Sunday, August 30, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on defeating Trump in November

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 30, 2020
 
Hello All – For the coming election, the Republicans appear to be staking everything on law-and-order and white supremacy.  The speeches that opened the convention on Monday and closed it Friday stake out the territory of a 21st-century American fascism. Though President Trump made random boasts about the success of the economy or the defeat of the coronavirus, the default theme of the Republican convention was the threat of Black Lives Matter and a promise to protect the suburbs from this plague.  Will it work?
 
For better or worse, Americans have been "chosen" to hold the levers that will decide the future of humans. I'm sure that few people welcome this responsibility; and undoubtedly many share my fears that we may not make the right choices. I think Noam Chomsky lays out our dilemma very well in the short video linked below.  We face the twin dangers of nuclear war and climate destruction, and in a very short time we must make the decisions and take the actions that will prevent these disasters.  As Bill McKibben explains in his article linked below, it must be Joe Biden's climate programs that determine the fact of humanity; we've run out of presidential administrations to waste.
 
So Trump must be defeated in November.  The vehicle assigned for this task is Biden-Harris, not our first choice, but the only one we have.  The Democratic Party leadership seems to be counting on not-Trump being a winning strategy; and this may well be true.  But the grassroots energy now rocking the country is coming from the Black Lives Matter movement and their white allies, drawn largely (my guess) from the Sanders wing of the Democratic Party. It is this grassroots energy that will be called on to play a key role if and when Trump and his allies render our election chaotic, with an uncertain result.  We face not only the possibility of an October Surprise, but even more surprises in the months to come.  En garde!
 
News Notes
Stephen Miller may not be a household name, but he is one of the most important players creating Trump's fascist Agenda.  Miller's specialty is anti-immigration policy; his goal is to exclude people of color from our country in the name of White Supremacy.  Last week Democracy Now! had an extended two-part interview (here and here) with award-winning journalist Jean Guerrero, author of the new book Hatemonger, a profile of Miller and the anti-immigration networks in the USA.  Guerrero also had an op-ed in Friday's New York Times, "Stephen Miller's Dystopian America."  An important subject; please check it out!
 
For CFOW, an important benefit of the victory of Jamaal Bowman in the Democratic primary last June was getting rid of Eliot Engel, whose power-base as head of the House Foreign Affairs Committee gave him an important (and militaristic) role in US foreign policy, esp. re: Israel/Palestine.  It now appears that the contest among Democrats hoping to succeed Engel as chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee includes a progressive, Rep. Joaquin Castro, who is challenging the two mainstream Democratic candidates (Rep. Meeks – NY and Rep. Sherman – CA).  It would make a big difference if Castro were to hold this important position. [Link]
 
If you are not a sports fan, the decision of basketball, baseball, soccer, and tennis players – in response to the rampant police violence – to refuse to play, may not be a big deal. But in terms of The Resistance, and in the context of the players' strike on the US labor movement, it was/could be huge.  Check out the Democracy Now!  interview with The Nation's sports editor Dave Zirin to learn more. [See the Program]
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Taking the Covid Crisis into account, we meet (with safe distancing) for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 11 to 11:30 a.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Another vigil takes place on Mondays, from 6 to 6:30 pm, in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell.  In this time of coronavirus, we are meeting (by Zoom conference) each Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.  If you would like to join our meeting, please send a return email to get the meeting's access code. 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!
This week's Rewards for stalwart Newsletter readers come from singer Amy Rigby.  I did not know about her (silly me) until I heard her great anti-Trump song. (Potty-mouth alert!).  More suitable to a Family Publication are "Girl to City"; "The Good Girls"; "Dancing with Joey Ramone"; and "Do You Remember That?" And there are lots more on-line.  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
UPRISING AND CRISIS
(Video) Noam Chomsky: 'There's never been a moment in human history' like this one
From The Hill TV [August 2020]
---- World-renowned scholar and activist Noam Chomsky said humans are living through the darkest and most consequential time in history. Speaking on Hill.TV, Chomsky said the current age is a "point of confluence of severe crises," including the threat of nuclear war, climate change, a raging pandemic, economic depression and racial unrest in the United States. "This is a unique moment in human history, not just my lifetime," he said. "There's never been a moment in human history where such a confluence of crises emerged and decisions about them have to be made very soon — they cannot be delayed." … "There were few decades left in which we could make a decision as to whether organized human life will survive on earth, or will succumb to the threat of environmental disaster," Chomsky added. [Short Video]
The Thin Blue Line Between Violent, Pro-Trump Militias and Police
By Ryan Devereaux, The Intercept [August 28 2020]
---- The videos that preceded Anthony Huber's killing on the streets of Kenosha, Wisconsin, are jarring. Among the most chilling is one from the parking lot of an auto repair shop. Several shots ring out. In the distance, you see the gunman in jeans and a green T-shirt. A man rushes up behind him. The gunman turns. More shots ring out and the man collapses to the ground. The gunman circles a parked car, then comes back to the man laid out on the pavement. He looks down at him and pulls out his cellphone. "I just killed somebody," the shooter says, before jogging off. The man on the ground twitches and stares up at the sky, gasping deeply as bystanders work desperately to put pressure on his wound. Some cry, others yell for someone to call the police. … The killings came on the third night of protests over the police shooting of Jacob Blake, an unarmed Black man who was left paralyzed after being shot in the back in front of his children. Like other moments around the country, the response to the police violence has featured large-scale peaceful demonstrations, vandalism, and property damage. Blake remains hospitalized and, according to his father, has been shackled to his bed despite being unable to move. … The events in Kenosha are the latest in a long line of cases in which self-styled vigilantes have gathered under the banner of the "thin blue line" — a flag and movement devoted to the defense of law enforcement and the president — and engaged in violence with counterprotesters while police stood back. [Read More]
 
