Monday, April 29, 2019

CFOW Newsletter - Climate Crisis and the Sunrise Movement; Biden for President?; Russia-Gate

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
April 29, 2019
 
Hello All – Last Friday I attended a Green New Deal "Town Hall" in Manhattan.  It was sponsored by several organizations, most notably the Sunrise Movement, several Indivisible groups, and NYC350.org.  It drew more than 200 people.  The presentations ranged from impassioned calls to action to speeches by four members of Congress focused on federal legislation.  The Town Hall was one of several hundred being held across the country. I found it both energizing and worrying.
 
As the Town Hall took place in lower Manhattan, it was not surprising that most of the speakers referenced what had happened to the city in 2012 wth Hurricane Sandy, a storm whose intensity was/is linked the climate effects of global warming.  At least 53 people died and thousands of homes were destroyed, with estimated economic losses totaling $19 billion.  That is, New York City people have had experienced the consequences of "climate change" in a way that we in Westchester have not.
 
We see the destructive effects of this coming climate disaster everywhere: in Puerto Rico's hurricane, in the California wildfires, and so on. An article linked below describes the destruction recently inflicted on Mozambique by a hurricane that literally wiped out a city the size of Atlanta; and today's news reports that an even stronger storm is raging in Mozambique right now.  We're not talking about preventing climate disaster; we're working to mitigate worst cases.
 
The young people in the Sunrise Movement get this in a way that older people don't.  Based on proven science, they know that their lives and especially the lives of their children will be structured, battered, and for many totally ruined by the climate disaster that has gone unchecked over the last 40 or more years.  A video of the Town Hall has been placed on the Sunrise Movement's Facebook page, and watching the many good speeches is recommended.  But the speech by Sunrise's Aracely Jimenez, beginning at 11:00 into the video, displays a passion and an urgency that is not so evident in the other speakers and the congressional representatives.
 
I hope we can find a way to support the passion and urgency of the young people in the Sunrise Movement and their many co-agitators. Most of the "adults" now shaping climate policy and electoral strategies will be long dead by the time that climate chaos shapes the daily lives of the world's population.  Humans as a species have never faced a crisis like this one.  It is obvious that "adults" are a long way from knowing how to collaborate worldwide to do what has to be done. We must find that dime that we need to turn on and do it. To help frame what we need to do, here again is the terrific short video from AOC and Naomi Klein called "Imagining the Future."  
 
News Notes
Amazon, Delta Air Lines, Chevron, General Motors, and lots more corporate giants paid $0 federal taxes in 2018; and many of them got tax rebates.  For a useful chart to get your blood boiling, go here.
 
The Pentagon budget request for the next fiscal year is $718 billion.  What do they want to buy with all the money?  To read their shopping list, go here.
 
Last Friday marked the 56th weekly protest by residents of Gaza against their enforced imprisonment at the hands of Israel.  No Gazans were killed last week, though Israeli forces wounded 110 civilians, including 37 children and 4 paramedics.  For more on this on-going atrocity, go here.
 
As reported in the last Newsletter, several dozen people, led by Code Pink, have occupied the Venezuelan embassy in Washington.  As the Trump people pretend that Venezuelan right-winger Juan Guaido is now the "legitimate" president of Venezuela, they are planning to take over the embassy and install "legitimate" ambassadors and staff.  The Code Pink occupation is intended to prevent that.  For an update, go here.
 
Things to Do/Coming Attractions
Ongoing – Weather permitting, the CFOW stalwarts gather every Saturday from 12 to 1 PM at the VFW Plaza in Hastings (Warburton and Spring St.) to protest war and other evils.  Please join us!
 
OngoingThe Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) in Hastings still has room for a few dozen members.  CSA's connect local/regional farms with consumers, providing fresh organic vegetables (as they come into season) in exchange for a pre-payment that helps the farmers get their new season off the ground.  The CSA in Hastings is managed by CFOW stalwart Elisa Zazzera, and the shopping/eating season runs from June 5 to November 13.  You can learn about the CSA partner, Stoneledge Farm, here.  For more information, email Elisa at hastingsCSA@gmail.com.
 
Ongoing Our "Raging Grannies" is one of the groups supporting Code Pink's campaign to expose the military and other nefarious investor financing by BlackRock, one of the world's largest investor organizations.  To learn more about BlackRock and Code Pink's campaign, go here.
 
Sunday, May 5th CFOW's next monthly meeting will be held at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society, 12 Elm St. in Dobbs, from 7 to 9 p.m.  At these meetings we review our work/the happenings of the past month and make plans for the month to come.  Everyone is welcome at these meetings.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 12 to 1 p.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Our leaflet and posters for our rallies are usually about war or climate change, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's immigration policies are often targeted, depending on current events. We (usually) 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. And if you would like to support our work by making a contribution, 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.  As always, we have some excellent "Featured Essays."  I also encourage you to check out an update on "Russia-Gate," and some fair-and-balanced assessments of the Joe Biden candidacy for President.  In the War & Peace section there are some very good articles on the wars and looming wars in Yemen, Iran, and Venezuela, and some excellent assessments of what really happened during eight years of war in Syria.  Also useful imo are the climate/cyclone disaster in Mozambique; two articles on important legal developments re: BDS; another fiery article by Israeli reporter Amira Hass; and a new and delightful essay by one of my favorite historians, Peter Linebaugh ("Our History").  Read on!
 
Rewards!
The Newsletter's rewards are intended as a rest stop between the editorial & intro business and some serious reading.  This week's Rewards are from the back-in-the day song bag.  First up is some Andy Warhol film of The Velvet Underground (1966) and a good instrumental, "I'm gonna move right in."  Next, we remember Norma Egstrom, who took a bus from North Dakota to Hollywood at the age of 17 and became Peggy Lee. Here she is in "Stage Door Canteen" with Benny Goodman (1943) and "Why Don't You do Right." And finally, from Port Arthur, Texas, here's Janis Joplin and "Piece of My Heart." Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Suicide Watch on Planet Earth: As the Flames Began to Rise, the Arsonists Appeared
By Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch [April 28, 2019]
---- Among those who will someday be considered the greatest criminals in history, don't forget the Big Energy CEOs who, knowing the truth about climate change from their own hired scientists, did everything they could to increase global doubts by funding climate-denying groups, while continuing to be among the most profitable companies around. … Sooner or later, if the global temperature is indeed allowed to rise a catastrophic seven degrees Fahrenheit or four degrees Celsius, as an environmental impact statement from the Trump administration suggested it would by 2100, parts of the planet could become uninhabitable, hundreds of millions of human beings could be set in desperate motion, and the weather could intensify in ways that might be nearly unbearable for human habitation. … We are, of course, talking about nothing short of the ultimate crime, but on any given day of our lives, you'd hardly notice that it was underway. Even for an old man like me, it's a terrifying thing to watch humanity make a decision, however inchoate, to essentially commit suicide. In effect, there is now a suicide watch on Planet Earth. Let's hope the kids can make a difference. [Read More]
 
