National Rural Strategy Summit Outlines How Democrats Win

In case you missed it, this is vital information for every Democratic strategist and candidate for 2022 and beyond. You can watch the full program (except for the breakout sessions). It’s about 4 hours long, but you can listen to it while you are doing something else.

Here’s a note from RuralVote.org Executive Director J.D. Scholten. A link to the full video of the program is below.

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Thank you for participating in our National Rural Strategy Session! With the results in Virginia and New Jersey sounding the alarms that most of us are all too familiar with and the midterm elections being a year away, Saturday’s event was perfect timing to get together and figure out what needs to happen.

Moving forward, we’re hoping to draft a monthly newsletter and host a monthly meeting starting in January. Stay tuned for those.

If you missed the event or want to re-watch, you can view the recording here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1GPGFVuDkoKTUBQw8ksMFDl9Z8_Y5PSgX/view

Many folks were interested in having a directory, which we compiled of the groups that participated: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1c8Zw55cpXp8OmJuH1EMDMoIYa9k4PFn85tcr7ZzzAM0/edit?usp=sharing

If you’re interested in the presenters’ slides: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1QFuMqBrcYg2LR0PVYFfwb_d7TzU-2AYc?usp=sharing

Along with Backroads PAC’s video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Epjg7PpE8Bk

And Jane Kleeb’s video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cXKJgTn5iN8

The Poll: https://actionnetwork.org/user_files/user_files/000/059/832/original/RuralObjective_toplines.pdf

John Ray – YouGov Blue – john.ray@yougov.com

Again, thank you for all of your efforts and don’t be strangers.

JD Scholten

J.D. Scholten

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Carbon Capture and Sequestration References

Corn Ethanol

Like it or not, Iowa Republicans have hoodwinked us into a carbon capture and sequestration method of addressing the climate crisis. It is common sense that hooking a polluting ethanol plant, coal-fired electricity generating station, or a propane grain drying operation to a mechanism for carbon capture does nothing to address the root cause of pollution. Nonetheless, here we go.

On June 22, 2021, Governor Kim Reynolds “signed Executive Order 9 launching a task force to explore carbon sequestration and the opportunities it presents for further economic development in the state of Iowa,” according to a press release.

Because of our existing supply chain and emphasis on renewable fuel infrastructure, Iowa is in a strong position to capitalize on the growing nationwide demand for a more carbon free economy. Iowa is a recognized leader in renewable fuel and food production, and this is another opportunity to lead and be innovative, invest in Iowa agriculture, and facilitate new sources of revenue for our agriculture and energy sectors. I am proud to bring together an impressive team of stakeholders that will help formulate smart, commonsense policy recommendations on this issue ahead of the 2022 legislative session.

Governor Kim Reynolds on June 22, 2021

When we talk about the decarbonization imperative across the global economy, carbon capture and sequestration has only limited use. As is typical of statements from the Iowa governor, there was no mention of the climate crisis in the release.

Having been forced to deal with carbon capture and sequestration as a public issue, advocates need references to understand what it is, its consequences, and risks. Below are some links to get started. Expect this post to be updated as new information is found and becomes available.

Carbon Capture and Storage, Center for International Environmental Law.

What is Carbon Capture and Storage?

The Role of Natural Gas Power Plants with Carbon Capture and Storage in a Low Carbon Future, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Carbon Capture, Utilization and Storage comment to California Air Resources Board, Los Angeles Chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility.

Potential for Geologic Sequestration of CO2 in Iowa

The Gassing of Sataria by Dan Zegart, Aug. 26, 2021, HuffPost.

Chevron Concedes Failure at Gorgon.

Summit Carbon Solutions

Public Informational Meetings on the Proposed Summit Carbon Pipeline, Iowa Utilities Board.

Navigator CO2 Ventures LLC.

Public Informational Meetings for Proposed Navigator Pipeline, Iowa Utilities Board.

Bold Iowa

Iowa Sierra Club

The Future of Fossil Fuels Hinges on Two Huge Midwestern Pipeline Fights

Fossil Fuel Industry and Investment in CCS and CCUS.

The Fossil Fuel Industry’s New Rube Goldberg Scheme, Science and Environmental Health Network.

Carbon Capture & Storage: The Facts, Science and Environmental Health Network.

