Monday, January 27, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on Trump's Impeachment

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
January 27, 2020
 
Hello All – Will the "leak" of former National Security Adviser John Bolton's book manuscript make a difference?  Will it be the "Black Swan" that saves the day and turns the tide on President Trump's impeachment trial? Will the alleged revelations contained in the manuscript, and reported in today's New York Times (and presumably chewed over for hours on cable news) sway four Republican Senators to agree to Democratic demands that additional witnesses – ta dah, John Bolton – must be called to testify at the Senate trial?  It's not impossible; and there's also a strong possibility that President Trump will commit new unforced errors – a cover-up of the cover-up – in attempting to ensure that Bolton doesn't testify.
 
Without defections from "moderate Republicans," the Republican majority in the Senate is sufficient to bulldoze its way to a vote to acquit Trump by the end of the coming week.  But with an eye to the November elections – not just for president, but for all offices – the Republicans are concerned to manufacture at least a thin coating of legitimacy over the impeachment process. The Democrats' demand that they be able to call additional witnesses appears to be supported by a broad swathe of public opinion. A recent CNN poll, for example, found that 69% of Americans, including 48% of Republicans, say that the impeachment trial should include testimony from new witnesses who did not testify in the House trial. The Bolton revelations will only add to this pressure.
 
The Democrat "managers" have made a strong case.  From a legal perspective, as outlined by former National Lawyers Guild president Marjorie Cohn on Democracy Now! last week, Trump is guilty not only of abuse of power and the Ukraine business, but could also be impeached for war crimes, assassinations, and corruption.  And "the country" seems persuaded: according to a Fox News poll released Sunday morning – has persuaded a majority of the population, and a large majority (53-34 percent) of independents, that the Senate should vote to convict Trump and remove him from office.  Again, the non-stop cable news programming about Bolton's book is likely to strengthen these numbers further. I think this could be an interesting week.
 
Politics
CFOW does not "endorse" candidates for elected office, but we have a consensus among us to support and publicize the ideas and issues of the two progressive Democrats, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. We think these ideas represent the minimum program our country needs to escape the disasters of war and our climate crisis. This week the news media reported that Sanders was ahead in the polls in Iowa and New Hampshire; and David Swanson offers a useful analysis of a recent CNN poll, "Sanders is the Most Electable."  The Nation also offers support to the two progressive Democrats, and this week published a pair of "endorsements": "Why I Support Elizabeth Warren for President, by Richard Parker; and "Why I support Bernie Sanders for President," by Zephyr Teachout.  Also last week the Democratic National Committee appointed committees for the Democratic National Convention that include many people strongly opposed to a progressive agenda. Finally, the group of activist-intellectuals around Z Magazine – Noam Chomsky, Barbara Ehrenreich, et al. – has published "An Open Letter to the Green Party about 2020 Election Strategy," urging the party not to run a presidential campaign in battleground states.  An interesting and important piece, imo.
 
News Notes
Shortly after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, some of the scientists who helped to develop the Bomb founded The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists to work for peace.  Two years later, they created the Doomsday Clock, posted on their magazine to indicate how close the world was to atomic apocalypse (midnight).  Last year, the Doomsday Clock stood at two minutes before midnight.  Last week the Bulletin moved the second hand so as to leave us at 100 seconds before midnight.  To learn more and why the scientists think we are even closer to Doom this year, go here.
 
On Friday, tens of thousands of Iraqis demonstrated in Baghdad to demand that US troops leave Iraq. The "million person march" was organized by the supporters of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and the heads of Shiite party-militias.  Between them, these groups have more than 100 seats in Iraq's parliament, which voted a few weeks ago to demand that the US troops pull-out, after the assassination of Iran's General Suleimani.  Both President Trump and Secretary of State Pompeo have stated that US troops will not leave.  To read a user-friendly background article, go here, and to see a short video of the protests, go here.
 
The coronavirus, which began last month in China, has expanded quickly, with four cases reported in the USA.  Should we worry?  What should we do?  CFOW stalwart Betsy Todd has put up a blog for the American Journal of Nursing explaining the nature of the disease and the precautions we should take. A useful article from Friday's New York Times asks "Is American Ready for Another Outbreak?" and answers in the negative, stressing the importance of decision-making based on science, not politics. One of the reasons why the USA is not as prepared for this new virus as we should be is because so much of our public health infrastructure has suffered from funding cuts over the past decade.  Read more here.
 
Finally, some important votes re: war & peace are coming up in the House of Representatives   next Thursday.  One vote will on the question of repealing the 2002 Authorization to Use Military Force, or AUMF; this is introduced by Rep. Barbara Lee, the only member of Congress to vote against the legislation 18 years ago.  The second vote will be on Rep. Ro Khanna's bill to prohibit funding for any military offensive against Iran without congressional approval. If you would like to make your voice heard, you can call Rep. Eliot Engel (202-225-2464) and/or Rep. Nita Lowey (202-225-6506).  To learn more about these bills and other war & peace issues before Congress next week, go here.
 