Palestine, International Law, and a Radically Just Future
---- In her new book, Justice for Some: Law and the Question of Palestine, Noura Erakat breaks new ground in her approach to international law as it pertains to Palestine. Analysts have generally considered the law in this context as either essentially beneficent if deployed properly, or fundamentally harmful because of its relationship to power. Erakat, however, makes a more nuanced argument: Law is politics, she says, and though it can be used as a tool of domination by powerful states, it can also be used strategically to advance progressive causes – including that of Palestinian liberation. "Many of the texts about law and Palestine have been framed with the idea that if the law is allowed to operate, we will see a more just outcome," Erakat explains. "But the law is functioning as it's supposed to function. We need to be more critical about it." She argues that law has no set meaning, but is contingent on process and interpretation. "It's not merely a question of legal analysis," she says. "The law reflects a balance of power, strategy, and historical contingencies." [Read More]
 
The Most Dangerous Time for Women's Rights in Decades
By Martha Burk, Otherwords [April 24, 2019]
---- To grease the wheels, the Judiciary Committee has ended the decades-old practice of seeking advice from the American Bar Association on nominee qualifications and started holding hearings during congressional recesses. Recently the Senate voted to shortcut the process even more by reducing the time between final confirmation votes on district court judges from 30 hours to just two. Currently, 85 percent of Trump's circuit court nominees are members of the Federalist Society, an ultra-conservative legal network strongly connected to anti-abortion organizations.  [Read More]
 
Sudan's Unfinished Revolution: The Dictator Is Gone, but the Fight Continues
By Reem Abbas, The Nation [April 24, 2019]
---- On April 6, the Sudanese Professionals Association asked people to march in protest to the army headquarters in Khartoum—the most dangerous place in Sudan's capital. I was skeptical, but nonetheless I joined the march, knowing the risks but also knowing it was the only way this revolution could succeed. I went in a group for solidarity and protection. Out of the three meeting points, we chose the European Union headquarters. My dad's friend has an office on the same street, and I had worked close by at the University of Khartoum. My old office space could be a refuge if we needed to escape arrest or, possibly, live ammunition…. Figuring it was more dignified to get arrested in a protest and not in hiding, we brainstormed a plan: Sprint to the car and drive away before we are stopped and searched (we had left our phones at home, bringing only old ones for emergencies). Hoping for the best, we drove toward the army headquarters. The air ahead of us was thick with tear gas. [Read More] Also insightful and useful is "Amid U.S. Silence, Gulf Nations Back the Military in Sudan's Revolution," by Declan Walsh, The New York Times [April 26, 2019] [Read More]
 
RussiaGate Update
The Mueller Report Indicts the Trump-Russia Conspiracy Theory
By Aaron Maté, The Nation [April 26, 2019]
---- For more than two years, leading US political and media voices promoted a narrative that Donald Trump conspired with or was compromised by the Kremlin, and that Special Counsel Robert Mueller would prove it. In the process, they overlooked countervailing evidence and diverted anti-Trump energies into fervent speculation and prolonged anticipation. So long as Mueller was on the case, it was possible to believe that "The Walls Are Closing In" on the traitor/puppet/asset in the White House. The long-awaited completion of Mueller's probe, and the release of his redacted report, reveals this narrative—and the expectations it fueled—to be unfounded. … As a result, Mueller's report provides the opposite of what Russiagate promoters led their audiences to expect: Rather than detailing a sinister collusion plot with Russia, it presents what amounts to an extended indictment of the conspiracy theory itself. [Read More]
 
An Indictment in All But Name
By David Cole, New York Review of Books [May 23, 2019 issue]
[FB – This article by a leading civil liberties analyst is written as a "review" of Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election, by Robert S. Mueller III.]
---- Special Counsel Robert Mueller's long-awaited report, released to the public in a redacted version on April 18, lays out in meticulous detail both a blatantly illegal effort by Russia to throw the 2016 presidential election to Donald Trump and repeated efforts by President Trump to end, limit, or impede Mueller's investigation of Russian interference. Trump's efforts included firing or attempting to fire those overseeing the investigation, directing subordinates to lie on his behalf, cajoling witnesses not to cooperate, and doctoring a public statement about a Trump Tower meeting between his son and closest advisers and a Russian lawyer offering compromising information on Hillary Clinton. …What should be done now? …A third, more realistic form of accountability is for the House to continue its investigation of the Russian interference and Trump's conduct. At a minimum, that investigation will inform what Congress might do to ensure electoral integrity in the future…. The last and most important forum for judging Trump is the ballot box. He will almost certainly run for reelection in 2020, and voters will be able to decide whether he deserves a second term. Elections are determined by many factors, of course, so the 2020 vote will be a referendum on more than Trump's obstruction of justice. But it may be the best chance we have to call him to account for the actions the Mueller report has documented. [Read More]
 
Also useful/interesting on "Russia-Gate" – "Unanswered Questions in the Mueller Report Point to a Sprawling Russian Spy Game," by James Risen, The Intercept [April 28, 2019] [Link]; "How 'Russiagate' Has Reshaped American and Russian Public Opinion," by James Carden, The Nation [April 11, 2019] [Link]; and "Russiagate was journalist QAnon," by Matt Taibii, Politico [April 23, 2019] [Link].
 
JOE BIDEN FOR PRESIDENT?
Joe Biden Isn't the Answer
Rebecca Traister, The Cut [March 29, 2019]
---- For his whole career, Biden's role has been to comfort the lost, prized, and most fondly imagined Democratic voter, the one who's like him: that guy in the diner, that guy in Ohio, that guy who's white and so put off by the changed terms of gendered and racial power in this country that decades ago he fled for the party that was working to roll back the social advancements that had robbed him of his easy hold on power. That guy who believed that the system worked best when it worked for him. … Now it seems, That Guy is widely viewed as the best and safest candidate to get us out of this perilous and scary political period. But the irony is that so much of what is terrifying and dangerous about this time — the Trump administration, the ever more aggressive erosion of voting and reproductive rights, the crisis in criminal justice and yawning economic chasm between the rich and everyone else — are in fact problems that can in part be laid at the feet of Joe Biden himself, and the guys we've regularly been assured are Democrats' only answer. [Read More]
 
