Thursday, June 21, 2018

CFOW Weekend Update - Rally Saturday. Protect Immigrants & Families

CFOW Weekend Update
June 21, 2018
 
Hello All – This edition of the CFOW Weekend Update focuses on the immigration crisis at our southern border.  If this issue – migrant detentions, separating children from parents – is important to you, please come to our "RALLY FOR IMMIGRANTS/KEEP FAMILIES TOGETHER" on Saturday, June 23rd, from 12 to 2, at the VFW Plaza in Hastings (Warburton Ave. and Spring St.)
 
The rally is co-sponsored by CFOW, Indivisible Rivertowns, Hastings RISE, and the Greenburgh Human Rights Advisory Council.
 
The speakers list is a work-in-progress.  It includes Hastings' mayor, Peter Swiderski; county legislator MJ Shimsky; and members of the Hudson Valley Community Coalition, the grassroots organization that works with Westchester immigrants in defense of their rights.  We have also invited area political leaders and immigration attorneys/experts, and Jenny Murphy will sing.  And we will have an open-mike for those wishing to add their voices.  We have invited local media, and hope that this will amplify our voices to the community.
 
Please spread news of this rally to your friends and post on your Facebook pages.  A good-size rally will help to keep the momentum going until the following Saturday, June 30th, when there will be many (and large) rallies across the country.
 
Below I've linked some recent articles and videos that help to illuminate what's going on.
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
 
Some Good/Useful Reading About the Refugee Crisis
 
Stories from today's edition of Democracy Now!

Trump Admin to Indefinitely Detain Migrant Families Together; No Plan to Reunite Separated Children

GEO Group & Private Prisons Stand to Profit as Trump Pushes Indefinite Family Detention

Report from McAllen, Texas: No One Knows What Will Happen Now to Separated Migrant Children


U.S. Prepares Housing Up to 20,000 Migrants on Military Bases
By Michael D. Shear, Helene Cooper and Katie Benner, New York Times [June 21, 2018]
---- The United States is preparing to shelter as many as 20,000 migrant children on four American military bases, a Pentagon spokesman said on Thursday, as federal officials struggled to carry out President Trump's order to keep immigrant families together after they are apprehended at the border. The 20,000 beds at bases in Texas and Arkansas would house "unaccompanied alien children," said a Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Col. Michael Andrews, although other federal agencies provided conflicting explanations about how the shelters would be used or who would be housed there. It was unclear whether the military housing would also house the parents of migrant children in families that have been detained, and officials at the White House, Defense Department and Department of Health and Human Services said on Thursday they could not provide details. [Read More]
 
The Trump Administration Still Has No Plan to Reunite Families It Tore Apart
By Zoë Carpenter, The Nation [June 21, 2018]
---- When María got to court on Thursday morning, federal prosecutors dropped charges against her and 16 other immigrant parents who'd also been separated from their children. It's not clear why the charges were dropped; the Department of Justice did not respond to questions. It's tempting to see it as a sign of good news, perhaps a signal that the executive order that President Trump signed Wednesday evening is encouraging prosecutors to use discretion, softening the "zero-tolerance" policy that has led to thousands of family separations. In reality, the dropped charges—and the executive order itself—raise many more questions than they answer. María, who told Olivares that she came to the United States for her son's protection after two of her siblings were murdered in El Salvador, has no idea where her son is. Children are not supposed to stay at the McAllen processing facility for longer than 72 hours, and so presumably he's already been transferred into custody of the Office of Refugee Resettlement and placed in a shelter. Trump's executive order does nothing to help María and other parents find the more than 2,300 kids who've been taken from them. So far, the administration has no official process for reuniting them. (A spokesperson of the Department of Health and Human Services said Wednesday that the agency was "awaiting further guidance" on reunification.) [Read More]
 
Trump's Executive Order Turns Family Separation Into Family Incarceration
By Julianne Hing, The Nation [June 20, 2018]
---- On Wednesday, Trump caved to an overwhelming outcry from a widespread group of critics that came to include the pope and former first lady Laura Bush and announced that his administration would end the policy of separating children from parents at the border. "Anybody with a heart feels very strongly about it," Trump said shortly after signing the executive order. "At the same time, we don't want people coming in illegally. This takes care of the problem."  But like so much else in Trumpland, there is how something appears, and how something actually operates in reality. In the hours between the announcement of the order and its actual release, many hailed the change as an about-face—a stunning and rare pivot for a president who has little capacity to admit error. But now that the executive order is out, what is clear is that this document offers no fix at all. The Trump administration intends to trade the practice of separating children while it prosecutes parents for another kind of horror: locking up parents and children together. And, according to the executive order, this new incarceration of families could well be indefinite. [Read More]
 
The U.S. Has Taken More Than 3,700 Children From Their Parents — and Has No Plan for Returning Them
By Ryan Devereaux, The Intercept [June 19, 2018]
---- The Trump administration's program of systematically separating migrant children from their parents is steadily expanding, government officials confirmed Tuesday. Under Attorney General Jeff Sessions's "zero tolerance" doctrine, U.S. authorities have been ordered to criminally prosecute all individuals arrested for illegally crossing the border without exception, including asylum-seekers and parents arriving with small children. The result has been historic, and catastrophic, with the U.S. government intentionally creating thousands of so-called unaccompanied minors whose immigration cases have now become separate from their parents, plunging them, on their own, into an already overwhelmed system of federal bureaucracies. [Read More]
 
Cops plead 'allow ICE employees to go home to their families' after protesters blockade prison in Portland
By Arun Gupta, Raw Story [June 19, 2018]
---- In Portland, Oregon, the prison used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement is housed in a nondescript building tucked between a highway and the waterfront south of downtown. The tan three-story structure has darkened windows and no identifying marks. It's surrounded by an 8-feet high metal fence, guarded by a security checkpoint, and cameras outside cover every angle. Since Sunday night, dozens of protesters under the banner of #OccupyICEPDX have been maintaining a round-the-clock vigil outside the prison. They are demanding an abolition of ICE and an end to the Trump administration's policy of forcibly separating children from parents fleeing across the U.S. border from violence-ravaged countries. [Read More]

Sunday, June 17, 2018

CFOW Newsletter - "Blood on our Hands" in Yemen; Tragedy at the Border

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
June 17, 2018
 
Hello All – Yesterday's CFOW vigil/rally in Hastings protested our government's complicity in the bloodbath now underway in Yemen.  Military forces of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, having intervened in Yemen's civil war three years ago, are now besieging/attacking Yemen's major port, Hodaideh.  This port is the entryway for the bulk of food and medicine entering Yemen, a country on the brink of famine and ravaged by a cholera epidemic that has infected a million people.  To the great shame of all of us, the US government gave the "green light" for this attack last week.  And because the United States supplies Saudi Arabia and the UAE with arms, targeting advice, blockade support, and aerial refueling support, they could have stopped it – they could have pulled the plug.  But they did not.
 
Today the UK's liberal newspaper The Guardian editorialized:
 
[Saudi Arabia and the UAE} are conducting this war with British-, American- and French-made arms. They are conducting it with western military training and advice; British and US officers have been in the command room for airstrikes, and this weekend Le Figaro alleged that there are French special forces on the ground in Yemen. They are conducting it with diplomatic shelter from the west. On Friday, the UK and the US blocked a Swedish drive for a UN security council statement demanding a ceasefire: Arms sales and security interests dictate.
 