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 the climate crisis, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's immigration policies are often targeted, depending on current events. Also, we (usually) have a general meeting on the first Saturday afternoon of each month. 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!
 
Rewards!
Randy's back! With President Trump's back to the wall – Impeachment and all that – Randy Rainbow puts up a new campaign theme song ("it's only a draft") to re-elect the Orange One.  And on a much more serious note, I highly recommend this (audio) interview with Michelle Alexander, in which she reflects on the 10th anniversary of her seminal book, The New Jim Crow, and what it would take to change America's racial crisis.
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
SOME FEATURED ESSAYS
 
How the Transformative Power of Solidarity Will Beat Trump
By Naomi Klein, The Intercept [January 22, 2020]
---- This is one of the fascinating ways that the campaign's slogan "Not Me. Us." has gradually taken on a life of its own, with new layers of meaning added as the project matures. When the slogan was first unveiled, it seemed to mean something narrow and specific: This campaign was not about voting for a messianic leader who would fix all of our problems for us. To achieve the scale and speed of change that Sanders is pledging (and that we desperately need), the people currently supporting his campaign, with small donations and volunteer work and eventually votes, will need to stay organized and keep pushing for change on the outside, just as they did during the New Deal era. The slogan still carries that meaning. … But as the campaign has gone on and the base has grown, the slogan's meaning has become more layered. "Not Me. Us." is now also the first-person voice of that worker or student or senior or immigrant who previously had been suffering in silence and solitude, blaming themselves, and who now sees that they have more company than they ever dared to imagine. Now it also means: "I thought it was just me. Now I know it is us." [Read More]
 
How Generation Z is leading the climate movement
By Nick Engelfried, Waging Nonviolence [January 14, 2020]
---- Andrea Manning was quickly drawn into Zero Hour's remotely coordinated teenage network, becoming an organizer. The team's first project was a nationwide day of action that summer on July 21, 2018, which included a march in Washington, D.C. and satellite actions around the country. Manning and her friends pulled off an Atlanta rally that drew 40 people. Small as this first local action may have been, the phenomenon of high schoolers protesting climate change piqued the community's interest and garnered coverage from news media like the Georgia State Signal. Meanwhile, young people around the world were drawing inspiration from Zero Hour — most notably Greta Thunberg, then a 15-year-old high school student in Sweden. Thunberg read about Zero Hour's day of action online. Then, a month later, she began her Fridays For Future school strike campaign, protesting outside Sweden's parliament every week. The strike movement spread across Europe and the world, becoming a key part of today's wave of youth climate activism.  [Read More]
 
Indelible Legacy: Or How This Became a Gitmo World
Karen J. Greenberg and Joshua Dratel, Tom Dispatch [January 2020]
---- In January 2002, the Guantánamo Bay Detention Facility in Cuba opened its gates for the first 20 detainees of the war on terror. Within 100 days, 300 of them would arrive, often hooded and in those infamous orange jumpsuits, and that would just be the beginning. At its height, the population would rise to nearly 800 prisoners from 59 countries. Eighteen years later, it still holds 40 prisoners, most of whom will undoubtedly remain there without charges or trial for the rest of their lives. … And those detainees are hardly the only enduring legacy of Guantánamo Bay. Thanks to that prison camp, we as a country have come to understand aspects of both the law and policy in new ways that might prove to be "forever changes." Here are eight ways in which the toxic policies of that offshore facility have contaminated American institutions, as well as our laws and customs, in the years since 2002. [Read More]
 
One person, one vote for Israel-Palestine
By Gideon Levy, Haaretz [Israel] [January 26, 2020]
---- The Trump administration's Middle East peace plan brings with it good news and bad news. It will put the final nail in the coffin of that walking corpse known as the two-state solution – that's the good news. It will also create a new reality in which international law, the resolutions of the international community and especially international institutions are meaningless. Filled with the hope that the U.S. president instills in us, in his great mercy, let's begin with the good news. Once his proposal is made public, no one will ever be able to talk with any seriousness about the two-state solution. It was probably never born, but now it is clearly dead. There is no Palestinian state and there never will be. … Trump's news and the world's capitulation, however, are much more portentous. Trump is creating not only a new Israel, but a new world. A world without international law, without honoring international resolutions, without even the appearance of justice. A world in which the U.S. president's son-in-law is more powerful than the UN General Assembly. [Read More]
 
