Sunday, February 25, 2018

CFOW Newsletter - Guns and War and Race in the USA

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
February 25, 2018
 
Hello All – The numbers are really astonishing. Last year there were 11,000 gun homicides in the United States, and more than 20,000 gun suicides. The Florida massacre was the 18th school shooting this year.  Since the Sandy Hook school shooting of 2012, 438 people have been killed in 239 school shootings.  From the beginning of 2013, there were more than 1,900 "mass shootings" (4 or more victims) leading up to the Las Vegas slaughter last October.  Why is this happening?  Why is the United States so different from other modern countries, which don't have so much gun violence?
 
Right now our nation's focus is on limiting the supply of deadly weapons, such as assault weapons, which have no place in civilian life.  And this is right and long over due. But what about the demand for deadly weapons? Why do so many American men and boys crave ownership of war weapons?  Why do so many men and boys have so many weapons? What is it about American men and boys that make their need to have a gun so much greater than the rest of the world?
 
As an antiwar organization, we are led to the conclusion that one thing that makes American men different in their romance with deadly weapons is that we have so many wars. We have developed this theme in recent newsletters and our vigil leaflets. To stop gun violence, we must be willing to stop war as well.
 
But I think that the link between men and boys wanting guns and the fact that we have a militarized national culture is complex. At a minimum, we need to consider how our foundational national stories of Indian extermination and chattel slavery have affected white male character structure and the culture that it has produced.  As the leading US historian of our colonial South, Edmund S. Morgan, has shown in his book American Slavery, American Freedom, the creation of the "white race" in the United States, and the relatively large degrees of personal and civil freedoms that white men were to obtain, were based on the cross-class alliance of rich and poor organized – first in late 17th century Virginia – to keep slaves and free blacks in their place. From "Bacon's Rebellion" in 1674 to the slave patrols before the Civil War, from the Ku Klux Klan in the period of Reconstruction to the enormous grown of the Klan in northern mid-western cities in the 1920s, from the White Citizen Councils in the South in the 1960s to the vigilantes that target immigrants today in the American Southwest, white solidarity organized around armed control of people of color has been one of the defining characteristics of being "white" in America.
 
As historian Jill Lapore writes in an essay linked just below, the history of gun regulations in the United States is intimately bound up with racial conflict. With strident gun advocacy now based to such a great extent among armed white supremacists, it is not surprising that the far right holds a near monopoly on political violence in the United States. There are many directions that a discussion these issues could go from here, but for now I think the important point is that efforts to control access to gun ownership and the kinds of guns that civilians can own challenges a very deep, institutionalized racism that has shaped the lives of white American men and boys for centuries.
 
News Notes
On March 24th, in response to the Florida school massacre, the student-led March for Our Lives will take place in Washington, DC. The Hastings Recreation Dept. and Project SHARE are organizing buses.  To help cover costs, fund raising is underway.  To contribute to this righteous cause, go to this GoFundMe site.
 
The United National Antiwar Coalition has announced plans for national antiwar actions on the weekend of April 14-15.  The way things are going, there's a good chance imo that we will have a new war, somewhere, by then.  To learn more, go here; and for UNAC's website, go here.
 
The Rev. Billy Graham died last week. Some decades ago, when he was a "spiritual adviser" to presidents and a major media figure, he found Christian justifications for every war that came along. A highlight of his career was his supporting remarks on the murder of four students at Kent State in May 1970. His spiritual descendents are still in power.  Learn some things about his career here.
 
For those keeping score at home, here is a list of the "20 Companies Profiting the Most From War."
 
Airwars is a very useful site/program that keeps track of civilian casualties incurred in the wars in Iraq, Syria, and Libya.  Their report for January 2018 is just out.
 
Things to Do/Coming Attractions
Ongoing – Concerned Families of Westchester holds a rally/vigil each Saturday in Hastings, at the VFW Plaza, from 12 to 1.  Please join us.
 
Ongoing – CFOW stalwart Elisa Zazzera manages Hastings' "Community Supported Agriculture" (CSA).  The CSA partners with an upstate farm to provide fresh vegetables each Wednesday.  Highly recommended. To learn more about this, and/or to sign up for the next growing season, go here.
 
Monday, February 26 - Port Chester Immigration Defense and Make the Road (Westchester Hispanic Coalition) will be hosting a Free Legal Advice and Training for Immigrants and those who serve them. The program begins at 7 p.m. At St. Peter's Episcoopal Church, 19 Smith St. in Portchester.
 
Sunday, March 4th – CFOW's monthly meeting will be at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society, 12 Elm St. in Dobbs, from 7 to 9 p.m.  At these meetings we review our work of the past month and lay plans for the coming weeks. Everyone is welcome at these meetings; please join us!
 
Saturday, March 10th – The Westchester Coalition Against Islamophobia and other organizations will present a forum on "Defending Constitutional Rights: Religious Freedom and Police Accountability" at the Ethical Culture Society of Westchester, 7 Saxon Wood Rd., in White Plains, starting at 2 p.m.  Speakers will include Omar T. Mohammedi, President of the Association of Muslim American Lawyers, and Jon Moscow, writer and community activist with the NY Coalition against Islamophobia and Jewish Voice for Peace – Northern NJ. [NB The snow date is Sunday, March 11th at 2 p.m.]
 
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!
 
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" and the selection of articles about guns and gun violence in America, I especially recommend the videos linked just below (in "Rewards!"); a video of Kathy Kelly speaking in Stony Point; some insights on how Mueller's recent indictment of some Russians poses a threat to dissenters in the USA; and an interesting article on how the US "Red Scare" shaped the distinctions in law and practice between who is a "migrant' and who is a "refugee."
 