US policy is clear: our government supports the attack on Hodaideh, whatever the cost.  The urgent need is for a ceasefire. Yet at the United Nations last week, the Trump administration (and the UK) opposed a Resolution introduced by Sweden calling for a ceasefire.  Last March, during the only serious discussion in the Senate over US policy in Yemen, ten Democrats joined with the Republican majority to defeat a Resolution that attempted to gain some congressional control over US assistance for the war in Yemen. And last week, Westchester's congressional representatives Lowey and Engel joined with other Democratic Party foreign-policy heavyweights in issuing a statement pointedly avoiding calls for a ceasefire in Yemen, expressing wishes instead that good faith efforts would be made to avoid civilian casualties. The world's major humanitarian disaster is about to get a lot worse.
 
Another tragedy unfolding this week is the escalating sadism of US immigration and asylum policy on our border with Mexico. Official US policy now is to separate children from parents seeking asylum, and to deny asylum to anyone presenting evidence that they are escaping from an abusive or gang-threatening environment.  Several good/useful articles about these developments are linked below.  One heartening development has been the proliferation of protests and demonstrations under the banner of "Families Belong Together."  It may be that the Trump people have made their attack on the conscience of Americans "a bridge too far," and their actions may invoke a counterattack similar to the one that brought thousands of people to airports in January 2017 to protest Trump's attempt to prevent non-citizens from entering the country.
 
Finally, NB all peace and justice stalwarts are invited to CFOW's more-or-less annual July 4th picnic. Details are in the newsletter Calendar section, below.
 
News Notes
A rule of thumb for housing advocates is that an "affordable" rent is one-third or less of monthly income.  Ha, ha, ha say most renters; and according to a new study of housing affordability, "People Earning Minimum Wage Cannot Afford To Rent Anywhere In the US."  "The stark findings of this report," notes the article in The Huffington Post, "come at a time when affordable housing, already in crisis, is further threatened by Trump administration proposals to strip back the social security net.
 
Now that white nationalism is at home in the White House, this short US government anti-prejudice film from wartime 1943 could be ripped from today's presidential tweets.  Check out "Don't Be a Sucker!" and weep for the USA.
 
After three years of legalized marijuana in California, how are things going?  Check out this report from old friend Jonah Raskin, "Canabis in California."
 
While the Trump team loyally defends Israeli killings of Palestinians on the Gaza border, the rest of the world is not buying it.  Last week 120 members of the UN General Assembly supported a Resolution introduced by Algeria and Turkey deploring Israel's use of "excessive force" against the Gaza protesters.  Among those supporting the Resolution were Russia, China, France, and 11 other European states.  This action of the General Assembly follows a UN Security Council vote on a similar Resolution that was defeated by the traditional US veto, with no other support.
 
Things to Do/Coming Attractions
Ongoing – CFOW holds a vigil/rally each Saturday at the VFW Plaza in Hastings (Warburton and Spring) from 12 to 1 p.m.  Everyone invited; please join us!
 
Ongoing – Added to the Hastings farmers market on Saturdays is the opportunity to recycle food scraps, including meat and anything that was once alive, according to coordinator EZ.  Look for the big bin at the market; and for more info email hastingscompost@gmail.com.
 
Ongoing – Sign the "People's Peace Treaty"!  Code Pink writes: "Inspired by the Vietnam-era People's Peace Treaty, we have initiated a People's Peace Treaty with North Korea, to raise awareness about the past U.S. policy toward North Korea, and to send a clear message that we, the people of the U.S., do not want another war with North Korea. This is not an actual treaty, but rather a declaration of peace from the people of the United States."  To sign the Treaty, go here.
 
Ongoing The Poor Peoples' Campaign is now under way, with actions across the country. For more information and to get involved with the action in Westchester, contact Rev. Joya Colon-Berezin.
 
Thursday, June 21st – Churches for Peace in the Middle East (CMEP) invites us to "a conversation about peace-building in Palestine and Israel."  One of the speakers will be a Palestinian woman from the West Bank village where nonviolent resistance to the Occupation inspired the animated film, "The Wanted 18."  The program will be held at the White Plains Presbyterian Church, 39 N. Broadway in White Plains, starting at 7:30 p.m.
 
Wednesday, July 4th – Come one and all to the CFOW 4th of July picnic.  Celebrate true Independence in the company of peace & justice stalwarts.  We'll assemble in the afternoon at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society, 12 Elm St. in Dobbs.  More details forthcoming.
 
Sunday, July 15th – CFOW will host Korean expert Soo Bok Kim for a discussion about what's happening on the Korean peninsula.  The program will be at the Hastings Community Center, starting at 2 p.m.  More details forthcoming.
 
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," I especially recommend the sets of articles on the war in Yemen, the Trump-Kim summit on Korea, and our immigration/asylum crisis; Tom Engelhardt's article on the decline of the USA ("War & Peace"); and several good articles on the "Great March of Return" in Gaza.
 
Rewards!
This week's rewards for stalwart readers come from the newsletter's favorite Stalin-era composer, Dmitri Shostakovich.  Young Dmitri's innovations shook the musical world in the late '20s and early '30s, ran into Stalin's cultural counter-revolution in the mid-30s, trembled through the purge trials/murders of the late 1930s, and triumphed with his seventh ("Leningrad") symphony during the dark days of World War II.  But by 1947 the cultural night had fallen again.  Thus Shostakovich's 1st violin concerto, the second part of which is played here by the amazing violinist Hillary Hahn, was not performed in public until after Stalin's death.  One of my favorites from Shostakovich is his "24 Preludes and Fugues," finished in 1951, but criticized by the Party music police for having succumbed to "constructivist complexity, gloom moods, and individualistic aloofness."  Listen to them here and judge for yourself; and enjoy this reminiscence by the pianist, Tatiana NIkolayeva, about her friendship with Shostakovich. (h/t LS). The English writer Julian Barnes wrote a good novel about Shostakovich ("The Noise of Time") in 2016; but I much prefer the (more fantastic) fictional portrayal of Dmitri in William Vollmann's wonderful "Europe Central."  After all that … enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Bringing Julian Assange Home
By John Pilger, ZNet [June 17, 2018]
---- The persecution of Julian Assange must end. Or it will end in tragedy. The Australian government and prime minister Malcolm Turnbull have an historic opportunity to decide which it will be. They can remain silent, for which history will be unforgiving. Or they can act in the interests of justice and humanity and bring this remarkable Australian citizen home. … Julian Assange has committed no crime. He has never been charged with a crime. The Swedish episode was bogus and farcical and he has been vindicated.  Katrin Axelsson and Lisa Longstaff of Women Against Rape summed it up when they wrote, "The allegations against [Assange] are a smokescreen behind which a number of governments are trying to clamp down on WikiLeaks for having audaciously revealed to the public their secret planning of wars and occupations with their attendant rape, murder and destruction… The authorities care so little about violence against women that they manipulate rape allegations at will." This truth was lost or buried in a media witch-hunt that disgracefully associated Assange with rape and misogyny. The witch-hunt included voices who described themselves as on the left and as feminist. They willfully ignored the evidence of extreme danger should Assange be extradited to the United States. [Read More]
 