The War on Journalism [Julian Assange and Glenn Greenwald]
By Nozomi Hayase, Antiwar.com [January 24, 2020]
---- At the hearing on Thursday, at Westminster in London, the timetable for Julian Assange's US extradition case was worked out. Assange's US legal teams made an application to have the extradition hearing split. His defense lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald, emphasized to the court that they won't be ready to call the main body of their evidence until after the first week of the hearing, which is now set to start at the end of February.  … Assange's legal team has been warning about the threat to press freedom by the US government's judicial overreach to prosecute a foreign journalist, with their two-edged sword of denying the First Amendment protection, while applying the Espionage Act. … Now, the "Assange precedent" seems to be being quietly established. The spark of the war on journalism now has enlarged. On Tuesday, Glenn Greenwald, a journalist at The Intercept, was charged with cybercrimes in Brazil…  Assange's extradition hearing is now set to proceed in two parts from the beginning of February 24, for one to two weeks and then continue further from May 18 for three more weeks. This is the most important press freedom case of 21st century. The public must engage in order to end this war on journalism. [Read More]
 
Americans Need to Hear More from Iranians. Here's Where to Start.
By Negin Owliaei, Foreign Policy in Focus [January 21, 2020]
---- Following President Trump's announcement that the U.S. would seek new sanctions, but not immediate military escalation, against Iran, most people in the United States likely breathed a sigh of relief. For Iranians and Iranian Americans like myself, that relief was accompanied by a reminder of just how painful existing conditions can be. Sanctions starve our people of food, medicine, and safety while public figures threaten us with more violence. We may no longer be at immediate risk of all-out, open combat, but this is hardly peace. Every part of the U.S. relationship with Iran feels asymmetrical, and looking through coverage of Iran in U.S. media makes that imbalance incredibly obvious. … Perspectives from Iranians and Iranian Americans have been largely absent in mainstream U.S. media, or of questionable sourcing when they do appear. Fortunately, this absence has also been felt by plenty of Americans, eager to resist more bloodshed in their names. So I've compiled a few of the most illuminating and emotionally resonant pieces I've come across from Iranians and Iranian Americans, both in the diaspora and within Iran. [Read More]
 
Our History
(Video) "King in the Wilderness"
FB – I failed to include this magnificent documentary – new to me – in last week's appreciation of Martin Luther King, on the anniversary of his birthday.  This 2018 film covers King's last years, when, following the Harlem riots of 1964 and the Watts riot of 1965, he moves his civil rights campaign to the North, starting with a residence in Chicago slum housing, and intersects with a political climate that sorely tests his commitment to nonviolence. Check it out - here.
 

Sunday, January 19, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on Dr. Martin Luther King's gifts to us all

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
January 19, 2020
 
Hello All – Martin Luther King, Jr. is remembered now as a civil rights leader and an advocate of nonviolence; but in his last years King also became an outspoken opponent of war and a crusader for economic justice.   On his day, let us remember and honor the great arc – the entirety – of Dr. King's life.
 
In one of his last essays, for example, King pointed out that the "black revolution" had gone beyond the "rights of Negroes." The struggle, he said, is "forcing America to face all of its interrelated flaws—racism, poverty, militarism and materialism. It is exposing the evils that are rooted deeply in the whole structure of our society. It reveals systemic rather than superficial flaws and suggests that radical reconstruction of society itself is the real issue to be faced."
 
This is the Martin Luther King, Jr. that we wish to especially remember and honor today.  In the face of our many wars, we recall the words he spoke at Riverside Church in NYC just a year before his death; he said:
 
America, the richest and most powerful nation in the world, can well lead the way in this revolution of values. There is nothing except a tragic death wish to prevent us from reordering our priorities so that the pursuit of peace will take precedence over the pursuit of war. There is nothing to keep us from molding a recalcitrant status quo with bruised hands until we have fashioned it into a brotherhood.
 
Millions of people are homeless and suffering because of the wars supported by our government. The disasters of war engulf Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, and now threatens the people of Iran. Yet the people of America have not been able to act effectively to turn the tide of disaster. In his own day, King addressed a similar dilemma, our failure to stop the war in Vietnam, killing millions of people. In his 1967 speech at Riverside Church, he said:
 
If we do not stop our war against the people of Vietnam immediately, the world will be left with no other alternative than to see this as some horrible, clumsy, and deadly game we have decided to play. The world now demands a maturity of America that we may not be able to achieve...The situation is one in which we must be ready to turn sharply from our present ways.
 
Finally, Martin Luther King, Jr. proclaimed that justice and peace couldn't wait. Millions of lives depended on swift and powerful action. He said:
 
We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In this unfolding conundrum of life and history, there is such a thing as being too late. Procrastination is still the thief of time. Life often leaves us standing bare, naked, and dejected with a lost opportunity. The tide in the affairs of men does not remain at flood—it ebbs. We may cry out desperately for time to pause in her passage, but time is adamant to every plea and rushes on. Over the bleached bones and jumbled residues of numerous civilizations are written the pathetic words, "Too late."
 
On this, the 91st birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr., let us honor his memory by renewing our resolve to do all we can to work for peace and justice.
 