Facts About Carbon Capture and Storage, Sept. 14, 2021, Science and Environmental Health Network.

U.S. House Conservative Climate Caucus

Rational Solutions at COP26, Not Dramatic Alarmism, podcast by Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX02)

Landowners: Know Your Rights About Eminent Domain

Iowa Laws and Rules for pipeline construction:

Chapter 9 - Restoration of Agricultural Lands During and After Pipeline Construction
Chapter 479b - Hazardous Liquid Pipelines and Storage Facilities
IUB FAQs on Eminent Domain https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_fiqcylIzo
IUB Hazardous Pipeline Permitting Process https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1K_w5VzBZ6s

How to submit an objection with the Iowa Utilities Board: 

Written comments or objections to the proposed pipeline can be filed electronically using the IUB’s Open Docket Comment Form, by email to customer@iub.iowa.gov, or by postal mail to the Iowa Utilities Board, Attn: Docket No. HLP-2021-0003 (Navigator) and/or Docket No. HLP-2021-0001 (Summit) , 1375 E. Court Ave., Des Moines, IA 50319. 

Posted in Environment | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Iowa Needs Small Town Newspapers


ICYMI –  Go to Storm Lake Movie to find out how to watch.

“The First Amendment doesn’t just apply to the Washington Post or The New York Times, it applies to The Storm Lake Times and every other little paper, too.”

Newspaper man Art Cullen won the Pulitzer Prize for his Editorials on the 2015 Des Moines Water Works lawsuit. With his brother John as publisher, Art’s wife Dolores on features and their son Tom reporting the beat, The Storm Lake Times is a family paper that isn’t out to cause trouble, just to report the news. #GreetingsFromIowa

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The Role That Vaccines Play In The Health Of Children

by Ralph Scharnau
Published with permission

States require hundreds of thousands of their residents—mostly infants, toddlers, and schoolchildren—to be vaccinated against numerous diseases. Actually, mandatory childhood immunizations have been a hallmark of American society since the 19th century. Now on the airways and social media, in personal and family conversations daily news coverage of the national COVID pandemic seems ubiquitous.

Childhood immunization rates have a long history in the United States as well as such European countries as France and Italy. Mandated vaccinations for polio, diphtheria, and tetanus rank as the most common. Now a wider range of vaccinations include shots for influenza, measles, mumps, rubella, pertussis, pneumonia, and chickenpox.

The vast majority of children are vaccinated. But no guarantee exists against disease transmission, particularly when school age children congregate close to one another in schools and daycare centers. The recent delta variant of the coronavirus sparked outbreaks and upset plans for a smooth transition to the school process. Some school immunization experts predict that vaccine mandates will become more common.

All 50 states mandate vaccination as a condition of school entry. Despite this requirement, exemptions occur and vary from state to state. A nationally enforced mandatory vaccination program will reduce local outbreaks, morbidity, and mortality associated with vaccine-preventable diseases.

All states also allow vaccination exemptions for medical reasons. And California, Mississippi, and West Virginia go a step further by granting religious or philosophical exemptions for those with sincerely held beliefs that prohibit immunizations. Today 29 states and D.C. have a religious and philosophical exemption law. These laws allow parents to claim an exemption based on their personal, moral, or other beliefs.

According to a recent POLITICO-Harvard poll, a majority of Americans now support a requirement that public school students aged 12 or older be vaccinated against Covid-19 before they can attend classes in person. The survey also shows lingering divisions along partisan, racial, and ethnic lines.

Nearly 75% of Democrats favor a vaccine mandate for the students while 59% of Republicans are opposed with just over half of independents against the mandates. Support for mandates was higher in communities of color than among white folks with blacks at 63%, Hispanics at 59%, and whites at 51%.

Making COVID-19 vaccination mandatory for children draws widespread support among health care professionals across a spectrum from general physicians to specialized immunologists. It will not be possible to achieve full protection against COVID-19 at the population level unless most adolescents and children are vaccinated. However, factors such as vaccine hesitancy and mistaken beliefs about COVID-19 risks may pose to children make this a challenging goal.