Alabama's Lynching Memorial and the Legacy of Racial Terror in the South
By Liliana Segura, The Intercept [June 17 2018]
---- Today, the legal framework governing the death penalty is complex and impenetrable — and executions are more secretive and sanitized than ever. This long evolution can make the link between lynching and the death penalty feel tenuous and disorienting in 2018. Last year in Charleston, South Carolina, I watched as Dylann Roof was sentenced to die for the slaughter of nine black people, under the authority of a black president. … I came to Alabama to bridge another disconnect, one that spans my own lifetime: the distinction we created between the "modern death penalty era" and everything that came before. In between are the four years separating two landmark Supreme Court rulings: Furman v. Georgia, which struck down the death penalty in 1972, and Gregg v. Georgia, which upheld it in 1976. Gregg ushered in an age of state-sanctioned killing that would transform executions to look modern and humane, while closing a chapter in death penalty history that is now rarely invoked. For all the data we have amassed showing discrimination in capital punishment, its roots in racial terror have been severed from our collective memory. [Read More]
 
The Mueller Indictments Still Don't Add Up to Collusion
By Aaron Maté, The Nation [June 13, 2018]
---- In just over one year, special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation of the Trump campaign and Russia has generated five guilty pleas, 20 indictments, and more than 100 charges. None of these have anything to do with Mueller's chief focus: the Russian government's alleged meddling in the 2016 election and the Trump campaign's suspected involvement. While it's certainly possible that Mueller will make new indictments that go to the core of his case, what's been revealed so far does not make a compelling brief for collusion. … The January 2017 intelligence report begat an endless cycle of innuendo and unverified claims, inculcating the public with fears of a massive Russian interference operation and suspicions of the Trump campaign's complicity. The evidence to date casts doubt on the merits of this national preoccupation, and with it, the judgment of the intelligence, political, and media figures who have elevated it to such prominence. [Read More]
 
The Trump spectacle is overshadowing the more urgent scandals of this administration
, Editor of The Nation [June 12, 2018]
---- Breaking news: President Trump tweeted. He's feuding with a foreign leader — or a football team. Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III is investigating the administration. In today's media environment, these "breaking" political news alerts are nearly constant. They dominate cable news and serve primarily to agitate rather than inform. Though the tendency to focus on spectacle over substance is not a new media phenomenon, it has noticeably worsened under the influence of a president who has devoted his public life to making a spectacle of himself. And as recent events have shown, it is leaving little to no oxygen for important issues that have real consequences on the American people's lives. Perhaps the most brazen example is the media's neglect of hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico. Last month, a new Harvard study estimated that 4,645 deaths can be linked to the storm and its immediate aftermath, a toll far higher than the official estimate of 64. If accurate, that's more than the number of Americans killed on 9/11 or during the Iraq War. Yet on the day it was released, the study was treated as an afterthought on cable news, [Read More]
 
WAR & PEACE
How the Last Superpower Was Unchained: American Wars and Self-Decline
By Tom Engelhardt, Tom Dispatch [June 15, 2018]
---- The history of greed in our time has yet to be written, but what a story it will someday make. In it, the greed of those geopolitical dreamers will intersect with the greed of an ever wealthier, ever more gilded 1%, of the billionaires who were preparing to swallow whole the political system of that last superpower and grab so much of the wealth of the planet, leaving so little for others. Whether you're talking about the urge to control the planet militarily or financially, what took place in these years could, in the end, result in ruin of a historic kind. To use a favored phrase from the Bush years, one of these days we may be facing little short of "regime change" on a planetary scale. And what a piece of shock and awe that's likely to prove to be. All of us, of course, now live on the planet Bush's boys tried to swallow whole. They left us in a world of infinite war, infinite harm, and in Donald Trump's America where cluelessness has been raised to a new power. [Read More]
 
The War in Yemen
(Video) A Humanitarian Catastrophe: U.S.-Backed Forces Attack Key Yemeni Port Imperiling Millions
From Democracy Now! [June 13, 2018]
----In Yemen, a coalition led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates has launched an all-out offensive against the key port city of Hodeidah. The offensive is expected to be the biggest battle in the ongoing 3-year war between the U.S.-backed, Saudi-led coalition and Houthi rebels. The war has already killed 15,000 civilians, sparked the world's worst cholera epidemic and pushed the country to the brink of famine. Humanitarian organizations have warned the offensive could be a catastrophe for a quarter of a million civilians living in the port city, and for the rest of the Yemen, which is highly dependent on aid that travels through this port. For more, we speak with Congressmember Ro Khanna in Washington, D.C. He recently co-authored a bipartisan letter calling for Defense Secretary James Mattis to help prevent an attack on Hodeidah. [See the Program]
 
The Saudi & UAE Slaughter in Yemen isn't a Proxy Conflict with Iran
By Sheila Carapico, Informed Comment [June 2018]
---- Alongside their throttlehold over which reporters can visit what parts of Yemen, and thus what story they can tell, Saudi and Emirati investments in public relations, lobbying, think-tanks, and political consultants are shaping the narrative about their war there. … The US- and UK- supported Saudi and UAE dynasties and their hired analysts insist that their Yemeni adversary is a proxy of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. The inference is that Arab Gulf monarchies righteously resist Iranian – or Shi`a — influence in the Peninsula. Therefore, forty months of relentless bombing and blockade are justified as self-defense. Poppycock. [Read More]
 
The Disaster Awaiting Yemen After Al Hudaydah Falls
By Alex De Waal, The New York Times [June 14, 2018]
---- Last-ditch diplomatic efforts could not stop the Saudi Arabian and Emirati coalition's offensive on the Yemeni port city of Al Hudaydah this week. With no real prospect for peace talks of any kind, the city, a fief of the Houthi rebels who control much of the country and a hub for humanitarian assistance for millions of desperate Yemeni civilians, could fall within days. If the offensive goes according to the Saudis' and Emiratis' plan, promptly after that, the Houthis, who also control the capital Sana, will sue for peace. The maritime blockade in place since 2015 could then be lifted. After that, a vast humanitarian operation could unfold, saving Yemen from a devastating famine. But nothing in this war has gone according plan so far, and the risks of mass starvation are greater than ever, even if Al Hudaydah falls fast. … Famine isn't just about masses of people going hungry; famine tears societies apart. It means mass exodus caused by desperation. It means humiliation and collective trauma. Some people profit from the misery of others, hiking food prices or buying land at fire-sale prices. Those who pay the price — and their children and then those children's children — can only resent the opportunists for their plight. Not to mention the aggressors. As the British learned in Ireland in the mid-19th century, and the Soviets in Ukraine in the 1930s, starving people is a dangerous and loaded strategy: It leaves behind a bitter legacy, and a long trail of rancor. [Read More]
 
Also useful/illuminating on Yemen – Patrickk Cockburn, "Attacking Hodeidah is a deliberate act of cruelty by the Trump administration," The Independent [UK] [Link]; and Iona Craig, "UAE Says It Can't Control Yemeni Forces — Even as It Hands Them Bags of Cash," The Intercept [June 7, 2018] [Link].
 
The Trump-Kim Korean Summit
[FB – The Trump-Kim summit in Singapore was an optimistic beginning to an intricate and probably long peace process.  In a nutshell, in response to steps taken by North Korea prior to the summit (an announced end to bomb and missile testing, the destruction of the nuclear test site), and building on the impressive steps taken by North and South Korea along a path towards reconciliation and national unification, Trump announced the suspension of the "provocative" (Trump's word) war games which involved the United States practicing the destruction of the North.  The best assessment of the summit and its context that I have come across is The Nation magazine interview with our most able historian of the Koreas, Bruce Cumings.  A very useful background piece, imo, remains this month-old Democracy Now! interview with Korean expert, Prof. Christine Hong.]
 