Some illuminating reading/listening to help us remember MLK – We can starting with his great 1963 "I Have a Dream" speech, move on to his courageous "Anti-Vietnam War speech" at Riverside Church, NY, in 1967; and finally to the speech he gave to striking Memphis sanitation workers on the eve of his assassination, "I Have Been to the Mountaintop." As for some reading, there is so much, but some of these may be new to you: "The Hours Before "I Have a Dream," by Calvin Trillin, The New Yorker [August 30, 1963] [Link]; "Martin Luther King's Radical Anticapitalism," by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, The Paris Review [January 15, 2020] [Link]; and "Martin Luther King Day with Trump," by Jelani Cobb, The New Yorker January 7, 2017] [Link].
 
Politics
The media-driven scuffle between Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, and their supporters, thankfully seems to be drawing to a close; but it shows the fragility of the non-aggression pact between the two progressive candidates for the Democratic nomination for president.  I think it is  very important that we keep our Eyes on the Prize of retaining this progressive united front until it is clear which of the two candidates appears to have the greater chance of winning in November, and then to encourage a blending of the two campaigns behind him or her.  In this case, as in so many others, demands for "unity from below" are our safeguard against division among leaders.  In support of this, let us congratulate the leaders of 16 progressive organizations who quickly issued a unity statement, and I encourage a close reading of the article by Norman Solomon, a supporter of Sanders, "Not Bernie, Us.  Not Warren, Us."
 
Also fading seems to be the immediate danger of a US-Iran war. In the 48 hours when it appeared that such a war was threatening, it was clear that there was not much popular support for war, and in many places strong opposition.  But it was also clear that the antiwar movement was not as strong as it must be if we are to have much effectiveness.  Responding to this concern, I think that we all – not just "antiwar groups" – need to give this our attention.  Helpful in this respect, I believe, are ""Iran Tensions Showed How Much More Work an Effective U.S. Anti-War Movement Needs to Do," by Natasha Lennard, The Intercept [Link], and a roundtable discussion led by The Intercept's Jeremy Scahill, "Trump v. Iran: What Now?" [Link].
 
News Notes
The proliferation of "Killer drones," used to assassinate Iranian General Suleimani and thousands of other "bad guys" around the world, is a terrible danger to the human species.  In Westchester, www.knowdrones.com is an excellent website to learn about this danger.  This week I learned about a UN program that focuses on the dangers of drone robots, the drones guided/programmed by Artificial Intelligence.  To learn more about this danger, I recommend a chapter from the just-out annual report of Human Rights Watch, "As Killer Robots Loom, Demands Grow to Keep Humans in Control of Use of Force" [Link].
 
We learned this week that the past decade was the hottest decade in recorded history, and that 2019 was the second-hottest year ever. Moreover, according to new climate models, it appears that the force of CO2 in the atmosphere has been underestimated, and that it has a greater impact on warming that has been thought up to now. In a nutshell, this is very bad news. Thus the deadline to establish a drastic reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, thought to be some 12 years in the future according to the most recent UN report, may well be some decades behind us.  Whether and how much drastic action may mitigate disaster, such as that now  burning much of Australia, is of course unknown, but it would be criminal not to try.  To get involved in a serious way with efforts to save our civilization from environmental chaos, check out the newly formed group, Extinction Rebellion Westchester.
 
On December 9th the Washington Post published documents – dubbed "the Afghanistan Papers" – it received under the Freedom of Information Act that showed that the congressionally appointed Inspector for Afghanistan had amassed  hundreds of pages of testimony by US military personnel in Afghanistan affirming that the war was going badly and they had no idea what they were doing.  Last Tuesday, Rep. Eliot Engel's Foreign Affairs Committee held a lengthy hearing/interview with the Inspector, who confirmed the worst news and more. The video of the hearing can be seen here, and an especially illuminating segment can be watched at 1:17:25 into the video. Because of the Impeachment proceedings and the usual Trump antics of the day, the hearing was poorly attended, with little media coverage; and it is to be regretted that Rep. Engel did not use the full potential of the Afghanistan Papers to launch an extended public investigation into the War against Afghanistan and why we should leave asap, but in an odd way Trump's wars-around-the-world are sheltered from scrutiny by the media/congressional demands of Impeachment.
 
Last Tuesday, more than 500 people went to Albany to support "Fair and Timely Parole" (S.497A) and "Elder Parole," (S.2144).  CFOW member Steve Siebert reports:  
 
Over 500 people (for issues like this, an unexpectedly large and encouraging number) showed up to urge lawmakers to pass these two bills. Much of the day was theatrical – marches though the halls while singing and chanting, a press conference on the Million Dollar Staircase, stories from many formerly incarcerated [under the dome of the aptly but depressingly named War Room, "honoring" acts of genocide against native Americans thought to be part of NY state's glorious history]). But numerous meetings were held with legislators, and additional co-sponsors signed onto the bills. Our subgroup of about eight people met with an aide to Tom Abinanti, who has not yet signed on to sponsor either bill. I've talked to him in the past about the urgency of criminal justice reform, and he seems supportive, but also seems to need political cover for this. Another Hastings-on-Hudson resident who was there and I are going to try to get a petition together with hopefully hundreds of signatures from the river towns, including Tarrytown and perhaps Elmsford.
  
