Sunday, December 31, 2017

CFOW Newsletter - Good-bye to 2017!

Concerned Families of Westchester
December 31, 2017
 
Hello All – As 2017 comes to a close, CFOW rolls on, now in our 17th year.  None of the years since 9/11 has been easy for peace and justice stalwarts, but the span covering Trump's election and his first year in office takes the cake for badness. Beyond the emergence of a dictatorship of the Very Wealthy and the destruction of, or the threat of destruction to, the basic welfare elements of a modern society, the sheer stupidity and nonsense of our political elite has produced many dark moments, speaking at least for myself. And must I mention the half-dozen (nay, more!) wars now underway, with the threats of serious conflict with Russia, North Korea, and Iran looming at the back of the stage.  And how lonely CFOW stalwarts have felt this year, when so little of the anti-Trump "Resistance" focused on war and the threat of war!
 
It is against this background that, for me at least, the existence and perseverance of Concerned Families of Westchester has been like a candle in a dark room.  In working together – talking, planning, deciding, and (especially) acting – our few dozen "stalwarts" have established a community of friends and fellow-passengers that makes this strange trip called America more bearable.  For 2018, I hope that we can maintain the solidarity, community, and fighting spirit that is so important at this moment.  Good luck to us all.
 
News Notes
This is the third year in a row that police officers in the United States have killed more than 1,000 people.  And for the third time, Josh Begley of the Intercept has compiled a short video that shows the location of each of the (in 2017) 1,100 plus killings.  This link explains the project and lets you see the video.  What is striking to me is that the great majority of locations are rural or suburban, not "inner-city urban" in appearance.  Check it out.
 
Erica Garner, the daughter of the murdered (by police) Eric Garner ("I can't breathe"), died Saturday at the age of 27. Democracy Now! has put together a video segment on Erica's work as an anti-police brutality activist, which you can see here.
 
In Factis Pax, the on-line journal of peace-making and peace education, has a new issue out.  Of particular interest, imo, is the lead article by Boaventura de Sousa Santo (frequently linked in the CFOW newsletter) on "Colombia Between Neoliberal Peace and Democratic Peace."
 
It will come as no surprise that, according to  Bloomberg's Billionaire Index, the richest people in the world got a trillion dollars richer in 2017.  On December 26th the 500 billionaires surveyed controlled assets valued at $5.3 trillion, up from $4.4 trillion a year ago.
 
Nikki Haley, Trump's UN Ambassador, was (we think) the victim of a prank phone call and spent 22 minutes talking to someone she thought was the Polish Prime Minister.  The high point of the call was her deft handling of the question of the US stance on the imaginary country of "Binomo," supposedly under threat from Russia.  She pretended to have the situation under close scrutiny.
 
The environmental terrorists running Exxon, Shell, etc. foresee investing $180 billion in plastics over the next decade.  A study released by the Center for International Environmental Law points out that this will
"permanently" pollute our oceans.  Can't we do something about such terrorism besides wring our hands?  Where are OUR drones?  (Of course, that would be wrong.)
 
One of the visitors to our Holiday Party yesterday was Ken Gale, who runs an environmental program ("Eco-Logic") on WBAI on Tuesday evenings from 8 to 9 p.m.  Check it out, and learn more at www.ecoradio.org
 
2017 in the rearview mirror
There is no stopping the tsunami of lists of good/bad/funny things that happened during 2017.  Here is a highly selective list of some of these lists.
 
"10 Good Things About a TERRIBLE Year" by Medea Benjamin of Code Pink. [Link].
"2017 in Photos: Capturing the Causes and Impacts of Climate Change." From DeSmogBlog [Link].
"What were the top BDS victories of 2017?" from the Electronic Intifada [Link].
"Ten High School Protests That Defied the Trump Agenda in 2017," from Truth Out [Link].
"Top Stories Of 2017 In The Hudson Valley," from The Patch [Link].
 
This Newsletter
Articles linked in the CFOW newsletter are intended to illuminate some of the main action-issues about which we are concerned.  Coming mostly from the "dissenting media," they provide an alternative to the perspectives of the mainstream media.  In addition to the excellent "Featured Essays," I hope you will be able to read some of the articles on the unfolding situation in Iran; Marjorie Cohn's explanation of what's old and what's new in Trump's first National Security Strategy document; old friend Brian Tokar's interesting article about Murray Bookchin and the development of "social ecology"; a good set of articles about what's been happening with immigration during Trump's first year; and four (!) excellent articles about "Our History."
 
Things to Do/Coming Attractions
Thursday, January 4th - The CFOW Facebook page is often adorned with the pictures of Erik R. McGregor, whom we got to know during the fight against the Spectra pipeline, and who seems to be everywhere that there is a protest or demonstration.  He will be presenting and discussing his work on at the Municipal Archives, 31 Chambers St. in NYC, from 6 to 8 p.m.  For more information, go here.
 
Sunday, January 7th – The next meeting of Concerned Families of Westchester – and the first of 2018! What will we do about that tyrant Trump and all the wars and other bad things that are left over from 2017?  Show up at 7 p.m. at 12 Elm St. (the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society) in Dobbs next Sunday and we will get the New Year off to an energetic start!  Everyone is welcome at these meetings.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 12 to 1 p.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Our leaflet and posters for our rallies are usually about war or climate change, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's tax cut legislation are often targeted, depending on current events. We meet on the first Sunday of each month, from 7 to 9 p.m., at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society.  Our weekly newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  If you would like to make a financial contribution to our work, please send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706.  Thanks!
 
Rewards!
Among the guests at Saturday's CFOW holiday party was a contingent of "Raging Grannies."  They brought along a fabulous sheet of holiday songs, skillfully crafting subversive lyrics to the tunes of traditional Christmas fare.  There are many "gaggles" [chapters] of Raging Grannies across the world; check out the home page of our party visitors here.  This snippet of video/singing is all that we have so far of Saturday's songfest, but this video from last year includes the late Lillian Pollak (then 101 years old) and our own Maria Harris (off to the right).  Enjoy!
 
Best Wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Remaining Peaceful Was Their Choice
By Kathy Kelly, Waging Nonviolence [December 31, 2017]
---- People living now in Yemen's third largest city, Ta'iz, have endured unimaginable circumstances for the past three years. Civilians fear to go outside lest they be shot by a sniper or step on a land mine. Both sides of a worsening civil war use Howitzers, Kaytushas, mortars and other missiles to shell the city. Residents say no neighborhood is safer than another, and human rights groups report appalling violations, including torture of captives. Two days ago, a Saudi-led coalition bomber killed 54 people in a crowded market place. Before the civil war developed, the city was regarded as the official cultural capital of Yemen, a place where authors and academics, artists and poets chose to live. Ta'iz was home to a vibrant, creative youth movement during the 2011 Arab Spring uprising. Young men and women organized massive demonstrations to protest the enrichment of entrenched elites as ordinary people struggled to survive. The young people were exposing the roots of one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world today. They were sounding an alarm about the receding water tables which made wells ever harder to dig and were crippling the agricultural economy. They were similarly distressed over unemployment. When starving farmers and shepherds moved to cities, the young people could see how the increased population would overstress already inadequate systems for sewage, sanitation and health care delivery. They protested their government's cancellation of fuel subsidies and the skyrocketing prices which resulted. They clamored for a refocus on policy away from wealthy elites and toward creation of jobs for high school and university graduates. Despite their misery, they steadfastly opted for unarmed, nonviolent struggle. [Read More]
 