Trump Meets Kim, Averting Threat of Nuclear War—and US Pundits Are Furious
By Tim Shorrock, The Nation [June 13, 2018]
---- On Tuesday, President Trump and Kim Jong-un met and shook hands on Singapore's resort island of Sentosa, curbing decades of deep and bitter hostility between the two countries and possibly opening a new chapter for the United States in East Asia. Afterward, Trump even boasted that he had created a "special bond" with the North Korean dictator. The unprecedented meeting was the climax of months of intensive negotiations that began in earnest in March, when Kim, through the mediation of South Korean President Moon Jae-in, unexpectedly invited Trump to meet and settle their vast differences. As their initial encounter began, Trump declared that times had changed—irrevocably. … The "joint statement" included a pledge to build "a lasting and robust peace regime on the Korean Peninsula" and reaffirmed the DPRK's commitment, made in Kim's April 27 "Panmunjom Declaration" with President Moon, to "work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula." In a last-minute addition, the statement also committed each side to restart a project abandoned years ago to jointly recover the remains of US soldiers killed and missing in action during the Korean War of 1950 to 1953. … Even as the first images flashed across the world of Trump and Kim shaking hands against the unusual background of US and DPRK flags flapping together, social media and op-ed sections of media sites were filled with denunciations of Trump. Democratic leaders in the House and Senate led the attack. [Read More]
 
War with Iran?
With new pro-Iran Iraq Coalition, Tehran Outmaneuvers Trump-Saudi-Israeli Axis
---- It is likely that Trump's violation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the deal signed between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany, was intended to set the stage for a push to contain Iran. The push against Iran would involve again subjecting it to severe economic sanctions, in hopes of bankrupting it and depriving it of the means with which to continue to play a role in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. … So far, the new alliance of Trump, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Israel against Iran formed in spring of 2017 has had no successes at all. If anything, in the last year Iran's hand has been strengthened in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. While the Houthi rebels in Yemen may ultimately be defeated by the Saudi-UAE Axis, which is now attacking the Red Sea port of Hodeida, Iran is only marginally involved in Yemen– contrary to what Saudi propaganda would have us believe. … Some 18 months into the Trump administration, Trump hasn't laid a finger on Tehran, which is still in the catbird seat in the eastern stretches of the Middle East. [Read More]
 
The Enhanced Cruelty of US Immigration/Asylum Policy
Protect Immigrants' Rights; End The Crises That Drive Migration
By Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers, Popular Resistance [June 16, 2018]
---- Immigration is tied into issues of corporate trade agreements, regime change, US Empire, the drug war and capitalism. These issues are forcing a race to the bottom for worker rights and wages and destruction of the environment. They are driving a growing security state, militarization of law enforcement and mass incarceration. Border patrols lock people into countries where they face poverty, pollution and violence with little chance of escape. Immigrants are the scapegoats, but it is the systems that are driving migration. Most people would prefer to remain in their home countries where they have roots, family and communities. Extreme conditions drive people to abandon everything and endure harsh and dangerous travel in hope of finding safety and the means of survival. [Read More]
 
(Video) Trauma at the Texas-Mexico Border: Families Separated, Children Detained & Residents Fighting Back
From Democracy Now! [June 14, 2018]
----- We look at growing outrage over the Trump administration's policy of separating immigrant families who cross the U.S.-Mexico border, many fleeing dangerous conditions and seeking asylum. At least 600 immigrant children were removed from their parents last month, after Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced the new rule. On Wednesday, 10 members of Congress protested by blocking the entrance to the headquarters of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the agency tasked with carrying out the forced removal of children from their parents. More protests in at least 60 cities are planned today by the group Families Belong Together, which formed in response to the new policy. We go to the epicenter of this "zero tolerance" crackdown, the Rio Grande Valley in South Texas, where more than half of all migrant families and children have been apprehended by Border Patrol agents since mid-May, for a special report by Democracy Now! correspondent Renée Feltz, who spoke with residents taking action in response to the widely condemned practice of separating families. [See the Program] For another sad/useful article about this family-separation policy, check out "The U.S. Has Been in the Business of Breaking Up Families For Years" [Link].
 
The Misogynistic Logic of Asylum Policy
By Natasha Lennard, The Intercept [June 15, 2018]
---- When the United Nations adopted the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women in 1993, it gave long overdue recognition to the fact that gendered domestic violence is not a private issue, but a public health and human rights concern for the international community. Attorney General Jeff Sessions's decision this week to stop giving asylum protections for domestic violence victims stands in grim conflict with this principle. … Victims of domestic and gang violence, in other words, won't even be able to have their claims for asylum heard. The effect of Sessions's ruling could be sweeping and immediate. Immigration attorneys have said this decision could invalidate tens of thousands of pending asylum claims from women fleeing domestic and gang violence, which often intersect, in Central America and Mexico. [Read More]
 
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
Debunking Myths About the Palestinian Protests
By Muhammad Shehada and Jamie Stern-Weiner, VICE News [June 12, 2018]
---- Over the past ten weeks, tens of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza have participated in the "March of Return", mass nonviolent demonstrations to protest Israel's illegal siege. Throughout, Israel has responded with violent force. As of the 7th of June, Israeli forces had killed more than 110 Palestinians in the course of the protests, including 14 children, and injured more than 3,700 with live ammunition. In order to brutalise the people of Gaza into submission while minimising the international criticism that accompanies lethal force, Israeli snipers deployed along Gaza's perimeter fence methodically shot the legs of Palestinian demonstrators. "The aim", reports the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz, was "to leave as many young people as possible with permanent disabilities". To this end, the snipers used expanding bullets that "pulverised" bones and left exit wounds the size of a fist. According to the Secretary-General of UNRWA, the United Nations agency providing education and healthcare for refugees in Gaza, "many" of those shot will suffer "life-long disabilities". Mission accomplished. In order to legitimise its resort to overwhelming force, Israel has sought to cast doubt on the popular character of the demonstrations in Gaza and to present them as a threat to its security. A number of myths about the Gaza protests have consequently gained widespread traction. Here are some of the most prominent myths about these recent protests, and why they're not true. [Read More]
 
The Great Return March and the Women of Gaza
By Fadi Abu Shammalah and Jen Marlowe, Tom Dispatch [June 12, 2018]
---- The Return March, which has just ended, was unique in recent history in Gaza for a number of reasons. Palestinians there are known for engaging in militant resistance against the Israeli occupation and also for the internal political split in their ranks between two dominant factions, Fatah and Hamas. Yet, in these weeks, the March has been characterized by a popular, predominantly nonviolent mobilization during which Gaza's fractured political parties have demonstrated a surprising degree of unity. And perhaps most noteworthy of all, women activists have played a visibly crucial role in the protests on a scale not seen for decades, possibly indicating what the future may look like when it comes to activism in the Gaza Strip. [Read More]
 
Media Tutorial
[FB – The newsletter's occasional "media tutorials" highlight articles that analyze media bias: what it is, how it works, and how it is produced.  For those interested in this topic, I recommend the book by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky, Manufacturing Consent.  In a nutshell, they develop a "propaganda model" that attempts to explain how the free-market media develops a news/information product that is in lock-step with the needs of the people/corporations that run the USA and much of the rest of the world.]
 
