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Over two city blocks, lined by some of SF's biggest banks, eleven community groups this week painted their visions of solutions to climate chaos. (Photo: Anesti Vega/Maluco Studios)
"Yesterday was so fulfilling! Waking up before dawn & spending the day shutting down the SF Financial District with my friends, painting two full city blocks with 11 #ClimateChange murals in creative civil disobedience. 36 affinity groups did blockades which shut down Bank Of America, Citibank, Chase, US Bank, and protested Bolsonaro at the Brazilian Consulate." --Joshua Kahn Russell, street painting volunteer
September 25th, Day of Climate Strike in San Francisco
The morning is still cool at 7am. The mural crew meets up at Market and Montgomery streets to go over the morning's plan. We've measured and counted and practiced for the last month, but the shape of the day ahead is still unknowable. Everyone seems game, enthusiastic, up for what comes. We all walk a few blocks through Wall Street West, center of San Francisco's financial district. The streets are beginning to be blocked off for the day by members of the 1000 Grandmothers and many others. The four intersections are defined by 32 foot cloth banners, by wooden facsimiles of oil derricks, by people who came prepared to stand all day so mural painters can fill the streets with art.
In these two blocks, lined by some of SF's biggest banks, eleven community groups are about to paint their visions of solutions to climate chaos. Five hundred or so brushes are lined up ready for paint as people first chalk out circles and center marks for each of the 25 foot murals. Some people chalk around a plywood template to mark the basket weave pattern, designed by local indigenous artist Ed Willie, to be painted as a border around the mural groups' circles.
As the mural designs come to life, radiant images appear in the street--there's a rising feeling of tenderness and amazement. Each group has thought about how to show what they see as a powerful solution to climate harm. All day people ask, "Do you need any help?"
Gradually, hundreds of hands fill in the border with natural clay paint from the Sierra foothills. It was our plan to fill the street edge to edge, but it's unexpectedly moving to actually see the Miwok red clay blanketing dark asphalt.
A work crew of three guys stands chatting on the sidewalk; one of them steps in and picks up a brush. People walking by say thanks to those who now look paint-covered.
A woman tells us she works in one of the highrises, and asks if the painting will be permanent. We start to explain that it's temporary art. She says, "I wish it wasn't. I'm coming back on my lunch to help you paint."
These murals call for justice and advocate for solutions to the climate crisis. Each mural group answered the question, "What is a solution to climate chaos and injustice in your community?" They were created by a range of community organizations and youth groups, who created the designs and coordinated the painting. The groups and statements are listed below. The murals were mostly painted with natural paint made from Ione Miwok Red Clay from the Sierra foothills and also children's-type colored tempera paints.
As we write this on the last day of the Sept 20-27 global climate strikes the Global Climate Strike coalition says, "At a total of over 7 million and still counting, the week of Global Climate Strikes is on par with the 2003 anti-Iraq war protest as one of the largest coordinated global protests in History. From September 20th to 27th, millions of students, parents, trade unions, businesses, health workers, scientists, celebrities, people of all backgrounds, ages, regions and faiths came together in all corners of the globe calling for climate action."
"We are surrounded by the financial institutions that profit from climate chaos, and the government offices responsible for the climate crisis. We disrupt today to stop catastrophic climate disruption tomorrow, and to support future generations."
After two massive student climate strikes in March and May, the next climate was strike called: "Starting on Friday 20 September we will kickstart a week of climate action with a worldwide strike for the climate. We're asking adults to step up alongside us. It is time for all of us to unleash mass resistance - we have shown that collective action does work. We need to escalate the pressure to make sure that change happens, and we must escalate together."
In the US there have been seen a series of climate strike mass nonviolent direct actions during the week of climate strikes; in DC, Seattle, Duluth, MN and other cities.
Climate Justice Street Mural Project
The overall project was coordinated with the Climate Justice Street Mural Project, which the pair of us lead with a team of artists and activists. The Map and Program created for the event read, "We paint these solutions in the middle of 'Wall Street West,' as Montgomery Street is nicknamed. We are surrounded by the financial institutions that profit from climate chaos, and the government offices responsible for the climate crisis. We disrupt today to stop catastrophic climate disruption tomorrow, and to support future generations."
The Climate Strike street murals were part of a mass nonviolent direct action initiated by Idle No More SF Bay, Extinction Rebellion SF Bay, Diablo Rising Tide, 1000 Grandmothers, and the Society of Fearless Grandmothers, coming together as Climate Justice SF. Climate Justice SF issued a call to action, reading in part, "On September 25th, we name those responsible for destroying life as we know and need it. We'll begin weaving a new web of community-oriented and earth-based solutions, putting on large display the depth and breadth of our love for this planet and for all the generations to come. We are calling for you to speak the truth of our awakening to all those who are still caught in the nets of profit. Come disrupt business-as-usual in the offices of those institutions profiting off the destruction of the system of life we need to simply survive. We are inviting you to help create street murals, each one representing a part of the whole vision we have for our immediate transformation. Come dream, paint, and teach our community how we move forward at this moment in time."
