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A crowd sourced, central, easy to use calendar to find protests, rallies, vigils, and solidarity events near you
A renewed campaign to protect Home Rule and win lasting dignity for our communities.
Exploring global Awareness Days highlighting health, social, environmental, and cultural causes and campaigns year round
See all months on the Awareness Page
March is Women's History month. While we have made progress, we are not yet across the finish line. We decided to hold our event on March 8th for International Women's Day to honor each other, the meaningful work we do, and the vital contribution of women to society. In 1987, Congress declared March as National Women's History Month in perpetuity (1). That means forever and we have no intention of giving it up. Women are getting louder and we will not be silenced. We are embracing our anger no matter how "un lady like" it is. Our anger is valid, our pain is valid, and our lives are valid. For many this month reminds us of our shared harm and inspires acts of solidairty. For others it is a reminder than women working together create change - and that scares them. We will love not hate and we will nurture not exploit. We all deserve human diginity. This month (and all year long) we encourage embracing humanity and learning about women's history. Furthermore, we ask that you study up and take action. Please listen to this share from KoreanVegan (2).
1- Ask yourself;
What the world would look like if every man who said they value women, support women's rights, and are protectors called congress to defend women's access to voting?
What if they all demanded accountability for "the files"?
What if they all held other men accountable for abuse?
What would that world look like? What if women did this for each other at an even larger scale than we are now?
2 - Understand Matriarchy V. Patriarchy
Patriarchy is a ladder with men at the top
Matriarchy is NOT a ladder with women at the top.
Matriarchy is a CIRCLE with protectors on the outside and protected on the inside.
We protect and nurture those more vulnerable than ourselves.
3 - Learn what abortion care actually is!
Did you know that a miscarriage often requires abortion care to remove necrotic material in order to keep the mother alive?
Did you know medical conditions like pre-clampsia, cancer treatment, and epilepsy may mean a pregnancy cannot make it to term without the death of mother, child or both?
Did you know women who have miscarried are being forced to carry necrotic (dead) tissue in their body until they are septic enough to die before receiving medical help because they and the medical staff may face a life sentence or death sentence if they provide care?
Did you know children's bodies may not be able to carry a pregnancy to term without resulting in life threatening complications or death? Did you know pregnant children are overwhelming impregnated by significantly older men and experience a lack of consent and abuse?
If you are more offended by these questions than their answers, we encourage you to research them, accept the facts, and do something about it.
4 - Stop raping us! Stop abusing us! Stop Killing us!
In the U.S. a woman experiences physical abuse every 9 seconds, amounting to nearly 3 women killed by an intimate partner daily (3)
Protect women and children. Do not stay silent or turn the other cheek. Intervene when harm is being done. Prevent harm from happening. Take de-escalation trainings and learn how to step in as a protector.
Review the Racial and Sexual and Sexual Violence Pyramid shared in February's drop down tab. https://pcar.org/resource/racial-sexual-violence-pyramid
Acknowledge that women of color experience more systemic harm than white women.
(1) https://nationalwomenshistoryalliance.org/womens-history-month-history/
(2) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MNPvEHPm5zw
(3) https://rainn.org/get-informed/facts-statistics-the-scope-of-the-problem/
StateCourtReport helps you find information about your states constitution and data
Pro Publica reports on maternal mortality rates and shares stories of women harmed by lack of medical care and freedom
Abortion Every Day shares reliable information on abortion care, what it is, and what happens when women can't access it
Data on Infant Death and Maternal Mortality
Gender Equity Policy Institute provides research on gender inequity
START WITH THANK YOU
Pick 3-5 elected officials who are doing things you appreciate and start with a thank you call.
Ex. "Thank you for supporting the Epstein Files Transparency Act."
PICK ONE TOPIC TO SUPPORT
Choose one topic and one point you want to make. Call 3-5 officials and repeat the same point to each one. This is a show of support as you contact reps who are actively supporting what you support.
Ex. "Thank you for for supporting the Epstein Files Transparency Act. I am NOT happy that all the files have not been released and I SUPPORT further investigation into this matter."
PICK ONE TOPIC TO OPPOSE
Chose one topic that you oppose. Call 3-5 officials and repeat the same point to each one. This is making it clear that you OPPOSE what they are doing.