'The Israeli military said,' the New York Times reports
By Norman G. Finkelstein, Mondoweiss [June 14, 2018]
---- New York Times reporter David M. Halbfinger didn't know whether the demonstrations in Gaza were "peaceful protests or violent riots."  So he embedded himself with Israeli snipers poised on the perimeter of Gaza concentration camp to find out ("At Gaza Protests: Kites, Drones, Gas, Guns and the Occasional Bomb," June 8, 2018). One might suppose if he wanted an answer to that question, the obvious place to go would be among the demonstrators.  But never mind. According to human rights organizations, the weekly Gaza demonstrations have been overwhelmingly nonviolent.  But from day one, Halbfinger and his Times colleagues have recurrently portrayed them as armed confrontations in which Israeli snipers return the fire of protesters.  They rely on official Israeli statements that are quoted without demurral, without further investigation, and without independent corroboration from, say, human rights monitors: [Read More] For another insightful analysis of New York Times reporting bias, read "Acts and Omissions: The NYT's Flawed Coverage of the Gaza Protest," by L. Michael Hager [Link].
 
OUR HISTORY
Oliver Law, the Lincoln Brigade's Black Commander
Oliver Law was among a brave band of 2800 American men and women (including 90 other African Americans) who rushed to help the Spanish Republic Spain during its Civil War (1936-1939). Their aim was to stop Hitler and Mussolini from seizing and using Spain to launch their march across Europe. This was a crucial Nazi warm-up for World War II. These brave Americans were joined by 40,000 other men and women from 52 countries who also volunteered to save Spain's Republican government from Hitler and Mussolini and General Francisco Franco, their Spanish fascist ally. For the only time in world history a global volunteer force left their homelands to defend democracy in a distant land. Though few volunteers had any military training they aimed to shame and prod their governments to stop fascist aggression "at the agates of Madrid." But at this point England, France, the US and other democratic governments did nothing about fascist aggression – and England and France encouraged it. So, as one American volunteer said, "some one had to do something!" [Read More]
 
American Nativism: From the Chinese Exclusion Act to Trump
---- Since nativism is largely responsible for the election of Donald Trump, the left is obligated to understand its roots as well as the impact it is having on those who are its most visible victims. Two new documentaries will help us develop both the historical and personal dimensions of the great stain across the body politic that has existed almost since the beginning of what Robinson Jeffers called our "perishing republic". "The Chinese Exclusion Act" premiered last month on PBS but is thankfully available now on-demand. Directed by Ric Burns, It is a history of a racist immigration law that was passed in 1882 and remained on the books until it was repealed by the Magnuson Act in 1943 when China became a key ally in the war against Japan. … To be shown at the Human Rights Film Festival in New York on June 21st, "The Unafraid" derives its title from the chant of DACA students sitting in at a state college in Athens, Georgia: "We are undocumented; we are unafraid!" It tracks the struggle of four high school seniors brought to the USA from Mexico as young children to now overcome the obstacles they face in one of the country's most viciously anti-immigrant states. They formed a local activist group called Freedom University that sought to end the punitive practice of forcing undocumented students to pay non-resident tuition fees even though they lived nearly their entire lives in Georgia. Coming from hard-pressed families barely scraping by, the non-resident tuition fees costing triple what residents paid stood in the way of getting a college degree. [Read More]
 
 

Sunday, June 10, 2018

CFOW Newsletter - Peace or War at the Korea Summit?

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
June 10, 2018
 
Hello All – Tuesday's summit meeting between President Trump and Kim Jong Un of North Korea is an historic opportunity for peace.  Will the opportunity be grasped … or wasted? For the United States, the immediate goal of the summit is to persuade North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons.  The North Koreans hope that the summit will lead to an end to economic sanctions, a peace treaty to finally end the Korean War, and promises by the United States that it will not attack.
 
What would a good deal look like? North Korea has nuclear weapons because it thinks this will prevent the United States from attacking it.  This is a reasonable fear; and North Koreans remain acutely aware of the total destruction that it suffered during the Korean War – a war that is largely unknown in the United States. So a good deal for North Korea requires some kind of assurances from the United States that it will not attack North Korea.  Could/would the United States make these assurances?  And can the United States be counted on to keep its promise?
 
Rightly or wrongly, the United States will suspect North Korea of cheating, of keeping some nuclear weapons hidden. Because of US threats to attack, North Korea has built many military bases underground. The United States will want intrusive inspections to make sure that no nuclear facilities remain. North Korea will object to this. What to do? In the case of Iran, negotiations about "modalities of inspection" consumed months and threatened the talks with breakdown.  Will Trump & his team have the patience for lengthy negotiations, or will they use any resistance from North Korea to justify the end of negotiations and a return to threats of war?
 
A destabilizing wildcard was played this week by the Senate Democrats, under the leadership of NY Senator Chuck Schumer.  He and a half-dozen other Senate heavyweights issued a letter setting out a series of demands that North Korea must meet if sanctions are to be lifted and relations between the two countries "normalized." As Congress must act to remove any sanctions against North Korea, the Senate can probably veto any agreement that does not meet with its approval.  The Democrats' action is similar to the role played by the Republicans in their 2015 attempt to derail the Iran nuclear agreement.  While the Democrats' ploy may be in part political, in attempting to deprive President Trump and the Republicans of advantage in the congressional elections this fall, the statement by Schumer and others also reflects the Cold War-era logic that has returned to Washington.  Please check out what the Senate Democrats are demanding and, if the demands seem unreasonable/insane to you, call Senator Schumer at 212-486-4430 and tell the human on the phone that you want your Senator to work for peace, not war, with North Korea.
 
On Friday the 11th weekly protest in "the Great March of Return" took place in Gaza.  Four Palestinians were killed by Israeli sharpshooters and 117 Palestinians were wounded, bringing the total casualty count to 127 Palestinians killed and more than 14,000 injured since March 30th.  Also notable this week were the creative efforts by the Israeli government and its supporters in the US media to "interpret" this one-sided slaughter in a light more favorable to Israel.  A focus of this media spin was Israel's attempt to undo the PR damage caused by the murder of Palestinian medic Razan al-Najjar, killed the previous Friday while attempting to help the wounded.  In an interview recorded just before her murder, Razan had described matter-of-factly that she felt she was being targeted by the Israeli sharpshooters. Her funeral the following day was attended by thousands in Gaza; and – as reported in the New York Times and in this Democracy Now! segment – Israel responded with a clumsy video intended to turn the "angel medic" into a Hamas terrorist.  A survey of New York Times correspondents and their reporting on the murder of Razan al-Najjar shows that Israel's efforts were largely successful; but a close examination of one of The Times' columnists produced this imo useful resource:  "Propaganda 101: How To Defend A Massacre."
 
News Notes
The death of Anthony Bourdain this week brought forth many tributes and appreciations, including this one in The Nation. Many of Bourdain's programs shined a light on people (and their food) in conflict zones; and his program on Palestine was rewarded with appreciation from the Muslim Public Affairs Council. Cambodia was another of his culinary destinations, and he won many hearts (at least mine) with his fair-and-balanced appreciation of Henry Kissinger: "Once you've been to Cambodia, you'll never stop wanting to beat Henry Kissinger to death with your bare hands. You will never again be able to open a newspaper and read about that treacherous, prevaricating, murderous scumbag sitting down for a nice chat with Charlie Rose or attending some black-tie affair for a new glossy magazine without choking."  R.I.P. Anthony Bourdain.
 