Street Mural History
For seven years, communities and movements in the San Francisco Bay Area have painted street murals for social justice and climate justice, with clay from the Sierra foothills and non-toxic tempera paints. Last year, 55 groups painted climate solutions murals over 5 blocks as part of Rise for Climate Justice, also coordinated by the Climate Justice Mural Project.
Through trainings and encouraged by a Street Mural Guide, painting street mural as a participatory part of actions is spreading to groups across North America, like this one in Victoria, BC.
This was the Climate Strike Street Mural Map-Program created for the day:
The Groups Behind the Murals:
ColombiaConexion:
We had a terrific time joining the protest and blockade the other day! It was hugely gratifying for ColombiaConexion to spread the word about one of the most urgent calls in the global south: Defending the life of social leaders who protect the environment. We believe this was relevant as not everybody sees and comprehend the magnitude of the ongoing genocide in Colombia, Brazil, and other countries like the Philippines and Mexico. The land defenders are mandated to be the ones who keep the voice of the ancestors alive. Frontline communities are being killed for disrupting and protesting about water sovereignty and land reform in our countries. It feels indeed a privilege to take over the streets of one of the major cities in the States and do what we did. Art represents the most compelling narrative to bring these issues to the people, and now we have the tools as a collective to make it happen.
This mural is the result of a collective effort, the sum of many frustrations. Frustration with policies and governments that are only interested in overworked humans and exploitation of nature and life. I never painted a mural before, and after this experience I feel that art is the only honest way to help us express ourselves, raise awareness and demand change! This experience reinforced in me the importance of working in community, and inspired me to continue opening spaces to dialogue about what the solutions are to the current climate crisis and how humans should contribute to more creative initiatives that protect life. Life is sacred.
Brasil Solidarity Network:
Envisioning the future: return to the old ways, the traditional ways that indigenous people have been caring for the Amazon since time immemorial. Before money and colonization, when medicine and traditional wisdom were taken and warped for economic purposes.
Queer Magic Affinity Group:
With this mural, we hope to help people feel the interdependence and reciprocity of relationships, necessary always and especially at this critical time. We are featuring three medicinal plants from the Amazon as well as a bird, the macaw. The bird is in reciprocity with forest plants, getting food from them and helping them spread and grow.
Idle No More SF Bay:
Migration has always been natural and must remain so to save lives. No dams, no walls, no imaginary lines.
Pacific Islander Climate Justice:
Our solution; Aloha Aina--follow Inidgenous leadership and love and respect the land.
Rise Labor & Mona Caron: Green New Deal:
Artist-muralist-activist Mona Caron and activist labor group "Rise Labor" collaborate to paint Mona's Green New Deal design. Mona Caron says, "This remix of the classic Rosie The Riveter image calling for a Green New Deal, implies that "We can do it!"--now as much as back then. It's possible, it's urgent, and we're ready to roll up our sleeves." (Free poster download of this design available at Green New Deal Arts Project; art.350.org).
We can and must create a cleaner, sustainable, and better future. Together, with thousands of young people leading the charge, we can topple polluting corporations and build a world with clean jobs and a livable future through the Green New Deal, the only plan put forward to address the interwoven crises of climate catastrophe, economic inequality, and racism at the scale that science and justice demand.
In their Instagram post of the murals, Sunrise Movement writes, "Political organizing demands imagination. Whether it's expressed through art or science fiction, we must be able to envision a future filled with beauty. We must be able to hope. We're not just fighting to avert the climate crisis. We're fighting for a future we believe in."
Bay Area Spiritual Community:
From mural co-organizer Anita Kline: "Amazing, heart-opening day. Thanks to our mural painters from spiritual communities and to the many who saw the 'welcome' arrow, wrote prayers for Mother Earth, and walked the labyrinth we painted, whether in bare feet or high heels."
Trust Your Struggle:
"The Trust Your Struggle Collective painted a mural in colored clay as grandmothers locked themselves to the doors of Wells Fargo Bank in SF's Financial District. The mural depicts a black snake, symbol of the pipelines being built across the Americas, cut into pieces with sustainable energy growing from its wounds."
"Whose streets?! Our streets!"
Business as usual was disrupted yesterday with hundreds of people demanding climate justice at San Francisco's financial district. Doors to bank were blocked and the streets were painted with earth- based paints with images of the sustainable future we want to grow.
PODER (People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights):
Our mural, "Liberate the Land/ Libera la Tierra" acknowledges that in order to truly combat this climate crisis, our solutions must be in harmony with Mother Earth and stewarded by communities first and worst impacted.
Through reclaiming lands like @hummingbird_sf, we are able to connect to the foods and medicines that heal us, and rebuild connections to one land and one another.