Ex. "I noticed that you voted to block the Epstein Files Transparancy Act. I OPPOSE that decision and any future decisions that in anyway undermine the effort of the Bill."
FIND YOUR VOICE
After a few rounds of this, take notice of how you feel. Are the calls faster than sending emails or letters? Do you feel better making all the calls in a batch over morning coffee or after work? Is it easier for you to pause when you hear news and make a call right away? Does it help you to plan out what you say or is it more natural to wing it? Pay attention to what works for you and nurture those actions.
IT IS TIME TO GET SPECIFIC
Now that you are comfortable with calls/emails/etc., it is time to look at specific committees. What committee has impact on your topic of focus? Appropriations, Energy and Commerce, Intelligence, Homeland Security? Who is on that committee? Now contact each member of that committee to voice your opinion.
Ex. "I am reaching out to each member on the Oversight Committee to express my concerns over compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act. This matter is extremly important to me. I expect full compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act."
GET LOUDER!
3-5 calls becomes 5-10 calls.
Focus on people who are already getting pressure and apply more.
Stay alert for mass action and quick responses.
SUPPORT OTHERS
Help others flex their civic engagement muscles by sharing tips and creating support.
When you hear someone talking about a topic, ask them if they have made their opinion known to Congress.
Create a group chat, or join our discord, where everyone can check in on calls they are making and let each other know about things they may have missed.
BUST THE MYTHS!
Elected Officials work for US! They are OUR employees.
You do not have to give personal information to leave a comment, though some offices will not officially track those comments, and you will only get a response to your questions from the office if they have a way to contact you. TIP: set up a dedicated email for this purpose
The person answering the phone or reading your letters is essentially customer service: don't be intimidated by them! It is their job to listen to you and you are paying their wages.
Calls do work!
Ask staff about the impact of your voice. Watch interviews of past employees who tell their experiences. Listen to how Representatives talk about 'what they are hearing from the public.' All these are indicators of public pressure.
"The Last Republican" documentary directed by Steve Pink shows (among many things) an inside look at a Congressional Office. Worth a watch.
ASSUME EVERYTHING IS PROPAGANDA
Leading with this assumption can be a helpful way to remain calm and skeptical of new information. It is one way to encourage fact checking, guard against emotional manipulation, and ask critical questions about the information being consumed.
FIND 2 OR MORE SOURCES TO SUPPORT THE INFORMATION
Fact checking and cross-examining information with 2 or more resources can be a helpful way to mitigate knee-jerk reactions, ensure the information is corroborated by other sources, and identify reliable information.
FACT CHECK FATIGUE
We don't all have time to fact check every single thing we see. Limiting your information to a few reliable sources can be helpful. Fact check every so often to ensure the source is still reporting accurately - especially with social media. Many creators have been known to have 'pipeline' information. They have a few videos that are factual and reasonable so one subscribes and starts to trust them. Then, they release inaccurate information hoping they have your confidence and you don't fact check them. Look for people who will make retractions, update information, show their sources, and admit when they were wrong or spoke too soon.
NON-REACTIVE CONSUMING
Emotional regulation when consuming media is essential. In the era of 'rage bait' and 'doomerism' creators and media outlets are making a lot of money exploiting your fear and anger. Emotion can easily cloud critical thinking. As emotional as much of the news is, regulating our emotions is one of the best defenses to fake news. Take a deep breath, research subjects so you have the larger context, and step back for self care when your emotions are clouding your rational mind.
ALLOW INFORMATION TO EVOLVE
Too often evocative headlines roll out before any real information is available. Stories take time to develop. Fact checking takes time. Allow things to evolve. Go back to a headline from a week ago and see what up to date reporting says. Let investigative journalists do their job. Read FULL articles AND their SOURCES. Headlines are designed to grab your attention, not give information, especially legal investigations which take an enormous amount of time to get the full story. Be careful not to jump to conclusions. Pay attention while waiting for the full story before deciding what you think you know.
CHECK FOR BLIND SPOTS
A term most of us have heard by now is 'echo chamber.' And it is a real concern. On one side we want to listen to people who align with our values and on the other we don't want to limit our perspectives. That doesn't mean we need to start listening to extremists of any kind, but it does mean we should know what others are talking about. Variety in our sources is important. Notice when you are listening to information that presents more than one perspective...and when it doesn't. Another fun way is googling 'what books and movies get wrong about (insert here).' For example what do movies get wrong about the U.S. Military? You will likely be surprised at the disparities in what movies show and how the U.S. Military actually works. Check out Ground News which has a tool to check for blind spots and ensure you come out of the echo chamber.