So your homework question is, "Is the world becoming more or less peaceful?"  How do you start?  What do you measure?  With these high school thoughts in mind, I found this report from the "Global Peace Index 2018" pretty interesting.
 
Owners (and wannabe owners) of beachfront property listen up! We know that global warming melts glaciers and expands water (a bit) so that sea levels are rising.  But how much?  Here's a geeky but interesting report that concludes that "due to sea level rise, the national average frequency of high tide flooding is double what it was 30 years ago."  
 
Things to Do/Coming Attractions
Ongoing – CFOW holds a vigil/rally each Saturday at the VFW Plaza in Hastings (Warburton and Spring) from 12 to 1 p.m.  Everyone invited; please join us!
 
Ongoing – Added to the Hastings farmers market on Saturdays is the opportunity to recycle food scraps, including meat and anything that was once alive, according to coordinator EZ.  Look for the big bin at the market; and for more info email hastingscompost@gmail.com.
 
Ongoing – Sign the "People's Peace Treaty"!  Code Pink writes: "Inspired by the Vietnam-era People's Peace Treaty, we have initiated a People's Peace Treaty with North Korea, to raise awareness about the past U.S. policy toward North Korea, and to send a clear message that we, the people of the U.S., do not want another war with North Korea. This is not an actual treaty, but rather a declaration of peace from the people of the United States."  To sign the Treaty, go here.
 
Ongoing The Poor Peoples' Campaign is now under way, with actions across the country. For more information and to get involved with the action in Westchester, contact Rev. Joya Colon-Berezin.
 
Wednesday, July 4th – Come one and all to the CFOW 4th of July picnic.  Celebrate true Independence in the company of peace & justice stalwarts.  We'll assemble in the afternoon at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society, 12 Elm St. in Dobbs.  More details forthcoming.
 
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," I especially recommend the section of articles on Korea and on Puerto Rico; Stephen F. Cohen's article on the dimensions of the dangerous cold war between the United States and Russia; Jeremy Brecher's article on the Constitutional avenues to fight global warming; and a timely re-posting of an essay by Sara Roy on the dimensions of the economic collapse in Gaza.  And don't miss the two interesting articles in "Our History." Good reading!
 
Rewards!
A few weeks ago this newsletter's Rewards! spotlighted Hudson Valley Sally, the wonderful singers who had performed at a CFOW fundraising house concert.  Now you can hear them again, with two sweet songs from their new CD, "Diamonds and Pearls."  Here are "Annie" and "Magic Penny".  Check out Hudson Valley Sally on their website, and see them in person next Sunday at the Clearwater Festival.  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Anarchism and Libertarianism: An Interview with Noam Chomsky
From ZNet [June 2018]
---- Noam Chomsky: Well, anarchism is, in my view, basically a kind of tendency in human thought which shows up in different forms in different circumstances, and has some leading characteristics. Primarily it is a tendency that is suspicious and skeptical of domination, authority, and hierarchy. It seeks structures of hierarchy and domination in human life over the whole range, extending from, say, patriarchal families to, say, imperial systems, and it asks whether those systems are justified. It assumes that the burden of proof for anyone in a position of power and authority lies on them. Their authority is not self-justifying. They have to give a reason for it, a justification. And if they can't justify that authority and power and control, which is the usual case, then the authority ought to be dismantled and replaced by something more free and just. And, as I understand it, anarchy is just that tendency. It takes different forms at different times. [Read More]
 
Outside the Wire: Camp America Comes Home [Guantanamo Bay - Photographs]
By Siddhartha Mitter, The Intercept [June 10 2018]
---- By the time Debi Cornwall landed in Algeria in May 2015, in search of a former Guantánamo Bay detainee, the first phase of her photography project on the prison camp was complete. She had visited the U.S. base in Cuba three times in the previous year, making photographs that strictly complied with the rules: No faces or full-frontal views of anyone on base, no sensitive infrastructure or communications facilities, no panoramas of the site, and so on. … A New York-based photographer who spent 12 years as a civil rights lawyer before returning to art, Cornwall initially set out to make portraits of Guantánamo's survivors. Some of the men released from the camp after years of isolation had returned to their home countries; others were parked in limbo, in host countries where they knew no one. Their situation reminded Cornwall of her law clients: Her focus had been wrongful incarceration cases in the United States … "Welcome to Camp America," Cornwall's Guantánamo book, appeared last fall. It made multiple critics' best-of-2017 lists and was shortlisted for the Paris Photo-Aperture First Photo Book Prize. It mixes photographs with snippets of redacted documents and essays by Cornwall, photography scholar Fred Ritchin, and the British former Guantánamo detainee Moazzam Begg. Interspersed through the book is a story: a dramatic edited version of legal testimonial about a violent incident in the prison, which mounts like a page-turner towards an unexpected climax. All the text is in both English and Arabic; Cornwall hopes to produce a French and Arabic version as well. [Read More]
 
The More Valuable Your Work Is To Society, The Less You'll Be Paid For It
By David Graeber, Linkedin.com [June 6, 2018]
[FB – David Graeber was one of the initiators of "Occupy Wall St."  He is the author of the interesting book Debt.]
---- One of the most frequently heard complaints from supporters of the Occupy Wall Street movement—particularly the ones working too much to spend much time in the camps, but who could only show up for marches or to express support on the Web—ran along the lines of: "I wanted to do something useful with my life; work that had a positive effect on other people or, at the very least, wasn't hurting anyone. But the way this economy works, if you spend your working life caring for others, you'll end up so underpaid and so deeply in debt you won't be able to care for your own family." There was a deep and abiding sense of rage at the injustice of such arrangements. I began to refer to it, mostly to myself, as the "revolt of the caring classes." … Very few economists have actually attempted to measure the overall social value of different professions; most would probably take the very idea as something of a fool's errand; but those who have tried tend to confirm that there is indeed an inverse relation between usefulness and pay. [Read More]
 
Michael Pollan Drops Acid — and Comes Back From His Trip Convinced
By Tom Bissell, New York Times [June 4, 2018]
[FB - A review of Pollan's new book, How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence]
----
Where Pollan truly shines is in his exploration of the mysticism and spirituality of psychedelic experiences. Many LSD or psilocybin trips — even good trips — begin with an ordeal that can feel scarily similar to dissolving, or even dying. What appears to be happening, in a neurological sense, is that the part of the brain that governs the ego and most values coherence — the default mode network, it's called — drops away. An older, more primitive part of the brain emerges, one that's analogous to a child's mind, in which feelings of individuality are fuzzier and a capacity for awe and wonder is stronger. As one developmental psychologist tells Pollan, "Babies and children are basically tripping all the time." [Read More]
 