Rewards!
The week's rewards for stalwart readers come from our history drawer.  Documentary film maker Raoul Peck ("I Am Not Your Negro") has made an imo very interesting film called "The Young Karl Marx."  You can see the film online here.  Peck was interviewed by Democracy Now!'s Amy Goodman on Friday [Link]. And you can read a useful assessment of "The Young Karl Marx" by favorite film critic Louis Proyect here.  Also as part of your reward package, the activism of US students in response to the Florida school massacre reminds us of another time when young people came to the rescue of a stymied movement – i.e. the civil rights movement in Birmingham, Alabama in 1963.  Check out this documentary footage from those heroic days; and for an excellent background story, see this short film.
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
GUNS, RACE, AND GENDER
Battleground America: One nation, Under the Gun.
By Jill Lepore, The New Yorker [April 23, 2018]
---- The U.S. Constitution, which was signed in Philadelphia in September of 1787, granted Congress the power "to provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions," the power "to provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress," and the power "to raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years." Ratification was an uphill battle. The Bill of Rights, drafted by James Madison in 1789, offered assurance to Anti-Federalists, who feared that there would be no limit to the powers of the newly constituted federal government. Since one of their worries was the prospect of a standing army—a permanent army—Madison drafted an amendment guaranteeing the people the right to form a militia. … One in three Americans knows someone who has been shot. As long as a candid discussion of guns is impossible, unfettered debate about the causes of violence is unimaginable. Gun-control advocates say the answer to gun violence is fewer guns. Gun-rights advocates say that the answer is more guns: things would have gone better, they suggest, if the faculty at Columbine, Virginia Tech, and Chardon High School had been armed. That is the logic of the concealed-carry movement; that is how armed citizens have come to be patrolling the streets. That is not how civilians live. When carrying a concealed weapon for self-defense is understood not as a failure of civil society, to be mourned, but as an act of citizenship, to be vaunted, there is little civilian life left. [Read More]
 
Guns, Boys, And School Shootings
By Sandy Carter, ZNet [February 21, 2018]
---- Coronado Elementary School in Sierra Vista, Arizona, Italy High School in Italy, Texas, NET Charter High School in New Orleans, Louisiana, Marshall County High School in Benton, Kentucky, Salvador Castro Middle School in Los Angeles, California, Oxon Hill High School in Prince George's County, Maryland, and finally on Valentine's Day, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida—eight school shootings, 19 people dead, 37 injured in the first 45 days of 2018. And after the avalanche of tragic images, pleas for prayer and endless media commentaries, what have we learned about the seeds of this horrific violence? Health professionals and politicians offer no easy answers, only the same old litany of problems: easy access to guns, violent pop media, online hate speech, permissive and absentee parenting, ignorance of warning signs, a failing mental health system. But something is missing here. The very glaring reality of the recent school shootings is that they were committed by boys—to be specific, white boys. Genes and biology, of course, do not make boys perpetrate heinous acts of violence. So what is it about American culture that pushes and pressures boys toward a breaking point where mass slaughter becomes acceptable. … Yes we need gun control. But we need it mostly to protect us from the weaponized  aggression of boys and men. However, even now, with the images of screaming kids and horrified parents fresh in our eyes, few seem focused on the normalcy of male violence. So the lines between victims and victimizers continue to blur. And you can bet, there is more carnage to come. [Read More]
 
150,000 American Students Have Experienced a School Shooting
By
---- It's remarkable how easy it is to relate to the experience of a school shooting. Schools are such familiar, self-similar environments—the awkward chair-desks, the laminated maps—that the one on the news could easily stand in for yours. For parents, each news break threatens the fragile social trust required to leave your kid with strangers all day, even when the violence is thousands of miles away. You can picture it being your child with his hands up, marching through the parking lot. In other words, it is easy to make each tragedy our own. For a staggering number of Americans under 40, however, it doesn't require any leap of the imagination at all. According to an analysis conducted by the Washington Post earlier this month, more than 150,000 Americans have experienced a shooting on campus since Columbine in 1999. After Wednesday's rampage at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, you can add 3,000 more kids to that list. Together, America's school shooting survivors would make up a city the size of Savannah, Georgia or Syracuse, New York. A whole city knowing the trauma of what we still, wrongly, insist on calling the unthinkable. … For years, we thought it would be the escalating horror that might finally prompt bans on semi-automatic weapons or restrictions on selling guns to people with mental illnesses. Maybe it's the opposite. After 150,000 survivors, a school shooting is normal now, and that normalcy makes it fodder for immediate, serious, political discussion. The kids have figured that out.  [Read More]
 
Terror Begins at Home
By Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker [June 16, 2016]
---- There is a connection between domestic violence and mass shootings, and in acknowledging that connection there is some hope for helping to prevent both. A recent analysis of mass shootings, conducted by the research-and-advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety, found the link to domestic violence "noteworthy." Using the F.B.I.'s definition of mass shootings as incidents in which four or more people are murdered by guns, the Everytown researchers were able to document a hundred and thirty-three such shootings between January, 2009, and July, 2015. They found that "in at least 76 of the cases (57%), the shooter killed a current or former spouse or intimate partner or other family member, and in at least 21 incidents the shooter had a prior domestic violence charge." The lethal intersection of firearms and intimate-partner violence is actually one of the few gun-safety matters that Congress has acted on. In 1996, it adopted the Lautenberg Amendment, which bans people who have been convicted of domestic-violence misdemeanors, or who are subject to restraining orders, from owning firearms. This was sound and compassionate legislation. Guns are the most common method, by far, for killing intimate partners. Not surprisingly, the presence of a firearm in the home makes it much more likely that a woman in an abusive relationship will end up dead. [Read More]
 
Out of Bloodshed, Hope for Gun Control
By Gary Younge, The Nation [February 21, 2018]
---- This fight comes at a moment of heightened consciousness about the nation's political trajectory and with a new critical mass determined to correct it. As a result of Donald Trump's victory, many liberals and progressives have been doing things over the past year—campaigning, marching, phone banking, running for office—that they hadn't done for a long time, if at all.  In the course of this activism, many are now realizing that the issues that energize us most—whether it's immigration, sexual harassment, racism, or health care—are not isolated. In the past, campaigning around a tragedy like Parkland would have concentrated solely on gun control. That doesn't go far enough. Avoiding the more enduring American pathologies that allow the gun culture to flourish—the obsessions with conquest, domination, force, power, masculinity, and rugged individualism—means failing to explain why a racist, anti-Semitic teenage boy with a grudge and an easily available weapon of war can go to school and kill others at will, and what might be done to prevent it. It means failing to recognize that America's gun culture is deeply embedded in its general culture. [Read More]
 