For details on the issue and the event, go here. And coming up next week, on January 21st in Albany there will be a rally to limit solitary confinement to 15 days. To learn more about the event and the reasons why the action is important, go here. The organizers are aiming for 1,000 participants; please join them!
 
Finally, as if we don't have enough on our plate, Business Insider reports (and video!) that "The Navy has said it has top-secret information about unidentified flying objects that could cause "exceptionally grave damage to the National Security of the United States" if released."  We report, you decide.
 
Things to Do/Coming Attractions
Tuesday, January 21st – Again in Albany, there will be a rally to limit solitary confinement to 15 days.  To learn more about the event and the reasons why the action is important, go here. The organizers are aiming for 1,000 participants; please join them!
 
Sunday, January 26th – The Sister District Bronx/Westchester with the Social Justice committee at the First Unitarian Society of Westchester and CFOW will show the documentary film "Suppressed: The Fight to Vote," from 3 to 5 pm.  The film shows Stacey Abrams' fight to become the first Black female governor in the U.S, and the many challenges that face Georgians, including polling place closures, voter purges, missing absentee ballots, extreme wait times and a host of voter ID issues—all of which disproportionately prevented many students and people of color from casting their ballots. The FUSW is at 25 Old Jackson Rd. in Hastings. For more information email ny16dc@gmail.com.  
 
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 the climate crisis, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's immigration policies are often targeted, depending on current events. Also, we (usually) have a general meeting on the first Saturday afternoon of each month. 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!
 
Rewards!
Until this week, I did not know about the Protest Music Project housed at the interesting website www.shadowproof.com.  From this site, and in honor of yesterday's many Women's Marches, here is "We Are Rising" by Taina Asili.  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
THIS WEEK'S FEATURED ESSAYS
 
Injustice on Repeat: From mass incarceration to mass deportation, our nation remains in deep denial.
By Michelle Alexander, New York Times [January 17, 2020]
---- We are now living in an era not of post-racialism but of unabashed racialism, a time when many white Americans feel free to speak openly of their nostalgia for an age when their cultural, political and economic dominance could be taken for granted — no apologies required. Racial bigotry, fearmongering and scapegoating are no longer subterranean in our political discourse; the dog whistles have been replaced by bullhorns. White nationalist movements are operating openly online and in many of our communities; they're celebrating mass killings and recruiting thousands into their ranks. … Contrary to what many people would have us believe, what our nation is experiencing is not an "aberration." The politics of "Trumpism" and "fake news" are not new; they are as old as the nation itself. The very same playbook has been used over and over in this country by those who seek to preserve racial hierarchy, or to exploit racial resentments and anxieties for political gain, each time with similar results. [Read More]
 
The Center Blows Itself Up: Care and Spite in the 'Brexit Election'
By David Graeber, New York Review of Books [January 13, 2020]
---- Politics, in wealthy countries, is increasingly becoming a war between the generations. … Why, then, such an apparently devastating victory? Why did middle-aged swing voters—particularly in the former Labour heartlands of the North—break right instead of left? … Most experienced the next forty or so years largely as a sequence of disasters. In 2016 they turned against the "Eurocrats," then watched in dismay as the entire political class proceeded to engage in endless and increasingly absurd procedural ballet that appeared designed to reverse their decision. This explanation is true, but superficial. To understand why Brexit became such an issue in the first place, one must first ask why a populism of the right has so far proved more adept than the left at capitalizing on profound shifts in the nature of class relations that have affected not just the UK but almost all wealthy societies; second, one must understand the uniquely nihilistic, indeed self-destructive, role of centrism in the British political scene. [Read More]  For additional insights into the collapse of the UK, read "Labour's fake anti-Semitism crisis outlives Corbyn" by Asa Winstanley, Electronic Intifada [January 16, 2020] [Link]; and "So Much for England," by Tariq Ali, London Review of Books [January 23, 2020] [Link]
 
The Playbook for Poisoning the Earth [Bees and Neonicotinoids]
By Lee Fang, The Intercept [January 18, 2020]
[FB – Years ago, the late Jean St. George, an early member of CFOW, would bring up at our monthly meetings, "What about the bees?" To give her her due, we would talk about this for a few minutes and then move on, not knowing how to even start "saving the bees."  Looking back, how wrong we were, and how right Jean was, about the centrality of this crisis.]
---- In September 2009, over 3,000 bee enthusiasts from around the world descended on the city of Montpellier in southern France for Apimondia — a festive beekeeper conference filled with scientific lectures, hobbyist demonstrations, and commercial beekeepers hawking honey. But that year, a cloud loomed over the event: bee colonies across the globe were collapsing, and billions of bees were dying. … In the U.S., however, industry dug in, seeking not only to discredit the research but to cast pesticide companies as a solution to the problem. Lobbying documents and emails, many of which were obtained through open records requests, show a sophisticated effort over the last decade by the pesticide industry to obstruct any effort to restrict the use of neonicotinoids. [Read More] For some clues about where this is going, read "Who Controls Trump's Environmental Policy?" New York Times [January 14, 2020] [Link].
 