THE TRUMP-KIM KOREAN SUMMIT
Trump and Kim Head to Singapore as Democrats Chafe
By Tim Shorrock, The Nation [June 8, 2018]
---- The unprecedented meeting is the direct result of a diplomatic initiative Kim launched in January with South Korean President Moon Jae-in. It culminated on April 27 with a joint declaration to end "the Cold War relic of division and confrontation" through the "complete denuclearization" of the Korean peninsula. In March, Kim's offer to meet Trump was conveyed by senior South Korean officials, making Moon a mediator between Washington and Kim's government in Pyongyang. … A likely outcome of the Trump-Kim encounter—which is already being called "the summit of the century"—is a joint declaration ending the state of war and transforming the 1953 armistice that ended the fighting into a permanent peace treaty. That would set the stage for an agreement to end North Korea's nuclear-weapons and ballistic-missile programs, which the United States has viewed for years as a strategic threat. "We could sign an agreement" to end the war, Trump said Thursday. "We're looking at it."  For the summit to be a success, however, the Trump administration expects North Korea to announce a firm timetable for disarmament and publicly commit to an international system of verification. In return, Washington is apparently prepared to lift economic sanctions and agree to the full normalization of political and economic relations that North Korea has long sought with the United States. … But Trump's decision to meet with Kim has been greeted with skepticism and even derision in some quarters of the US foreign-policy establishment. On June 4, Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) issued a harsh letter to Trump indicating that the president could face serious opposition in Congress if he offers concessions before North Korea shows that it has ended its nuclear and missile program.  [Read More]
 
Also useful/illuminating on the Korean Summit – Simone Chun, "Toward a Truly Indigenous Peace in the Korean Peninsula," Foreign Policy in Focus [June 8, 2018] [Link]; and Medea Benjamin and Ann Wright, "North Korea Has Taken Big Steps. Now It's Trump's Turn To Show Goodwill," The Guardian [UK] [June 4, 2018] [LInk].
 
WAR & PEACE
The Necessity of a Trump-Putin Summit
By Stephen F. Cohen, The Nation [June 6, 2018]
---- Recent reports suggest that a formal meeting between Presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin is being seriously discussed in Washington and Moscow. Such ritualized but often substantive "summits," as they were termed, were frequently used during the 40-year US-Soviet Cold War to, among other things, reduce conflicts and increase cooperation between the two superpowers. They were most important when tensions were highest. Some were very successful, some less so, others were deemed failures. Given today's extraordinarily toxic political circumstances, even leaving aside powerful opposition in Washington (including inside the Trump administration) to any cooperation with the Kremlin, we may wonder if anything positive would come from a Trump-Putin summit. But it is necessary, even imperative, that Washington and Moscow try. The reason should be clear. As Cohen first began to argue in 2014, the new Cold War is more dangerous than was its predecessor, and steadily becoming even more so. It's time to update, however briefly, the reasons, of which there are already at least ten. [Read More]
 
Just Say No to an Illegal War on Iran. The U.S. House Did.
By Marjorie Cohn, Truth Dig [June 6, 2018]
---- In a little noticed but potentially monumental development, the House of Representatives voted unanimously for an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act of 2019 (H.R. 5515) that says no statute authorizes the use of military force against Iran. The amendment, introduced by Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minnesota), states, "It is the sense of Congress that the use of the Armed Forces against Iran is not authorized by this Act or any other Act." A bipartisan majority of the House adopted the National Defense Authorization Act on May 24, with a vote of 351-66. The bill now moves to the Senate. If the Senate version ultimately includes the Ellison amendment as well, Congress would send a clear message to Donald Trump that he has no statutory authority to militarily attack Iran. This becomes particularly significant in light of Trump's May 8 withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal. That withdrawal was followed by a long list of demands by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, which could set the stage for a US attack on Iran. [Read More]
 
(Video) Kathy Kelly on Afghanistan: Destitution, Unemployment & Hunger Must Be Addressed to Achieve Peace
From Democracy Now! [June 8, 2018]
---- Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has announced an unconditional ceasefire with the Taliban to last until June 20. The ceasefire comes after Muslim clerics in Afghanistan issued a fatwa—or religious ruling—against suicide bombings, after an attack Monday, claimed by ISIS, killed 14 people who had gathered for a clerics' peace summit in Kabul. This comes as the BBC is reporting that the number of bombs dropped by the U.S. Air Force has surged dramatically since President Trump announced his Afghanistan strategy and committed more troops to the conflict last August; new rules of engagement have made it easier for U.S. forces to carry out strikes against the Taliban. We speak to Kathy Kelly, co-coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence, a campaign to end U.S. military and economic warfare. She has made many trips to Afghanistan and just returned from a trip this week. [See the Program]
 
GLOBAL WARMING/CLIMATE BREAKDOWN
A Climate Constitution in the Courts and the Streets
---- What's the Constitution got to do with climate? Current legal cases are now addressing that question. They are using the U.S. Constitution to bring climate protection into the courthouse. These cases range from youth demanding their constitutional right to a stable climate to activists who block fossil fuel pipeline construction and justify their action as necessary to protect constitutional rights. While legal action has contributed to social change in the past, it also is notoriously slow and uncertain. But action in the streets can accelerate the legal process and pressure the courts to act. Conversely, courts can establish legal principles that encourage action in the streets. Can we combine the two to jumpstart climate protection? … Constitutional climate arguments are also reaching the courts as part of a necessity defense for civil disobedience.  The necessity defense is well established in Anglo-American common law. While judges very often resist such necessity claims, since the 1970s hundreds of people who have committed civil disobedience in service of the public good have been acquitted on the grounds that their actions were taken to prevent a greater harm. To make a necessity defense the accused must prove that they believed their act was necessary to avoid or minimize a harm; that the harm was greater than the harm resulting from the violation of the law; and that there were no reasonable legal alternatives. [Read More]
 
THE STATE OF THE UNION
Poor People's Campaign Building Toward June 23 in DC
By Ted Glick, ZNet [June 8, 2018]
---- Two weeks from now thousands of people will be gathering in Washington, DC on the National Mall as part of the final day of an impressively coordinated, national, 40 days of action which began on Mother's Day. Over that time, on three Mondays and the Tuesday after Memorial Day, upwards of 25,000 or so people have demonstrated on work days in 35 state capitols, and over 2,000 have been arrested taking part in nonviolent moral fusion direct action. There have been 12 million or more hits on social media. A google search for "Poor People's Campaign" lists over 40 million results. … For those not yet connected to the Poor People's Campaign and the 40 days campaign, there is still time to do so. There will be two more days of action at state capitols, on June 11 and June 18, followed by people gathering in DC throughout the week leading up to the big event on the 23rd. [Read More]
 
1,358 Children and Counting — Trump's "Zero Tolerance" Border Policy Is Separating Families at Staggering Rates
By Ryan Devereaux, The Intercept [June 8, 2018]
---- The Trump administration's intensifying border crackdown has seen as many as 2,000 cases involving children separated from their parents, according to an estimate by a lead attorney litigating a high-profile class-action lawsuit challenging the practice. Hundreds of new incidents of children being separated from their parents have emerged in the last month alone. "I think it's between 1,500 and 2,000," Lee Gelernt, a veteran attorney with American Civil Liberties Union, told The Intercept on Thursday, … A senior Department of Homeland Security immigration official, speaking to The Intercept on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the press, said that the rising total of family separations sounded accurate. "It is definitely possible," they said. "We are seeing it every day here now." The official added, "Family separation is not only a cruel and barbaric practice meant to deter asylum-seekers from exercising their legal right to seek protection in the United States, but it is also an abrogation of our responsibilities under international law." Noting that the U.S. has signed on to both the U.N. Convention of the Rights of the Child and the Hague Convention on Parental Responsibility and Protection of Children, which expressly stipulate that "the best interests of the child should be paramount in any consideration of policy or law affecting children or families," the official said, "In no way can anyone argue that tearing a screaming child from the arms of their parent is in that child's best interests." [Read More]  For more on this important topic, "Nearly 1800 Families Separated At US Border In Just 17 Months," f [Venezuela] [June 10, 2018] [Link].
 