Joe Biden: An Imperial Corporatist Wrapped in the Bloody Flag of Charlottesville
---- Why is this dirty old imperialist and corporatist dog being rolled out to corporate media acclaim as the supposed people's alternative to Trump in the White House? It's all about blocking Bernie Sanders, who is the Democrats' best chance to win back the presidency since he nearly won the Democratic presidential nomination three years ago (Sanders would have prevailed over the vapid centrist Hillary Clinton but for the corrupt shenanigans of the Democratic National Committee) and is still running (as before) in sincere accord with majority-progressive-populist sentiments on key domestic issues. … Biden is part of the corporate "Stop Sanders" campaign inside the Democratic Party. It helps that he is a white male in an election cycle shaped by the Democrats' fear that running a woman and/or person of color might fuel the patriarchal and racist sentiments of the Trump base, increasing its turnout in battleground states. Look for the Democratic establishment to do everything it can to prevent its party from defeating Trump by running its most popular candidate, Bernie Sanders. Surprised? You shouldn't be. [Read More]
 
For more reasons to doubt the Joe Biden campaign - "The Other Reason Biden Shouldn't Run," by Stephen Zunes, The Progressive [April 2, 2019] [Line]; and "The Fickle Over the Faithful," by Charles M. Blow, New York Times [April 28, 2019] [Link].
 
WAR & PEACE
Fewer Americans want to serve in the military. Cue Pentagon panic
, The Guardian [UK] [April 10, 2019]
---- Donald Trump's three-quarters-of-a-trillion-dollar defense budget request submitted to Congress last month contains a dirty secret, one that should make us all think twice about perpetual war and public support for it. The youth of America don't want to serve in the military any more. The situation has become so dire that just to maintain America's ground forces – the army and Marine Corps – the two services are resorting to unprecedented pay raises, bonuses and socialist trappings. … These sweeteners are all required even though nearly three-fifths of service members and their families have at least two other immediate family members who serve or have served in the military, according to a survey by Blue Star Families, a non-profit founded by military spouses in 2009. But even that pool of "legacy" recruits is dwindling. The 2017 Blue Star Families Military Family Lifestyle Survey shows that a growing number of military families are no longer willing to recommend that their children join the service. [Read More]
 
War with Iran?
The Path to War with Iran Is Paved with Sanctions
By Joe Cirincione, LobeLog [April 23, 2019]
---- The Trump administration is laying siege to Iran. Taking pages from the Iraq War playbook, senior officials paint a picture of a rogue, outlaw, terrorist regime bent on acquiring nuclear weapons and whose "malign activities" are the cause of all the chaos in the Middle East. They know what they are doing. They have done it before. They are building a case for war. The "maximum pressure" campaign by the White House, Treasury Department, and State Department accelerated this week with the announcement that the United States would force China, India, Japan, South Korea, and Turkey to cease all imports of Iranian oil or face severe U.S. sanctions. The goal is to cut to zero all of Iran's oil exports, which account for some 40 percent of its national income. This strategy is unlikely to force the capitulation or collapse of the regime, but it very likely could lead to war. [Read More]
 
Also useful on "War with Iran?" – 'Trump's Iran terrorist designation is designed to lock in endless enmity,' b, The Guardian [UK] [April 12, 2019] [Link]; Trump Officials: China Gets No 'Wind-Down' Period for Cutting Iran Oil Purchases," by Jason Ditz, Antiwar.com [April 26, 2019] [Link]; and "End Of Sanction Waivers For Iran's Oil Will Hurt Trump's Voter Support," from Moon of Alabama [Link].
 
The War in Syria
The Secret History of America's defeat in Syria
An interview with reporter Sharmine Narwani, by Patrick Lawrence, Salon.com [April 21, 2019]
---- When the war in Syria was recently declared decisively over, there were few correspondents or witnesses to turn to for a credible look at exactly what happened during eight years of conflict. … Having witnessed the Syrian war from start to finish, she now casts it in a usefully broad context. "The Syrian conflict constitutes the main battlefield in a kind of World War III," she said during our lengthy exchange. "The world wars were, in essence, great-power wars, after which the global order reshuffled a bit and new global institutions were established." This, in outline, is what Narwani sees out in front of us, now that the Western powers' latest "regime change" operation has failed. Narwani and I conducted our exchange via email, Skype and WhatsApp over a period of several weeks in late March and early April. In this, the first of two parts, Narwani dissects the role of various constituencies — radical jihadists and the nations that backed them, the Western press, the NGOs — in prolonging a war that, in her view, could have ended far sooner than it did. I have edited the transcript solely for length. Part 2 will follow. [Read More]
 
Coalition Airstrikes in Raqqa Killed at Least 1,600 Civilians, More Than 10 Times U.S. Tally, Report Finds
By Alex Emmons, The Intercept [April 25 2019]
---- Mohannad al-Tadfi is one of more than 400 witnesses or survivors interviewed by Amnesty International, which, along with the monitoring group Airwars, released their most comprehensive report Thursday on the coalition's air and artillery campaign during the four-month offensive to retake the city in 2017. The groups found that coalition strikes killed at least 1,600 civilians. … The Trump administration has looked to other countries to provide recovery funding for cities like Raqqa and Mosul. In March 2018, the White House put a freeze on more than $200 million the State Department had set aside for Syrian reconstruction under former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. The administration later informed Congress that money would be reallocated to "other, unspecified areas," according to the Washington Post. [Read More]
 
The War in Yemen
Yemen death toll to surpass 230,000 by end of 2019: UN report
By James Reinl, Middle East Eye [April 26, 2019]
---- By the end of 2019, fighting in Yemen will have claimed about 102,000 lives, according to new figures from the United Nations that indicate the war has killed far more people than previously reported. A UN-commissioned report by University of Denver also revealed that more Yemenis were dying of hunger, disease and the lack of health clinics and other infrastructure than from fighting. About 131,000 Yemenis will have died from these side effects of the conflict between the beginning in 2015 and the end of 2019, according to the 68-page study, called Assessing the Impact of War on Development in Yemen. The combined death toll from fighting and disease is 233,000, or 0.8 percent of Yemen's 30 million-strong population. Researchers also said that those five years of conflict will have cost Yemen's economy $89bn. … According to Moyer, the vast majority of the victims of Yemen's conflict are children under five. [Read More]  For another perspective, read "More Than 70,000 Killed in Yemen's Civil War: Database Tracker," by Jason Ditz, Antiwar.com [April 19, 2019] [Link]
 