Our History
It's Time We Celebrate Ella Baker Day
By Mark Engler, The Nation [January 17, 2020]
---- Honoring Baker alongside Martin Luther King would highlight the long and patient work of building a social movement. King was undeniably an inspirational leader who deserves to be honored. But this weekend also should allow us to appreciate other contributors to the civil rights movement. The life of Ella Baker highlights a different model of leadership and gives insight into the long and patient work of building a social movement. While King is justly remembered as a powerful preacher and rousing orator, a political strategist and practitioner of nonviolent direct action, Baker calls attention to a more specific role: that of the organizer.
Drawing from activist Bob Moses, the sociologist Charles Payne has argued that the civil rights movement of the 1950s and '60s actually contained two distinct traditions. One he labels "the community-mobilizing tradition," which was "focused on large-scale, relatively short-term public events." Payne sees this lineage as "best symbolized by the work of Martin Luther King," and he includes in it such well-remembered events as the March on Washington and the famous campaigns in Birmingham and Selma, Alabama. The second is a tradition of community organizing. This is a lineage, Payne writes, "with a different sense of what freedom means and therefore a greater emphasis on the long-term development of leadership in ordinary men and women," and it is a tradition best epitomized "by the teaching and example of Ella Baker."
Ultimately, both dramatic mass protest and long-term organizing were essential to the gains of the civil rights movement. But in retellings of what it took to secure change, the latter work is too often forgotten. [Read More]
 
 
 
 

Sunday, January 12, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on "Killer Drones" and Assassination

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
January 12, 2020
 
Hello All – A week ago, President Trump brought the USA to the edge of war with Iran by assassinating their General Suleimani. The murder weapon of choice was a missile fired by an MQ-9 Reaper Drone, flying high in the sky. In just over a decade, weaponized Drones have become the go-to tool in the Imperial Toolbox.  Drones come in many shapes and sizes. Some are large and some are small.  Some Drones are for surveillance: hovering over a village or tracking or searching for an individual who has been designated as a target. Others, like the Reaper, are outfitted with missiles to strike at the "enemy."
 
Beginning with the Obama administration, Drones have racked up an impressive record as a killing machine.  Drones have been used to kill people in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Syria, Somalia, Yemen, Niger, Libya and the Philippines. The numbers are imprecise, hard to come by, and largely secret, but Drones have killed at least 12,200 people in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen alone.  The total number of drone dead is much higher, particularly because of more intense use of killer drones in Afghanistan in the last three years.  The government refuses to release figures on the numbers of these attacks.
 
The government says drone killing is "precise".  But the killing is done by Hellfire missiles and 500-pound bombs, which means that usually, many more than those targeted are killed.  And there is enduring terror from drone attacks for people who know that their lives can be snuffed out at any minute by an unseen and unheard missile.  We must understand that all those killed are being killed without due process, violating international law and U.S. law prohibiting assassination. Politicians are acting as judge, jury and executioner, as happened in the case of General Suleimani. Killer drones enable government vigilante actions that not only violate human rights but national sovereignty and respect for the rights of all governments to protect their citizens.  General Suleimani was killed in Iraq, whether the Iraqi government liked it or not.
 
Killer drones are bringing a new level of lawlessness to the world that is totally unacceptable. The world needs to ban weaponized Drones.  If their use and development continue, we will soon be in a world of war by "artificial intelligence," a world too frightening to contemplate.  A useful first step would be a negotiated moratorium on Drone killings, something Congress could legislate and presidential candidates could promise.  Please call Eliot Engel (202-225-2464); Chuck Schumer (202-224-6542); Nita Lowey (202-225-6506); and Kirsten Gillibrand (202-224-4451). Ask them to support legislation to stop weaponized Drones.
 
To learn more about the uses and dangers of weaponized Drones, the place to start is the website www.KnowDrones.com.  It is run by Nick Mottern, a resident of Hastings and a member of CFOW. His "Drone Organizer's Bulletin" includes analyses of drone warfare and reports from anti-drone organizers across the USA.  A useful overview of how Killer Drones serve as a weapon of terrorism, even when they are not firing their missiles, was published last month; read "Merry Christmas, America! Let's Remember the Children Who Live in Fear of Our Killer Drones," by Elise Swain and Jon Schwarz, [Read More] And on the same day that General Suleimani was killed in Iraq, a attempted assassination-by-drone failed to hit the right "bad guy" in Yemen, illustrating a glitch in our precision murder weapon. [Link] For an interesting overview of the role that drones play in the USA's great economic and military campaign in the Middle East, read Michael Hudson's "America Escalates Its "Democratic" Oil War in the Near East," [Link].
 