What We Don't Talk about When We Talk about Russian Hacking
By Jackson Lears, London Review of Books [January 2018]
---- American politics have rarely presented a more disheartening spectacle. The repellent and dangerous antics of Donald Trump are troubling enough, but so is the Democratic Party leadership's failure to take in the significance of the 2016 election campaign. Bernie Sanders's challenge to Hillary Clinton, combined with Trump's triumph, revealed the breadth of popular anger at politics as usual – the blend of neoliberal domestic policy and interventionist foreign policy that constitutes consensus in Washington. Neoliberals celebrate market utility as the sole criterion of worth; interventionists exalt military adventure abroad as a means of fighting evil in order to secure global progress. Both agendas have proved calamitous for most Americans. Many registered their disaffection in 2016. Sanders is a social democrat and Trump a demagogic mountebank, but their campaigns underscored a widespread repudiation of the Washington consensus. For about a week after the election, pundits discussed the possibility of a more capacious Democratic strategy. It appeared that the party might learn something from Clinton's defeat. Then everything changed. A story that had circulated during the campaign without much effect resurfaced: it involved the charge that Russian operatives had hacked into the servers of the Democratic National Committee, revealing embarrassing emails that damaged Clinton's chances. With stunning speed, a new centrist-liberal orthodoxy came into being, enveloping the major media and the bipartisan Washington establishment. This secular religion has attracted hordes of converts in the first year of the Trump presidency. In its capacity to exclude dissent, it is like no other formation of mass opinion in my adult life, though it recalls a few dim childhood memories of anti-communist hysteria during the early 1950s. [Read More]. For more on the negative consequences of "Russia-gate," read James Carden, "Russiagate Is Devolving Into an Effort to Stigmatize Dissent,"' The Nation [December 28, 2017] [Link].
 
"Star Wars: The Last Jedi" Takes a Side in the Class War
By Kate Aronoff, The Intercept [December 24 2017]
---- What "The Last Jedi" advises is a radical break from resistance as we know it: abandoning old tactics and loyalties and handing the keys — or at least more of them — over to the grassroots: the mechanics, the child laborers, the Ewoks, and the rebel foot-soldiers. The resistance of the "Star Wars" films has never been particularly visionary, operating as a kind of top-down, underground rebellion looking to reconstitute the New Republic of the prequels. Its biggest heroes have been messiah figures, princesses, and the so-called great men. The biggest heroes of "The Last Jedi," by contrast, are the proletariat — working stiffs who've gotten the short shrift throughout the franchise. They're also mostly women, and many are people of color — not unlike the makeup of the American working-class. [Read More]
 
What's Happening in Iran?
Misreading Qazvin in Washington: On the Protests in Iran
By Eskandar Sadeghi-Boroujerdi, Jadaliyya [December 30, 2017]
----- Iran has featured protests throughout several provincial cities (e.g., Mashhad, Kermanshah, Rasht, and Isfahan) since they first started on Thursday 28 December 2017. Some reports indicate that conservative opponents of the Rouhani government in the north-eastern city of Mashhad initiated the protests. However, they have since spread and escaped their oversight. In the early stages, protestors' demands largely revolved around spiraling prices of basic foodstuffs and bore the classic signs of frustration with the country's ongoing economic torpor. Today, they reached Tehran and have been taken up in limited numbers by students around the university. As of yet, it is not clear whether we can speak of one protest movement or several protest movements, as there are different (and sometimes conflicting) grievances and solutions being articulated. [Read More]
 
Iran Protests: Civil Rights Movement Or Revolution?
By Reza Marashi [National Iranian American Council] [December 31, 2017]
---- Revolution or civil rights movement? That's the question I've been asked repeatedly as the latest round of protests in Iran commenced. But it's not the first time I've tried to explain what even many inside Iran had trouble explaining. In 2009, I served in the Office of Iranian Affairs at the State Department and was one of a small handful of people who covered the post-election protests from start to finish. Days in, we were asked to clarify how things would end – an impossible question to answer. However, after taking a step back and examining the situation dispassionately, we gave our superiors an assessment that proved correct. Broadly conceived, the core elements of our advice eight years ago remain true today. A few key points illustrate why. [Read More]
 
For more on this confusing/developing story – Juan Cole, "Did the US cause Iran's Economic Protests & will Trump Take Advantage?" [Informed Comment] and "Top 5 Signs Trump doesn't Actually Care about Iranian Protesters" [Informed Comment]; "Iranian Officials Struggle to Halt Growing Demonstrations," Antiwar.com; James Dorsey, "Spinning the Iranian protests" [LobeLog]; and from the New York Times today, "Rouhani Urges Calm in Iran as Protests Continue" [Link].
 
WAR & PEACE
Trump's "America First" Security Strategy Imperils the US
By Marjorie Cohn, Truthout [December 29, 2017]
---- Last week, with great fanfare, Donald Trump rolled out his new National Security Strategy (NSS). Its guiding theme is "America First." An analysis of the 55-page document, however, reveals a program that renders the United States more unpopular and vulnerable to external threats. Trump's plan takes Barack Obama's policy of "American exceptionalism" to a new level. In his speech accompanying the NSS's release, Trump stated, "America has been among the greatest forces for peace and justice in the history of the world." Yet Trump has not only continued but also escalated the Bush-Obama wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, dropped Tomahawk missiles on Syria, threatened North Korea and Iran, intensified airstrikes against Muslim countries, and fanned the flames of conflict in the Middle East. Trump's NSS stresses military might but makes scant reference to diplomacy. His administration is building 10 new aircraft carriers worth $13 billion each as a counterweight to China, and expanding the US nuclear weapons program to the tune of $1 trillion over the next 30 years. [Read More]
 
Trump National Security Strategy Could 'Create More Pathways to Nuclear War,' Critics Warn
By
---- Viewed by critics as further evidence that President Donald Trump is "obsessed with nuclear weapons and creating the conditions for nuclear war," the White House's newly unveiled National Security Strategy (NSS) lionizes America's nukes as the "foundation" of its security policy and suggests they could be deployed even in the case of non-nuclear threats. "Nuclear weapons have served a vital purpose in America's National Security Strategy for the past 70 years," states Trump's NSS document made public on Monday. "While nuclear deterrence strategies cannot prevent all conflict, they are essential to prevent nuclear attack, non-nuclear strategic attacks, and large-scale conventional aggression." … Trump's NSS was released as tensions between the U.S. and North Korea continue to soar. As Common Dreams reported earlier this month, the U.S. flew a B-1B supersonic bomber over the Korean Peninsula as part of war exercises that North Korea denounced as a simulation of "all-out war." Given Trump's expressed affinity for America's nuclear arsenal, it is not entirely surprising that his administration's security strategy would place it at the center of attention. [Read More]
 
Also important in decoding the Trump Military Agenda – "Trump's National Security Strategy and the Middle East: A Bridge to Nowhere" LobeLog; "Trump Touts New Security Strategy as Congress Warns of Costs," Military.com; "Trump to Drop Climate Change as National Security Threat" EcoWatch; and "US could broaden its use of nuclear weapons, Trump administration signals" [The Guardian [UK]. You can read Trump's "remarks" on the NSS here; the White House briefing/spinning here; and the entire 68-page unclassified version of the NSS here.
 