In the United States advocates and opponents of vaccination have clashed over compulsory vaccination and whether vaccines are safe and effective. There are also barriers to vaccines created by misinformation. Some social media sites claim that vaccines cause autism, a notion refuted by large-scale studies. Long standing studies, moreover, show that childhood immunization protects children from diseases that ravaged populations fifty years ago.

Other factors such as race and class also come into play. Kids may not get shots if their parents can’t get off work. Other factors like child care, missing work, evening hours, and getting transportation may also be important. Sometimes racist and sexist messages aimed at teens contribute another barrier to vaccination.

Upholding the efficacy of vaccination for the health of children while protecting the openness to the need for exceptions remains a delicate balancing challenge. Perhaps the most we can expect is a respectful discussion without rancor.

Ralph Scharnau
November 3, 2021

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Master List Of Biden’s Achievements 

  Video 3:40:

Remember how the Former Guy achieved what only Herbert Hoover had achieved before him – losing jobs during his administration.

Holy Smokes – if a Republican president ever achieved a list 1/10th of what Biden has achieved in just his first 10 months we would never hear the end of it. Yet because the media is mostly corporate owned, their mission is to mute achievements of Democrats. Thus we only hear of CRT (which doesn’t really exist except as a dog whistle), inflation and “democratic disarray.” 

So I found this thread over on reddit.com. In this thread poster backpackwayne has been keeping an updated list of the ongoing Biden achievements. Rules do not allow publishing the full list. reddit.com would like your traffic but I am allowed to post a few things as a teaser.

Just this month alone is amazing – the passage of the infrastructure bill alone was amazing, especially considering the parliamentary style bloc voting that the Republican have imposed on their members. A few had enough courage to vote for the country instead of their party to get this much, much needed bill passed.

(BTW – those Republicans with courage did NOT include Feenstra, MIller-Meeks nor Hinson who apparently prefer to be puppets rather than representatives.)

Along with the infrastructure bill, employment is skyrocketing. Employment numbers are being achieved which were not expected for at least a couple more years. Along with that has come a growth in real wages, something that hasn’t happened in a long time.

Just to remember a couple of milestones that have already been achieved in 10 short months. For example the Biden Administration has gotten nearly 200 million folks vaccinated. Remember also that when Biden’s administration came in, the vaccination program in place by the previous administration was a pathetic joke.

Let is not forget the stimulus payments early in his term that saved a lot of businesses. Add to that the Families with Children payments that have substantially decreased childhood poverty in this country.

Funny we hear almost nothing from the corporate media about these huge successes. Nor, really, do we hear about Republicans coordinated plan to undermine the Biden plan to the detriment of the country.

So here is a bit of that list from reddit. Please go over and take a look. Be warned it is a long (and exciting) list. These are in some chronological order

  • Rejoin the Paris Climate agreement

  • Extend Student Loan payment freeze

  • Extend eviction freeze

Historic stimulus bill passed: 

Cut Obamacare premiums by 40%  

•Passes largest infrastructure improvement bill in history  

He is only just beginning, folks.

Yet the media portrays this obviously successful administration as struggling. Put a Republican in charge of this economy and it would collapse fairly quickly. We have plenty of examples in history.

Want more of this? Vote Democratic next fall, if not for your sake then for the sake of your children and future generations.

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Sunday Funday: Have You Started Christmas Shopping Yet? Edition

 

Well now that the Christmas season starts before the trees even turn color AND we are being warned “there will be delays” this year, have you started your shopping yet?

Much of my list is more what I would like for others. Here goes:

  • A nice warm cell for Steve Bannon (and others) where they can contemplate their roles in the treasonous insurrection before they appears before congress.
  • Some common sense for Kim Reynolds who seems to think that pandemics are no big deal
  • The spirit of real democracy for Kristen Sinema and Joe Manchin.
  • A map for Mariannette Miller-Meeks so she can figure out where she is

Nothing much happened last week, but we will include some early Thanksgiving questions:

A) Well, an estimated million of what group got vaccinated this week?

B) Iowa’s Mariannette Miller-Meeks declared that she was against what proposed program that would greatly affect seniors?

C) Speaking of Miller-Meeks, she said she wouldn’t do what before reversing and saying she would later on the day she said she would run in the new first district?

D) In San Diego last Sunday the US Navy christened a ship named for what slain gay civil rights leader?