Also useful/insightful on the gun violence issue – From Democracy Now! (Video) "The Time to Act Is Now": Florida School Shooting Survivors Confront Trump, Rubio on Gun Control" [February 22, 2018] [Link]; Peter Dreier, "Who Was Marjory Stoneman Douglas?" The American Prospect [February 20, 2018] [Link]; Katha Pollitt, "Has the NRA Finally Met Its Match?" The Nation [February 21, 2018] [Link]; and Benjamin L. McKean, "'Blood Money' and Mass Membership," Jacobin Magazine [February 2018] [Link].
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Iona Craig Won a Polk Award for Her Investigation of a SEAL Team Raid That Killed Women and Children in Yemen. Here's How She Did It.
By Peter Maass, The Intercept [February 24 2018]
---- A little more than a year ago, on January 29, 2017, Iona Craig was at the tail end of a month-long reporting trip to Yemen. On that day, special operators from the U.S. Navy's SEAL Team 6 launched a surprise raid in a remote part of Yemen, apparently trying to capture or kill an Al Qaeda leader. This was the first covert assault of the Trump era, and the White House, which was not challenged in the U.S. media, hailed it as "highly successful." Except it wasn't. Craig, who was based in Yemen from 2010-2015 and had continued to make reporting trips to the country since a civil war broke out, quickly learned from local media that the raid killed civilians. As she began planning for an arduous and risky journey to the site of the assault, local sheikhs she knew from her previous work in the country told her that the U.S. was getting the story wrong. A large number of women and children had been killed, and the targeted village did not appear to have had a standing Al Qaeda presence. But these accounts were just words that had yet to be confirmed. Craig had to go there to find out first-hand. [Read More]
 
Ed Herman's Media Criticism
By Justin Podur, Alternet [February 24, 2018]
---- The story goes that Einstein's theory of relativity began with a simple question: What if a person could sit on a beam of light? A single inquiry led to an entire field of study, and perhaps the world's most famous scientific breakthrough. The late Ed Herman's questions were less playful. They were about war and death, lies and power politics, but they too created entire areas of study. If properly considered, they can even guide us through the perilous age in which we're living. Herman is best known for co-authoring Noam Chomsky's iconic Manufacturing Consent, which explores how U.S. corporate media operates as a system of disinformation. Written during the Cold War, the book challenged readers who understood propaganda to be a tool of the Soviet Union. How could a diverse industry without official censors to monitor what it published or aired, that was neither owned nor controlled by the state, be used for social control? Quite easily, as it turns out. … In their propaganda model, the pair identified five distinct filters: Media ownership, which is concentrated in the hands of a few spectacularly wealthy corporations; ideology, specifically anti-communism, which "helps mobilize the populace against… anybody advocating policies that threaten property interests or support accommodation with Communist states and radicalism"; advertising, or the selling of audiences to advertisers, which can lead to any number of distortions and misconceptions; official sourcing, which often leads to self-censorship as media outlets become dependent on their access to members of the government; and finally organized flak, which allows lobbies to lean on journalists and outlets who deviate from the status quo. [Read More]
 
What We Don't Talk About When We Talk About #MeToo
By JoAnn Wypijewski, The Nation [February 22, 2018]
---- Amid the chorus of stories that define the #MeToo phenomenon, there remain other, unattended stories. These others do not displace the chorus. They do not say, "You are wrong, shut up." They do not exist in the world of "Keep quiet" or "Be good." They do not deny the reality of men's age-old power over women, or conformity as a silencing force. They say power is cunning, power is a hydra; it has more heads than any story or group of stories can describe. They say history does, too. They invite us to inspect the hydra. What follows is my invitation. … Sex panic reverses the order that governs law, where, formally at least, innocence is presumed. In panic, the stories are all true, and the accused are guilty by default. Law having been declared a flawed tool for achieving justice—as, indeed, it is—"naming and shaming" takes its place. Garbed as justice, accusations become moral lessons of Good's triumph over Evil; they thus become increasingly difficult to question. Their proliferation becomes proof of legitimacy. Victims are encouraged to "Speak your truth." Everyone else is commanded, "Believe." [Read More]
 
The Light at the End of the Corner: A Trip Down Memory Lane, Pentagon-Style
By Tom Engelhardt, Tom Dispatch [February 2018]
---- Here was the problem: every time American troops actually turned that corner, what they found there were insurgents armed with rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) and other weaponry, sometimes even American-produced arms.  In addition, the streets around that corner turned out to be pitted with half-buried improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, those same insurgents could build from instructions on the Internet and that could destroy the most well-armored Humvee for the price of a pizza.  (Early on, in fact, some of the places down which American troops had to turn were already being given grimly sardonic names like "RPG Alley.") There were, as it happened, so many corners to turn and yet, from 2003 on, seemingly nowhere to go. I don't doubt that those of you of a certain age preparing for our little walk are already thinking about a somewhat more perilous image from another war: the infamous "light at the end of the tunnel" that will forever be connected with Vietnam.  That phrase was repeatedly used by Americans to describe the glide path to victory in that conflict and would long be associated with the commander of U.S. forces, General William Westmoreland. He used it to remarkable effect in 1967, a mere 10 weeks before the enemy launched its devastating Tet Offensive. However, the general was anything but alone in his choice of imagery.  That "tunnel" was also occupied by a range of top U.S. officials, from President Lyndon Johnson to National Security Advisor Walt Rostow.  And it wasn't the newest of images either.  After all, General Henri Navarre had used it a decade and a half earlier in the French version of that losing war. [Read More]
 
WAR & PEACE
(Video) Time is Not on Yemen's Side
A talk by Kathy Kelly, Voices for Creative Nonviolence [February 20, 2018] [13 minutes]
---- I think the urgency of our gathering tonight is indicated by the words that Muhammad bin Salman, the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, spoke on a nationalized, televised speech in Saudi Arabia on May 2nd of 2017 when he said a prolonged war is "in our interest" – regarding the war in Yemen. He said, "Time is on our side" regarding the war in Yemen. And I see that as particularly urgent because it's likely that the Crown Prince, Muhammad bin Salman, who is by all accounts the orchestrator of the Saudi-led coalition's involvement in prolonging the war in Yemen, is going to come to the United States – in Britain they managed to push back his arrival there: there was such a strong movement, led by young Quakers, actually, in the UK – and he probably will come to the United States and most certainly, if that trip happens, to New York, and I think that gives us an opportunity to say to him, and to all of the people focused on him, that time is not on the side of the civilians who suffer desperately; and their situation will be described much further throughout the course of our evening together. [See the Video]
 
Slaughter in Syria – The Last Round?
This Could be the Last Siege of the Syrian War
By Patrick Cockburn, The Independent [UK] [February 20, 2018]
---- The siege of Eastern Ghouta could be the last of the big sieges that have characterised the war in Syria for the last five or six years and has made it such a destructive conflict. Early on in the war, government forces adapted the strategy of abandoning opposition strongholds, surrounding them and concentrating pro-government forces in defence of loyalist areas, essential roads and important urban areas. The rebel enclaves were sealed off with checkpoints and the people inside were subjected to regular bombardment. … The Syrian and – to a lesser extent – the Iraqi wars have been wars of sieges in which limited numbers of ground troops are deployed, but are supported by massive air power. This was true of the Syrian government and Russians against Isis, al-Qaeda linked groups and jihadi rebels. But it was also true of the Kurdish YPG (People's Protection Units) backed by US airpower in the four month siege of Raqqa and the Iraqi Army, also backed by the US air force and its own artillery, in the nine-month siege of Mosul. The latter was probably the bloodiest of all these sieges because of the size of the city, the ferocity of the fighting and the refusal of Isis to allow the civilian population to escape from West Mosul and from the close-packed Old City. [Read More]
 