News Notes
On Thursday, January 9th, CFOW held a No War on Iran rally in Hastings.  More than 100 people attended.  (See pictures and video on our Facebook page.) Our event was one of more than 370 events organized by MoveOn across the country (see pictures here.)
 
In talking about the dangers of US/NATO military exercises on Russia's border, or other close encounters between US and Russian troops (e.g. Syria), we often say that this could lead to an accidental nuclear war.  Never! reply some of our critics.  Well, here are some semi-famous examples of how close we have com  to accidental nuclear war in the past decades – from the Union of Concerned Scientists.
 
It is usually said as a half-joke, half-truth: "The American people couldn't find [fill in whatever country we were bombing at the moment] on a map.  Well, now this question has been studied, and it turns out that 23 percent of Americans were able to locate Iran on a map, though an earlier survey found that 36 percent were able to find North Korea on a map. [Link]. Should the War Powers Act include a map test?
 
Finally, our Things to Do/Calendar (below) includes two rallies in Albany to relieve some of the horrors of Incarceration Nation.  Steve Siebert writes: "As we know, some important first steps toward criminal justice reform – the elimination of cash bail for misdemeanors and some non-violent felonies, and new discovery rules that give the accused the right to hear the evidence against them in a timely fashion – took effect in NY state on January first. But much more needs to be done to address the on-going injustices in the country's mass-incarceration system. There are two opportunities to continue this movement of reform that may be of interest, both involving lobbying days in Albany."
 
Things to Do/Coming Attractions
Tuesday, January 14th - Extinction Rebellion is an international movement that uses non-violent, direct action to raise awareness about the climate and ecological crisis. Extinction Rebellion Westchester will present a program called "Climate Change: Heading for Extinction (and What to Do About It.)"  XR says: "In this public talk, climate speakers from Extinction Rebellion will share the latest climate science on where our planet is heading, discuss some of the current psychology around climate change, and offer solutions through the study of social movements." At the JV Harmon Community Center, 44 Main St. in Hastings, from 7 to 9 pm.  Free.
 
Tuesday, January 14th – In Albany, there will be a rally to support Fair and Timely Parole (S.497A) and Elder Parole (S.2144). Almost 500 people are signed up to attend.  For details on the issue and the event, go here.
 
Thursday, January 16th & Saturday, January 18thThe Legal Aid Society of Westchester will present two "Know Your Rights" forums, both covering the new criminal justice legislation, immigration reform, and voter registration.  There will also be Legal Aid attorneys available for one-on-one discussions.  The forum on the 16th is at the Yonkers Riverfront Library from 5 to 7 pm; the forum on the 18th is at the Field Library in Peekskill, from 1 to 3 pm.
 
Tuesday, January 21st – Again in Albany, there will be a rally to limit solitary confinement to 15 days.  To learn more about the event and the reasons why the action is important, go here. The organizers are aiming for 1,000 participants; please join them!
 
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 the climate crisis, but issues such as racial justice or Trump's immigration policies are often targeted, depending on current events. Also, we (usually) have a general meeting on the first Saturday afternoon of each month. 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!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
SOME INTERESTING/ILLUMINATNG FEATURED ESSAYS
 
10 Ways Trump's Actions Against Iran Hurt the US, the Region, and the World
By Medea  Benjamin and Nicholas Davies, Common Dreams January 10, 2020]
---- The U.S. assassination of General Qassem Soleimani has not yet plunged us into a full-scale war with Iran thanks to the Iranian government's measured response, which demonstrated its capabilities without actually harming U.S. troops or escalating the conflict. But the danger of a full-blown war still exists, and Donald Trump's actions are already wreaking havoc. The tragic crash of the Ukranian passenger jet that left 176 dead may well be the first example of this, if indeed it was shot down by a jittery Iranian anti-aircraft crew who mistook the airliner for a U.S. warplane. "If we fail to haul our deluded leaders back from the brink, an American war on Iran may mark the ignominious end of our country's imperial moment and seal our country's place among the ranks of failed aggressors whom the world remembers primarily as the villains of human history." Trump's actions make the region, and the American people, less safe in at least ten important ways. [Read More]
 