The War on Venezuela
Economists Warn Trump's Sanctions Targeting Venezuela 'A Death Sentence for Tens of Thousands of People'
By
---- Two American economists warn that U.S. sanctions targeting Venezuela "are a death sentence for tens of thousands of people" and that the nation's humanitarian crisis will worsen as long as the sanctions continue. … The broad sanctions Trump imposed in 2017 fueled a sharp decline in oil production that impeded the Maduro government's ability to "import medicine, food, medical equipment, spare parts and equipment needed for electricity generation, water systems, or transportation," and the U.S. president has ramped up economic pressure since offering his support to Guaidó earlier this year. [Read More]
 
GLOBAL WARMING/CLIMATE BREAKDOWN
It's Time to Pay Our Climate Debt to Countries Like Mozambique
By Ben Ehrenreich, The Nation [April 22, 2019]
---- Bad things happen all the time in places with unfamiliar names. Disaster piles upon disaster: Last month a cyclone, somewhere else a flood. The newscasters don their most solemn expressions, frown for a quick, respectful pause, and move on. With Idai, it was a city larger than Oakland or Atlanta, simply washed off the map. And it will almost certainly happen again. More heat in the oceans means extra energy for storms. Idai was the seventh of nine cyclones in the southern Indian Ocean this season, more than twice the usual average. More severe hurricanes are hitting the Atlantic—remember Maria, and the nearly 3,000 killed in Puerto Rico?—and more severe cyclones are forming in the Indian Ocean. Many more people will die. Others will profit. The latter, insists Dipti Bhatnagar, a climate activist in the Mozambican capital of Maputo, have a bill to pay. [Read More] And just days ago Cyclone Kenneth, the strongest storm in Mozambique history, hit the already battered country.  Here are preliminary accounts from Democracy Now! and The New York Times.
 
THE STATE OF THE UNION
Bring Back May Day
By Saurav Sarka, OtherWords [April 24, 2019]
---- Most of the world recognizes May 1 — May Day — as International Workers' Day. Here in one of the few countries that doesn't, it's worth pausing to ask how U.S. workers are doing. At an event marking the launch the Poor People's Campaign, Fight for $15 organizer Terrence Wise recalled "going to bed at night, ignoring my own stomach's rumbling, but having to hear my three little girls' stomachs rumble. That's something no parent should have to endure." Last year, the Institute for Policy Studies and the Poor People's Campaign released The Souls of Poor Folk, a report on 50 years of change in the issues that affect working people, and particularly those at the bottom. We looked at systemic racism, poverty, militarism, and ecological devastation. We found some startling and unhappy results. For the most part, workers like Wise are struggling hard to get by. … Of course, these changes haven't happened in a vacuum. It's not a coincidence that while most Americans are struggling, just three individuals — Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, and Warren Buffett — together own as much wealth as half of the country combined. It's also probably no coincidence that the American politicians backed by billionaires don't recognize May Day. [Read More]
 
Universal Health Care Might Cost You Less Than You Think
By Matt Bruenig, People's Policy Project [April 29, 2019]
---- As the national debate about health care kicks off ahead of the 2020 presidential election, we're going to be hearing a lot about the costs of increasingly popular progressive proposals to provide universal health care, like Bernie Sanders's Medicare for All plan. One common refrain on the right and the center-left alike: Since the rich can't foot the bill alone, are middle- and working-class supporters of a more socialized health care system really ready to pay as much for it as people do in some of the high-tax nations that have one?The problem is, we already do, and we often pay more. … Unlike workers in many other countries, the vast majority of American employees have private health insurance premiums deducted from their paychecks. If we reimagine these premiums as taxes, we'd realize that Americans pay some of the highest and least progressive labor taxes in the developed world. Just how heavy is the burden placed on American workers by employer insurance premiums? [Read More]
 
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
Soldiers Have to Shoot at Palestinians. It's Israel's Way to Keep Them in Check
By Amira Hass, Haaretz [Israel] [April 28, 2019]
---- The soldiers have no choice but to shoot. They have no choice but to hit demonstrators, stone throwers and paramedics who volunteer during confrontations, to kill and wound those who brandish knives. Surprise that the soldiers fire even at youths who are handcuffed and blindfolded belongs to a different era.  It belongs to the 1970s or '80s, when we still thought that military domination over a population of noncitizens was an accident, a temporary deviation that would soon be corrected. When we hadn't yet recognized that the soldiers' role is to protect the spoils of war rather than our existence. When there weren't yet cameras everywhere to shatter our naivete. If the Palestinians don't receive a clear message every day that they're risking their own lives when they resist our rule, tomorrow they will march by the thousands and tens of thousands, empty-handed or armed with spades and stones, toward the Israeli settlements, outposts, checkpoints and military bases in the heart of a civilian population. [Read More]
 
The logic behind US humiliation of the Palestinians
By Marwan Bishara, Aljazeera [Quatar] [April 24, 2019]
---Changes to the traditional US foreign policy in the Middle East have come at the initiative of Trump's three top Middle East advisors: his son-in-law Jared Kushner and his two former New York lawyers, Jason Greenblatt and David Freedman, who have been actively promoting pro-Israeli policies for decades. These three proud radical Zionists have clearly demonstrated their enthusiasm for Israel's illegal settlements in the Palestinian territories and their rejection of the label "occupied" for the West Bank and Jerusalem.  They are part of a group of American Zionist hardliners who opposed the "Oslo Peace Process" in the 1990s and have even made comparisons between Israeli peacemakers and Nazi collaborators. They have dismissed Palestinian national and historical rights out of hand and defended Israel's actions as ordained by God. [Read More]
 
OUR HISTORY
The Earth for Their Possession
[FB – Peter Linebaugh writes in the tradition of E. P. Thompson and others who explore "history from the bottom up."  His books are insightful ("The Commons") and sometimes at first sight quirky (Piracy as the best job a sailor could get in the 17th century).  His new book is Red Round Globe Hot Burning:  A Tale at the Crossroads of Commons & Closure, of Love & Terror, of Race & Class, and of Kate and Ned Despard.  It is a collection of interesting-lookiing essays.  The essay below is written as reflections on his recent speaking appearance in Hawaii.]
---- At the University a circle of fifty people came to hear about Red Round Globe Hot Burning whose title comes from William Blake. I recited,
They told me that night and day were all that I could see;
They told me that I had five senses to inclose me up,
And they inclos'd my infinite brain into a narrow circle,
And sunk my heart into the Abyss, a red round globe hot burning
Till all from life I was obliterated and erased.
The apparent confusion in these lines between the cosmos (the round globe) and the subject (my heart, my brain) no longer seems quite so deranged in our age of planetary warming, ocean acidification, and species extinction.  It explains why Blake's moment of truth is upon us.  In response to the anthropocene we could do worse than Blake's "The whole business of man is the arts and all things common." Apart from the beach (and the "weeds") nothing much is common any more in Honolulu. [Read More]
 
(Video) Defying Gravity: American Power in the Long 20th Century
By Adam Tooze, London Review of Books [March27, 2019]
---- The history of American power, as it is commonly written, is a weighty subject, a matter of military and economic heft, of 'throw-weight', of resource mobilization and material culture, of 'boots on the ground'. In his LRB Winter Lecture, Adam Tooze examines an alternative, counterintuitive vision of America, as a power defying gravity. This image gives us a less materialistic, more fantastical and more unstable vision of America's role in the world. The lecture was delivered at the British Museum on 22 February 2019. [See the Program]
 
 
CFOW Newsletter - Climate Crisis and the Sunshine Movement; Biden for President?;  Russia-Gate

Monday, April 22, 2019

CFOW Newsletter - What next after the Mueller Report?