Stop the Slaughter in Syria's Eastern Ghouta
By Loubna Mrie, The Nation [February 23, 2018]
---- Even if you do not follow Syria closely, you might have come across an article or a picture about a place called Ghouta. So what exactly is happening? According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, at least 403 civilians, including 150 children, were killed in Ghouta between February 18 and 23. More than 2,100 were injured. Twenty-two hospitals and makeshift clinics have been targeted, according to the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS), and according to Médecins Sans Frontières, 13 of the hospitals they have supported in Ghouta have been knocked out of service. Only three medical facilities are left. … The end of the Syrian civil war is apparently not on anyone's agenda. The United Nations children's fund, UNICEF, saying, "We no longer have the words to describe children's suffering and our outrage," issued a blank statement—yet another sign of the international community's failure. What is happening today in Ghouta is not new, but the bombing hasn't been this intense in years. This 100-square-kilometer suburb shelters more than 400,000 civilians, most of whom fled there from other parts of Damascus. Only some 100 doctors remain in Ghouta, and since the government siege began in 2013, more than 2,000 people have died. … Calling for the protection of civilians on both sides of the conflict is crucial. Whether or not you support the Syrian opposition, whether or not you support Bashar al-Assad, one simple thing that should never be debated is the sanctity of civilian life, and the fact that collective punishment is always wrong. We should show solidarity with all civilians, on all sides of the conflict. The people who were unable to flee the country are paying the highest price in this war. [Read More]
 
GLOBAL WARMING/CLIMATE CHAOS
Warnings Mount That Trump's Infrastructure Plan Will Make It Harder to Fight Pipelines
By
---- As green groups continue to denounce the Trump administration's recently unveiled infrastructure plan as a "scam" that's designed to keep the nation trapped in its "dirty and destructive past," analysts are also warning the proposal will "make it harder for the next big anti-pipeline movement" to launch successful legal challenges to new fossil fuel projects. The plan aims to not only fast-track the construction of more pipelines across the U.S., but also to limit "the legal options available to lawyers at environmental groups opposed to new fossil fuel infrastructure" in part by changing "the standard under which a pipeline project could be temporarily halted by a judge," as Dino Gradoni explains in a Washington Post piece published Friday. Trump also wants Congress to rewrite long-standing environmental laws that allow for lawsuits challenging permits. Gradoni notes that although the administration's desire for that specific revision by lawmakers may be a bit of a "pipe dream," enacting barriers to launching legal challenges against pipeline projects "could be a significant blow to the slew of protesters who spent years agitating against the Keystone XL pipeline and more recently the Dakota Access one." [Read More]
 
THE STATE OF THE UNION
Why Mueller's Indictments Are Hugely Important
---- There are at least three key reasons why Robert Mueller's mid-February indictments of 13 Russians and three private Russian companies are hugely important. In fact, Mueller has significantly advanced Cold War 2.0 onto highly dangerous ground., even though the published indictments provided no connection of the alleged "troll farm" to Vladimir Putin or the Kremlin. First, the indictments "target domestic dissent" by "smearing" Black Lives Matters, Bernie Sanders, and Green Party leader Jill Stein (all mentioned in the indictments) "as unwitting collaborators with the Russians". … Second, as Rob Urie has noted, Mueller's indictments suggest that the Russians "are sowing discord, therefore discord is both suspect in itself and evidence of being a foreign agent."  Mueller is the former director of the FBI from 2001 to 2013, and as Urie writes, "It is the FBI's legacy of conflating dissent with being an agent of a foreign power that Mr. Mueller's indictment most insidiously perpetuates." Third, the charges of Russian "meddling" were soon neatly translated in the MSM into something more sinister. … This change of wording from "meddling" to "attack" and "cyber-attack" is not a mere semantic difference. It is chillingly critical, given the February release of the Pentagon's 2018 Nuclear Posture Review – which would allow a "first-strike" use of nuclear weapons in retaliation for a cyber-attack.  [Read More]  For more skepticism about Mueller's indictments, read Aaron Maté, "Hyping the Mueller Indictment," The Nation [February 21, 2018] [Link].
 
Capitalism as Obstacle to Equality and Democracy: the US Story
---- The Cold War displaced the legacies of the New Deal. Time and Trump are now displacing Cold War legacies. Where capitalism was questioned and challenged in the 1930s and into the 1940s, doing that became taboo after 1948. Yet in the wake of the 2008 crash, critical thought about capitalism resumed. In particular one argument is gaining traction: capitalism is not the means to realize economic equality and democracy, it is rather the great obstacle to their realization. … The conclusion to be drawn from the US story is not that efforts to reverse deepening inequality are foredoomed to failure. It is to face the fact that mere reforms such as tax law changes are inadequate to the task. To make reforms stick – to overcome temporariness across so many histories – requires going further to basic system change. Because capitalism tends toward deepening inequality and can defeat reversals by keeping them temporary, it is capitalism that must be overcome to solve its inherent inequality problem. [Read More]
 
Also interesting/useful about the Trump economy – Peter Bohmer, "Trump's Tax Scam," ZNet [February 25, 2018] [Link]; and Kate Aronoff, "Citigroup Drove Puerto Rico Into Debt. Now It Will Profit From Privatization on the Island," The Intercept [February 21 2018] [Link].
 
OUR HISTORY
How the Red Scare Shaped the Artificial Distinction Between Migrants and Refugees
BY Sarah Lazare, In These Times [February 5, 2018]
---- Trump is transparent about his racist and geopolitical motives for dividing people who migrate across borders into categories of "good" and "bad"—but his aims are far from original. The distinction between political refugees who are "deserving" of protection, and economic migrants who are not, has been formally enshrined in U.S. law and international norms since the beginning of the Cold War. This binary is neither abstract nor trivial: Denial of refugee status can spell out precarious undocumented existence, indefinite detention, coerced repatriation and even death. While sometimes draped in Trump-style inflammatory rhetoric, these categories are often vaunted by policymakers and technocrats as natural and neutral—far above the political fray. However, the legal distinction between refugees and migrants has been ideological from the outset, formally emerging in the early 1950s as an anti-communist tool wielded by U.S. and Western European governments. Under U.S. law, the concept of a "refugee" first emerged to describe individuals seeking sanctuary in non-communist countries. On the international level, the United States played a key role in developing norms that emphasize the liberties of political dissidents, while denying the right to live free from poverty. By extending open arms to people escaping the "red menace," the burgeoning U.S. empire sought to position itself as the leader of the free world. In the process, the U.S. government treated the dispossessed and displaced as pawns to undercut geopolitical foes and advance reactionary policies while fanning the flames of further displacement. [Read More]
 
 
 
 

Sunday, February 18, 2018

CFOW Newsletter - The Florida school shootings and what they mean

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
February 18, 2018
 
Hello All – The murders of students and teachers has elicited a nationwide outpouring of rage.  Rage against the political system that allows gun violence to go unchecked.  Rage against the hypocrisy of politicians who send "thoughts and prayers" and have their pockets stuffed with money from the National Rifle Association. Rage against the Machine.
 