Extinction Rebellion - SF Bay Area:
Our demands are: Tell the Truth About the Climate Crisis; Declare a Climate Emergency and Reach Net Zero by 2025; and Create a People's Assembly and a Just Transition.
Our mural depicts the vision to "Invest in Life, Divest from Fossil Fuels." A divestment is not only necessary to realize our demand of net zero carbon by 2025, but it also begins the process of changing the exploitive and colonizing system created by resource extraction.
Trump and Musk are on an unconstitutional rampage, aiming for virtually every corner of the federal government. These two right-wing billionaires are targeting nurses, scientists, teachers, daycare providers, judges, veterans, air traffic controllers, and nuclear safety inspectors. No one is safe. The food stamps program, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are next. It’s an unprecedented disaster and a five-alarm fire, but there will be a reckoning. The people did not vote for this. The American people do not want this dystopian hellscape that hides behind claims of “efficiency.” Still, in reality, it is all a giveaway to corporate interests and the libertarian dreams of far-right oligarchs like Musk. Common Dreams is playing a vital role by reporting day and night on this orgy of corruption and greed, as well as what everyday people can do to organize and fight back. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover issues the corporate media never will, but we can only continue with our readers’ support. |
"Yesterday was so fulfilling! Waking up before dawn & spending the day shutting down the SF Financial District with my friends, painting two full city blocks with 11 #ClimateChange murals in creative civil disobedience. 36 affinity groups did blockades which shut down Bank Of America, Citibank, Chase, US Bank, and protested Bolsonaro at the Brazilian Consulate." --Joshua Kahn Russell, street painting volunteer
September 25th, Day of Climate Strike in San Francisco
The morning is still cool at 7am. The mural crew meets up at Market and Montgomery streets to go over the morning's plan. We've measured and counted and practiced for the last month, but the shape of the day ahead is still unknowable. Everyone seems game, enthusiastic, up for what comes. We all walk a few blocks through Wall Street West, center of San Francisco's financial district. The streets are beginning to be blocked off for the day by members of the 1000 Grandmothers and many others. The four intersections are defined by 32 foot cloth banners, by wooden facsimiles of oil derricks, by people who came prepared to stand all day so mural painters can fill the streets with art.
In these two blocks, lined by some of SF's biggest banks, eleven community groups are about to paint their visions of solutions to climate chaos. Five hundred or so brushes are lined up ready for paint as people first chalk out circles and center marks for each of the 25 foot murals. Some people chalk around a plywood template to mark the basket weave pattern, designed by local indigenous artist Ed Willie, to be painted as a border around the mural groups' circles.
As the mural designs come to life, radiant images appear in the street--there's a rising feeling of tenderness and amazement. Each group has thought about how to show what they see as a powerful solution to climate harm. All day people ask, "Do you need any help?"
Gradually, hundreds of hands fill in the border with natural clay paint from the Sierra foothills. It was our plan to fill the street edge to edge, but it's unexpectedly moving to actually see the Miwok red clay blanketing dark asphalt.
A work crew of three guys stands chatting on the sidewalk; one of them steps in and picks up a brush. People walking by say thanks to those who now look paint-covered.
A woman tells us she works in one of the highrises, and asks if the painting will be permanent. We start to explain that it's temporary art. She says, "I wish it wasn't. I'm coming back on my lunch to help you paint."
These murals call for justice and advocate for solutions to the climate crisis. Each mural group answered the question, "What is a solution to climate chaos and injustice in your community?" They were created by a range of community organizations and youth groups, who created the designs and coordinated the painting. The groups and statements are listed below. The murals were mostly painted with natural paint made from Ione Miwok Red Clay from the Sierra foothills and also children's-type colored tempera paints.
As we write this on the last day of the Sept 20-27 global climate strikes the Global Climate Strike coalition says, "At a total of over 7 million and still counting, the week of Global Climate Strikes is on par with the 2003 anti-Iraq war protest as one of the largest coordinated global protests in History. From September 20th to 27th, millions of students, parents, trade unions, businesses, health workers, scientists, celebrities, people of all backgrounds, ages, regions and faiths came together in all corners of the globe calling for climate action."
"We are surrounded by the financial institutions that profit from climate chaos, and the government offices responsible for the climate crisis. We disrupt today to stop catastrophic climate disruption tomorrow, and to support future generations."
After two massive student climate strikes in March and May, the next climate was strike called: "Starting on Friday 20 September we will kickstart a week of climate action with a worldwide strike for the climate. We're asking adults to step up alongside us. It is time for all of us to unleash mass resistance - we have shown that collective action does work. We need to escalate the pressure to make sure that change happens, and we must escalate together."
In the US there have been seen a series of climate strike mass nonviolent direct actions during the week of climate strikes; in DC, Seattle, Duluth, MN and other cities.
