Announcing Operation Cooperation

Over the past two months, Red Sun Press has been organizing to launch a Massachusetts initiative to celebrate the International Year of the Cooperatives (http://www.2012.coop/) and to strengthen our state cooperative economy.

I’m pleased to say that we’ve put together a great advisory committee with representatives from national and regional co-op organizations and state cooperatives. Meet the committee:

Maggie Cohen, Cooperative Fund of New England http://cooperativefund.org/
Andrew Kessel, Equal Exchange http://equalexchange.coop
Doug DiMento, Cabot Creamery Cooperative / Agri-Mark http://agrimark.coop
Erbin Crowell, Neighboring Food Co-op Association http://nfca.coop/
Emily Lippold Cheney, North American Students of Cooperation http://nasco.coop
Noemi Giszpenc, Cooperative Development Institute http://www.cdi.coop/
Melissa Hoover, US Federation of Worker Co-ops http://usworker.coop
Ivy Foster, Whirlybird Co-op http://whirlybird.bostoncoops.org
Peter Brown, Red Sun Press http://redsunpress.com
Yesterday, we officially announced the initiative and new website, and have begun the process of reaching out to the hundreds of co-ops and credit unions in the state, to seek their participation. Below is the official announcement. Please help spread the word!
It’s 2012, the International Year of Cooperatives (IYC)!
Today, we’re announcing a new Massachusetts state wide initiative:
OPERATION COOPERATION http://operation.coop
Our goals are to: highlight the importance and power of the Massachusetts cooperative economy; to forge better cooperation across our co-op sectors; to increase citizen awareness and support for our cooperative economy.
Find us online: http://operation.coop
Like us on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/operation.coop
Please share this email with your colleagues and friends!
Join the conversation at http://groups.google.com/group/operationcooperation/
Q: How can my co-op participate in Operation Cooperation?
A: We will be publishing a list of participating co-ops. Join the list at: http://operation.coop/?p=219 Through your participation we can start to promote collective actions that strengthen our co-op economy across all sectors.
Q: I don’t live or work in a cooperative. What’s my role?
A: First, join in support at http://operation.coop/?p=219 . Help spread the word and encourage friends to join too. We are preparing a public campaign to promote actions that all citizens can take to support cooperation. These actions include: Move your money to a credit union; Join a food co-op; Do business with local cooperative enterprises; Support co-op food brands; Renting or sharing? Learn more about the benefits of cooperative living.
Q: What’s first?
A: We have a Boston City resolution being prepared and the text of a State Resolution that we want to build support for. The draft text can be seen here http://operation.coop/?p=11
Q: I have a great idea or suggestion. What do I do?
Join the conversation at http://groups.google.com/group/operationcooperation/
In cooperation
Operation Cooperation Team

Peter T. Brown
Red Sun Press
www.redsunpress.com

Read More

Increasing Human Cooperation

Here at the Red Sun Press, we are counting down the final days of 2011 with a spring in our step. You see 2012 is the United Nations Year of the Cooperative, and we are celebrating it by working on a campaign to raise awareness of the cooperative movement
To us this is much more than the typical UN, warm and fuzzy, “year of”. As a print shop and design studio, you wouldn’t necessarily expect Red Sun Press to be organizing a campaign, but then maybe you don’t know our history or how personal us coop(ites) take this cause, and why we think increasing human cooperation is so important.
By putting people at the center of their activity instead of capital acquisition, cooperatives are the natural form of organizing to increase human cooperation and progress – in all fields.
With Time magazine awarding “The Protestor” as their person of the year, there are clear signs that social consciousness is rising around the world. Corporatism and conflict are discredited. They have left us with increased unemployment, environmental degradation, poverty, war and debt. Yet, when we lift our heads up from our current activities, and look down on our struggle, we see our fellow occupiers, our fellow community activists, our neighbor looking for a job, and we can’t help but notice how separate we are in our struggles. It’s that separatism that keeps us from getting to real solutions. The modern communication tools provided by the Internet give us unprecedented opportunity to overcome this separateness, bridge the gaps, and finally, empower each others struggles and campaigns. But we haven’t gotten there yet. We are still struggling in our own patch.
With more than a 100 million Americans already participating in cooperatives, either through food cooperatives, cooperative employment, cooperative housing, or by entrusting their finances to a cooperative Credit Union, we have in place a network of immense economic and positive potential. And with a new generation awakening to the struggle for social justice and desiring solutions, here we are again, more ready than ever: the cooperative movement.
Modernizing our campaign to promote the cooperative movement is the  opportunity that I see before us, and is what our campaign will emphasize. It is the raising of awareness to the fact that by increasing human cooperation here in Massachusetts we can create more jobs, strengthen our community, and build a narrative of human cooperation and the cooperative entity as the basis for finding solutions to our problems.
In the way that “Occupy” has come to define protest in 2011, so “Cooperation” can be the banner under which we define solutions in 2012. Cooperation is to embrace each others struggles and know that each is part of the whole.
The UN year of the cooperative will be there constantly reminding us of the serendipity of this moment. It’s up to us to make it real. After all, human cooperation is the most powerful resource we have.
(If you would like to get involved directly in the campaign contact me at peterb@redsunpress.com or follow us on twitter.com/redsunpress)
Red Sun Press, Boston’s Cooperative Printer

Read More

Where were you when…

As progressive activists since well before the era of YouTube and Facebook, our collective memories sometimes get a bit weak or blurry. This is exacerbated by frequent feelings of vain struggles and bitter defeats suffered over the years at the hands of gadflies like Ronald Reagan and Dick Cheney.

peace poster

Central America, Reagan Wages War, various CA solidarity groups, artist: Bonnie Acker

Even if if we still haven’t gotten the “change we can believe in” no one can take away the glory, those moments of triumphant striving for justice and peace that we experienced at some point along the road.
And luckily those events – both momentous and minor –  have been preserved for us through the years in the political art and graphics that blazoned our progressive visions. Art continues to be a powerful force in political activism (look at the impact of Shepard Fairey’s work, for instance). And the historical narrative of a vital progressive movement is nowhere more tangible than in the graphical manifestos and the poignant posters that have so often rallied us to the call.
(more…)

Read More

Hints for better print design Part II

or how to make your print provider’s day go better; Part II
1. Do you PDF/X-1a?
Don’t be put off by the obscure and cumbersome acronym. Of the myriad formats and vehicles for sharing electronic files, PDF – specifically the flavor called PDF/X-1a – has become the standard in the printing industry. For good reason, we think.
After decades of struggling with dozens of divergent, incompatible formats, from Quark to Word to Postcript to My-Cool-Little-Layout-Program-That-Only-3-People-Use, not to mention platform-dependent idiosyncracies, the graphics world has settled on a system that smooths out virtually all the bumps in the road to reliable output (that means printing things the way you want them). Besides more predictable output, PDF has the extra benefit of slimming your files for sending to the printer. Instead of packaging up and transmitting 250 big ol’ Megabytes of documents, graphics and fonts, you can just shoot over a fit and trim 14 Mb (or so) PDF.
(more…)

Read More
Find Us

Red Sun Press
94 Green Street
Jamaica Plain, MA 02130

617-524-6822