E) Last weekend at least 8 people were killed during a crowd surge at a concert in Houston, Texas. Who was the performer at that concert?

F) Let’s Party! How long did the first Thanksgiving Day celebration last?

G) From way back in history. On November 14, 1666 what lifesaving procedure was experimentally performed in Britain using two dogs? Typing was still far in the future.

H) What US Olympic gold medal winner was pepper sprayed in a racist attack in Los Angeles because she is Asian?

I) In the trial in the death of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia, the defense attorney called out what person saying he didn’t want “any more Black pastors” in court?

J) What namesake of one of the Supreme Court’s worst decisions that declared “separate but equal” is the law of land  is set to be posthumously pardoned in Louisiana?

K) According to a new book by newsman Jonathan Karl, Vice-President Mike Pence hid where while the insurrectionist mob was looking for him to hang him?

L) Texas Senator Ted Cruz picked a fight with what puppet for that puppet’s audacity to promote Covid vaccinations in children?

M) What high ranking American visited France for their Armistice Day events?

N) Deaths in 2020 due to abuse of what substance rose 26% in Iowa, no doubt due to the stresses of the pandemic?

O) “Presidents are not kings, and Plaintiff is not President.” Thus spoke the judge in a case where who is trying to get the National Archives to suppress records?

P) President Biden visited what major US city to push the just signed infrastructure bill?

Q) Speaker Pelosi called for an investigation of what congress member who posted a video of him killing congress member Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez?

R) A teenage girl being abducted in Kentucky used a distress signal from what popular social media site to get help from a passing motorist who summoned help?

S) The stock price soared for the initial public offering of Rivian last week. What does Rivian make?

T) What two major US companies announced they would split into separate companies last week? One will become 3 companies and the other will split into 2 companies.

The pathetic reality is either Kyle Rittenhouse will go to prison for murder or he’ll be the keynote speaker at the 2024 Republican National Convention. – Kaivan Shroff

Answers:

A) Kids between 5 and 12 

B) Medicare negotiating drug prices. No real good reason except for a “contribution” from big Pharma I would bet.

C) Move from her home in Ottumwa even though it will be outside of the district she wants to represent

D) Harvey Milk

E) Travis Scott

F) 3 days

G) Blood transfusion

H) Sunisa Lee

I) Rev. Al Sharpton (the trial is in open court)

J) Homer Plessy (Plessy v. Ferguson 1896)

K) in the parking garage underneath the US capitol

L) The feathers flew as Cruz called out Big Bird (sorry, I had to do it)

M) VP Kamala Harris

N) alcohol

O) The previous president

P) Baltimore

Q) Paul Gosar of Arizona

R) Tik-toc

S)  Electric cars

T) GE will split into 3 companies and Johnson & Johnson will split into 2 companies

Kayleigh McEnany Tells January 6th Panel She Never Worked at White House. – Andy Borowitz

Tip of the hat to EarlG on democraticunderground.com

Posted in #trumpresistance, Covid-19, Humor | Comments Off on Sunday Funday: Have You Started Christmas Shopping Yet? Edition

And Now, Iowa’s Deer Are A Covid Repository

2 minutes:

Well, here is an unexpected turn:  

“Scientists have evidence that SARS-CoV-2 spreads explosively in white-tailed deer, and the virus is widespread in this deer population across the United States.

Researchers say the findings are quite concerning and could have vast implications for the long-term course of the coronavirus pandemic.

<< skip>>

Now veterinarians at Pennsylvania State University have found active SARS-CoV-2 infections in at least 30% of deer tested across Iowa during 2020. Their study, published online last week, suggests that white-tailed deer could become what’s known as a reservoir for SARS-CoV-2. That is, the animals could carry the virus indefinitely and spread it back to humans periodically.

If that’s the case, it would essentially dash any hopes of eliminating or eradicating the virus in the U.S. — and therefore in the world — says veterinary virologist Suresh Kuchipudi at Penn State, who co-led the study.

“If the virus has opportunities to find an alternate host besides humans, which we would call a reservoir, that will create a safe haven where the virus can continue to circulate even if the entire human population becomes immune,” he says. “And so it becomes more and more complicated to manage or even eradicate the virus.”