There were rallies and protests everywhere this weekend.  On Saturday in Tarrytown, 100 people rallied for stricter gun laws. Today, Sunday, more than 350 rallied outside the GOP county headquarters in White Plains to demand action to end gun violence. In Hastings on Saturday, CFOW had a rally that demanded an end to gun violence at home and abroad.
 
It is difficult to explain in just a few words the causal links and interconnections between wall-to-wall gun violence in the United States and the fact that our country has been at war more or less continuously since World War II, and without a let-up since 9/11. But we think the links are strong and that to make progress against gun violence – in our towns, in our schools – we need to turn our country away from war and to stigmatize the thinking that turns to war whenever international disagreements arise.
 
A good introduction to this line of thinking is provided by a leaflet prepared by CFOW stalwart Nick Mottern for our rally in Hastings.  It is reprinted here in the hope that it stimulates thought and discussion.
 
Was the Parkland Killer Inspired by Our Sociopathic Wars?
 
Students and parents at Florida's Parkland school are putting a stop to the usual post-massacre commentary.  They are saying, thanks for the "thoughts and prayers," but this time we will fight the NRA and hold pro-gun politicians accountable.
 
It is imperative, however, that we all look more broadly at the highly-charged, militaristically propagandized emotional ocean in which we in the U.S. are all swimming.  In America today, the message coming out loud and clear from the President, the Congress, super hero movies and so much more: "If you have a problem with humans kill them."
 
Was Nickolas Cruz, the Parkland Killer, in any way influenced by Donald Trump's threat to incinerate North Koreans, or Barack Obama's commitment to, and joking about, assassinating people with drones.
 
Just who are the socio-paths here?
 
Are we willing to pay the price, over and over, for the government/business fear-mongering and fomenting of societal sociopathy that this combine views as essential to carrying forward with good old-fashioned colonial wars to grab resources from people of color.  As in Afghanistan, Yemen, Iraq, Somalia, Syria, Libya, Niger, and the list goes on.
 
There are countries, such as Canada or Switzerland, where gun ownership is even more prevalent than in the United States.  But gun violence is very low and mass murders almost non-existent.  Why?
 
Is there a connection between the amount of gun violence in the United States and our many wars?  
Is there a connection between the violence in our country and our history of slavery and white supremacy?  Is this experience the source of our Islamophobia?
 
Since 9/11, we have had constant warfare.  Today we have more and more wars, overt and covert. The students in Florida have never known a time when we weren't at war, when we didn't demonize a people who were strangers to us, or who were darker than the whitest white, or who had the misfortune to live near oil or other valuable things.
 
Can we change attitudes towards guns and violence while our media and politicians urge us to support war and violence? Can we endure a regime of heavily militarized police forces and a "surveillance state" without accepting that disagreements should be settled by force?  With troops and bases in more than 100 countries, do we have the strength to ask, "In whose interest have we become an Empire?" There are many questions we have to think about. -  Nick Mottern
 
News Notes
excellent summary of their "thoughts and prayers" responses to last October's mass shooting in Las Vegas shouldn't be missed.
Today, February 18th, is the international day of support for the Tamimi family of Palestine's West Bank. In this inspiring video, Abby Martin ("Empire Files") interviews the family's most notorious member, Ahed, now on trial for felonious slapping.
 
With congressional action on DACA apparently at a dead end, this useful survey of the several legal cases challenging Trump's right to abolish the DACA program asks, "Will the Supreme Court Become Trump's Enabler?"
 
As we may (or may not) be teetering on the edge of a financial crash, I found this selection of articles from The London Review of Books about previous crashes very interesting.  NB highly recommended is the article by old friend Robert Brenner on the 2000 crash.
 
In writing about the life-issues of one woman, Katha Pollit (The Nation) deftly illustrates how "Trump Is Making Life Even Harder for Working-Class Women."
 
Coming Attractions/Things to Do
Ongoing – Concerned Families of Westchester holds a rally/vigil each Saturday in Hastings, at the VFW Plaza, from 12 to 1.  Please join us.
 
Monday, February 26 - Port Chester Immigration Defense and Make the Road (Westchester Hispanic Coalition) will be hosting a Free Legal Advice and Training for Immigrants and those who serve them. The program begins at 7 p.m. At St. Peter's Episcoopal Church, 19 Smith St. in Portchester.
 
Sunday, March 4th – CFOW's monthly meeting will be at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society, 12 Elm St. in Dobbs, from 7 to 9 p.m.  At these meetings we review our work of the past month and lay plans for the coming weeks. Everyone is welcome at these meetings; please join us!
 
Saturday, March 10th – Jewish Voice for Peace and other organizations will present a forum on "Defending Constitutional Rights: Religious Freedom and Police Accountability" at the Ethical Culture Society of Westchester, 7 Saxon Wood Rd., in White Plains, starting at 2 p.m.  Speakers will include Omar T. Mohammedi, President of the Association of Muslim American Lawyers, and Jon Moscow, writer and community activist with the NY Coalition against Islamophobia and Jewish Voice for Peace – Northern NJ.
 
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!
 
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 section on the Florida school shooting and the excellent "Featured Essays," I especially recommend the essays on the US role in Niger and more generally the invasion of Africa; the photo essay about what happened at Standing Rock, one year ago; and Thomas Edsall's interesting essay on what's happened to the Democratic Party.
 