Climate Justice Street Mural Project
The overall project was coordinated with the Climate Justice Street Mural Project, which the pair of us lead with a team of artists and activists. The Map and Program created for the event read, "We paint these solutions in the middle of 'Wall Street West,' as Montgomery Street is nicknamed. We are surrounded by the financial institutions that profit from climate chaos, and the government offices responsible for the climate crisis. We disrupt today to stop catastrophic climate disruption tomorrow, and to support future generations."
The Climate Strike street murals were part of a mass nonviolent direct action initiated by Idle No More SF Bay, Extinction Rebellion SF Bay, Diablo Rising Tide, 1000 Grandmothers, and the Society of Fearless Grandmothers, coming together as Climate Justice SF. Climate Justice SF issued a call to action, reading in part, "On September 25th, we name those responsible for destroying life as we know and need it. We'll begin weaving a new web of community-oriented and earth-based solutions, putting on large display the depth and breadth of our love for this planet and for all the generations to come. We are calling for you to speak the truth of our awakening to all those who are still caught in the nets of profit. Come disrupt business-as-usual in the offices of those institutions profiting off the destruction of the system of life we need to simply survive. We are inviting you to help create street murals, each one representing a part of the whole vision we have for our immediate transformation. Come dream, paint, and teach our community how we move forward at this moment in time."
Street Mural History
For seven years, communities and movements in the San Francisco Bay Area have painted street murals for social justice and climate justice, with clay from the Sierra foothills and non-toxic tempera paints. Last year, 55 groups painted climate solutions murals over 5 blocks as part of Rise for Climate Justice, also coordinated by the Climate Justice Mural Project.
Through trainings and encouraged by a Street Mural Guide, painting street mural as a participatory part of actions is spreading to groups across North America, like this one in Victoria, BC.
This was the Climate Strike Street Mural Map-Program created for the day:
The Groups Behind the Murals:
ColombiaConexion:
We had a terrific time joining the protest and blockade the other day! It was hugely gratifying for ColombiaConexion to spread the word about one of the most urgent calls in the global south: Defending the life of social leaders who protect the environment. We believe this was relevant as not everybody sees and comprehend the magnitude of the ongoing genocide in Colombia, Brazil, and other countries like the Philippines and Mexico. The land defenders are mandated to be the ones who keep the voice of the ancestors alive. Frontline communities are being killed for disrupting and protesting about water sovereignty and land reform in our countries. It feels indeed a privilege to take over the streets of one of the major cities in the States and do what we did. Art represents the most compelling narrative to bring these issues to the people, and now we have the tools as a collective to make it happen.
This mural is the result of a collective effort, the sum of many frustrations. Frustration with policies and governments that are only interested in overworked humans and exploitation of nature and life. I never painted a mural before, and after this experience I feel that art is the only honest way to help us express ourselves, raise awareness and demand change! This experience reinforced in me the importance of working in community, and inspired me to continue opening spaces to dialogue about what the solutions are to the current climate crisis and how humans should contribute to more creative initiatives that protect life. Life is sacred.
Brasil Solidarity Network:
Envisioning the future: return to the old ways, the traditional ways that indigenous people have been caring for the Amazon since time immemorial. Before money and colonization, when medicine and traditional wisdom were taken and warped for economic purposes.
Queer Magic Affinity Group:
With this mural, we hope to help people feel the interdependence and reciprocity of relationships, necessary always and especially at this critical time. We are featuring three medicinal plants from the Amazon as well as a bird, the macaw. The bird is in reciprocity with forest plants, getting food from them and helping them spread and grow.
Idle No More SF Bay:
Migration has always been natural and must remain so to save lives. No dams, no walls, no imaginary lines.
Pacific Islander Climate Justice:
Our solution; Aloha Aina--follow Inidgenous leadership and love and respect the land.
Rise Labor & Mona Caron: Green New Deal:
Artist-muralist-activist Mona Caron and activist labor group "Rise Labor" collaborate to paint Mona's Green New Deal design. Mona Caron says, "This remix of the classic Rosie The Riveter image calling for a Green New Deal, implies that "We can do it!"--now as much as back then. It's possible, it's urgent, and we're ready to roll up our sleeves." (Free poster download of this design available at Green New Deal Arts Project; art.350.org).
We can and must create a cleaner, sustainable, and better future. Together, with thousands of young people leading the charge, we can topple polluting corporations and build a world with clean jobs and a livable future through the Green New Deal, the only plan put forward to address the interwoven crises of climate catastrophe, economic inequality, and racism at the scale that science and justice demand.
In their Instagram post of the murals, Sunrise Movement writes, "Political organizing demands imagination. Whether it's expressed through art or science fiction, we must be able to envision a future filled with beauty. We must be able to hope. We're not just fighting to avert the climate crisis. We're fighting for a future we believe in."
Bay Area Spiritual Community:
From mural co-organizer Anita Kline: "Amazing, heart-opening day. Thanks to our mural painters from spiritual communities and to the many who saw the 'welcome' arrow, wrote prayers for Mother Earth, and walked the labyrinth we painted, whether in bare feet or high heels."