That seems to be fairly self-explanatory doesn’t it? If humans do manage at some point to get the virus under control, the virus can continue to exist AND POSSIBLY MUTATE  in another host species, in this case deer. At some point the virus could cross back to humans in some form, either the same or mutated.

We have no idea when deer became infected. Speculation is that it crossed species from humans to deer. Since there are little to no symptoms of Covid in deer, it will not be easy to identify infected individuals. You may recall a huge culling of mink in the Netherlands in 2020 when such a species transfer was thought to have happened and 17 million mink were killed.

With the Covid virus now having at least one other species where they can live and possibly mutate, eradication of the disease may now be impossible.

For those leaders and followers who have made fighting mitigation efforts part of the political divide all we can say is your efforts to fight against what should have been common sense pandemic procedures, you may have made this situation possible. 

Certainly we can’t say for sure and probably never will be able to. But by giving the virus another day to live and another chance to adapt you certainly did no one any favors. 

There have also been cases found among zoo animals and some reports of dogs having covid. This virus has shown itself to be extremely adaptable and mutable. Now instead of a pandemic we may have an endemic disease that may possible alter life-styles in our world. 

Want things to return to normal? We may have missed our chance. But now is a good day to mask up and get vaxxed.

Posted in Covid-19 | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Joe Bolkcom Fought Medicaid Privatization

Count me among the many in Iowa who will be very sad to see Joe Bolkcom retire from the Iowa Senate. Bolkcom from his first day worked hard for Iowans, especially Iowans whose lot in life was not to be counted among the fortunate.

Bolkcom’s commitment to the unfortunate was never in such grand display as his work to stop the privatization of Iowa’s Medicaid program. From the time it was first proposed by Branstad and I assume until his final day in the Senate, Bolckom has and will continue to expose this wealth transfer to the wealthy scheme.

From the beginning Bolkcom smelled something very stinky in this scheme:  

Putting Wall Street firms in between Iowa families and their Iowa health care providers won’t save money either and it won’t improve health care.

What it will do is take several hundred million dollars each year out of Iowa’s Medicaid budget and give it to out-of-state corporations in the form of guaranteed administrative fees and profits.

There are two basic ways the managed care companies will cut costs.  One is by denying health care to Iowans, especially the Iowans whose health care is the most threatened and the most expensive.  The second is by not paying Iowa providers the full cost of the health care they provide.

Medicaid helps us all sleep better at night.  By helping those in need, we also make sure help will be there if we need it ourselves.

Sen. David Johnson, from northwest Iowa, is the leading Republican on the Human Resources Committee.  On Monday, he voted to end Medicaid privatization.  He said he did so after talking with doctors and families in his Senate district.

Taking money from those who need it for health care that will let them survive and giving it to for-profit companies. Very, very bad idea.

Bolkcom approached the issue with a fervor. Certainly other Iowa Democrats will take up this issue with the fervor Bolkcom had, but it will be hard to match.

Although Medicaid privatization is still out there as an issue, it has been muted in recent years by the devastating effects of the Covid-19 and the utter incompetence of the Republican administrations in Washington and in Des Moines that chose to make addressing the pandemic a political issue. Thus what should have been a logical approach to the pandemic has been turned into a politically divisive issue by the Republican Party. Thus our chances of controlling the virus have suffered a huge setback.

So despite Senator Bolkcom’s Herculean efforts to stop the insane privatization of Medicaid that takes health care from the poor and the disabled and transfers that money to Wall Street firms, Branstad’s and Reynold’s monument to greed still stands as Iowa law.

Let us hope that in the near future this law will fall and former Senator Bolkcom will be a special guest to witness the signing of the bill that ends it.

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Iowa Unions, Democrats, The Public, Stand With Deere Workers

photo credit: Wikipedia

https://www.thenation.com/article/activism/john-deere-strike-update/

by Dave Leshtz

Davenport, Iowa—In October the United Auto Workers and Iowa’s labor movement were on the march.

Community support and sympathetic media were solidly behind the 10,100 striking John Deere and Company employees. Workers at America’s biggest maker of agricultural machinery were justifiably insulted by Deere’s initial contract offer of a 5 percent raise following a year of record-breaking profits. They had been deemed essential workers, but apparently none were as essential as Deere’s CEO John May, who made $15.6 million in 2020—a 160 percent raise.