BRING BACK EXPERTISE
One thing movies got right was how easily available all the world's information would be in the 21st century. People can find out almost anything about any topic with a 5 minute internet search. 'Looking it up' is not the same thing as understanding it or being an expert. As a society we have lost respect for expertise. Knowledge and experience earned over decades of study and practice with the full context of the field matters. Your favorite content creator may or may not have expertise. Look them up. See who they are, what they do, what they've studied. That is not to say laypersons do not know anything and are not worth listening to, but when it comes to topics like science, ask a scientist too. That history buff might have great insights...but make sure to also follow an actual historian.
READ REAL BOOKS
There is a literacy crisis in the United States today. Podcasts and social media may be stimulating, but how much sinks in? How much do you actually understand about their commentary? With book bans and low reading scores, it is important to actually read some real books in order to get the full context, get the whole story, and practice reading. According to the National Literacy Institute, 54% of adults have a literacy below a 6th-grade level (20% are below 5th-grade level) in 2024 (2). Yes, audio books are great and a wonderful option for people who have trouble reading. It is also important to put your eyes to same pages if you can and read some written words. What if this year you read just one full book that was recommended by that podcast you like? Or one book that is being banned? Might we suggest 1984 by George Orwell?
BRUSH OFF THE BUZZ WORDS
Vocabulary may make you think of grade school but ask yourself - do you actually now the definition of fascism? Treason? Domestic Terrorist? Words like these are thrown around these days like water at a pool party. Do you actually understand them? "Buzzword" means "an important-sounding usually technical word or phrase often of little meaning used chiefly to impress laymen"(3). Are you watching the news to be impressed or informed? Again, experts are those people who understand the technical definitions and their implications. As we are inundated with more complex terms and legalese than ever, it behooves us to listen to the experts who can define what these words mean. People like historian Heather Cox Richardson, attorneys at Legal AF of Meidas Touch Network and Under Color of Law, and especially Military experts.
QUESTIONS TO ASK YOURSELF
"Is this real, fake news, or propaganda?"
"Who benefits from me feeling/thinking this way?"
"Who does not want me to know this?"/ "Who does want me to know this?"
"Who is funding this information?"/ "Who is making money from this information?"
"What other sources back this up?"
"Am I too emotional to think critically about this information?"
"Is this too fresh to trust? How much more we will know in a week?"
"Do I know enough about this subject to draw an informed conclusion?"
"How many perspectives am I seeing?"
"Who is a trusted expert on this subject?"
(1) https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/why-politifact-has-labeled-2025-the-year-of-the-lies)
(2) https://www.thenationalliteracyinstitute.com/2024-2025-literacy-statistics
NEED SUPPORT? FEEDING AMERICA CAN HELP YOU;
Find a Local Food Bank
Get SNAP Assistance
Explore Meal Program Resources
WANNA HELP? You can visit Feeding America and help by;
Donating - $1 provides 10 meals
This math is because Feeding America has relationships with farms, grocery stores, and other organizations that allow them to buy in bulk, make use of excess product, and source local produce. This also helps them buy what they need and distribute it effectively, rather than sorting through hundreds of inconsistent drop off donations. (not that they or we are discouraging you from donating items).
Fundraising
You can partner with Feeding America on a fundrasing campaign. People are more likely to donate to trusted organizations. If you are starting a food fundraiser consider working with Feeding America who can help you find your food distribution regional area and the local food banks in your community.
Volunteering
It takes many hands to get things to the people who need them. Everything from packaging, unpacking, sorting, distributing, essential services like inventory, and more are done by everyday people like you. They have a simple sign up form and most food banks will list their volunteer shifts on their local website.
Advocating
'Urge lawmakers to see how community organization and government programs work together to help neighbors' (2) Feeding America's Advocate page allows you to fill in your information and send a letter asking your member of Congress to visit a local food bank.
When reaching out to representatives, advocate for programs like SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) and WIC (Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children).
These are your tax dollars - you have a voice in how they are used.