Trust Your Struggle:
"The Trust Your Struggle Collective painted a mural in colored clay as grandmothers locked themselves to the doors of Wells Fargo Bank in SF's Financial District. The mural depicts a black snake, symbol of the pipelines being built across the Americas, cut into pieces with sustainable energy growing from its wounds."
"Whose streets?! Our streets!"
Business as usual was disrupted yesterday with hundreds of people demanding climate justice at San Francisco's financial district. Doors to bank were blocked and the streets were painted with earth- based paints with images of the sustainable future we want to grow.
PODER (People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights):
Our mural, "Liberate the Land/ Libera la Tierra" acknowledges that in order to truly combat this climate crisis, our solutions must be in harmony with Mother Earth and stewarded by communities first and worst impacted.
Through reclaiming lands like @hummingbird_sf, we are able to connect to the foods and medicines that heal us, and rebuild connections to one land and one another.
Extinction Rebellion - SF Bay Area:
Our demands are: Tell the Truth About the Climate Crisis; Declare a Climate Emergency and Reach Net Zero by 2025; and Create a People's Assembly and a Just Transition.
Our mural depicts the vision to "Invest in Life, Divest from Fossil Fuels." A divestment is not only necessary to realize our demand of net zero carbon by 2025, but it also begins the process of changing the exploitive and colonizing system created by resource extraction.
"Yesterday was so fulfilling! Waking up before dawn & spending the day shutting down the SF Financial District with my friends, painting two full city blocks with 11 #ClimateChange murals in creative civil disobedience. 36 affinity groups did blockades which shut down Bank Of America, Citibank, Chase, US Bank, and protested Bolsonaro at the Brazilian Consulate." --Joshua Kahn Russell, street painting volunteer
September 25th, Day of Climate Strike in San Francisco
The morning is still cool at 7am. The mural crew meets up at Market and Montgomery streets to go over the morning's plan. We've measured and counted and practiced for the last month, but the shape of the day ahead is still unknowable. Everyone seems game, enthusiastic, up for what comes. We all walk a few blocks through Wall Street West, center of San Francisco's financial district. The streets are beginning to be blocked off for the day by members of the 1000 Grandmothers and many others. The four intersections are defined by 32 foot cloth banners, by wooden facsimiles of oil derricks, by people who came prepared to stand all day so mural painters can fill the streets with art.
In these two blocks, lined by some of SF's biggest banks, eleven community groups are about to paint their visions of solutions to climate chaos. Five hundred or so brushes are lined up ready for paint as people first chalk out circles and center marks for each of the 25 foot murals. Some people chalk around a plywood template to mark the basket weave pattern, designed by local indigenous artist Ed Willie, to be painted as a border around the mural groups' circles.
As the mural designs come to life, radiant images appear in the street--there's a rising feeling of tenderness and amazement. Each group has thought about how to show what they see as a powerful solution to climate harm. All day people ask, "Do you need any help?"
Gradually, hundreds of hands fill in the border with natural clay paint from the Sierra foothills. It was our plan to fill the street edge to edge, but it's unexpectedly moving to actually see the Miwok red clay blanketing dark asphalt.
A work crew of three guys stands chatting on the sidewalk; one of them steps in and picks up a brush. People walking by say thanks to those who now look paint-covered.
A woman tells us she works in one of the highrises, and asks if the painting will be permanent. We start to explain that it's temporary art. She says, "I wish it wasn't. I'm coming back on my lunch to help you paint."
These murals call for justice and advocate for solutions to the climate crisis. Each mural group answered the question, "What is a solution to climate chaos and injustice in your community?" They were created by a range of community organizations and youth groups, who created the designs and coordinated the painting. The groups and statements are listed below. The murals were mostly painted with natural paint made from Ione Miwok Red Clay from the Sierra foothills and also children's-type colored tempera paints.
As we write this on the last day of the Sept 20-27 global climate strikes the Global Climate Strike coalition says, "At a total of over 7 million and still counting, the week of Global Climate Strikes is on par with the 2003 anti-Iraq war protest as one of the largest coordinated global protests in History. From September 20th to 27th, millions of students, parents, trade unions, businesses, health workers, scientists, celebrities, people of all backgrounds, ages, regions and faiths came together in all corners of the globe calling for climate action."
"We are surrounded by the financial institutions that profit from climate chaos, and the government offices responsible for the climate crisis. We disrupt today to stop catastrophic climate disruption tomorrow, and to support future generations."
After two massive student climate strikes in March and May, the next climate was strike called: "Starting on Friday 20 September we will kickstart a week of climate action with a worldwide strike for the climate. We're asking adults to step up alongside us. It is time for all of us to unleash mass resistance - we have shown that collective action does work. We need to escalate the pressure to make sure that change happens, and we must escalate together."