For Children All Over The World, 2017 Was Defined by War
By Vijay Prashad, AlterNet [December 27, 2017]
---- It is now normal to have armies enter a country and bomb it viciously or to enter into towns and villages to execute those suspected of being the enemy. All this is now normal. It is everyday life in Afghanistan. In the midst of such normality are children, many of whom not only grow up with the ferocious sound of bombs going off, but also see death before them when their lives have not yet begun. Entire generations in Afghanistan have come to this world surrounded by death, just as a generation in Iraq, in Syria and in Libya, in the broken parts of the Great Lakes region of Africa and in the wounded areas of Myanmar know too much of the sounds of gunfire and the images of death. Children are often in the crossfires of astoundingly loud days and nights. Their trauma is evident in the drawings done by children in refugee camps. Flashes of light and explosion are drawn at a very large scale. The impossibility of representing the noise is clear to the young artists. But it is what is so central to their ordeal. [Read More]
 
(Video) How Did Bombs Made in Italy Kill a Family In Yemen?
---- We followed shipments of bombs from a holiday island in Italy to Saudi Arabia, then found those bombs at the scene of civilian deaths in Yemen. Is Italy capitalizing on a brutal conflict or just doing business? [See this powerful video]
 
GLOBAL WARMING/CLIMATE CHAOS
Social Ecology: Communalism against Climate Chaos
By Brian Tokar, Roar Magazine #7 [December 2017]
---- Since the 1960s, the theory and praxis of social ecology have helped guide efforts to articulate a radical, counter-systemic ecological outlook with a goal of transforming society's relationship to non-human nature. For many decades, social ecologists have articulated a fundamental ecological critique of capitalism and the state, and proposed an alternative vision of empowered human communities organized confederally in pursuit of a more harmonious relationship to the wider natural world. … The philosophical vision of social ecology was first articulated by Murray Bookchin between the early 1960s and the early 2000s, and has since been further elaborated by his colleagues and many others. It is a unique synthesis of social, historical and anthropological investigation, dialectical philosophy and political strategy. Social ecology can be viewed as an unfolding of several distinct layers of understanding and insight, spanning all of these dimensions and more. It begins with an appreciation of the fact that environmental problems are fundamentally social and political in nature, and are rooted in the historical legacies of domination and social hierarchy. [Read More]  NB the latest issue of "Roar Magazine," from which this essay is excerpted, is focused on "System Change," with many interesting-looking articles. 
 
CIVIL LIBERTIES/"THE GLOBAL WAR ON TERROR"
Intelligence Community Says US Had Better Reauthorize Surveillance… Or Else
By Caitlin Johnstone, [December 23, 2017]
---- In a new joint statement by the Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats, CIA Director Mike Pompeo, FBI Director Christopher Wray, NSA Director Michael Rogers, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the US intelligence community warns that should congress fail to reauthorize Section 702, something very, very bad may happen to America. … Going by what we ordinary people can actually put our eyes on, surveillance is not even really about fighting terrorism at all; it's about having access to as much information as possible which can be used for geopolitical manipulation and leverage for America's unelected power establishment. And yet these intelligence agencies, which appear to spend far less energy fighting terrorism than they pretend to, are warning of terrorist attacks should the American people's elected representatives fail to grant them the reauthorization they demand. [Read More]
 
THE STATE OF THE UNION
This Is What Pseudo-Democracy Looks Like
By Norman Soloman, Truth Dig [December 28, 2017]
---- Oligarchy prevents democracy. That explains the gist of why the United States became more undemocratic in 2017. With vast income inequality and corporate power, this country's oligarchy keeps consolidating itself—largely hidden in plain sight—normalized and embossed on the wallpaper of mass-media echo chambers. Several decades of ominous trend lines have brought us to dire tipping points. "In the American republic, the fact of oligarchy is the most dreaded knowledge of all, and our news keeps that knowledge from us," historian Walter Karp wrote. … Nearly 30 years later, the power of billionaires, huge banks and Wall Street over U.S. politics is far more dominant, while a propaganda fog diverts attention from their antidemocratic leverage. An array of news media (including big "public" outlets like NPR) and corporate politicians, unwilling to acknowledge let alone challenge the reality of an oligarchy in the United States, love to point accusatory fingers elsewhere. https://www.truthdig.com/articles/pseudo-democracy-looks-like/ [Read More]  [FB – I only learned today about a national network focused on changing the Democratic Party for the better.  I know nothing about the Justice Democrats except that their website looks interesting.]
 
RoseAnn DeMoro and the Nurses Union Chief Might Save Our Health Care.
By Wes Enzinna, Mother Jones [January/February 2018] (h/t P&IA)
---- As Trump tries to sabotage Obamacare, DeMoro is leading the counteroffensive in California, pushing single-payer health care in a campaign she hopes will offer a blueprint for how progressives can defeat the GOP. The battle also pits DeMoro against Democratic leaders who fear the proposed program could trigger a ferocious response from Trump and possibly bust the state budget. But all sides realize it's a test case that could determine the future of universal health care in America. … In this modern era of polished union bosses, DeMoro, 69, retains an old-school flair, with a classic Norma Rae hairstyle and a disposition more Jimmy Hoffa than Sheryl Sandberg, more "in your face" than "lean in." [Read More]
 
Any Shame Around Poverty Lies With the Society That Perpetuates It, Not the Poor
[An interview with Rev. Emily McNeill of the new "Poor People's Campaign:]
By Sarah Jaffe, Truth Out [December 25, 2017]
Sarah Jaffe: The national Poor People's Campaign launch was December 4. Tell us about what is going on and why now.
Rev. Emily McNeill: It is a really, really exciting development. There are a couple of reasons why it is happening now. The most important is that we are at a crisis point in a lot of ways in our country -- certainly in New York State, as well -- in terms of how a large portion of our population is being impacted by poverty, by racism and other forms of discrimination, by militarism and an economy that revolves around war in a lot of ways, and also, ecological devastation. We are really seeing a point at which if we don't really mobilize and organize in a new way that builds power in a new way and connects people in a new way ... we are in trouble. … A lot of the things that Dr. King and his colleagues were talking about then were, in many cases, even worse today. The vision that they had and the strategy and analysis that they had really resonates [Read More]  To learn about/recall Dr. King's project for a "Poor People's Campaign in 1967-68,' unfinished because he was murdered, go here.
 
Puerto Rico Relief Package Demands More Than Half Measures
By Matt Nelson, Truthout [December 28, ,2017]
---- The damage to homes, lives and communities from Hurricane Maria continues to mount in Puerto Rico months later. About one-third of approximately 425,000 Puerto Rican homeowners are behind on mortgage payments, tens of thousands of whom haven't made payments in months. Some economists predict that if the current indicators hold, the entire island is destined for a fate similar to Detroit's. … When the situation is so dire it transcends partisanship, we have an opportunity to pass a relief package that not only addresses the immediate tragic state of Puerto Rico, but also sets its people up for success well into the future. Puerto Rico doesn't just need its electricity and safe drinking water restored; it needs permanent policy that provides much-needed economic relief and allows it to reinvest in infrastructure that allows its residents to weather the next inevitable hurricane while avoiding more catastrophe. [Read More] Also useful is "If only they Were Houston: 45% Puerto Ricans still lack Power," from TeleSur [December 30, 2017] [Link].
 
The Trump Agenda and Immigration Chaos
One Year of Immigration Under Trump
By Maryam Saleh, The Intercept [December 31 2017]
---- Donald Trump made his formal entry into politics with the racism and xenophobia that would become a hallmark of his lightning-rod candidacy and, ultimately, his first year in the Oval Office. "When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending their best," he said in his presidential announcement speech. "They're bringing drugs. They're bringing crime. They're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people." "It's coming from more than Mexico," Trump continued. "It's coming from all over South and Latin America, and it's coming probably — probably — from the Middle East." Fast forward 2 1/2 years. Trump is wrapping up his first calendar year as president, and he's failed to make policy progress on many of his campaign promises. But when it comes to immigration, the president has proven to be much more than just a big talker. In his first year, he's significantly uprooted immigration policy, tearing apart the families of longtime residents and erecting significant barriers in the face of would-be immigrants to the United States. [Read More].  Also useful/important is Julianne Hing, "Why Numbers Alone Obscure the Real Deportation Story," The Nation [December 28, 2017] [Link].
 
