as streets, sidewalks, and parks. You also likely have the right to speak out on other public property, like plazas in front of government buildings, as long as you are not blocking access to the government building or interfering with other purposes the  property was designed for.
    • Private property owners can set rules for speech on their property. The government may not restrict your speech if it is taking place on your own property or with the consent of the property owner.
    • Counterprotesters also have free speech rights. Police must treat protesters and counterprotesters equally. Police are permitted to keep antagonistic groups separated but should allow them to be within  sight and sound of one another.
    • When you are lawfully present in any public space, you have the right to photograph anything in plain view, including federal buildings and the police. On private property, the owner may set rules related to photography or video.
    • You don’t need a permit to march in the streets or on sidewalks, as long as marchers don’t obstruct car or pedestrian traffic. If you don’t have a permit, police officers can ask you to move to the side of a street or sidewalk to let others pass or for safety reasons.

    What to do if you believe your rights have been violated

    • When you can, write down everything you remember, including the officers’ badge and patrol car numbers and the agency they work for.
    • Get contact information for witnesses.
    • Take photographs of any injuries.
    • Once you have all of this information, you can file a written complaint with the agency’s internal affairs division or civilian complaint board.

    What happens if the police issue an order to disperse the protest?

    • Shutting down a protest through a dispersal order must be law enforcement’s last resort. Police may not break up a gathering unless there is a clear and present danger of riot, disorder, interference with traffic, or other immediate threat to public safety.
    • If officers issue a dispersal order, they must provide a reasonable opportunity to comply, including sufficient time and a clear, unobstructed exit path.
    • Individuals must receive clear and detailed notice of a dispersal order, including how much time they have to disperse, the consequences of failing to disperse, and what clear exit route they can follow, before they may be arrested or charged with any crime.
  • Just the facts: Results from Getting Out the 2019 Vote

    Contributed by Olga Vanucci.

    Southeastern Pennsylvania county government flipped BLUE!

    Among many other efforts, Turn PA Blue supporters hand-wrote and mailed over 45,000 postcards, sent over 71,000 texts to voters and volunteers, knocked on over 30,000 doors, and deployed over 150 Election Day poll greeters.

    The Virginia legislature flipped BLUE!

    Among many other efforts, Flippable and Swing Left knocked upwards of 88,000 doors, and wrote over 200,000 get-out-the-vote letters, and Sister District volunteers made 204,326 phone calls, sent 201,202 postcards, knocked 19,324 doors, and sent 229,687 texts.

    It takes many hands and much effort to win.  Let’s gear up for 2020!

  • Riding the Blue Wave in Bucks and Beyond: A personal diary of pre- and post- 2019 election perspectives

     Contributed by Lisa Bergson.

    November 2: 

    Last night, I ventured downtown to the Philly Convention Center for the Inaugural Pennsylvania Democratic Party Independence Dinner. Although richly diverse, it was not a very lively crowd, maybe too big bucks. Even the full-throated Pentecostal House of Prayer Mass Choir failed to rouse the room.

    So, when Nancy Pelosi, who only the day before chaired the historic congressional vote to formally initiate trump’s impeachment process, later appearing on Stephen Colbert show in NYC, when this woman in the swirling vortex shaping our nation’s future said that she was here to “catch your spark – to be energized by you,” I thought, oh dear.  

    Fortunately, diminutive, super-brave Nancy is an extraordinary force, bringing the desultory crowd to its feet as she followed an incredibly detailed and articulate review of who and what is at stake in the 2019 PA election, with a sober assessment of the Congressional responsibility to prevent presidential violations of our Constitution. 

    “The times have found us,” she said, quoting Thomas Paine, the philosopher and political theoretician, who fostered the American Revolution. “Not to say that any one of us is as great as our founders.  But, we do understand that we are not a monarchy. We are a republic. No one is above the rule of law.” More than a spark, Nancy upholds the flame of our democracy.

    November 3:

    I wouldn’t say I’ve mastered the art of canvassing. For one thing, I’m slow. I go into a very quiet, humble mindframe as I approach people’s homes, standing far back from the door after knocking or ringing the bell. Sometimes little dogs inside bark and drum their paws against the door, objecting to my intrusion. Sometimes big dogs bark loudly and slam themselves with full force.  (Once a little girl with a big dog opened the door. What could I do? Pet him.)

    Most folks around here will not answer the door, preferring to avoid chatting with strangers.  Some do, and those are the tiny vignettes a canvasser craves. But, you can’t get too attached to the outcome. In this way, it becomes a more Zen-like practice.  