Rewards!
One of the "rewards" for this week's newsletter is prompted by the powerful energy coming from the students and parents of the Parkland, Florida high school. Listen to the subtle Crosby and Nash song "Teach Your Children" and see what you think. And for something completely different, here is a useful map. that you might want to consult in times of confusion. (h/t JG).
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
THE FLORIDA HIGHSCHOOL SHOOTING
After Sandy Hook, More Than 400 People Have Been Shot in Over 200 School Shootings
---- When a gunman killed 20 first graders and six adults with an assault rifle at Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012, it rattled Newtown, Conn., and reverberated across the world. Since then, there have been at least 239 school shootings nationwide. In those episodes, 438 people were shot, 138 of whom were killed. The data used here is from the Gun Violence Archive, a nonprofit that began tracking school shootings in 2014, about a year after Sandy Hook. [Read More] For more numbers, read Lydia O'Connor, "We're Averaging One School Shooting Incident Every 63 Hours In 2018," Huffington Post [February 14, 2018] [Link].
 
How Trump Is Undermining the Fight Against Mass Shootings
By George Zornick, The Nation [February 15, 2018]
---- Forget banning assault weapons. Forget preventing people from obtaining "countless magazines," or banning the manufacture of high-capacity clips, or expanding background checks for both guns and ammunition. Forget all of these commonsense measures that could prevent mass shootings like the one Wednesday in Parkland, Florida, that killed 17 people. President Donald Trump, who got $30 million worth of help from the National Rifle Association on his way to the White House and is, in so many ways, the NRA's dream president, will not do any of these things—nor will his Republican allies in Congress. … As Trump swings a sledgehammer to the hated "administrative state," with Ryan's support and encouragement, he is destroying or attempting to destroy some of the very modest programs the government does undertake to prevent mass shootings and violence in schools—even when it comes to enforcing current laws or improving mental-health services. [Read More]
 
In Wake of Florida Massacre, Gun Control Advocates Look to Connecticut
---- In the aftermath of the rampage at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, where 20 children and six educators were killed in 2012, state lawmakers in Connecticut set out to draft some of the toughest gun measures in the country. They largely succeeded — significantly expanding an existing ban on the sale of assault weapons, prohibiting the sale of magazines with more than 10 rounds and requiring the registration of existing assault rifles and higher-capacity magazines. The state also required background checks for all firearms sales and created a registry of weapons offenders, including those accused of illegally possessing a firearm. Now, in the wake of another wrenching shooting rampage — this one at a high school in Parkland, Fla., that killed 17 — and in the absence of any federal action, gun-control advocates, Democratic politicians and others are pointing to the success of states like Connecticut in addressing the spiraling toll of gun violence. Analyses by the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence show that, with few exceptions, states with the strictest gun-control measures, including California, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York, have the lowest rates of gun deaths, while those with the most lax laws like Alabama, Alaska and Louisiana, have the highest. [Read More]
 
The Students' Voices
(Video) Florida student Emma Gonzalez to lawmakers and gun advocates: 'We call BS'
---- Emma Gonzalez, a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, addressed a gun control rally on Saturday in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, days after a gunman entered her school in nearby Parkland and killed 17 people. … "We haven't already had a moment of silence in the House of Representatives, so I would like to have another one. Thank you. Every single person up here today, all these people should be home grieving. But instead we are up here standing together because if all our government and President can do is send thoughts and prayers, then it's time for victims to be the change that we need to see." [See the Video]
 
(Video) Parkland student: My generation won't stand for this
By Cameron Kasky, CNN [February 15, 2108]
---- We can't ignore the issues of gun control that this tragedy raises. And so, I'm asking -- no, demanding -- we take action now. Why? Because at the end of the day, the students at my school felt one shared experience -- our politicians abandoned us by failing to keep guns out of schools. But this time, my classmates and I are going to hold them to account. This time we are going to pressure them to take action. This time we are going to force them to spend more energy protecting human lives than unborn fetuses. [See the Video]
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
The Wars No One Notices: Talking to a Demobilized Country
By Stephanie Savell, Tom Dispatch [February 15, 2018]
---- At heart, whatever our small successes, we continue to face a grim reality of this twenty-first-century moment, one that long preceded the presidency of Donald Trump: the lack of connection between the American public (myself once included) and the wars being fought in our names in distant lands. Not surprisingly, this goes hand-in-hand with another reality: you have to be a total war jockey, someone who follows what's happening more or less full time, to have a shot at knowing what's really going on in the conflicts that now extend from Pakistan into the heart of Africa. … For any of this to change, President Trump's enthusiastic support for expanding the military and its budget, and the fear-based inertia that leads lawmakers to unquestioningly support any American military campaign, would have to be met by a strong counterforce. Through the engagement of significant numbers of concerned citizens, the status quo of war making might be reversed, and the rising tide of the U.S. counterterror wars stemmed. [Read More]
 
Ahed Tamimi and women in the Palestinian resistance
By Nada Elia, Middle East Eye [February 18, 2018]
---- As activists around the world take part in the Global Day of Action to Free the Tamimis on February 18, it is only appropriate to highlight the courage that made 17-year-old Ahed Tamimi the face of Palestinian resistance. It is also important to celebrate Palestinian women generally, and the long history of their many contributions to the struggle. We must do our part to denounce how Israel treats an indigenous woman defending her land and natural resources from an illegal occupying army. Ahed Tamimi is an admirable young woman who makes Palestinians and our allies proud, not because she slapped a soldier, but because, for years, she has participated in, and led, protests against the theft of her land. She was an icon before "the slap" that resonated around the world. …While Ahed herself may be exceptional, her struggle is nevertheless typical of that of millions of Palestinians. Nor is there anything unusual about her pre-dawn arrest: Israel arrests an average of two Palestinian children per night. As such, Ahed is representative of a multitude of Palestinian women and children whose stories are insufficiently reported. [Read More]
 
A Border Patrol Memoir Gets Caught Up in the Deportation Fight
By Ryan Devereaux, The Intercept [February 18 2018]
---- … Over the next four years, as he patrolled the vast expanses of the American southwest, where U.S. enforcement strategies have driven migrants into some of the country's deadliest terrain, culminating in thousands of deaths, Cantú was proven wrong. While he was granted the ground-level view of immigration enforcement that he had been looking for, it came at a cost. There was no way to be half-in, he learned. When you become a cog in "the thing that crushes" — a name Cantú later gave to the U.S. immigration enforcement apparatus — your good intentions have a way of evaporating and you become implicated whether you like it or not. … Like the war on terror, the interlocking conflicts along the border are at times regarded as abstractions among those who are removed from its realities. But unlike the wars abroad, the disaster at home has yielded few firsthand, literary accounts from officers and agents tasked with fighting that fight (though perhaps that will change as the face of U.S. immigration enforcement evolves)."The Line Becomes a River" provides a rare window into that world, but Cantú also attempts to go deeper, reflecting on the border itself and the clichéd narratives that surround the region. Woven throughout his personal story is a deep body of research and critical analysis that seeks to explain how the status quo came to be. And while reasonable minds can disagree on whether he's succeeded, Cantú, in both his book and public comments, has clearly attempted to address the underlining conditions that made his experience what it was, along the way demonstrating a willingness to publicly challenge the mission of his former employer. [Read More]
 