In the US there have been seen a series of climate strike mass nonviolent direct actions during the week of climate strikes; in DC, Seattle, Duluth, MN and other cities.
Climate Justice Street Mural Project
The overall project was coordinated with the Climate Justice Street Mural Project, which the pair of us lead with a team of artists and activists. The Map and Program created for the event read, "We paint these solutions in the middle of 'Wall Street West,' as Montgomery Street is nicknamed. We are surrounded by the financial institutions that profit from climate chaos, and the government offices responsible for the climate crisis. We disrupt today to stop catastrophic climate disruption tomorrow, and to support future generations."
The Climate Strike street murals were part of a mass nonviolent direct action initiated by Idle No More SF Bay, Extinction Rebellion SF Bay, Diablo Rising Tide, 1000 Grandmothers, and the Society of Fearless Grandmothers, coming together as Climate Justice SF. Climate Justice SF issued a call to action, reading in part, "On September 25th, we name those responsible for destroying life as we know and need it. We'll begin weaving a new web of community-oriented and earth-based solutions, putting on large display the depth and breadth of our love for this planet and for all the generations to come. We are calling for you to speak the truth of our awakening to all those who are still caught in the nets of profit. Come disrupt business-as-usual in the offices of those institutions profiting off the destruction of the system of life we need to simply survive. We are inviting you to help create street murals, each one representing a part of the whole vision we have for our immediate transformation. Come dream, paint, and teach our community how we move forward at this moment in time."
Street Mural History
For seven years, communities and movements in the San Francisco Bay Area have painted street murals for social justice and climate justice, with clay from the Sierra foothills and non-toxic tempera paints. Last year, 55 groups painted climate solutions murals over 5 blocks as part of Rise for Climate Justice, also coordinated by the Climate Justice Mural Project.
Through trainings and encouraged by a Street Mural Guide, painting street mural as a participatory part of actions is spreading to groups across North America, like this one in Victoria, BC.
This was the Climate Strike Street Mural Map-Program created for the day:
The Groups Behind the Murals:
ColombiaConexion:
We had a terrific time joining the protest and blockade the other day! It was hugely gratifying for ColombiaConexion to spread the word about one of the most urgent calls in the global south: Defending the life of social leaders who protect the environment. We believe this was relevant as not everybody sees and comprehend the magnitude of the ongoing genocide in Colombia, Brazil, and other countries like the Philippines and Mexico. The land defenders are mandated to be the ones who keep the voice of the ancestors alive. Frontline communities are being killed for disrupting and protesting about water sovereignty and land reform in our countries. It feels indeed a privilege to take over the streets of one of the major cities in the States and do what we did. Art represents the most compelling narrative to bring these issues to the people, and now we have the tools as a collective to make it happen.
This mural is the result of a collective effort, the sum of many frustrations. Frustration with policies and governments that are only interested in overworked humans and exploitation of nature and life. I never painted a mural before, and after this experience I feel that art is the only honest way to help us express ourselves, raise awareness and demand change! This experience reinforced in me the importance of working in community, and inspired me to continue opening spaces to dialogue about what the solutions are to the current climate crisis and how humans should contribute to more creative initiatives that protect life. Life is sacred.
Brasil Solidarity Network:
Envisioning the future: return to the old ways, the traditional ways that indigenous people have been caring for the Amazon since time immemorial. Before money and colonization, when medicine and traditional wisdom were taken and warped for economic purposes.
Queer Magic Affinity Group:
With this mural, we hope to help people feel the interdependence and reciprocity of relationships, necessary always and especially at this critical time. We are featuring three medicinal plants from the Amazon as well as a bird, the macaw. The bird is in reciprocity with forest plants, getting food from them and helping them spread and grow.
Idle No More SF Bay:
Migration has always been natural and must remain so to save lives. No dams, no walls, no imaginary lines.
Pacific Islander Climate Justice:
Our solution; Aloha Aina--follow Inidgenous leadership and love and respect the land.
Rise Labor & Mona Caron: Green New Deal:
Artist-muralist-activist Mona Caron and activist labor group "Rise Labor" collaborate to paint Mona's Green New Deal design. Mona Caron says, "This remix of the classic Rosie The Riveter image calling for a Green New Deal, implies that "We can do it!"--now as much as back then. It's possible, it's urgent, and we're ready to roll up our sleeves." (Free poster download of this design available at Green New Deal Arts Project; art.350.org).
We can and must create a cleaner, sustainable, and better future. Together, with thousands of young people leading the charge, we can topple polluting corporations and build a world with clean jobs and a livable future through the Green New Deal, the only plan put forward to address the interwoven crises of climate catastrophe, economic inequality, and racism at the scale that science and justice demand.
In their Instagram post of the murals, Sunrise Movement writes, "Political organizing demands imagination. Whether it's expressed through art or science fiction, we must be able to envision a future filled with beauty. We must be able to hope. We're not just fighting to avert the climate crisis. We're fighting for a future we believe in."