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
Parallel Worlds: Gaza and Israel
---- What is there about a tiny enclave known as Gaza that so offends, so alarms, so intimidates Israel? It would be far too easy to say nothing and simply reduce it to Tel Aviv's voracious chase of its off-shore gas reserves or its potential as a Mediterranean tourist coastline …once cleansed of its native population and the destruction which bears the marked Star of David. No. Gaza terrorizes Israel not by force of arms but through the endless resound of its resilience and the muscle of its inspiration. To millions of Palestinians under siege in Palestine, or those forcibly exiled by a Diaspora now 70 years of age, and to its chorus of supporters worldwide, Gaza stands as a shining beacon of resistance and hope.  Yet, to romanticize Gaza is to lend excuse to Israel and no such apologia will be offered here. 50 miles from the destruction that is Gaza sits Tel Aviv… as so much a marker of grotesque Israeli indifference. … But an hour's drive, yet worlds away, sits Gaza; home to two million Palestinians. Once known, in polite social circles, as the earth's largest open air prison, it long ago moved on from jail to Israeli administered death camp. Whether by embargo or bombs, it is simply impossible to watch the life and death of the coastal enclave without seeing Israel's criminal plan unfold. [Read More]
 
Will 2018 Usher in a New Palestinian Strategy?
By Ramzy Baroud, ZNet [December 27, 2017]
---- 2017 will be remembered as the year that the so-called 'peace process', at least in its American formulation, has ended. And with its demise, a political framework that has served as the foundation for US foreign policy in the Middle East has also collapsed. The Palestinian leadership and its Arab and international allies will now embark on a new year with the difficult task of drumming up a whole new political formula that does not include the United States. The Palestinian Authority entered 2017 with the slight hope that the US was in the process of moving away, however slightly, from its hardline pro-Israel attitude. This hope was the result of a decision made by the Barack Obama Administration in December 2016 not to veto United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334 that declared the status of illegal Jewish settlements in the Occupied Territories null and void. But the new Donald Trump Administration suffocated all optimism as soon as it took over the White House, with a promise to relocate the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, thus recognizing, in defiance of international law, the Holy City as Israel's capital. [Read More]
 
Nabi Saleh is where I lost my Zionism
By Lisa Goldman, +972 Magazine [Israel] [December 24, 2017]
---- By the time I began going to Nabi Saleh, I had spent about four years reporting on what I saw in the West Bank and Gaza, watching detachedly as my politics moved ever leftward. What I witnessed in that small West Bank village was the last straw. Throughout the many months I attended Friday demonstrations in Nabi Saleh, I never saw a single reporter from an Israeli media outlet. And yet, during the drive home after those long and distressing days, the news presenter on Israel Radio would report that there had been "riots" in a West Bank village and that "our forces" responded with crowd control measures. The Tamimi family has been demonstrating every Friday for about a decade, protesting the takeover of Nabi Saleh's natural water spring by nearby settlers. As Bassem Tamimi once explained to me, in quite fluent Hebrew, the villagers said nothing when the army built the settlement of Halamish (originally Neve Tzuf) on their land. But when the settlers confiscated their spring, and the army then prevented the Tamimis from accessing it, Bassem and his extended family decided to draw a red line. [Read More]
 
"To see a world in a grain of sand" [Wm. Blake] – So much about the Tamimi family and its experience under Israeli occupation captures – for me – the entire Zionist project.  For more on this chapter of history, read Ben Ehrenreich, "Is This Where the Third Intifada Will Start?" [Link]; and "Israel Extends 16-year-old Palestinian Girl's Detention Because She Could 'Pose a Danger,'" Haaretz [Israel] [Link].  And check out this marvelous video with Ahmed Tahimi, "Living Resistance Tour"; more than 400,000 people have seen it. (h/t FG)
 
OUR HISTORY
Mary McCarthy's Unsparing Honesty.
By Maggie Doherty, The Nation [December 28, 2017]
---- "The Fact in Fiction" [essay] offers the best of Mary McCarthy: her considered criticism of writers, her careful taxonomies, her bold and withering condemnations, and her impeccable, almost fastidious sentences. These were the qualities that made her one of the most respected—and feared—critics of her generation. They also reveal what she valued in fiction, both in what she read and what she wrote. Verisimilitude was paramount. Depicting a social world was more valuable than rendering a subjective consciousness, unless that consciousness was itself given to observations about the social world. A novelist could entertain, she could illuminate, but she must never swerve from the world as it is experienced. "Factuality," her word for a precise and honest accounting of the observable world, was both McCarthy's literary standard and her lodestar. … But this emphasis on accuracy was more than just a literary aesthetic; it was a moral and political position, a principle to live by. McCarthy was allergic to groupthink in all its forms, as skeptical of the small political sects of the 1930s as she was of mass culture in the 1950s. She participated briefly in Communist Party activities and was on the left her entire life, but she never surrendered her independent mind in the name of solidarity. [Read More]
 
'Wormwood' Is an LSD-Soaked True Crime Masterpiece [Errol Morris]
By Matthew Gault, Vice [December 28, 2017]
---- America loves watching true crime documentaries. There are several television channels dedicated to the subject, dozens of podcasts, and hundreds of movies. Most of them tell the story of a violent crime, then unravel its mysteries. There are variations on the theme—authorities catch a killer or don't, the wrong person is accused, or the bad guy gets away—but they all follow a similar pattern. Then there's the work of director Errol Morris. He wants the audience to understand not just the crime, but the way the crime affected everyone around it, and what the story people tell about the crime says about them. Wormwood is his new documentary miniseries on Netflix that—on its surface—it's about LSD, the CIA, and the clandestine MKUltra project. From the early 1950s until 1973, the CIA and the Pentagon used torture, hypnosis, and drugs such as LSD to attempt to control the human mind. It didn't work, and the project killed Frank Olson. … It's Morris' focus on Eric's obsession with truth rather than the procedural details of a true crime documentary that makes Wormwood transcend the genre. It revisits themes from his 1988 masterpiece The Thin Blue Line in that both films use a real death and elaborate reenactments not only to reconstruct disputed versions of the past, but to examine the slippery methods with which truth itself is constructed. [Read More]
 
The Amazing Benjamin Lay: Friend of Animals, Enemy of Slavers
---- Marcus Rediker's The Fearless Benjamin Lay: the Quaker Dwarf who became the first revolutionary abolitionist was published by Beacon Press and is the latest in a series of books the historian has written about slavery.  Rediker is to be hailed for rescuing Lay from obscurity. This was a freedom-fighter who lived a life that was strikingly in the spirit of contemporary radicalism even though he was born 335 years ago. Not only was he against slavery, he was also against cruelty to animals. A strict vegan, he shunned ostentation in keeping with his Quaker faith even as the bourgeois members of the faith were indistinguishable from other Protestant elites. Constantly being expelled from one Quaker congregation after another, he refused to keep his mouth shut about slavery. He saw his mission as one of comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable—to paraphrase how Finley Peter Dunne described the role of newspapers. Finally, anticipating the kind of guerilla theater Abbie Hoffman pulled off when he threw dollar bills into the trading floor of the NY Stock Exchange, Lay often adopted tactics that relied more on the daring deed than the spoken word. [Read More]
 