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
April 22, 2019
 
Hello All – With the release of the Mueller Report, the drama of the Trump presidency moves on to the next Act. The protagonists remain the same – Trump & Co., the Democrats, and the media establishment and supporting cast.  As the drama unfolds, how will we, the audience, respond and participate?
 
The Mueller Report provides no relief from the tensions developed in the previous Acts. Russian "meddling" is confirmed, "collusion" is dismissed, and "obstruction" is described, even if it does rise to the level of "crime."  Trump & Co. claim victory, while the Democrats vow to pursue the issues not resolved by the Report, though they are divided between Impeachment and Investigation.
 
Within the Democratic Party, the leadership has spoken clearly in favor of Investigation, dismissing Impeachment as unrealistic.  A useful article in The Nation entitled "The Mueller Report Is a Road Map for Congressional Investigation" outlines the most likely course that the Democrats will take. But proponents of Impeachment are gaining some ground.  that a slim majority of Americans want Trump impeached.  Elizabeth Warren has stated that she favors Impeachment, and other Democratic presidential candidates will have to decide on this also. And the newly elected radical women in the House of Representatives are demanding that the House get going on Impeachment.
 
Thus two issues are at stake here, though closely mingled.  One is, Is there a moral imperative to initiate Impeachment, given the magnitude of Trump's crimes and misdemeanors?  The second issue is, Which course of action, Impeachment or Investigation, is more likely to help the Democrats win in 2020? 
 
We see a Third Way forward. On Saturday, CFOW's weekly peace vigil supported Impeachment, but with a different approach. Similar to Noam Chomsky's take (linked below), we see the choices as presented above by the Democrats as likely to lead to a loss in 2020.  The Mueller Report "revealed" what we more or less knew from Day One: that Trump is a corrupt egomaniac, beholden to big business and earning his pay by inflaming his "base" – 30 percent of the electorate – on cultural issues of little interest to the rich people running the country.  Proving this in great depth is unlikely to change the 2020 electoral outcome. Thus our leaflet on Saturday proposed that the Impeachment of Trump be framed around his real and serious crimes – his crimes against peace and threats of war; his sabotage of any meaningful response to our environmental crisis; his brazen violations of law against immigrants and refugees, and his Nazi-like confinement of children in cages, and so on.
 
Finally, there remains the issue of Russian "meddling."  This received only a few pages in the Mueller Report; basically, the very foundation of the claims against Trump and thus the Mueller investigation are not examined in the Report. These claims have been questioned in many previous newsletters, and are discussed critically in some of the good/useful reading linked below.  Now it suffices to link Stephen F. Cohen's observations on how the Russian "meddling" claims are aggravating the new Cold War;  the assessment by former intelligence professionals that the Russian "hacking" theory is far from proven; and an investigation by Gareth Porter throwing doubt on the claims that Facebook posts by Russian "bots" played a role, or were intended to play a role, in influencing the 2016 election. Congressman Eliot Engel, in his capacity of chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, promises to introduce legislation to "punish those responsible" for Russian interference in our elections.
 
So the choices confronting the Democrats and the political Establishment now are whether to attack the Trump presidency – whether through Impeachment or through Investigation – via an attack on the Muller Report trivia or by an attack on Trump's more fundamental misuses of power that threaten our nation's well-being and harm millions of people throughout the world. I think only a powerful clamor from the Multitude will force the Democrats to address the real issues of peace, climate chaos, and economic justice. Can we do it?
 
News Notes
Over the weekend – and now Earth Day – the Extinction Rebellion broke out in Europe and the USA, especially in the UK, where there were hundreds of arrests and lots of colorful action.  Check out the Rebellion's "Updates" #5 and #6 for full coverage and lots of great pictures.
 
In Westchester, more than 60,000 immigrants and refugees live under threat of deportation. Last October, South Church in Dobbs Ferry gave Sanctuary to a family so threatened.  Now our friends at South Church  are looking to raise $35,000 to do some rehab work that would give the church and future Sanctuary families suitable accommodation.  To learn more (and please consider making a contribution), go here.
 
Next Friday, April 26th, marks the 33rd anniversary of the 1988 meltdown of a nuclear reactor in Chernobyl, just north of Kiev in Ukraine. The UN calls this the worst environmental catastrophe in human history. Much about the disaster remains unknown, including how many were killed and what dangers remain.  To learn more about this story, go here.
 
Sally O'Neill, one of the great human rights workers in Central America, was tragically killed last week in an automobile accident.  Read about some of her achievements here. Ironically, in illustrating O'Neill's role in bringing the 1981 Mozote (El Salvador) massacre to the world's attention, The Times' report links the writing of Raymond Bonner, whose reporting at that time, on Mozote and much else in El Salvador, was critical of the role of the USA and the government troops that it trained to fight insurgents. Under pressure from the Reagan administration, The Times soon removed Bonner from the El Salvador beat.
 
Finally, in this space last week we noted the dangers in which Rep. Ilhan Omar was living, given the media demonization and the many threats to her life. An article in The Nation this week underscores this theme, writing "Donald Trump Isn't Playing Games With Ilhan Omar—He's Inciting Violence."
 
Things to Do/Coming Attractions
Ongoing – Weather permitting, the CFOW stalwarts gather every Saturday from 12 to 1 PM at the VFW Plaza in Hastings (Warburton and Spring St.) to protest war and other evils.  Please join us!
 
OngoingThe Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) in Hastings still has room for a few dozen members.  CSA's connect local/regional farms with consumers, providing fresh organic vegetables (as they come into season) in exchange for a pre-payment that helps the farmers get their new season off the ground.  The CSA in Hastings is managed by CFOW stalwart Elisa Zazzera, and the shopping/eating season runs from June 5 to November 13.  You can learn about the CSA partner, Stoneledge Farm, here.  For more information, email Elisa at hastingsCSA@gmail.com.
 