Project Blitz: the legislative assault by Christian nationalists to reshape America
By David Taylor, The Guardian [June 4, 2018]
---- Since Donald Trump became president, rightwing groups are helping flood state legislatures with bills that promote hard-line Christian conservative views. The emboldened religious right has unleashed a wave of legislation across the United States since Donald Trump became president, as part of an organized bid to impose hard-line Christian values across American society. A playbook known as Project Blitz, developed by a collection of Christian groups, has provided state politicians with a set of off-the-shelf pro-Christian "model bills". Some legislation uses verbatim language from the "model bills" created by a group called the Congressional Prayer Caucus Foundation (CPCF), set up by a former Republican congressman which has a stated aim to "protect religious freedom, preserve America's Judeo-Christian heritage and promote prayer". At least 75 bills have been brought forward in more than 20 states during 2017 and 2018 which appear to be modeled on or have similar objectives to the playbook, according to Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a campaign group which tracks legislation that undermines the principle of separation of church and state. Opponents warn that the CPCF (which claims more than 600 politicians as members across state legislatures) is using the banner of "religious freedom" to impose Christianity on American public, political and cultural life. [Read More]
 
The Empire: Puerto Rico Strikes Back
(Video) 4,645 Deaths in Puerto Rico from Hurricane Maria Were "State-Sponsored Mass Killing"
From Democracy Now! [June 6, 2018]
---- We look at Puerto Rico as it continues to recover from Hurricane Maria, which devastated the island last September. Researchers at Harvard recently revealed the death toll from Hurricane Maria may be a staggering 70 times higher than the official count. The official death toll still stands at 64, but the new study estimates a death toll of at least 4,645, with some projections topping 5,700. The Harvard study found that "interruption of medical care was the primary cause of sustained high mortality rates in the months after the hurricane, a finding consistent with the widely reported disruption of health systems. Health care disruption is now a growing contributor to both morbidity and mortality in natural disasters." We speak with Naomi Klein, author, journalist and a senior correspondent for The Intercept. Her new book is titled "The Battle for Paradise: Puerto Rico Takes On the Disaster Capitalists." We also speak with Katia Avilés-Vázquez, a Puerto Rican environmental activist and member of Organización Boricuá de Agricultura Ecológica, and Elizabeth Yeampierre, executive director of UPROSE and co-chair of the Climate Justice Alliance. [See the Program]
 
(Video) The Battle for Paradise — Resisting Disaster Capitalism in Puerto Rico
---- On Wednesday, June 6, The Intercept co-hosted "The Battle for Paradise," an event focused on how the forces of disaster capitalism are seeking to undermine the Puerto Rican people's vision for a just and renewable future. You can watch a recording of the event below. Naomi Klein starts at 19:15. [See the Program]
 
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
The Colonization of Palestine: Rethinking the Term 'Israeli Occupation'
---- June 5, 2018 marks the 51st anniversary of the Israeli Occupation of East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza. But, unlike the massive popular mobilization that preceded the anniversary of the Nakba – the catastrophic destruction of Palestine in 1948 – on May 15, the anniversary of the Occupation is hardly generating equal mobilization. The unsurprising death of the 'peace process' and the inevitable demise of the 'two-state solution' has shifted the focus from ending the Occupation per se, to the larger and more encompassing problem of Israel's colonialism throughout Palestine. … Israel is a settler colonial project, which began when the Zionist movement aspired to build an exclusive homeland for Jews in Palestine, at the expense of the native inhabitants of that land in the late 19th century. Nothing has changed since. Only facades, legal definitions and political discourses. The truth is that Palestinians continue to suffer the consequences of Zionist colonialism and they will continue to carry that burden until that original sin is boldly confronted and justly remedied. [Read More]
 
If Israel Were Smart: In Gaza
By Sara Roy, London Review of Books [June 15, 2017]
[FB – Sara Roy is one of the world's leading experts on Gaza.  Though this essay was written a year ago, its relevance is underlined by current events.]
---- My last visit to Gaza had been in May 2014, just before Israel launched Operation Protective Edge, an assault that resulted in the deaths of more than two thousand Gazans – combatants and civilians – and the destruction of eighteen thousand homes. When I went back less than three years later the changes were evident everywhere. But two things struck me particularly: the now devastating impact of Gaza's decade-long isolation from the rest of the world, and the sense that an increasing number of people are reaching the limit of what they can endure. Gaza is in a state of humanitarian shock, due primarily to Israel's blockade, supported by the US, the EU and Egypt and now entering its 11th year. Historically a place of trade and commerce, Gaza has relatively little production left, and the economy is now largely dependent on consumption. Although a recent easing of Israeli restrictions has led to a slight increase in agricultural exports to the West Bank and Israel – long Gaza's principal markets – they are not nearly enough to boost its weakened productive sectors. Gaza's debility, carefully planned and successfully executed, has left almost half the labour force without any means to earn a living. … Need is everywhere. But what is new is the sense of desperation, which can be felt in the boundaries people are now willing to cross, boundaries that were once inviolate. [Read More]
 
OUR HISTORY
The Second Sight of W.E.B. Du Bois
By Chris Hedges, Truth Dig [June 3, 2018]
[FB - Chris Hedges gave this talk Friday at the Left Forum in New York City.]
---- W.E.B. Du Bois, more than any intellectual this nation produced in the first half of the 20th century, explained America to itself. He did this not only through what he called the "color line" but by exposing the intertwining of empire, capitalism and white supremacy. He deftly fused academic disciplines. He possessed unwavering integrity, a deep commitment to the truth, and the courage to speak it. That he was brilliant and a radical was bad enough. That he was brilliant, radical and black terrified the ruling elites. He was swiftly blacklisted, denied the professorships and public platforms that went to those who were more obsequious and compliant. Du Bois had very few intellectual rivals—John Dewey perhaps being one, but Dewey failed, like nearly all white intellectuals, to grasp the innate violence and savagery of the American character and how it was given its natural expression in empire. [Read More]
 
Israel's Attack on the USS Liberty: A Half Century Later, Still No Justice
---- In early June of 1967, at the onset of the Six Day War, the Pentagon sent the USS Liberty from Spain into international waters off the coast of Gaza to monitor the progress of Israel's attack on the Arab states. The Liberty was a lightly armed surveillance ship. Only hours after the Liberty arrived it was spotted by the Israeli military. The IDF sent out reconnaissance planes to identify the ship. They made eight trips over a period of three hours. The Liberty was flying a large US flag and was easily recognizable as an American vessel. Soon more planes came. These were Israeli Mirage III fighters, armed with rockets and machine guns. As off-duty officers sunbathed on the deck, the fighters opened fire on the defenseless ship with rockets and machine guns. … In Assault on the Liberty, a harrowing first-hand account by James Ennes Jr. … It's a story of Israel aggression, Pentagon incompetence, official lies, and a cover-up that persists to this day. The book gains much of its power from the immediacy of Ennes's first-hand account of the attack and the lies that followed. Now, decades later, Ennes warns that the bloodbath on board the Liberty and its aftermath should serve as a tragic cautionary tale about the continuing ties between the US government and the government of Israel. [Read More]