Dozens of businesses contributed discounted meals, drinks, haircuts, chiropractic services, fishing gear, and even a free session at Davenport Axe Throwing. The Retail Wholesale and Department Store Union in North Liberty donated 8,000 pounds of food. RWDSU Local 110 Vice President Bob Dixon said, “It’s about corporate greed…. people need to come together as members and as employees to fight against that.”

Iowa Senate Democratic Leader Zach Wahls and other Democratic legislators delivered strong statements of support, as did Iowa’s Federation of Labor, the Teamsters, the Iowa Farmers Union, and Senator Bernie Sanders. Secretary of Agriculture—and former Iowa governor—Tom Vilsack visited a picket line in Ankeny. “You deserve a fair price and a fair deal,” Vilsack told the workers. He thanked them for supporting his gubernatorial campaign in 1998: “The UAW was with me from the get-go. You don’t forget the people that were with you.”

Election Day in Iowa was also the day UAW members voted on a renegotiated contract, after overwhelmingly rejecting a tentative agreement on October 10. The second agreement between Deere and UAW leaders would give workers an immediate 10 percent raise with two additional raises of 5 percent over the course of a six-year contract. Workers would receive a bonus of $8,500 upon ratification of the contract. Deere also made some concessions on health care and retirement, but the two-tier salary system remained, with so-called “supplemental employees” paid substantially less than their coworkers doing the same jobs.

Many union members, anxious about their paychecks as the holidays approach, believe it is time to declare victory and get back to work. The majority disagree and voted down the second agreement by roughly 55 percent to 45 percent. Some say the rejection reflects a continuing dissatisfaction with their own leaders. Others blame uncertainty about the company’s Continuous Improvement Pay Plan, which is based on a complex incentive system. Many point to an overall sense that Deere management doesn’t respect them, despite their loyalty and hard work during the Covid pandemic.

Resentments hardened when Deere obtained an injunction to limit the number of picketers to four at any one time. The injunction went so far as to ban burn barrels for keeping warm at night. Tension spiked further when UAW member Richard Rich, a 56-year-old Deere warehouse inspector for 15 years, was struck and tragically killed by a car while crossing a poorly lit road near a picket line.

Public support doesn’t appear to have diminished, and Iowa unions continue to stand with the UAW. The Hawkeye Area Labor Council in Cedar Rapids, IBEW 405, and the Iowa City Federation of Labor are among those collecting and delivering household and hygiene items to strikers.

Deere management insists that the contract on the table is its “last, best, and final offer.” A Deere executive also issued a veiled threat, according to the Des Moines Register, to make up for the slack in domestic production by shifting some of the work to overseas factories. No word yet from Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds or Senators Charles Grassley and Joni Ernst—all Republicans—on how they feel about the prospect of jobs in their state being outsourced to workers in other countries.

Will Iowa’s labor movement keep moving? The two sides are said to be talking, but the outcome is hard to predict. Most of today’s strikers are young, with little knowledge of Iowa’s militant labor history to inspire them. They aren’t aware that the UAW was preceded by the Farm Equipment Workers who organized John Deere over 70 years ago. (See The Long Deep Grudge: A Story of Big Capital, Radical Labor, and Class War in the American Heartland, by Toni Gilpin).

Several UAW members I’ve recently talked with were not aware that Iowa’s Republican-led legislature nearly abolished public-sector unions in 2017 by stripping the guts out of Chapter 20, an Iowa collective bargaining law that operated efficiently and fairly—with no strikes—since the 1970s. Despite the heroic efforts of the University of Iowa’s Labor Center to educate workers, we still have many miles to go.

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Armistice Day Observance


Armistice Day Observance

The “WAR TO END ALL WARS” ended 103 years ago, on

November 11, 1918

On that day, people around the world rejoiced at the promise of peace.

Armistice Day is a day to promote peace and to remember the victims of war, both veterans and civilians.

An Armistice Day Observance will be held on Thursday, November 11, on the Ped Mall Blackhawk Mini park, Iowa City.

Program will begin at 10:45 AM and ringing of the bell promptly at 11:00 AM.

The event is free, and the public is welcome.  For more information call 319 430 2019 or visit our website:  vfp161.org

                                   Sponsored by

Veterans for Peace Chapter #161      

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