Friday, April 26th (and on-going) – Supporters of the Green New Deal have organized dozens of "Town Halls" to explain what The Deal is and how to help bring it into being.  On Friday there will be Town Halls on W. 18th St. in NYC and at Sarah Lawrence College in The Bronx.  And many more are scheduled.  The event is free.  More info and to get a Reservation, go here.
 
Sunday, May 5th CFOW's next monthly meeting will be held at the Dobbs Ferry Historical Society, 12 Elm St. in Dobbs, from 7 to 9 p.m.  At these meetings we review our work/the happenings of the past month and make plans for the month to come.  Everyone is welcome at these meetings.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  We meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 12 to 1 p.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Our leaflet and posters for our rallies are usually about war or climate change, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's immigration policies are often targeted, depending on current events. We (usually) 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. And if you would like to support our work by making a contribution, 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.  As always, we have some excellent "Featured Essays."  I also encourage you to check out the sections of articles about the Mueller Report and the arrest of Julian Assange; an in-depth report by Al McCoy about the history of the US drug wars; and an essay about the late and great historian Eric Hobsbawm.  Read on!
 
Rewards!
The Newsletter's Rewards provide stalwart readers with an oasis of calm and a welcome diversion from the troubles of the world.  The Rewards this week are from the 1936 film "Modern Times," Charlie Chaplin's last (more or less) silent film, which I watched over the weekend. How does the Little Tramp deal with the Great Depression?  First, he gets a job at a Ford-type factory with aspirations to speed up everything, including Charlie's lunch.  Next, he lucks into a job as a night watchman, where he tries out the roller skates.  Fired once again, he gets a job as a singing waiter.  And finally, when girlfriend Paulette Goddard feels that there's no hope for her, he bucks her up and makes her smile and they walk off together, into the new day. Popular Front romanticism at its best. Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
(Video) A Message From the Future With Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
By Naomi Klein, The Intercept [April 17 2019]
---- Today, The Intercept launches "A Message From the Future With Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez," a seven-minute film narrated by the congresswoman and illustrated by Molly Crabapple. Set a couple of decades from now, it's a flat-out rejection of the idea that a dystopian future is a forgone conclusion. Instead, it offers a thought experiment: What if we decided not to drive off the climate cliff? What if we chose to radically change course and save both our habitat and ourselves? What if we actually pulled off a Green New Deal? What would the future look like then? This is a project unlike any we have done before, crossing boundaries between fact, fiction, and visual art, co-directed by Kim Boekbinder and Jim Batt and co-written by Ocasio-Cortez and Avi Lewis. To reclaim a phrase from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, it's our "green dream," inspired by the explosion of utopian art produced during the original New Deal. And it's a collaboration with a context and a history that seems worth sharing. [Read more and see the video]. And for more on this topic, read "Ending climate change requires the end of capitalism. Have we got the stomach for it?" by Phil McDuff, The Guardian [UK] [Mach 28, 2019] [Link].
 
(Video) The Mueller Report: Glenn Greenwald vs. David Cay Johnston on Trump-Russia Ties, Obstruction & More
From Democracy Now! [April 19, 2019]
---- The Justice Department has released a redacted version of special counsel Robert Mueller's 448-page report detailing Russian meddling in the 2016 election, the Trump campaign's contacts with Russia and President Trump's attempts to impede the special counsel's investigation. The report states the campaign "expected it would benefit electorally from information stolen and released through Russian efforts," but Mueller concluded, "the investigation did not establish that members of the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities." … We host a debate on the report's findings between two Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists: Glenn Greenwald of The Intercept and David Cay Johnston, who has covered Donald Trump since the 1980s. [See the Program]
 
For more useful reading on the Mueller report – "Robert Mueller Did Not Merely Reject the Trump-Russia Conspiracy Theories. He Obliterated Them," by Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept [April 18 2019] [Link]; "Will the Mueller Report Make the New Cold War Even Worse?" by Stephen F. Cohen, The Nation [April 17, 2019] [Link]; "Mueller Report Likely to Renew Scrutiny of Steele Dossier," by Scott Shane, et al., New York Times [April 19, 2019] [Link]; and "The 'Guccifer 2.0' Gaps in Mueller's Full Report," by Daniel Lazare, Consortium News [April 18, 2019] [Link].
 
(Video) Chomsky: By Focusing on Russia, Democrats Handed Trump a "Huge Gift" & Possibly the 2020 Election
From Democracy Now! [April 18, 2019]
[FB – This is one part of a lengthy interview with Noam Chomsky, hosted by Democracy Now!'s Amy Goodman at Boston's historic South Church. All of them are very interesting, imo.]
---- The Democrats invested everything in this issue. Well, turned out there was nothing much there. They gave Trump a huge gift. In fact, they may have handed him the next election. That's just a—that's a matter of being so unwilling to deal with fundamental issues, that they're looking for something on the side that will somehow give political success. The real issues are different things. They're things like climate change, like global warming, like the Nuclear Posture Review, deregulation. These are real issues. But the Democrats aren't going after those. They're looking for something else—the Democratic establishment. I'm not talking about the young cohort that's coming in, which is quite different. Just all of that has to be shifted significantly, if there's going to be a legitimate political opposition to the right-wing drift that's taking place. And it can happen, can definitely happen, but it's going to take work. [See the Program]
 
Without Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, we would live in darker, less informed times
By Patrick Cockburn, The Independent [UK]
---- Lost in this dog-fight is what Assange and WikiLeaks really achieved and why it was of great importance in establishing the truth about wars being fought on our behalf in which hundreds of thousands of people have been killed. This is what Daniel Ellsberg did when he released the Pentagon Papers about the US political and military involvement in Vietnam between 1945 and 1967. Like Assange, he exposed official lies and was accused of putting American lives in danger though his accusers were typically elusive about how this was done. But unless the truth is told about the real nature of these wars then people outside the war zones will never understand why they go on so long and are never won. Governments routinely lie in wartime and it is essential to expose what they are really doing. [Read More[
 
For more on Assange's arrest – "Julian Assange Suffered Severe Psychological and Physical Harm in Ecuadorian Embassy, Doctors Say," by James Risen, The Intercept [April 15 2019] [Link]; "Media Cheer Assange's Arrest," by Alan MacLeod, Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting [FAIR] [April 18, 2019] [Link]; and two articles by Kevin Gosztola on Shadowproof, "Justice Department Charges Julian Assange With Computer Crime But Alleges Conspiracy To Abet Espionage,"[April 11, 2019] [Link]; and "FBI Affidavit In Assange Case Shows Government Is Criminalizing Publication Of Afghanistan War Logs," [April 16, 2019] [Link].
 
