LASC of Eugene

LASC of Eugene What is LASC? CISCAP, the Committee in Solidarity with the Central American People, was a local, volunteer-based grassroots organization, founded in 1982.

CISCAP has changed its name to LASC, Latin America Solidarity Committee. LASC has one full-time staff person, 30 very active members, over 100 volunteers, over 200 dues-paying members and a mailing list of more than 600. LASC works to educate the community, raise funds for material aid projects, build grassroots opposition to U.S. military intervention, and generate pressure for a more just U.S. p

olicy toward Central America, Mexico, and Cuba. LASC's work includes tabling at local events, bringing touring speakers to Eugene, providing educational forums, counteracting media disinformation, raising funds through concerts, benefit dinners and other activities, and carrying-out marches, demonstrations and leafleting. LASC also coordinates a phone tree to pressure congress on important legislative issues at key times and to respond to human rights abuses in Central America, Mexico, and Cuba. Why Do We Need LASC? Over the past twenty five years, the U.S. government has:
supported the death squad governments of El Salvador, where over 75,000 civilians have died due to the violence since 1980. supported the Guatemalan military governments which have the worst human rights record in this hemisphere. illegally intervened in the affairs of Nicaragua by funding the brutal contra army, economically starving the country through an embargo and manipulating the electoral process. been illegally enforcing an embargo against Cuba, effectively starving a nation of food and other necessities. implemented NAFTA which allows U.S. corporations to exploit Mexican labor, environment and health regulations
given military assistance and weapons sales to the Mexican army in the name of counter-narcotics efforts to contain the social and political pressures of recent social movements. While our tax dollars have bought death and destruction in Central America, human needs here in Eugene and the United States have gone unmet. Citizens in this country are in desperate need of healthcare, decent schools, housing, and jobs. However, rather than meet the needs of its own citizens, the U.S. government chooses to intervene in Central America, Cuba and Mexico because it is profitable to U.S. interests. LASC advocates funding human needs in the U.S., not militarism in Central America and Mexico.

Curious who sees this.  Please indicate somehow.  Thanks.
01/31/2023

Curious who sees this. Please indicate somehow. Thanks.

One by one, the rebel campesinos clambered up to the improvised podium they had built atop a 6ft earth barricade, to declare their determination to topple the president of Peru. “Brothers and sisters, right now our Peru needs us more than ever,” Nilda Mendoza Coronel, a 35-year-old farmer, told ...

The Latin America Solidarity Committee (LASC) of Eugene hosted the 14th Annual "Close the School of the Americas" Benefi...
10/10/2017

The Latin America Solidarity Committee (LASC) of Eugene hosted the 14th Annual "Close the School of the Americas" Benefit Concert at the Wellsprings Friends School on September 30th. Thank you to all of our donors who joined us for the evening and to the amazing performances by the Eugene Peace Choir and folk singer Tom Rawson

Big thanks to Amy Bowers for getting LASC back in the "Facebook-verse"!  Share the news with your friends!
06/21/2017

Big thanks to Amy Bowers for getting LASC back in the "Facebook-verse"! Share the news with your friends!

Hanging out with wonderful people, dancing cumbia and salsa with beautiful women and handsome men ('specially that Mr. M...
02/10/2012

Hanging out with wonderful people, dancing cumbia and salsa with beautiful women and handsome men ('specially that Mr. Moore!), celebrating 100 years of revolution and resistance in Mexico... Sí, la vida mia es buena.

02/01/2012
02/01/2012
“Migrating Towards Justice: Stories to Transform People and Policy” Augusto Obregon from Nicaragua came to speak about h...
02/01/2012

“Migrating Towards Justice: Stories to Transform People and Policy” Augusto Obregon from Nicaragua came to speak about his advocacy for rights of small scale farmers, negative effects of free trade on health, the environment, and food security.

02/01/2012

Address

Eugene, OR
97402

Opening Hours

Monday 11am - 3pm
Tuesday 11am - 3pm
Wednesday 11am - 3pm
Thursday 11am - 3pm
Friday 11am - 3pm

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