Bombing the Ho Chi Minh Trail
By Merrill A. McPeak, New York Times [December 26, 2017]
---- Starting in the late 1950s, North Vietnam appropriated a piece of Laotian real estate the size of Massachusetts and constructed an infrastructure that in many ways mirrored ours: hundreds of miles of road, communications centers, ammo dumps, stockpiles of food and fuel, truck parks, troop bivouacs. The North Vietnamese did this in a much more difficult environment: a sparsely populated region of rugged mountains, triple-canopy jungle and dense primeval rain forest. It was one of history's great achievements in military engineering, and all of it hidden from sight except for the trace of the road itself. … We dropped two million tons of bombs on Laos — something like our total tonnage during all of World War II in both the European and Pacific theaters. We seeded clouds to induce flooding, sprayed Agent Orange, mined the road, installed sensors along the electronic-monitoring McNamara Line. No doubt about it, we extracted a heavy price. In time, the North filled 72 military cemeteries with the remains of those who built, manned and moved over the trail. [Read More]
 

Sunday, December 24, 2017

CFOW Newsletter - We need a new resistance spirit for 2018!

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
December 24, 2017
 
Hello All – A few minutes ago, the on-line New York Times updated its front page with the chilling news that "for the new year, Republican leaders in the House have their sights on decades-old programs for the poor that they say are too easily exploited by those who do not need them."  Republican House leader Paul Ryan has told his party that his priority for 2018 is "welfare reform."  And in the years to come, Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security will be the go-to places to find money to fill the yawning budget gaps that will inevitably result from the recently passed Tax Reform law.
 
What will we do about this?  What will the Democrats do?  What will the post-election "Resistance" do?  I think the take-away lesson from the attempt to block the Tax Reform legislation is that We the People are on our own.  During the past months, expert testimony from zillions of economists had zero effect on the determination of the Republican majority to reward the Very Wealthy of this land, thanking them for their financial support in the past election.  Nor did dial-a-prayer phone calls to "wavering" Republican Senators produce any results. Yet even though stymied on the floors of Congress, the Democrats did not even consider calling on the People of This Land to rise up, to demonstrate, to gather at their state capitols in protest, or to otherwise display anger.  Nor did We the People do this on our own. We did not make much of an effort to break out of the two-party box, or to take our dissent to the streets. We watched in anguish, but scarcely moved a muscle.
 
When the Republicans begin their attacks on "entitlements," – the social safety net that every modern country in the world has as a matter of course -- we can't remain passive.  We can't allow a repeat of the Tax Reform debacle.  There is and will be too much at stake to do politics as usual, to hope that "moderate Republicans" from some gerrymandered Midwestern or Upstate backwater will be influenced by logic and humanitarian impulses.  The lesson of the Tax Reform is that our country is now under the dictatorship of the Very Wealthy, who view the "little people" as a problem to be managed, rather than as fellow citizens, or as people who have as much of a right to live a good life as they do.  If we don't scare them, we won't move them.
 
Let us hope that "the Resistance" of 2017 will be worthy of its name, and that we will find new and effective ways to protest the economic terror being waged against us. We really don't have a choice.
 
News Notes
Almost a year ago, on Trump's inauguration day, about 200 protesters were arrested and charged with heavy crimes.  Most of them were simply "kettled"; cornered and surrounded and arrested as a group and charged with conspiracy and felonious badness.  On Thursday, a jury acquitted the first six defendants, essentially rejecting the government's claim that being at a protest was in itself a crime.  For a lively account of the protest and the trial by one of the freed defendants, "stoked" live-streamer Alexei Wood, see this fun Democracy Now! segment.
 
I found this photo essay/story extraordinary. Jakarta, Indonesia – the world's second largest city – is literally sinking below sea level.  Moreover, its government seems so dysfunctional that practical steps towards survival appear inconceivable.  Is this a metaphor for the 21st century?  Read about it here.
 
According to this NPR report, the number of cholera cases in Yemen has passed one million. The main reason for this health disaster is the war and blockade waged against Yemen by Saudi Arabia. That the US is supporting this horror is a) beyond belief; or b) consistent with its role as a vast terror-state.
 
Of great interest and a spark of hope is the spectacular growth of the Democratic Socialists of America. Since Trump's election a year ago, about 24,000 people, mostly young, have joined DSA.  This very interesting article gives a good assessment of the organization's activities and broad range of views.
 
Reporting about the opioid epidemic has focused on its entrenchment is depressed white communities, especially in Appalachia.  This useful article describes the spread of the crisis into black America.  In the aged of failed neo-liberalism, despair knows no color.
 
Coming Attractions/Things to Do
Saturday, December 30thPlease join us for CFOW's annual Holiday Party.  We will gather at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society, 12 Elm St. in Dobbs, from 2 to 5 p.m.  Bring a snack or something to eat/drink to share.  We have hopes that a contingent of Raging Grannies will attend to lead us in song.  Everyone welcome!
 
Thursday, January 4th - The CFOW Facebook page is often adorned with the pictures of Erik R. McGregor, whom we got to know during the fight against the Spectra pipeline, and who seems to be everywhere that there is a protest or demonstration.  He will be presenting and discussing his work on at the Municipal Archives, 31 Chambers St. in NYC, from 6 to 8 p.m.  For more information, go here.
 
Ongoing – Each year Katha Pollitt of The Nation posts a list of a dozen peace-and-justice organizations to which you might wish to make an end-of-the-year donation.  Among them this year is the Afghan Women's Fund, for which CFOW organized a fund-raiser quite a few years ago, and which is still on the ground in Afghanistan, organizing schools and literacy programs. Another suggestion for donations is Resist, now in its 50th year.  Resist pools small donations and makes grants (more than 8,000 so far) to small, grassroots organizations. Check it out.
 
This Newsletter
Articles linked in the CFOW newsletter are intended to illuminate some of the main action-issues about which we are concerned.  Coming mostly from the "dissenting media," they provide an alternative to the perspectives of the mainstream media.  In addition to the excellent "Featured Essays," I especially recommend the set of essays on the stolen Honduras election; the article by Stephen Cohen about US military threats toward Russia and the several articles about the irrational and dangerous course initiated by "Russia-gate"; updates on the war crimes underway in Yemen; a good set of articles on the likely consequences of the Tax Law; and some useful articles on Trump's "recognition" of Jerusalem as Israel's capital and the consequent international isolation of the US in the UN.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  We meet for a protestl/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 12 to 1 p.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Our leaflet and posters for our rallies are usually about war or climate change, but issues such as racial justice or the Puerto Rico crisis are targeted from time to time, depending on current events. We meet on the first Sunday of each month, from 7 to 9 p.m., at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society.  Our weekly newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page. 
 
Contributions, Please
Our treasury is getting a little low, so if you are able to support our work, please make your check out to "CFOW" and mail it to PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706.  Thanks!
 