How William Barr Is Weaponizing the Justice Department to Help Trump Win
By Peter Stone, The Intercept [August 29 2020]
---- On August 13, a day after President Donald Trump again charged that Democrats' efforts to expand mail-in voting due to the pandemic will create "the greatest rigged election in history," U.S. Attorney General William Barr too made unfounded and conspiratorial-sounding claims. Barr told Sean Hannity on Fox News that Democrats' drive seeking to expand mail-in voting could raise "serious questions about the integrity of the election," were "grossly irresponsible," and "reckless." … Barr has violated numerous fundamental norms as attorney general, using his sweeping powers to carry out actions and judgments that are politically beneficial to the president's reelection campaign. Now, with under 70 days to the presidential election, the actions that pose the most consequential harm are those that threaten a free and fair election — especially Barr's work to undermine, rather than uphold, voting rights and to publicly accuse Trump's enemies. … Finally, as Trump's law-and-order mantra has become a central campaign motif, Barr's crackdown on largely peaceful protests in D.C., and authorizing federal agents to help fight violent crime in several cities run by Democrats look like ominous campaign ploys and possible harbingers of what's ahead before November. … Barr's leading role in Operation Legend at times overlaps — and seems to be inspired by — a conspiratorial, far-right, and dystopian vision of urban chaos he has linked to Black Lives Matter protests, which the attorney general alleged in a Fox interview this month with Mark Levin. Barr labeled some Black Lives Matter protesters "Bolsheviks" engaged in "urban guerrilla warfare," driven by a "lust for power."  [Read More]
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, and the Limits of Representation
By Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, The New Yorker  [August 26, 2020]
----- The demand for racial representation in government has been a crucial part of politics in the post-civil-rights United States. It reflects the recognition that no one can speak for another group of people, let alone a group of people suffering from centuries of oppression and exploitation. They must be allowed to speak for themselves. As Black populations swelled in American cities, they demanded to be represented by people who came from their own neighborhoods, on the assumption that those people would be most familiar with and sympathetic to a political agenda that would advance the needs of Black communities. In the nineteen-sixties, it was reasonable to assume that Black elected officials would advance an agenda that supported African-Americans, because of their proximity to the insurgent Black movement. But, fifty years later, that assumption no longer holds true. … The emerging populist, anti-racist movement of the past few months has exposed to the world that the issues raised by Occupy and the first iteration of Black Lives Matter have not gone anywhere: they have become only worse. The movement has also revealed the scale of protest that will be necessary if Biden and Harris win and fail to live up to their lofty promises. A recurring theme of the D.N.C. was "restoring the soul of the nation." But if restoration is simply about returning to the conditions that have brought us to this chaotic moment, then even more intense protests may well be on the horizon. We may have just experienced the largest participation in marches and protests in U.S. history under Trump, but we would be remiss to forget that Black Lives Matter erupted as a movement during Obama's Presidency. [Read More]
 
On Climate Change, We've Run Out of Presidential Terms to Waste
By Bill McKibben, New York Review of Books [August 26, 2020]
---- If Joe Biden and Kamala Harris take over the White House, in January, they're going to be dealing with an immediate and overwhelming climate crisis, not just the prospective dilemma that other Administrations have faced. It's not coming; it's here. The luxury of moving slowly, the margin for zigging and zagging to accommodate various interests, has disappeared. So, if the Democrats win, they will have to address the pandemic and the resulting economic dislocation, and tackle the climate mess all at the same time. Any climate plan must be, in some way or another, the solution to the current widespread loss of jobs. … We're out of Presidential terms to waste. If there's going to be effective American action on climate, it's going to have to come from Joe Biden. [Read More]
 
(Video) The Social Fabric of the U.S. Is Fraying Severely, if Not Unraveling
---- By Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept/ System Update [August 28 2020]
The year 2020 has been one of the most tumultuous in modern American history. … Since the end of World War II, the only close competitor to the current moment is the multipronged unrest of the 1960s and early 1970s: serial assassinations of political leaders, mass civil rights and anti-war protests, sustained riots, fury over a heinous war in Indochina, and the resignation of a corruption-plagued president. But those events unfolded and built upon one another over the course of a decade. By crucial contrast, the current confluence of crises, each of historic significance in their own right — a global pandemic, an economic and social shutdown, mass unemployment, an enduring protest movement provoking increasing levels of violence and volatility, and a presidential election centrally focused on one of the most divisive political figures the U.S. has known who happens to be the incumbent president — are happening simultaneously,  having exploded one on top of the other in a matter of a few months. … Lurking beneath the headlines justifiably devoted to these major stories of 2020 are very troubling data that reflect intensifying pathologies in the U.S. population — not moral or allegorical sicknesses but mental, emotional, psychological and scientifically proven sickness. Many people fortunate enough to have survived this pandemic with their physical health intact know anecdotally — from observing others and themselves — that these political and social crises have spawned emotional difficulties and psychological challenges. [Read More].  And for the video, go here.
 
