From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature
notes and photos from PETA's "Helping Animals 101" conference in SF #2
PETA's "Helping Animals 101" in San Francisco Feb. 5th and 6th, 2005.
Day Two, Sunday 2/6:
[Shorthand notes and blurry photos can't begin to capture almost 15 hours of presentations.]
vegan breakfast
1. Armchair Activism by Alka
- one person does make a difference
- righting wrongs by writing to the right people: companies that use animals, elected officials, feedback to media outlets when they do right and wrong by animals, letters to editors. use proper etiquette, don't preach, and no more than 200 words
- every piece of legislation for the animals came from concerned citizens lobbying legislators
- “Everybody’s vote counts in America, but those who sit down and write letters make their votes count more.” John F. Kennedy
- speak out, in voice and leaving leaflets around. help spread the word on the plight of animals
2. Effective Advocacy by Bruce
- build on anger to advocate effectively, with reasons for optimism
- prioritize! you can't fight all battles at once. finish one thing at a time before starting new projects.
- read "The Habits of Highly Effective People" and "How to Win Friends and Influence People" - better than you might think and not about manipulation
- don't get caught up in tyranny of urgent. some things are urgent, but most not. focus on being effective in long term
- be courteous, take care of yourself, be prepared, dont' forget t-shirts/buttons/bumper stickers
- don't minimalize when asked about your veganism/vegetarianism. really tell people why
- don't push others away by being 100% strict with vegan ingredients if someone goes to trouble to make veggie food for you. Bruce says this same thing in his intro to "Animal Ingredients" (http://www.akpress.org/2004/items/animalingredients)
- have non-animal interests and reach out to new people
- optimism: compared with other struggles AR moving very fast with great strides in just last 10 years even
3. Organizing a Demo by Dan
- don't jump straight to demo as not conducive to negotiating
- pick a target, look for big audience, consider time of day
- be clear with message, don't cover faces with signs
- part of national campaign
- grassroots groups need not waste resources on developing and printing materials as PETA will take their logo off and put local groups contact info on existing pamphlets
- consider type of demo best: leafletting, video (PETA has CD-ROMS), protest, stunt (works with few people to get attention)
-be polite as possible, professional (not social event but fun), confront the target not the public, know laws about private property
4. KFC demo (then vegan picnic lunch)
- see newswire for http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/02/1719985.php and http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/02/1720171.php
5. PETA PSAs
- see http://www.petatv.com
6. Basic Media Training by William
- don't wear clothes with patterns for TV
- be relaxed/smile
7. Community Activism by Dan
- many tips on starting your own grass roots group
- pick winnable targets, don't start what you can't finish
- stay resolute
8. Speak Up! by William
- playing small doesn't enlighten the world
- "power concedes nothing without a demand. never has, never will" - Frederick Douglas
- "...appalling silence of the good" MLK Jr.
Q & A #2 with PETA conference speakers
[see many more photos of conference and KFC demo at http://www.bayareaveg.org/gallery/ha101sf?page=1]
[Shorthand notes and blurry photos can't begin to capture almost 15 hours of presentations.]
vegan breakfast
1. Armchair Activism by Alka
- one person does make a difference
- righting wrongs by writing to the right people: companies that use animals, elected officials, feedback to media outlets when they do right and wrong by animals, letters to editors. use proper etiquette, don't preach, and no more than 200 words
- every piece of legislation for the animals came from concerned citizens lobbying legislators
- “Everybody’s vote counts in America, but those who sit down and write letters make their votes count more.” John F. Kennedy
- speak out, in voice and leaving leaflets around. help spread the word on the plight of animals
2. Effective Advocacy by Bruce
- build on anger to advocate effectively, with reasons for optimism
- prioritize! you can't fight all battles at once. finish one thing at a time before starting new projects.
- read "The Habits of Highly Effective People" and "How to Win Friends and Influence People" - better than you might think and not about manipulation
- don't get caught up in tyranny of urgent. some things are urgent, but most not. focus on being effective in long term
- be courteous, take care of yourself, be prepared, dont' forget t-shirts/buttons/bumper stickers
- don't minimalize when asked about your veganism/vegetarianism. really tell people why
- don't push others away by being 100% strict with vegan ingredients if someone goes to trouble to make veggie food for you. Bruce says this same thing in his intro to "Animal Ingredients" (http://www.akpress.org/2004/items/animalingredients)
- have non-animal interests and reach out to new people
- optimism: compared with other struggles AR moving very fast with great strides in just last 10 years even
3. Organizing a Demo by Dan
- don't jump straight to demo as not conducive to negotiating
- pick a target, look for big audience, consider time of day
- be clear with message, don't cover faces with signs
- part of national campaign
- grassroots groups need not waste resources on developing and printing materials as PETA will take their logo off and put local groups contact info on existing pamphlets
- consider type of demo best: leafletting, video (PETA has CD-ROMS), protest, stunt (works with few people to get attention)
-be polite as possible, professional (not social event but fun), confront the target not the public, know laws about private property
4. KFC demo (then vegan picnic lunch)
- see newswire for http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/02/1719985.php and http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/02/1720171.php
5. PETA PSAs
- see http://www.petatv.com
6. Basic Media Training by William
- don't wear clothes with patterns for TV
- be relaxed/smile
7. Community Activism by Dan
- many tips on starting your own grass roots group
- pick winnable targets, don't start what you can't finish
- stay resolute
8. Speak Up! by William
- playing small doesn't enlighten the world
- "power concedes nothing without a demand. never has, never will" - Frederick Douglas
- "...appalling silence of the good" MLK Jr.
Q & A #2 with PETA conference speakers
[see many more photos of conference and KFC demo at http://www.bayareaveg.org/gallery/ha101sf?page=1]
For more information:
http://www.helpinganimals101.com/
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