    This is where my task gets complicated. I put much thought into the aesthetics of my literature placement.  (I wish I could be more involved in the design of the literature, but that’s another topic.) What I want to achieve is a pleasing tableau. Sure, the door knocker goes on the door.  But, beyond that, you can be creative in your positioning of the candidates’ flyers, stacking them neatly by a potted plant or, it being the season, tucked under a pumpkin or other Halloween decorations. The point is to show that you respect both their home and your mission.  So, it takes a little more time, but I think it’s worth it.

    I cringe when I am on the second pass of a canvass and find that the prior volunteer simply tossed the handouts by the citizen’s door. That’s just littering. I was disheartened recently when a huge thunderstorm that night undoubtedly drenched much of my work, not to mention my little, personal handwritten notes to each recipient.

    November 4:

    In the past, I’ve always been stuck in Doylestown or Newtown.  But this time, I insisted on a Wrightstown list. There’s so much to discover here. Normally, I just commute to work, maybe stopping at the gas station or Organnon’s natural food store.  But, generally, even after 24 years in the same home, I had no sense of our neighborhood – until now.  

    I wouldn’t call it a community.  But, it is a fascinating, disparate, demographic hodgepodge, and not necessarily the republican stronghold folks imagine. There are blocks of McMansions perched high on hills too quiet for birdsong, with the only sign of life a mail deliverer in her mini-truck; there’s a hidden community down a single lane gravel road that one homeowner calls a “working man’s association”, with its own creeks and autonomous ethos; there’s shrouded wealth and even more discreet poverty; but, mostly I met young families and older couples, unhesitatingly committed to voting, with many voicing concern for my safety as I made my rounds.  “Be careful, it’s strange around here,” they would say. It occurred to me that they might not know that I am working off a Democratic list.  

    Then there was the time that I encountered the new owner of a once Democratic home.  Wearing a gun-emblazoned NRA sweatshirt, with slogans on the back, she was surprisingly welcoming and showed me around the still-empty house, indicating where she planned to put the dining room and discussing skincare and hair dye. (“Toxic,” she warned). We shook hands as I left.  “We pick the best candidates,” she assured me, promising to consider my literature.

    November 5:

    The most gratifying part of working the polls was seeing some of “my” canvassed families show up to vote! (I didn’t see the NRA woman, but she might have voted earlier.) On the whole turnout rose dramatically, especially for an off-year election.  We still lost Wrightstown, but, based on a binary choice, such as votes for coroner, our increase in turnout compared to that for 2015 was 30%+ higher than the republicans. So, with the number of Democratic voters in Wrightstown increasing 76% versus a 45% increase for republicans, we are gaining!

    And, despite their local victory, our Republican counterparts at the count seemed rather glum. Later that night and the next morning, it was evident why.  Wow. WE WON, WE WON, WE WON, WE WON, WE WON, WE WON! Bucks is BLUE!

    November 9:

    Now it’s vital to identify the best candidates to support in the primaries in the spring.  We have a clear path to fry Fitzpatrick, especially after his shameful, lemming-like vote against the investigation. Trump and his mob are on the run, as their toxic brand of self-dealing corruption becomes more and more of a liability for the republicans.  

    But, our way forward on both the Congressional and Presidential path is still murky to me.  I keep thinking of Helen Tai, our lovely, brilliant, former state representative, who lost to republican Wendi Thomas a year ago, after Wendi ran a really ugly campaign that I bet would not prevail today.

    As fate would have it, I ran into newly elected Democratic Judge Jordan Yaeger and Helen, with their spouses, at a Doylestown restaurant on Saturday night.  “You have to run, Helen,” I urged her. “You’re a great public servant, and you have the name recognition.”

    She shook her head, no.  

    November 10:

    Today, I went to a sparsely attended gathering for Elizabeth Warren on the outskirts of Doylestown. It’s encouraging that she already has at least a modest organization here, and I wanted to learn more.  As we go around the room, I admitted that I worry that Warren has gotten boxed in with her position on universal healthcare. Some of my closest friends and family members, even longtime liberals, are frightened by it. I asked whether she might consider modifying her position to offer people more of a choice.

    “You mean to continue to be ripped off by the insurance companies?” asks a woman with short, gray hair, a member of another local Indivisible.

    “Well, that way people would realize that universal healthcare is better and transition on their own,” I tried.

    “It was a fight with Medicare too,” the woman, who clearly knew her stuff, recalled. “Back in 1965, they said the same thing – that we would lose all the doctors and services. But that didn’t happen.” 