WAR & PEACE
US wasting billions on nuclear bombs that serve no purpose and are security liability
By Julian Borger, The Guardian [UK] [February 15, 2018]
---- The US is to spend billions of dollars upgrading 150 nuclear bombs positioned in Europe, although the weapons may be useless as a deterrent and a potentially catastrophic security liability, according to a new report by arms experts. … A third of the B61 bombs in Europe under joint US and Nato control are thought to be kept at Incirlik base in Turkey, 70 miles from the Syrian border, which has been the subject of serious concerns. The threat to the base posed by Islamic State militants was considered serious enough in March 2016 to evacuate the families of military officers. During a coup attempt four months later, Turkish authorities locked down the base and cut its electricity. The Turkish commanding officer at Incirlik was arrested for his alleged role in the plot. … There have been reports that the bombs have been quietly moved out because of safety concerns, but that has not been confirmed. The remaining B61 bombs are stored at five other locations in four countries: Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany, according to the Federation of American Scientists, which tracks the weapons. The NTI report said it "should be assumed that they are targets for terrorism and theft". The bombs are the remnants of a much larger cold war nuclear arsenal in Europe, and critics have said they serve no military purpose, as the nuclear deterrent against Russia relies largely on the overwhelming US strategic missile arsenal. [Read More]
 
The War in Syria
The US Is Permanently Occupying Northern Syria, and That's Trouble
By Reese Erlich, Antiwar.com [February 15, 2018]
---- With the Islamic State on the ropes, the Trump Administration has announced that some 2,000 U.S. troops will stay permanently in the Kurdish region of northern Syria. Ostensibly, the troops will fight Islamic State remnants and combat Iranian influence. In reality, the United States seeks to remove President Bashar al Assad, or failing that, dismember Syria into zones controlled by outside powers. … On February 7, US jets and artillery attacked pro-Assad forces in Khusham, an oil-rich area in north eastern Syria outside of the Kurdish region. The U.S.-allied Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) had captured the area from the Islamic State and Assad-allied troops were trying to take it. Needless to say, the fighting had nothing to do with Yazidis or remnants of the Islamic State. Then on February 9, Israel claimed an Iranian drone entered its airspace, a charge denied by Iran. On the same day Assad's artillery shot down an Israeli jet fighter, the first such loss since 1982. In retaliation Israel bombed a dozen sites in Syria. The United States is allied with Israel against Assad, Russia, and Iran. Such clashes are just the latest indication of the expanded role played by outside powers. … How did the United States get tangled up in another Mideast quagmire? [Read More]
 
For more on this slow-motion crisis, read John Glaser, "America's Creeping Regime Change in Syria," The American Conservative [[Link]; and Dozens of Russians Are Believed Killed in U.S.-Backed Syria Attack," [Link].
 
The War in Afghanistan
More Afghan Civilians Being Deliberately Targeted, U.N. Says
---- An annual United Nations report released on Thursday offered a stark assessment of the 16-year Afghan war, showing a slight decline in civilian casualties from an all-time high but a rise in complex bombing attacks that have taken a heavy toll in the capital. The report said at least 10,453 Afghan civilians had been wounded or killed in 2017. At a time when the American and Afghan governments are releasing fewer statistics — the Afghan Army stopped publishing military casualty numbers in November, for example — the United Nations report on civilian casualties is one of the few reliable indicators of how the war is proceeding. … Airstrikes — which are carried out only by the United States-led international forces, in an operation now called Resolute Support, and the Afghan Air Force, not by the Taliban and their allies — killed 295 civilian bystanders and wounded 336 more, the report said. That was the highest toll since the United Nations started counting in 2009, and possibly for the entire war. [Link].
 
The US Invasion of Africa
Drones in the Sahara
By Joe Penney, The Intercept [February 18 2018]
----- U.S. Special Operations forces have been in Niger since at least 2013 and are stationed around the country on forward operating bases with elite Nigerien soldiers. What happened in Tongo Tongo is just a taste of the potential friction and instability to come, because the pièce de resistance of American military engagement in Niger is a $110 million drone base the U.S. is building about 450 miles northeast of Niamey in Agadez, a city that for centuries has served as a trade hub on the southern edge of the Sahara Desert, not far from Mali, Algeria, Libya and Chad. In January, I hopped aboard an aging plane that followed a roundabout route to one of America's largest-ever military investments in Africa, its latest battleground in an opaque, expensive, and counterintuitive war on the continent. … The irony is that while the American presence is supposed to help keep the country stable, the U.S. has participated with the Nigerien government in a constitution-bypassing maneuver that undermines the country's already-fragile democratic process. … I got the feeling that Agadez was just one or two mistakes away from a radical change in which the American military becomes the focal point of hostility. Armed drones are a major issue anywhere the U.S. uses them, but in Niger, the American base is in a major city not far from potential drone targets. Judging from the secrecy and lack of trust thus far, it's not hard to envision a future in which an errant drone strike causes the population of Agadez to turn against the base. [Read More] Also very useful is this report from The New York Times: "'An Endless War': Why 4 U.S. Soldiers Died in a Remote African Desert" [February 17, 2018] [Link]
 
GLOBAL WARMING/CLIMATE BREAKDOWN
Photo Essay: Looking Back at Standing Rock One Year Later
By Zoë Carpenter, The Nation [February 16, 2018]
---- On February 23 of last year, a day when the frozen ground had started to turn to mud, law-enforcement officers rolled into the Oceti Sakowin camp near the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota. Donald Trump had been inaugurated a month earlier, and the new president quickly reversed an Obama administration decision to deny Energy Transfer Partners a permit to finish construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline, a $3.78 billion project running directly under the Missouri River. The water protectors, as protesters called themselves, had been fighting the pipeline since the spring of 2016, concerned that the proposed route cut through ancestral land of spiritual significance, and that a pipeline leak could contaminate the primary water supply to the reservation. The small group who had remained through the bitter winter at Oceti Sakowin had been ordered to leave by February 22 or face eviction and arrest. Most did; a few dozen remained the following the day, when Humvees with snipers on their roofs rolled into camp, a helicopter buzzing above them.  Photojournalist Tracie Williams, on assignment for the National Press Photographers' Association, captured some of what happened next. … An hour after police evicted the last demonstrators from Oceti Sakowin, North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum signed four measures increasing punishments for demonstrators. Among other things, the new laws expanded the definition of criminal trespass, and raised the penalty for a riot conviction. Though the measures were clearly in response to Standing Rock, they also reflected a much broader conservative backlash to direct action—a backlash that resulted in a wave of legislation introduced in states across the United States. Overall, according to the International Center for Not-for-Profit Law, lawmakers in 30 states have introduced 56 bills to restrict public protest since Trump's election. [Read More]
 