Bay Area Spiritual Community:
From mural co-organizer Anita Kline: "Amazing, heart-opening day. Thanks to our mural painters from spiritual communities and to the many who saw the 'welcome' arrow, wrote prayers for Mother Earth, and walked the labyrinth we painted, whether in bare feet or high heels."
Trust Your Struggle:
"The Trust Your Struggle Collective painted a mural in colored clay as grandmothers locked themselves to the doors of Wells Fargo Bank in SF's Financial District. The mural depicts a black snake, symbol of the pipelines being built across the Americas, cut into pieces with sustainable energy growing from its wounds."
"Whose streets?! Our streets!"
Business as usual was disrupted yesterday with hundreds of people demanding climate justice at San Francisco's financial district. Doors to bank were blocked and the streets were painted with earth- based paints with images of the sustainable future we want to grow.
PODER (People Organizing to Demand Environmental and Economic Rights):
Our mural, "Liberate the Land/ Libera la Tierra" acknowledges that in order to truly combat this climate crisis, our solutions must be in harmony with Mother Earth and stewarded by communities first and worst impacted.
Through reclaiming lands like @hummingbird_sf, we are able to connect to the foods and medicines that heal us, and rebuild connections to one land and one another.
Extinction Rebellion - SF Bay Area:
Our demands are: Tell the Truth About the Climate Crisis; Declare a Climate Emergency and Reach Net Zero by 2025; and Create a People's Assembly and a Just Transition.
Our mural depicts the vision to "Invest in Life, Divest from Fossil Fuels." A divestment is not only necessary to realize our demand of net zero carbon by 2025, but it also begins the process of changing the exploitive and colonizing system created by resource extraction.
If he prevails at the Supreme Court, U.S. President Donald Trump "could gain extraordinary powers to investigate and penalize private businesses and individuals, tilt elections," and more, one outlet noted.
The full D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday issued a divided ruling that reinstated two members of labor-focused independent agencies whom the Trump administration had sought to remove. The ruling is likely not the end of the legal saga and the case appears headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The federal appeals court voted 7-4 to reverse an earlier decision by a three-member panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals that upheld the Trump administration's dismissal of National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) member Gwynne Wilcox and Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) member Cathy Harris.
Since Trump's return to the White House, Harris and Wilcox have been repeatedly removed and reinstated following contradictory rulings, according to The Guardian.
Monday's ruling was split along partisan lines, with the four dissenting judges all appointed to the court by Republican administrations, per The Guardian.
Wilcox was first appointed to the NLRB, which safeguards private sector workers' rights to organize, in 2021 by then-President Joe Biden and was re-confirmed for a five-year term by the Senate in 2023. Wilcox's removal meant the body did not have a quorum, because it needs three members to have a quorum. It once again has a quorum and can issue decisions.
As a member and former chair of the MSPB, Harris helped lead an agency that reviews federal employee firings, suspensions, and whistleblower claims.
According to the outlet Democracy Docket, the court ruled Monday that the administration's dismissal of Wilcox and Harris ran afoul of the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Humphrey's Executor v. U.S., a 1935 case that upheld removal restrictions for government officials on multimember adjudicatory boards.
"Trump's Department of Justice said it believes congressional limitations on the president's removal power are unconstitutional and that it will urge the Supreme Court to overturn Humphrey's Executor," Democracy Docket reported. "If the Supreme Court ultimately grants Trump the ability to fire members of independent bodies, he could gain extraordinary powers to investigate and penalize private businesses and individuals, tilt elections, and use monetary policy for political purposes."
"Trump and House Republicans are crashing the economy, raising your cost of living, and driving us toward a recession," said the chamber's top Democrat. "What happened to the so-called golden era of America?"
A week after Goldman Sachs raised the chance of a U.S. recession in the next 12 months from 20% to 35%, the Wall Street giant elevated it to 45% on Sunday, following President Donald Trump's worse-than-anticipated tariff announcement.
Goldman Sachs' note—tilted, Countdown to Recession—points to "a sharp tightening in financial conditions, foreign consumer boycotts, and a continued spike in policy uncertainty that is likely to depress capital spending by more than we had previously assumed."
The analysis is based on expectations that negotiations early this week will lead to "a large reduction in the tariffs" that Trump is set to impose on Wednesday. If that doesn't happen, Goldman's forecast is expected to change for the worse.
Since Trump's "Liberation Day" announcement last Wednesday, "at least seven top investment banks have raised their recession risk forecasts," Reuters noted Monday, "with JPMorgan putting the odds of a U.S. and global recession at 60%, on fears that the tariffs will not only ignite U.S. inflation but also spark retaliatory measures from other countries, as China has already announced."
