TONIGHT! Mon, Oct. 27 7:30pm "Dismantling Monoculture:
¡MesoAmerica Resiste!"
TCS building, room 107 UC Davis
Technocultural Studies is in the building formerly known as the Art
Building just across Hutchison Drive from Shields Library adjacent to
the UC Davis Main Theatre. Translation: TCS is in a small building
behind the big purple theater on Hutchison Dr.
Hope to see you there!
Rainbow
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On their way back from the MesoAmerican Social Forum and the Honduras
Conference Against Militarization, the Beehive Collective will be performing
in Davis!
> Join the Beehive Collective for a picture storytelling performance that
> covers their new graphic "Mesoamerica Resiste!" This graphic takes a
> critical look at Project Mesoamerica (formerly "Plan Puebla Panama")- a
> development plan designed to facilitate the exploitation of resources by
> corporate interests in Central America, and transform much of its land to
> create more "efficient" trade routes for global markets just as early
> European monarchies set out to do 500 years ago. This elitist plan is a
> threat to the very survival of unique and important ecosystems and
> traditional cultures. Our presentation illustrates many inspiring and
> successful examples of resistance to this top down development through
> horizontal community based organizing.
>
>
> sponsored by the UCD Techcultural Studies Department and Students for
> Sustainable Agriculture
>
> more info: beehivecollective.org
>
> contact: ju...@beehivecollective.org or sakura....@gmail.com
>
>
> --
> The Beehive Collective is an all-volunteer non-profit graphics workshop
> who's mission is to cross pollinate the grassroots by creating iconic
> imagery that can be used as popular education and organizing tools.
>
> the beehive design collective
> www.beehivecollective.org
> polli...@beehivecollective.org
> 3 elm st - machias, me - 04654
>
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>
--
The bicycle is the most civilized conveyance known to man. Other forms
of transport grow daily more nightmarish. Only the bicycle remains
pure in heart.
—-Iris Murdoch
There never was a good war or a bad peace.
— Benjamin Franklin