    It’s true; my husband and I travel a lot and see first-hand that universal healthcare works in places as far flung as Korea and Taiwan.  If only we can make the case that the big macro-problems that we face, the ones that “touch people’s lives,” as Warren says, call for big badass solutions, she or another like-minded progressive can win. 

    When it comes to everything from climate change to income inequality to gun control to narcotics, healthcare, and more, only governments acting in the best interests of their people and working together can take remedial action before it is too late.  “The children, the children, the children,” Nancy Pelosi repeated at that dinner downtown. It is for their future that we are compelled to fight, but also to heal our nation, our world.

  • What to Watch for in the NJ Lame Duck Session

    What to Watch for in the NJ Lame Duck Session

    Contributed by Liz Glynn

    The lame duck session is here in the NJ legislature! This is the last legislative session before the new legislators are sworn in on the second Tuesday of January. It is a hard and fast scramble to get legislation passed – especially legislation already in the works. Any legislation that doesn’t cross the finish line by the end of the lame duck session has to start all over again in the next session. The legislature has also been known to try to sneak through bad bills while everyone is busy with the holidays. It’s time to watch the legislature and be ready to respond!

    What to look for in the lame duck session:

      • Reforming Corporate Tax Credits to ensure greater monitoring and oversight, higher labor standards for reward recipients, local hiring, smart investments with greater community benefits, and hard annual caps. The NJ Comptroller’s report, the Governor’s Task Force, and investigative journalists revealed a bevy of scandals, fraudulent activity and otherwise questionable policy. Time to fix our corporate tax subsidy programs! 
      • Driver’s Licenses for All to allow immigrants the opportunity to access driver’s license. This would allow our immigrant families to drive to work, drive their kids, and would make our roads safer for everyone. Sign up for alerts at letsdrivenj.org. You can also contact your legislators and show up in Trenton for upcoming days of action.
      • Redistricting Reform to create a more democratic process to draw our district lines. The Fair Districts reform proposal includes citizen commissioners, public participation, more transparency and bans legislators from being able to determine their own district lines. Learn more at fairdistrictsnj.org
      • Voting Rights Restoration for people on parole, probation and in prison. Advocates are pushing for full restoration and to become the third state to do so. You can contact your legislator to let them know you support full restoration with this online action: LetUsVoteNJ.org
      • Marijuana reform is up for negotiation. There are various bills that could advance that include expungement of marijuana-related offenses, decriminalization and possibly legalization of recreational use.
      • ACA protections are also in the pipeline to ensure we protect New Jersey residents from Trump’s sabotage. Bills include prohibiting pre-existing conditions exclusions, requiring dependent coverage to age 26, requiring coverage of essential health benefits, requiring coverage of preventative services, and requiring contraceptive coverage. 

      There will be plenty of opportunities to attend committee meetings, submit public testimony, meet with legislators, and see live voting on the Senate and Assembly floor. If you would like to visit Trenton and see democracy in action you can contact Liz Glynn, Director of Organizing with NJ Citizen Action at liz@njcitizenaction.org 

  • Winter is Coming Survival Guide

    Contributed by Amara Willey.

    As the impeachment hearings progress and we continue to narrow the field of presidential challengers, we may feel some stress from all the news coming our way. It’s always important to fill our own wells before we try to pour it out for others or the causes we support and volunteer for. Here’s your winter guide to well-being.

    1. Earth – While it may be too cold to stick our toes in the dirt at this time of year, it can be very peaceful to look at nature. Make a point of driving back roads so you can see the ever-changing scenery. Put a screensaver on your computer that displays beautiful natural scenes.
    2. Air – Take walks outside when the weather permits and breathe the crisp, cool air. Practice conscious breathing. Notice your breath at least three times a day – before or after meals if you have trouble remembering. Try slowing your breathing once a day. Breathe in four counts, hold seven counts, and breathe out eight counts. Do that for a minute or two.
    3. Water – Contemplate your inner world. Meditate and center yourself. Remember you are like a snowflake on the vast planet – unique and indivisible. Put up a photo of a snowflake or fountain and just be with it. Take a long bath and let the water soak away your troubles. Imagine them going down the drain.
    4. Fire – Sit in front of an outdoor bonfire or inside by a fireplace. Watch the flames and be grateful for how warm and cozy you are.
    5. Spirit — Speaking of gratitude, tell someone how grateful you are for them. Write down 10 things you are grateful for every day, either first thing in the morning or right before you go to bed. 

    For more ideas about how to de-stress this season, check out https://blog.risecredit.com/10-tips-de-stressing-fall/.