SUNDAY NIGHT GROUP SUNDAY NIGHT GROUP

Sunday Night Environmental Group Weekly Meeting

Sunday Night Environmental Group (SNEG) is a non-hierarchical student org committed to climate and social justice activism. In the past we have pushed the college to divest from fossil fuels, passed anti-fossil fuel infrastructure resolutions in town, trained students on methods of non-violent direct action, occupied the statehouse, organized climate strikes, and so much more. We strive to ground our work in anti-racism, indigenous sovereignty, and community power. We meet in Hillcrest Orchard Room in person every Sunday night from 8:00-9:00 pm.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Closed to the Public

Sunday Night Environmental Group Weekly Meeting

Sunday Night Environmental Group (SNEG) is a non-hierarchical student org committed to climate and social justice activism. In the past we have pushed the college to divest from fossil fuels, passed anti-fossil fuel infrastructure resolutions in town, trained students on methods of non-violent direct action, occupied the statehouse, organized climate strikes, and so much more. We strive to ground our work in anti-racism, indigenous sovereignty, and community power. We meet in Hillcrest Orchard Room in person every Sunday night from 8:00-9:00 pm.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Closed to the Public

Sunday Night Environmental Group Weekly Meeting

Sunday Night Environmental Group (SNEG) is a non-hierarchical student org committed to climate and social justice activism. In the past we have pushed the college to divest from fossil fuels, passed anti-fossil fuel infrastructure resolutions in town, trained students on methods of non-violent direct action, occupied the statehouse, organized climate strikes, and so much more. We strive to ground our work in anti-racism, indigenous sovereignty, and community power. We meet in Hillcrest Orchard Room in person every Sunday night from 8:00-9:00 pm.

Franklin Environmental Center, The Orchard-Hillcrest 103

Closed to the Public

The End of Protest, the Future of Activism

“When citizens of nominally democratic governments protest in the streets they are performing the foundational myth of democracy: the faith that the people possess ultimate sovereignty over their governments.

Contemporary protest is broken because the will of the people is no longer the basis of the authority of government. Put colourfully, the people’s sovereignty is dead and every protest is a hopeless struggle to revive the corpse. It is time to try a different method.”

(Private)

Sunday Night Group: Spoil Screening

Spoil, named Best Environmental Film at the Vancouver International Film Festival, tells the story of a proposed pipeline to deliver oil from the tar sands of Alberta to the coast of British Columbia. It follows a group from the International League of Conservation Photographers and members of the Gitga’at First Nation on their quest to photograph the spirit bears who reside in the rainforest.

Axinn Center 229