Dear Donna, and any others listening,

There are several groups in Iowa working on what we think is a better, more
direct way to fight the corporate dominance that has overtaken our country
and world.  This is called the Community Rights strategy.  By now, over 200
communities around the country have passed these very carefully crafted
ordinances that have directly and boldly (and legally) asserted that the
rights of the local community supersede corporate rights. Period.  and that
even the natural ecosystem must have legal rights to exist in their pure
state. Most of these ordinances still stand. A few have been fought back,
or the ordinance pulled back.

There is a group in Iowa City (100 grannies) that has been investigating
this, and also here in Fairfield. There is some interest in the quad cities
and elsewhere in Iowa.

This approach bypasses the need to 'beg' regulatory agencies and/or
state/federal government officials to do the right thing. which is both
time consuming, expensive, and often futile. (witness the Bakken Oil
Pipeline situation for instance.)  It does however require the local
citizens to rise up and understand their true political power. (see quote
from the Iowa constitution bill of rights, at bottom.)

Here are several links, for those who are interested in learning more! Or,
feel free to write if you have questions.

First, a link to the founding organization,  The community environmental
legal defense fund. www.celdf.org. their founder Thomas Linzey has been
here to Fairfield twice. he spoke to full house audiences, and indeed his
initial talk was the inspiration for the Jefferson County Community Rights
Network.

Second, below is an excerpt from this article
<http://paulcienfuegos.com/community-rights-movement-and-arc-nonviolent-social-change>
by Paul Cienfuegos from a couple of years ago. Paul has been to Iowa 3 or 4
times, and is coming again in the next month or so. he is a quiet, gentle,
powerful speaker and advocate for 'we the people.' (Also, here
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Prylnj4NQ8> is a great youtube video of
him being interviewed.)

kind regards,
Fred Rosenberg
Fairfield

A. excerpt

The rapid growth of the Community Rights movement over the past decade is a
powerful example of a new form of nonviolent civil disobedience never
before attempted in this country, and which is literally changing the
playing field under our feet. Municipal and county governments are passing
new-paradigm laws <http://celdf.org/section.php?id=39> that are themselves
"collective acts of municipal civil disobedience", as Community
Environmental Legal Defense Fund <http://www.celdf.org/> Director Thomas
Linzey calls them. Each of these new ordinances (and home rule charter
amendments) intentionally challenges existing law, because those existing
laws are themselves a violation of We The People's inherent right to govern
ourselves.



Claims of state pre-emption and corporate constitutional so-called "rights"
are used to legalize the corporate plunder of our communities, so in
response we act through local law-making to obstruct that violence. We
choose to step outside of conventional law, and to exercise our right of
self-government. We consider it our duty to amend, alter, or abolish unjust
laws. 150 communities in seven states and climbing - there's no denying
that a powerful new form of nonviolent civil disobedience is being born and
tested in front of our eyes.



Core to the strategy of what we are attempting to accomplish is to force
the powerholders - in this case elected state officials - to come out of
hiding and choose sides. Are our elected state officials defending the
rights of We The People? Or do they prefer to defend the so-called "rights"
of corporate legal fictions? Regardless of how the powerholders respond, we
win, IF we can sustain and build momentum at the local level, and
ultimately af the state and federal levels as well. This kind of direct
challenge is at the heart of powerful nonviolent action. (For more examples
of creating dilemmas for powerholders, click HERE
<http://wagingnonviolence.org/2012/03/how-to-create-a-dilemma/>.)

B. excerpt from the Iowa Constitution

*ARTICLE I. - Bill of Rights*

*...*

*Political power.* Section 2. All political power is inherent in the
people. Government is instituted for the protection, security, and benefit
of the people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or reform
the same, whenever the public good may require it.





On Thu, Aug 18, 2016 at 9:58 AM, Donna Buell <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> Hi all,
>
> Who is organizing around a Constitutional Amendment to clarify that
> corporations are not natural persons and that spending money is not the
> equivalent of free speech?  I know of a few organizations — but, for
> example, Move to Amend does not have an Iowa state page….  Are there people
> — natural persons — on this list working the issue?  Need some help?
>
> Thanks much.
>
> [log in to unmask]
>
> Donna
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