WAR & PEACE
The Toxic Lure of 'Guns and Butter'
By Norman Solomon, Antiwar.com [April 16, 2019]
---- The current political brawl over next year's budget is highly significant. With Democrats in a House majority for the first time in eight years, Speaker Nancy Pelosi and most other party leaders continue to support even more largesse for the Pentagon. But many progressive congressmembers are challenging the wisdom of deference to the military-industrial complex – and, so far, they've been able to stall the leadership's bill that includes a $17 billion hike in military spending for 2020…. It was a contention that Martin Luther King Jr. emphatically rejected. "When a nation becomes obsessed with the guns of war, social programs must inevitably suffer," he pointed out. "We can talk about guns and butter all we want to, but when the guns are there with all of its emphasis you don't even get good oleo [margarine]. These are facts of life." But today many Democrats in Congress evade such facts of life. They want to proceed as though continuing to bestow humongous budgets on the Pentagon is compatible with fortifying the kind of domestic spending that they claim to fervently desire. [Read More]
 
The War in Yemen
Trump's Veto on Yemen War Is a Sign That the Strongmen in the U.S. and Saudi Arabia Are Winning
By Sarah Aziza, The Intercept [April 18 2019]
---- On Tuesday, Donald Trump invoked his veto power for only the second time in his presidency. Trump's move struck down a congressional resolution to end U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen. In doing so, he stifled a moment of rare bipartisanship, flexing his own authoritarian tendencies to protect a fellow autocrat, the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who is known by the initials MBS. By doing so, Trump not only signaled his loyalty to a prince who has been widely implicated in the murder of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi, as well as the imprisonment and torture of numerous human rights activists, but he has also ensured that the U.S. would remain complicit in the world's worst humanitarian crisis. Far from an effort to protect the Constitution, as Trump claimed, the veto was rather the latest example of the autocratic, tit-for-tat deal-making that has in recent years increasingly dominated the geopolitics of the Middle East…This trend has dramatic implications in the Middle East. Since the collapse of the Arab Spring and in the wake of years of foreign intervention, hopes of democracy in the region have in large part given way to a cast of authoritarian rulers. From MBS in Saudi Arabia to Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey to the recently re-elected Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel, the region has grown increasingly polarized under hawkish, right-wing leaders. [Read More]
 
The War on Venezuela
Defending Venezuela: Two Approaches
By Chris Gilbert, Monthly Review [April 16, 2019]
---- Recent U.S. attacks on Venezuela have generated a widespread international response. Good willed people from all walks of life have come forward to express their solidarity with the Bolivarian revolution and their opposition to intervention. This is inspiring and leads one to conclude that there is generalized dissatisfaction with the global system and, together with it, a willingness to be critical and work for change. Naturally these defenses have focused on imperialism, intervention and interference. The overall consensus is "Hands off Venezuela." This slogan is a good one, since every thinking person today defends democracy, and a condition for democracy is that nations maintain (or attain) their sovereignty. (Nothing could be more antidemocratic than having foreign powers interfere in a country and have them sponsor foreign-appointed pretenders such as Juan Guaidó). However, this focus on imperialist interference, correct as it is, has sometimes led to an apparent indifference to the content of the revolution and its internal dynamic. … It is one thing to show the criminality of imperialist interference—it is indeed criminal—but it is a more powerful gesture to show that popular democracy can confront imperialism.  [Read More]
 
War with Iran?
U.S. Risks Roiling Oil Markets in Trying to Tighten Sanctions
By Edward Wong and Clifford Krauss, New York Times [April 15, 2019]
---- The Trump administration has reached a critical juncture in its efforts to tighten United States oil sanctions against Iran and Venezuela. By pressuring China and India to end or sharply reduce oil purchases from Iran and Venezuela, American officials are seeking to cut off a key economic lifeline for what the administration considers to be two rogue nations that threaten the stability of the Middle East and Latin America. But they must do that without roiling global markets, further straining relations with China and India or raising gasoline prices in the United States. The dilemma has led to a fierce debate within the Trump administration, which is set to decide by May 2 whether to extend waivers allowing China, India and three other nations to buy Iranian oil. A halt of oil shipments would constrict global oil supplies and increase costs at a time when much of the world economy is slowing. [Read More]
 
GLOBAL WARMING/CLIMATE CRISIS
Why Won't New York State Take Bold Action on Climate Change?
By Sean McElwee, The Nation [April 16, 2019]
---- According to the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, we have about 12 years to dramatically reduce our rate of carbon pollution or face a dire and apocalyptic future. There has been very little action on climate change at the federal level, but in the states, there have been growing calls to set legally enforceable mandates to combat carbon emissions. In New York, the Climate and Community Protection Act (CCPA) would enshrine these mandates into law. There is just one problem: Governor Andrew Cuomo.  … The bill was first introduced in 2016, and passed the state Assembly three times. The state Senate looks poised to act on the bill this year, but Cuomo has not supported it nor said that he would sign it. For the past four years, he's ignored the legislation, while claiming to be a climate leader. Instead, Cuomo has proposed his own bill, the Climate Leadership Act. But the CLA falls far short of both the national Green New Deal and the CCPA, which is supported by over 170 organizations in New York State. [Read More]
 
CIVIL LIBERTIES/"THE GLOBAL WAR ON TERROR"
'The FBI Appears to Be Engaged in a Modern-Day Version of COINTELPRO'
Janine Jackson interviews Nusrat Choudhury, Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting [FAIR] [April 19, 2019]
---- The FBI appears to be engaged in a modern-day version of COINTELPRO, and many of us remember, COINTELPRO took place in the last century, in the '50s and '60s, targeting covert activities against civil rights leaders and black people who had the courage to protest racial discrimination and to advocate for full equality and racial equity in this country. It looks like it's version 2.0. And when we look at this document, this FBI intelligence assessment, from August 2017 that creates this label of "Black Identity Extremists," it's based on nothing; there's no credible evidence that such a movement or group even exists. But what that report shows is that the FBI is looking at First Amendment–protected activity to determine who is a so-called "Black Identity Extremist." That report shows a focus at the FBI on social media activity, on the online search terms that people use, and what kind of internet content a person may like, as well as their associations with certain groups. [Read More]
 