Trump Administration Targets Obama-Era Effort to Limit Methane
By Lisa Friedman, New York Times [February 12, 2018]
---- The Trump administration on Monday moved to repeal one of the last unchallenged climate-change regulations rushed into place in the waning days of the Obama presidency — a rule restricting the release of planet-warming methane into the atmosphere. The rule, which applied to companies drilling for energy on federal land, has been the subject of intense court battles and delay efforts, as well as one surprise vote last year in which Senate Republicans temporarily saved it from being torpedoed. Methane, which is about 25 times more potent at trapping heat than carbon dioxide, accounts for 9 percent of all domestic greenhouse gas emissions; about a third of that is estimated to come from oil and gas operations. Under the rule, oil and gas companies would have been required to capture leaked methane, update their equipment and write new plans for minimizing waste when drilling on government property. [Read More]
 
THE STATE OF THE UNION
Why Is It So Hard for Democracy to Deal With Inequality?
By Thomas B. Edsall, New York Times [February 15, 2018]
---- In theory, in a democracy, the majority should influence — some would even say determine — the distribution of income. In practice, this is not the case. Over the past few decades, political scientists have advanced a broad range of arguments to explain why democracy has failed to stem the growth of inequality. Most recently, Thomas Piketty, a French economist who is the author of "Capital in the Twenty-First Century," has come up with a straightforward answer: Traditional parties of the left no longer represent the working and lower middle classes. … These upheavals have left the party of the left ill-equipped to tackle not only inequality but economic mobility more broadly and with it the pervasive decline of much of what has become red America. This in turn raises the question: Can a party split between an upscale wing that is majority white and a heavily minority working class wing effectively advocate on behalf of a liberal-left economic agenda? The jury is out on this question, but the verdict could very well be no. [Read More]
 
Puerto Rico Needs More Than Bandages
---- Puerto Rico needs more than bandages. It needs to rethink and redesign its electric, water and wastewater systems, both to protect them against the next big storm and to provide the dependable service they were failing to give residents before Hurricane Maria. To accomplish that and other rebuilding needs, Puerto Rico had sought $94.4 billion in total disaster aid in November. That included nearly $18 billion to rebuild the power grid — nine times what Congress has provided. … Scientists point to the possible contribution of climate change to Maria's intense rainfall — as well as to the rainfall of Harvey and Irma, its predecessor hurricanes. The Caribbean is already seeing changes in land and ocean temperatures that mimic global climate trends. The mass movement of Puerto Ricans to the mainland after last fall's hurricanes may provide one of the first examples of a large-scale climate migration in the Americas. [Read More]
 
Amidst Election Security Worries, Suddenly Paper Ballots Are Making a Comeback
By Zaid Jilani, The Intercept [February 18 2018]
---- The nation's secretaries of state gathered for a multi-day National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) conference in Washington, D.C., this weekend, with cybersecurity on the mind. Panels and lectures centered around the integrity of America's election process, with the federal probe into alleged Russian government attempts to penetrate voting systems a frequent topic of discussion. Cybersecurity experts from the federal government and military were in high supply. Every secretary of state was invited to a closed-door briefing at the Department of Homeland Security, while federal experts spoke to a wider audience at the conference. … One way to allay concerns about the integrity of electronic voting machine infrastructure, however, is to simply not use it. Over the past year, a number of states are moving back towards the use of paper ballots or at least requiring a paper trail of votes cast. … America's paper ballot states may seem antiquated to some, but our neighbors to the north have used paper ballots for federal elections for their entire history. Thanks to an army of officials at 25,000 election stations, the integrity of Canada's elections is never in doubt. "It's highly decentralized and it's paper-based so documents can be verified easily afterwards," Marc Mayrand, former Chief Electoral Officer of Elections Canada, told the National Post. "So, there may be an error in transmission from time to time or there may be somebody trying to hack the web system that publishes results for the general public. But it's always verifiable, you can always go back to your paper trail." [Read More]
 
How Trump Plans to Evict Poor Families From Public Housing
By George Zornick, The Nation [February 16, 2018]
---- When President Donald Trump released his first budget proposal last year, it called for the deepest cuts to the Department of Housing and Urban Development since the early 1980s. Congress didn't go along—the budget deal that legislators just passed after a brief shutdown actually increased HUD funding by $2 billion over previous levels—but Trump and his team are undeterred. The White House budget released this week calls for a $68 billion cut to HUD, or a 14 percent reduction, which is even deeper than what Trump demanded last year and, according to experts, the most radical attack on federal housing aid since the US Housing Act became law in 1937. If enacted, the Trump budget would be a vicious eviction notice to millions of low-income families. [Read More]
 
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
Trump Creates, Then Exacerbates, Crisis for Palestinian Refugees
By Marjorie Cohn, Truthout [February 17, 2018]
---- One of the most consequential actions Donald Trump took during the first year of his presidency was to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel in December 2017. When the Palestinians predictably responded by pulling out of the US-led "peace process," Trump retaliated by cutting US financial support to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) by more than 50 percent. The US cutback in aid to UNRWA critically threatens the access of Palestinian refugees to food, health care and education. In Gaza, 1.3 million Palestinian refugees, who comprise 70 percent of Gaza's population, depend on UNRWA for food assistance. The refugee crisis was aggravated by Israel's 2014 massacre in Gaza. … As Professor Richard Falk, former UN special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories, stated, until the United States lifts the unconditional mandate it gives Israel to repress the Palestinians, "there will be no peace. It's our struggle here to end this destructive policy." [Read More]
 
The Boomerang Effect: How Netanyahu Made Israel an American Issue, and Lost
By Ramzy Baroud, Antiwar.com [February 16, 2018]
---- While support for Israel among Republicans has remained high, a whopping 79%, support for Israel among Democrats has sunk even further, to 27%. True, Netanyahu's strategy in courting US conservatives has proved a success. However, the price of that success is that the relationship between Israel and the American public has fundamentally changed. Netanyahu has shoved Israel into the heart of polarizing American politics, and although he has achieved his short-term goals (for example, obtaining US recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel) he has irrevocably damaged the decades-long consensus on Israel among Americans, and in that there is a great source of hope. [Read More]