Rewards!
As Christmas approaches it's time to remember a great moment in peace-making, the "Christmas Truce" of 1914.  After months of fighting, with many thousands of deaths in what was to be history's most stupid war, German and British troops met in "no man's land"  on Christmas Eve. A few years ago, CFOW stalwart George MacAnanama and the Veterans for Peace organized a program at the Cooper Union, attended by many of us, at which folk singer John McCutcheon performed his Christmas in the Trenches.  It's special; enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Forget Coates vs. West — We All Have a Duty to Confront the Full Reach of U.S. Empire
By Naomi Klein and Opal Tometi, The Intercept [December 23, 2017
---- …Ever since Cornel West published his piece in The Guardian challenging Ta-Nehisi Coates, an article you either regard as an outrageous injustice or an earth-shattering truth bomb, depending on which team you have chosen. We see it differently. We see this debate as a political opportunity, one that has far less to do with either of these brilliant men and everything to do with how, at a time of unfathomably high stakes, we are going to build a multiracial human rights movement capable of beating back surging white supremacy and rapidly concentrating corporate power. As women, both Black and white, both American and Canadian, we see the question like this: What are the duties of radicals and progressives inside relatively wealthy countries to the world beyond our national borders? A warming world wracked by expanding and unending wars that our governments wage, finance, and arm — a world scarred by unbearable poverty and forced migration? … …Which is why it's high time to change the subject from West vs. Coates, and begin the much more salient debate about what we all can do to rediscover the power of a genuinely internationalist, anti-imperialist worldview. A power that our movement ancestors well understood. [Read More] Also of interest is this Laura Flanders interview, "Trump Embodies the Crisis of Capitalism: A Conversation With Naomi Klein," Truthout [December 23, 2017] [Link].
 
The Truth About Power and Capitalism: A Socialist Response to the Tax Bill
By Richard D. Wolff, Truth Out [December 22, 2017]
---- The limitation of "speaking truth to power" is and always was that it risks leaving us with the truth and them with the power. In today's world, the GOP, Trump and the corporate leaders who sustain them have the power to treat truths as so much "fake news" or simply to ignore them as they push their agendas. For the truth to become socially effective, it needs an alliance with an oppositional power able and willing to contest the ruling power. … The Democrats as a party currently do little more than speak their truth to GOP power. They do not act as or collaborate with or try to build a real social opposition. As far as the party goes, there are no demonstrations, no mass mobilizations: The Democrats vote and lose and make weak speeches to ever-smaller audiences. Democrats seem to fear losing major donations and donors were they to mount real opposition. The primary loyalty of major donors is to the capitalist system that undergirds their social position. This or that form of capitalism is of much less importance. The GOP gets this, too. Both parties now pander to the same donors; they have become, more than before, two wings of a party unified in its devotion to capitalism. [Read More]
 
Ahed Tamimi Has Become the Symbol of a New Generation of Palestinian Resistance
By Ben Ehrenreich, The Nation [December 24, 2017]
---- Ahed Tamimi was 11 when I met her, a little blond slip of a thing, her hair almost bigger than she was. I remember her grimacing as her mother combed out the knots each morning in their living room. The second time I went to a demonstration in Nabi Saleh, the West Bank village where she lives, Ahed and her cousin Marah ended up leading the march. Not because they wanted to, but because Israeli Border Police were chasing everyone, and shouting and throwing stun grenades, and she and Marah ran ahead of the crowd. That's how it's been ever since. The Israeli military keeps pushing—into the village, into the yard, into the house, beneath the flesh and into the skulls and tissue and bones of her family and her friends—and Ahed ends up out in front, where everyone can see her. She was there again last week after a video of her slapping an Israeli soldier went viral. I can assure you it's not where she wants to be. She would rather be with her friends, on their phones, doing the things that teenagers do. She would rather be a kid than a hero. [Read More]
 
Ahed Tamimi's action/arrest has generated many interesting comments – Simone Zimmerman, "At 16, Israel promised me freedom. Why does it deny it to Ahed Tamimi?" +972 Magazine [Israel] [December 21, 2017] [Link]; Hossam Shaker, "Ahed Tamimi: The symbol of the new defiant Palestinian generation," Middle East Monitor [December 22, 2017] [Link]; and Amira Haas, "Behind the Palestinian Girl-slaps-soldier Incident: Her Teenage Relative Was Shot in the Head," Haaretz [Israel] [December 20, 2017] http://www.haaretz.com/misc/article-print-page//1.830214
 
Who Cares? Not Them, Not It, Not Him, Not (Evidently) Us
By Tom Engelhardt, Tom Dispatch [December 21, 2017]
---- We're all now immersed in an evolving Trumpocalypse. In a sense, we were there even before The Donald entered the Oval Office. Just consider what it meant to elect a visibly disturbed human being to the highest office of the most powerful, potentially destructive nation on Earth. What does that tell you? One possibility: Given the near-majority of American voters who sent him to the White House, by campaign 2016 we were already living in a deeply disturbed country. And considering the coming of 1 percent elections, the growth of plutocracy, the blooming of a new Gilded Age whose wealth disparities must already be competitive with its 19th-century predecessor, the rise of the national-security state, our endless wars (now turning "generational"), the increasing militarization of this country, and the demobilization of its people, to mention only a few 21st-century American developments, that should hardly be surprising. [Read More]
 
The Crisis in Honduras
The Election Fraud in Honduras Follows Decades of Corruption Funded By the U.S. War on Drugs
By Danielle Marie Mackey, The Intercept [December 23 2017]
[FB – This is another amazing article by amazing journalist Danielle Mackey. Check it out.]
---- On December 17, the Supreme Electoral Tribunal officially crowned Hernández president-elect. That night, the delegation of election observers from the Organization of American States recommended the results be scrapped and that a new election be held. Despite increasing calls from U.S. senators to support the OAS verdict, on December 20 a senior State Department official said that unless presented with additional evidence of fraud, the U.S. government has "not seen anything that alters the final result." Two days later, the State Department sealed Honduras' fate, congratulating President Hernández on his victory, prescribing a "robust national dialogue" to "heal the political divide," and advising those who claim fraud to recur to Honduran law. The Department ended its statement by calling upon Hondurans to refrain from violence. [Read More]
 
Also useful/illuminating on the thwarting of democracy in Honduras – Vijay Prashad, "About That Stolen Election in Honduras," AlterNet [December 19, 2017] [Link]; and Jeff Abbott, "Youth mobilization challenges election fraud in Honduras," Waging Nonviolence [December 22, 2017] [Link].  On Friday, the United States "recognized" the stolen election as valid [Link], and (presumably to prevent violence) the opposition conceded [Link].
 
The Crisis in Catalonia/Spain
What is Happening in Catalonia and Spain?
By Vicente Navarro, Counterpunch [December 21, 2017]
---- A very important development occurring in Spain and in Catalonia has not been covered by the media. It is the Indignados movement (clearly inspired by the Arab Spring) that mobilized millions of people against the political establishment. Their slogan, "they do not represent us," became very popular, and the movement has created new left-wing forces in many parts of Spain: in Madrid (Podemos), in Galicia (Mareas), and in Catalonia (en Comun). Along with a renewal of leadership of the traditional left party (IU), these left-wing parties have established a new political formation, Unidos Podemos (UP), which in a very short period of time (three years) has become the second largest political formation in the opposition and already governs in some of the most important cities in Spain (Barcelona, Madrid, Coruña, Cadiz, etc.). In Catalonia, it has won the last two elections in the Spanish parliamentary elections. It has been a political tsunami and has created an enormous hostility from the major media and the political establishment. This alliance is against the law 155 and against independence. It calls for a plurinational state and for the right of self-determination of the different nations of Spain. It is a new development that is changing the political climate in Spain as a response to people's rejection of the highly repressive Spanish State against Catalonia, side by side with a demand for recognition of the plurinational nature of Spain. We will see what will happen next. [Read More]  Also of interest is this Democracy Now! Segment:
(Video) "Catalan Separatists Win Electoral Majority,"[December 22, 2017] [Link].
 