The U.S. military prison's leadership considered Mohamedou Salahi to be its highest-value detainee. But his guard suspected otherwise.
By Ben Taub, The New Yorker [April 15, 2019]
---- The fragmented image of Mohamedou Salahi that United States military, law-enforcement, and intelligence agencies assembled in a classified dossier was that of a "highly intelligent" Mauritanian electrical engineer, who, "as a key al-Qaida member," had played a role in several mass-casualty plots. Other men carried box cutters and explosives; Salahi was a ghost on the periphery. The evidence against him lacked depth, but investigators considered its breadth conclusive. His proximity to so many events and high-level jihadi figures could not be explained by coincidence, they thought, and only a logistical mastermind could have left so faint a trail. [Read More]
 
THE STATE OF THE UNION
In New Effort to Deter Migrants, Barr Withholds Bail to Asylum Seekers
By Michael D. Shear and Katie Benner, The New York Times [April 16, 2019]
---- The Trump administration on Tuesday took another significant step to discourage migrants from seeking asylum, issuing an order that could keep thousands of them in jail indefinitely while they wait for a resolution of their asylum requests. The order issued by Attorney General William P. Barr was an effort to deliver on President Trump's promise to end the "catch and release" of migrants crossing the border in hopes of escaping persecution in their home countries. The order — which directs immigration judges to deny some migrants a chance to post bail — will not go into effect for 90 days. It is all but certain to be challenged in federal court, but immigrant rights lawyers said it could undermine the basic rights of people seeking safety in the United States. [Read More]
 
Decriminalizing the Drug War: The Damage done by a Century of Drug Prohibition
---- We live in a time of change, when people are questioning old assumptions and seeking new directions. In the ongoing debate over health care, social justice, and border security, there is, however, one overlooked issue that should be at the top of everyone's agenda, from Democratic Socialists to libertarian Republicans: America's longest war. No, not the one in Afghanistan. I mean the drug war. ….  Instead of reducing the traffic, the drug war has actually helped stimulate that 10-fold increase in global opium production and a parallel surge in U.S. heroin users from just 68,000 in 1970 to 886,000 in 2017. On the other side of history's ledger, the harm-reduction movement led by medical practitioners and community activists worldwide is slowly working to unravel the global prohibition regime. With a 1996 ballot measure, California voters, for instance, started a trend by legalizing medical marijuana sales. By 2018, Oklahoma had become the 30th state to legalize medical cannabis. Following initiatives by Colorado and Washington in 2012, eight more states to date have decriminalized the recreational use of cannabis, long the most widespread of all illicit drugs. [Read More]
 
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
Trump's Embrace of Netanyahu Will Haunt the Middle East for Years
By Phyllis Bennis, The Nation [April 15, 2019]
---- Among Palestinians, there was little need to ask about what the election meant for them: Whatever government emerged seemed guaranteed to maintain current Israeli positions in support of occupation and apartheid, against international law, for war with Iran, for full-throated alliance with the US president and US military aid, and against human rights for Palestinians and equality for all. … During the campaign, Netanyahu not only vowed to annex illegal Israeli West Bank settlements in violation of international law, but also expressly disavowed the State of Israel's obligations to its Palestinian citizens. … It's been clear for a while that Netanyahu's power is thoroughly bound up with his up-close-and-personal alliance with the US president. Trump's list of gifts to Netanyahu goes back a long time. But Trump's embrace of Israel has escalated the already-supportive relationship far beyond any of those earlier assumptions. The whole run-up to the election was a tour de force of US enabling of Netanyahu's reelection and the rise and consolidation of Israel's far-right wing. [Read More]
 
Trump's America, Netanyahu's Israel
By Adam Shatz, London Review of Books [April 18, 2019]
---- Israel's legislative elections on 9 April were a tribute to Binyamin Netanyahu's transformation of the political landscape.  At no point were they discussed in terms of which candidates might be persuaded by (non-existent) American pressure, or the 'international community', to end the occupation. This time it was a question of which party leader could be trusted by Israeli Jews – Palestinian citizens of Israel are now officially second-class – to manage the occupation, and to expedite the various tasks that the Jewish state has mastered: killing Gazans, bulldozing homes, combating the scourge of BDS, and conflating anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism. With his promise to annex the West Bank, Netanyahu had won even before the election was held. It wasn't simply Trump's recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights that sped the incumbent on his way; it was the nature of the conversation – and the fact that the leader of the opposition was Benny Gantz, the IDF commander who presided over the 2014 'Operation Protection Edge', in which more than 2000 Gazans were killed. [Read More]
 
OUR HISTORY
Eric Hobsbawm's 20th century.
By David Marcus, The Nation [April 8, 2019]
[FB – When Eric Hobsbawm died a few years ago, we lost one of the great historians of our time, both in terms of what he wrote and how he influenced younger historians (e.g. me).  Almost alone among the incredible cohort of leftwing British historians of the 1950s and thereafter, Hobsbawm remained in the Communist Party, increasingly a lone survivor of a now-lost hopeful era.  During his later years and after his death, many critics focused on his CP connection to dismiss what he had done.  To me, the question was: How did being in the CP affect his history writing, for better or worse?  The book under review here seems to address this question; and I think it raises broad questions about "commitment" and "objectivity" for those working in many fields, not just academic history.]
---- Faced with the failures of early-20th-century communism, Hobsbawm found himself forced to liberalize his socialism. This was, he insisted, what Marx would also have done—"to recognize the novel situation in which we find ourselves…and to formulate not only what we would want to do, but what can be done." … Hobsbawm often lamented that the agitations of his primitive rebels did not leave behind any lasting institutions for the present. But the unconventional radicals of the 20th century—Hobsbawm included—did leave a mark, giving the left an image of a wide-ranging egalitarianism with which to challenge the reigning inequalities and injustices of its day. The popular fronts that it inspires will certainly not look like those of the past. They will face new challenges, and they will be forced to make history in their own way. But then again, none of us gets to act in the circumstances of our choosing. [Read More]
 
Earth Day: Colonialism's role in the overexploitation of natural resources
By Joseph McQuade, The Conversation [April 18, 2019]
---- We are currently experiencing the worst environmental crisis in human history, including a "biological annihilation" of wildlife and dire risks for the future of human civilization. The scale of that environmental devastation has increased drastically in recent years. Mostly to blame are anthropogenic, or human-generated factors, including the burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil. Other industries like gem and mineral mining also destroy the world's ecological sustainability, leading to deforestation and the destruction of natural habitats. Much of this traumatic exploitation of natural resources traces its origins to early colonialism. Colonialists saw "new" territories as places with unlimited resources to exploit, with little consideration for the long-term impacts. They exploited what they considered to be an "unending frontier" at the service of early modern state-making and capitalist development. To understand our current ecological catastrophe, described as "a world of worsening food shortages and wildfires, and a mass die-off of coral reefs as soon as 2040," we need to look at the role of colonialism at its roots. [Read More]