What if Australia Were Its Own Planet?
By Bill McKibben, The Nation [January 9, 2020]
---- The idea of Australia as a planet of its own only goes so far, of course—even if it stopped exporting coal tomorrow and resolved to power its own economy with abundant wind and sun, Australia's temperature would continue to rise. The country cannot, by itself, solve global warming. But if the shock of these hideous firestorms is what's required to decisively change Australia's politics, technology, and relations with the continent's original inhabitants, that example would demonstrate to the rest of the world that real change is not impossible. Imagine an Australia that stopped building new coal mines and started installing more giant solar farms and batteries; imagine an Australia where people retreated enough to give the natural world the margin it clearly requires. What we're going to see, over the next year or two, is whether modern societies are capable of responding to this kind of horror with the speed and courage that science demands. Planet Australia may be the best experiment we ever get. [Read More]
 
Also useful/illuminating – Famous climate scientist Michael Mann is interviewed (video) on The Real News (15 minutes).  For some good reading: "Australia is built on lies, so why would we be surprised about lies about climate change?" by Luke Pearson for IndigenousX [January 9, 2020] [Link];  and "Australia's Decade of Burning Environmental Apathy," by Edward Cavanough, The Nation [January 10, 2020] [Link].  And in case you are wondering, read "2019 Was Second Hottest Year on Record," by [Link].
 
Tear-Gas Gelato, Foulmouthed Mooncakes and Other Foods Fit for a Revolution
By Laurie Wen, New York Times [January 9, 2020]
[FB – Laurie Wen, a filmmaker and writer, was recently the staff person for Physicians for a National Health Program in NYC, but is now in Hong Kong, writing a book about the democracy movement.]
---- If the current protests in Hong Kong have lasted seven months despite minimal concessions from the government and the rising costs — economic, social, psychological — of all the disruption and violence, that's partly because sympathetic citizens like Ah Wa have mobilized to organize parallel support systems for the demonstrators. Various shadow networks of caterers, lawyers, health care providers or car-poolers have emerged. There are apps that tell you which restaurants and shops are "yellow" (pro-democracy) and which are "blue" (pro-police and pro-government). … One dessert place invites front liners who are low on cash to "come be food testers." A steamed-rice crepe shop offers a free meal to anyone who hands in a yellow Post-it that says, "I love Hong Kong"; at one burger joint, you're comped a meal if you whisper to a staffer: "Hong Kong, ga yau!" — "add oil," a term of encouragement among protesters. Employees of an e-commerce platform prepay for restaurant meals and groceries, then give out the order numbers to demonstrators so they can claim the food. … Mooncakes, round pastries often filled with a pristine, salted egg yolk, can be eaten at any time, but they're most common around Mid-Autumn Festival, an annual harvest ritual held during a full moon. Legend has it that on the occasion of the holiday in 1368, Han Chinese rebels wanting to overthrow Mongol oppressors slipped into the cakes pieces of paper calling for a revolt. The people got the message, rose up and overthrew the Mongol Yuan dynasty. Today, Kristina Sze, the owner of Wah Yee Tang Bakery, doesn't bother hiding her messages inside the cakes; she stamps them on top. [Read More]
 
The War on the War on Cancer
By Sharon Lerner, The Interceept [January 12, 2020]
---- Virtually no sector of the EPA's work has escaped reversals that will cause disease and death among the U.S. population. The agency scrapped the Clean Power Plan and a rule to improve fuel efficiency standards for cars, depriving the public of not just the climate benefits but also the improvements to air quality and health both would have brought. The EPA rejected its own science in deciding not to ban chlorpyrifos, a pesticide linked to autism and other neurodevelopmental problems in children. Dozens of other EPA rollbacks — including the gutting of the Clean Water Act, the undermining of guidelines on emissions of methane from landfills, the loosening of restrictions on toxic air pollution from industrial facilities, the disbanding of a panel on air pollution — will have dire health consequences, as will the dramatic reduction in the enforcement of environmental laws. The erosion of these protections may leave Americans at greater risk of all kinds of health effects, including fertility issues, birth defects, and neurodevelopmental problems — all of which have been linked to chemical exposure. But among the most devastating of Trump's legacies will be an increase in cancers. [Read More]
Our History
Project 1619 and Its Detractors
By Louis Proyect, Counterpunch [January 10, 2020]
---- Last August, the New York Times Sunday Magazine devoted an entire issue to Project 1619, an attempt to root today's racism in the institution of slavery dating back to the seventeenth century. In 1619, British colonists in Point Comfort, Virginia bought twenty African slaves from Portuguese traders who had landed there, fresh from a body-snatching expedition. Times reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones wrote the introduction to ten articles in the magazine that focused on different aspects of Black oppression, such as Traymaine Lee's on the wealth gap between black and white Americans. Four months later, five prominent historians of the Civil War signed a letter demanding that the newspaper correct "errors" and "distortions" in Project 1619. … As an example of what irked the five historians, the letter complains about the project asserting that colonists declared independence from Britain "in order to ensure slavery would continue." It was clear that they were singling out Ms. Hannah-Jones who did write: "Conveniently left out of our founding mythology is the fact that one of the primary reasons the colonists decided to declare their independence from Britain was because they wanted to protect the institution of slavery." [Read More]