WAR & PEACE
Why Russians Think 'America Is Waging War Against Russia'
By Stephen F. Cohen, The Nation [December 20, 2017]
---- The most central, ramifying, and dangerous allegation of Russiagate is that "Russian attacked American democracy" during the 2016 presidential election. After 18 months, there is still no credible evidence for this allegation. On the other hand, many Russians—in the policy elite, the educated middle class, and ordinary citizens—believe that "the United States has been at war with Russia" for 25 years, a perception regularly expressed in the Russian media. They believe this for understandable reasons. … Above all, Russians consider the history of US policy toward post-Soviet Russia since the early 1990s, enacted by both Democrats and Republicans, particularly major episodes that they perceive as war-like and as including acts of "betrayal and deceit" in the form of promises and assurances made to Moscow by Washington and subsequently violated. Cohen briefly itemizes the main examples: [Read More]  Also of great interest is Andrew J. Bacevich, "When Washington Assured Russia NATO Would Not Expand," The American Conservative [ [Link].
 
Did Obama Arm Islamic State Killers?
By Daniel Lazare, Consortium News [December 21, 2017]
---- Did Barack Obama arm ISIS? The question strikes many people as absurd, if not offensive. How can anyone suggest something so awful about a nice guy like the former president? But a stunning report by an investigative group known as Conflict Armament Research (CAR) leaves us little choice but to conclude that he did. CAR, based in London and funded by Switzerland and the European Union, spent three years tracing the origin of some 40,000 pieces of captured ISIS arms and ammunition. Its findings, made public last week, are that much of it originated in former Warsaw Pact nations in Eastern Europe, where it was purchased by United States and Saudi Arabia and then diverted, in violation of various rules and treaties, to Islamist rebels seeking to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. The rebels, in turn, somehow caused or allowed the equipment to be passed on to Islamic State, which is also known by the acronyms ISIS or ISIL, or just the abbreviation IS. This is damning stuff since it makes it clear that rather than fighting ISIS, the U.S. government was feeding it. [Read More]
 
The Saudi-US War in Yemen
Let Yemenis Live
By Kathy Kelly, Waging Nonviolence [December 23, 2017]
---- On May 2, 2017, before becoming Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman, as Minister of Defense, spoke about the Saudi-led coalition's war in Yemen, a war he orchestrated since March of 2015. "A long war is in our interest," he said, explaining that the Houthi rebels would eventually run out of cash, lack external supplies and break apart. Conversely, the Saudis could count on a steady flow of cash and weapons. "Time is on our side," he concluded. Powerful people in the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Sudan, Bahrain, Kuwait, Morocco, Senegal and Jordan have colluded with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince to prolong the war against Yemen. The Saudis have employed Sudanese fighters from the terrifying Janjaweed militias to fight in small cities along Yemen's coast line. The seeming objective is to gain ground control leading to the vital Port of Hodeidah. UAE military are reported to operate a network of secret prisons where Yemenis disappear and are tortured, deterring people from speaking up about human rights violations lest they land in one of these dreaded prisons. Among the most powerful warlords participating in the war are the U.S. and the UK. [Read More]
 
Also useful/illuminating on the war in Yemen – "Trump's Pentagon Admits to 'Multiple Ground Missions' in Yemen," from TeleSur [December 22, 2017] [Link]; "How the Saudi Blockade Is Starving Yemen," New York Times [December 19, 2017] [Link]; and "Yemen's War Enters a Dark Stage as Rebels Squeeze the Capital," New York Times [Link].
 
"Russia-gate and the American political crisis
The Abyss Between Russian and US Media Just Got Wider
By Nadezhda Azhgikhina, The Nation [December 22, 2017]
---- Russiagate managed in a few months to strike a much stronger blow against the prospects of improving relations than all the years of the Cold War and the arms race together. The mutual trust of the elites is gone. The rules of the game, once reliably observed, have been violated. The worst part is that trust is lost between the people and the intellectuals of both countries. There is another danger that has not been fully comprehended—the basic theses that provided the necessity and possibility of dialogue have been put into doubt. The hybrid war that mixes truth and fake, interpretation and fact, vileness and virtue is a fight without rules in a dark room. One can now say to an audience of millions what until recently was considered unthinkable. The concepts of decency and measure have been cast aside. The battlefield belongs to moral marauders. No one believes anyone anymore. [Read More]  Also very interesting is Aaron Maté, "More Media Malpractice in Russiagate," The Nation [December 21, 2017] [Link].
 
The Democratic Money Behind Russia-gate
By Joe Lauria, Consortium News [October 29, 2017]
---- The two sources that originated the allegations claiming that Russia meddled in the 2016 election — without providing convincing evidence — were both paid for by the Democratic National Committee, and in one instance also by the Clinton campaign: the Steele dossier and the CrowdStrike analysis of the DNC servers. Think about that for a minute. We have long known that the DNC did not allow the FBI to examine its computer server for clues about who may have hacked it – or even if it was hacked – and instead turned to CrowdStrike, a private company co-founded by a virulently anti-Putin Russian. Within a day, CrowdStrike blamed Russia on dubious evidence. … In other words, possibly all of the Russia-gate allegations, which have been taken on faith by Democratic partisans and members of the anti-Trump Resistance, trace back to claims paid for or generated by Democrats. [Read More]
 
GLOBAL WARMING/CLIMATE BREAKDOWN
Is it Too Late to Restore Our Relationship to Earth in the New Year?
By David Korten, Yes! Magazine [December 24, 2017]
---- According to the Ecological Footprint Network, humans currently consume at a rate 1.7 times what Earth's generative capacity can sustain—and the gap is growing. To have a viable human future on this overstressed planet, it is essential that we build a solidarity economy that seeks material sufficiency and spiritual abundance for all in balance with a living Earth. We must join in common cause to build local relationships of caring and equitable sharing across the lines of race, religion, and class. Strong and healthy local relationships, however, are only one element of the larger economic transformation required to rebalance our relationship to Earth and achieve a radical redistribution of access to and control of the essentials of living. … We all depend on the health and productivity of living Earth systems that none among us created. We earn our right to use them by fulfilling our responsibility to care for and restore them to full health and productivity. No one has a right to more than they need so long as others' needs go unmet. Here are some of the actions required to simultaneously restore human–Earth balance and redistribute the human share of Earth's wealth. [Read More]
 
THE STATE OF THE UNION
Militarized Police and the Psychological Impact on the Black Community
From The Brian Lehrer Show [December 2017]
---- When community members protested the death of Alton Sterling, who was shot in close range by Baton Rouge Police Department officers, they were met with brutality from the police and long lasting trauma. As police forces all over the country grow increasingly militarized many in the black community all over the country are still dealing with the psychological trauma encounters with the police have left them, reports  Collier Meyerson, contributing writer at The Nation, investigative fellow at Reveal and a Knobler Fellow at the Nation Institute. [Read More]
 
2017 Year in Review: Turning Lemons into Lemonade [the US labor movement]
By Alexandra Bradbury and Samantha Winslow, Labor Notes [December 19, 2017]
---- If there's one lesson labor can draw from the events of 2017, it's this—to survive and grow in the face of a nationally coordinated employer offensive, we'll have to use the attacks against us as organizing opportunities. Everywhere you look workers are either on the defensive or just plain getting crushed. Take anti-union "right-to-work" laws, which weaken union strength and budgets by giving workers covered by union contracts a short-term financial incentive to opt out of membership. Since Kentucky fell in January, the entire South is right-to-work. Such laws cover much of the Midwest and West too, a total of 27 states. A February law put Missouri on track to become number 28—until unionists blocked it from going into effect by collecting an astounding 310,567 signatures for repeal. The question will appear before voters on the November 2018 ballot. [Read More]
 