China initially responded to Trump on Friday with 34% import duties on all American goods. The U.S. president hit back on Monday, further escalating his trade war with the Chinese government by threatening to impose an additional 50% tariff. Citing a White House official, CNBC pointed out that "U.S. tariffs on China will total 104% if Trump's latest threat takes effect."
Trump wrote in a Truth Social post: "Additionally, all talks with China concerning their requested meetings with us will be terminated! Negotiations with other countries, which have also requested meetings, will begin taking place immediately."
Stocks have plummeted over the past week, and were "swinging Monday following a manic morning where indexes plunged, soared, and then sank again as Wall Street tossed around a false rumor," The Associated Press reported.
"A White House account on X said a rumor circulating that Trump was considering a 90-day pause on his tariffs was 'fake news,'" the AP continued. "The intense and sudden moves show how hard financial markets are straining to see hopes that Trump may let up on his stiff tariffs, which economists see raising the risks of a global recession."
While progressive economists and working-class people have highlighted how Trump's "batshit crazy" tariffs are expected to impact everyday Americans—as the cost of the duties are passed on to consumers—many executives are also blasting the president's policy.
One respondent to a CNBC CEO Council survey called Trump's tariffs "disappointingly stupid and illogical," and said that "without faith that our government knows what it is doing, it is impossible for businesses to thrive."
According to CNBC, other CEO responses included:
Democrats in Congress also continued to call out the Republican president on Monday.
"Trump and House Republicans are crashing the economy, raising your cost of living, and driving us toward a recession,"
said the chamber's minority leader, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.). "What happened to the so-called golden era of America?"
"South Sudan is about to blow up into potentially another country-wide civil war, putting civilians at risk. But yea let's force people to go back now," wrote one professor.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Saturday announced that the United States is revoking visas for all South Sudanese passport holders, "effective immediately"—sparking criticism from several observers, including those who pointed out that the country could soon tip into another civil war.
Rubio announced on X that the move, which includes restricting any "further issuance" of visas, comes in response to the South Sudanese government's failure to return "its repatriated citizens in a timely manner."
"This is wrongheaded cruelty," wrote Rebecca Hamilton, a professor at American University Washington College of Law and executive editor at the digital law and policy journal Just Security, on X on Saturday. "The vast majority of South Sudanese in this country (or, frankly inside South Sudan, right now) have no say in what their government does. They are here working, studying, building skills essential for their nascent country."
Mike Brand, an adjunct professor at the University of Connecticut and Georgetown University who focuses on human rights and atrocities prevention, wrote on Saturday: "South Sudan is about to blow up into potentially another country-wide civil war, putting civilians at risk. But yea let's force people to go back now."
South Sudan is the world's youngest country, having only declared independence from Sudan in 2011 following two lengthy civil wars.
The young nation was once again plunged into civil war in 2013 due to violence between warring factions backing President Salva Kiir and his deputy, Riek Machar. A peace deal was brokered in 2018, though the country has still not held a long-delayed presidential election and Kiir remains in power today, according to Time.
Fears of full-on civil war returned when, last month, Machar was arrested and his allies in government were also detained. Machar's opposition political party declared the country's peace deal effectively over, per Time.
Shortly after Rubio's announcement on Saturday, Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau wrote on X that the government of South Sudan had refused to accept a South Sudanese national who was "certified by their own embassy in Washington" and then repatriated. "Our efforts to engage diplomatically with the South Sudanese government have been rebuffed," Landau wrote.
On Monday, the government of South Sudan released a statement saying that the deportee who was not permitted entry is a citizen of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, not South Sudan. The government also said it has maintained consistent communication and cooperation with the U.S. government regarding "immigration and deportation matters."
In the early 2000s, thousands of "lost boys" stemming from a civil war in Sudan that began in the 1980s and eventually led to South Sudan's independence were resettled in the United States.
John Skiles Skinner, a software engineer based in California, reacted to Rubio's announcement by writing on Bluesky: "I taught a U.S. citizenship class to South Sudanese refugees in Nebraska, 2006-2007. Fleeing civil war, they worked arduous jobs at a meat packing plant. Many had no literacy in any language. But they studied hard for a citizenship exam which many native-born Americans would not be able to pass."
In 2011, the Obama administration granted South Sudan nationals in the United States "temporary protected status" (TPS)—a designation that shields foreign-born people from deportation because they cannot return home safely due to war, natural disasters, or other "extraordinary" circumstances. The Biden administration extended it, but the designation is set to expire early next month.
As of September 2024, the U.S. provides TPS protections to 155 people from South Sudan.
In a Monday post for Just Security, Hamilton of American University and a co-author wrote that "while there has been no public determination by the secretary of homeland security regarding an extension of TPS for South Sudanese, Rubio's announcement presumably means [U.S. Department of Homeland Security] Secretary Kristi Noem is planning to terminate their TPS."
Observers online also highlighted that Duke University star basketball player Khaman Maluach, whose family left South Sudan for Uganda when he was a child, could be impacted by the State Department's ruling.