Why 41 percent of white millennials voted for Trump
, Washington Post [December 15, 2017]
---- Contrary to what some have suggested, white millennial Trump voters were not in more economically precarious situations than non-Trump voters. Fully 86 percent of them reported being employed, a rate similar to non-Trump voters; and they were 14 percent less likely to be low income than white voters who did not support Trump. Employment and income were not significantly related to that sense of white vulnerability. So what was? Racial resentment. … Many white Americans are uneasy with what they see as their future, surrounded as they are by growing racial and cultural diversity in mainstream media, politics, entertainment and music. White millennials are part of the U.S.'s most diverse generation, as so many have discussed — but not all of them are comfortable with it. Voting for Trump reveals those racial and cultural anxieties. [Read More]
 
The Republicans' New Tax Law
The Trojan Horse in the Tax Bill
By Bryce Covert, New York Times [December 20, 2017]
---- Now that they've succeeded in passing a tax package that will reduce government revenues so much, the ensuing cost will serve as the excuse to get everything else they want. They'll count on our short memories to forget who created larger deficits in the first place. Those deficits will serve as the motivation to enact cuts they've sought all along. The tax bill isn't just a regressive giveaway to corporations and the rich. It's a Trojan horse with deep government reductions stuffed inside. [Read More]
 
The GOP Tax Bill and the Crisis of American Democracy
By Richard Kim, The Nation [December 21, 2017]
---- Throwing these enablers of oligarchy out of Congress is an obvious first step, but changing the rules that put them there in the first place is the longer game. That's a frustrating conclusion, because it means a lot of hard and uncertain work in a terrain that is often as mind-numbing as tax law itself—the census, redistricting, voting rights, and campaign-finance reform. But this past week proved that there's no way around it. For among the root causes of poverty in the United States identified by [UN rapporteur Philip Alston] was the withering of democracy itself. "The foundation stone of American society," he wrote, "is being steadily undermined." "The net result is that people living in poverty, minorities, and other disfavored groups are being systematically deprived of their voting rights…and some political elites have a strong self-interest in keeping people in poverty. [Read More]
 
Also helpful in understanding the deeper layers of the new law – Greg Kaufmann, "The Republican Plan Isn't Just About Taxes—It's About Shredding the Safety Net," The Nation [December 19, 2017] [Link]; Thomas B. Edsall, "You Cannot Be Too Cynical About the Republican Tax Bill," New York Times [December 21, 2017] [Link]; Lee Fang and Ryan Grim, "'Game On': K Street Salivating Over Next Step in Tax Fight,," The Intercept [December 20, 2017] [Link]; and Steven Pressman, "GOP tax plan doubles down on policies that are crushing the middle class," The Conversation [December 21, 2017] [Link].
 
Immigrants and Refugees
(Video) DACA Recipients' Message to Democrats: Stop Playing with Our Lives, and Pass a Clean DREAM Act Now
From Democracy Now! [December 21, 2017]
---- As Congress passes a massive rewrite of the U.S. tax code that could mean the largest transfer of wealth from the bottom to the top in history, it is also negotiating a stopgap spending measure that will not include the DREAM Act, which would grant legal status to recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA. This comes as seven young DACA recipients and one ally were released from jail Wednesday after six days in jail on hunger strike. The eight were arrested Friday during nonviolent sit-in protests inside the offices of Democratic lawmakers, demanding they commit to voting "no" on the spending bill this month unless it includes a version of the DREAM Act without concessions for funding for the border wall or enhanced border security. We are joined by Erika Andiola, one of the eight activists just released and a nationally known immigrant activist who served as a spokesperson for Bernie Sanders and helped him craft immigration policy. She is the political director for Our Revolution. She is a DACA recipient who grew up in Arizona, where her house was raided in 2013 and immigration agents picked up her mother and brother. [See the Program]
 
Judge Partially Lifts Trump Administration Ban on Refugees
---- A federal judge in Seattle on Saturday partially lifted a Trump administration ban on certain refugees after two groups argued that the policy prevented people from some mostly Muslim countries from reuniting with family living legally in the United States. U.S. District Judge James Robart heard arguments Thursday in lawsuits from the American Civil Liberties Union and Jewish Family Service, which say the ban causes irreparable harm and puts some people at risk. Government lawyers argued that the ban is needed to protect national security. Robart ordered the federal government to process certain refugee applications. He said his order applies to people "with a bona fide relationship to a person or entity within the United States." [Read More]
 
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
At United Nations, Trump's Attack on Palestinians Rebuffed by 128 Nations
By
---- The UN General Assembly sent a message from the world to the Trump administration yesterday—and it wasn't pretty. Despite dire threats to countries voting against the United States, a huge majority of countries called Trump's bluff to condemn Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The vote was overwhelming against the U.S. position—128 countries voted to condemn, only 9 opposed, and 35 abstained. The United States, with its uncritical support of Israeli violations, has long been criticized at the UN. But Thursday's vote reflects the profound global antagonism that the Trump administration has caused and indeed embraced. And once again U.S. protection of Israel is the basis for Washington being so thoroughly isolated at the UN. [Read More]  Also of interest is "Poll: Fewer than half of Americans support Jerusalem recognition," f[Link].
 
The Jerusalem Votes at the UN
By Richard Falk [December 24, 2017]
---- 128-9 is a clear expression of an overwhelming moral and legal sentiment, and deserves to be respected by any government that values the role of the General Assembly as the arbiter of legitimacy with respect to sensitive global issues. Although far weaker and more subject to geopolitical manipulation than is desirable, these main political organs of the UN provide the best guide that currently exists as to what global policy should be if the global and human interest is to be protected, and not merely an array of national interests and their multilateral aggregation to achieve cooperative results.  What this discussion glosses over in this instance without stopping to observe its significance is the degree to which issues of substance prevailed over matters of geopolitical alignment. Not one of America's closest allies (UK, France, Germany, and Japan) heeded the fervent arguments and pleas of Haley and Trump. Beyond this, every important country in the world backed the General Assembly Resolution on December 21, 2017 regardless of geography or political orientation (China, Russia, India, Brazil, Turkey, India, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Iran). This unanimity enhances the quality of the consensus supportive of the resolution repudiating Trump's arrogant decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital as 'null and void.' Such an impression is strengthened by listing the nine governments that voted against the resolution (Guatemala, Honduras, Marshall Islands, Israel, Miscronesia, Nauru, Palau, Togo, and the U.S.). [Read More]
 
Children of Stone
---- A friend of mine sent me an article by a respected Palestinian. He described his first demonstration, many years ago. The way he tells it, he was 15 years old, living in a village under occupation, hating Israeli soldiers. With a group of friends of the same age, he went to the center of his village, where a line of soldiers was waiting for them. Each of the demonstrators picked up a stone – no lack of stones in an Arab village – and threw it at the soldiers. The stones fell far short, causing no harm. But – and here the adult man grew ecstatic – what a wonderful feeling! For the first time in his life the boy felt that he was hitting back! He was no longer a despised, helpless Palestinian! He was upholding the dignity of his people! The old leaders may be subservient! Not he, not his friends! For the first time in his life he was proud, proud to be a Palestinian, proud to be a courageous human being. What a wonderful feeling! For this feeling he was ready to risk his life, again and again, ready to become a Shaheed, a witness, a martyr. There are many thousands like him. [Read More]