Ava DuVernay Interviews Angela Davis on This Moment—And What Came Before
From Vanity Fair [August 2020]
---- AVA DuVERNAY: I was reading an interview in which you talked about something that's been on my mind quite a bit lately. It's about this time we are in that I'll just call a racial reckoning. Do you feel that we could have encountered this moment in as robust a manner as we've felt it this summer without the COVID crisis having been the foundation? Could one have occurred with this much force without the other?
---- ANGELA DAVIS: This moment is a conjuncture between the COVID-19 crisis and the increasing awareness of the structural nature of racism. Moments like this do arise. They're totally unpredictable, and we cannot base our organizing on the idea that we can usher in such a moment. What we can do is take advantage of the moment. When George Floyd was lynched, and we were all witnesses to that—we all watched as this white policeman held his knee on George Floyd's neck for eight minutes and 46 seconds—I think that many people of all racial and ethnic backgrounds, who had not necessarily understood the way in which history is present in our lives today, who had said, "Well, I never owned slaves, so what does slavery have to do with me?" suddenly began to get it. That there was work that should have happened in the immediate aftermath of slavery that could have prevented us from arriving at this moment. But it did not happen. And here we are. And now we have to begin. [Read More]
 
The Democratic Party Won't Be Out-Israel'd This Fall
ByAugust 27, 2020]
---- The Democratic Party is not going to get out-Israel'd this fall. Yesterday, Kamala Harris had a conference call with 1800 Jewish Democratic donors and assured them a President Biden will never condition aid over any "political decisions that Israel makes and I couldn't agree more." Biden-Harris will show "unwavering support" for Israel. And Biden backed the "largest military aid package" to any country when the Obama administration signed that $38 billion MOU in 2016.  The fact is that despite deep misgivings about Israeli human rights violations in the Democratic base, the Democratic Party has brilliantly and effectively squelched the issue as a possible wedge in the coming election. … The Democrats have a unified line at the top now. Israel is a progressive cause. The self-determination of the Jewish people in their ancient land is something to be celebrated, and we are going to keep pretending we are pushing for a two state solution.  As we continually remind Democrats, Progressive Democrats don't believe these ideas. They think the two-state solution is a cruel charade for a reality of apartheid, that Israel's political culture is overwhelmingly rightwing, and that Jewish national "self-determination" is an excuse for rampant discrimination against a Palestinian minority. But the Democratic establishment doesn't care; those voices will not be heard inside the party and progressives are falling into line. Bernie Sanders spoke for 8-1/2 minutes at the Democratic convention, emphasizing the urgency of defeating a dangerous president, but he was a good soldier and didn't bring up the Palestine issue. [Read More]
 
OUR HISTORY
My Friend John Lewis
By Danny Lyon, New York Review of Books [August 29, 2020]
[FB – In the early 1960s, Danny Lyon became the photographer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).  Read more about him here.]
---- He was born John Robert Lewis in a wooden house that had no electricity in Troy, Alabama. He had ten siblings, including a brother who was born deaf. His mother called him Robert. As a child he played and ran through the 120 acres his father owned with twenty siblings and cousins. He loved the life of his childhood. Something made him different. At fifteen he wrote a letter to Dr. King saying he wanted to integrate the high school in Troy. Dr. King called him "the boy from Troy." Washing dishes at American Baptist Seminary in Nashville, he studied nonviolence, the way of Gandhi and Thoreau with Reverend James Lawson. By 1963 he had been arrested forty times. When, in the summer of 1962, I first saw him sitting in the corner of a small church in Cairo, Illinois, I knew who he was. John Lewis was a Freedom Rider. I gazed at him with wonder on that morning in southern Illinois. John was twenty-two years old. That summer he had asked the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) for ten dollars so he could work in Virginia, but for some reason Jim Forman had sent him to Cairo. I had never been in the South and I probably had never heard anyone from Alabama speak. Then, in that small church, he got up to speak. Though there might have been as few as fifteen people there, his voice exploded across the room with passion. I was transfixed. I would not leave the movement for another two years and in another sense I would never leave John. [Read More]
 

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Hope you can come!

Hi,

I'm hosting a "#SaveThePostOffice Saturday" event to reject Donald Trump's attack on the US Postal Service. Together, at post offices around the country, we'll demand Postmaster General DeJoy be fired and call on Congress to defend the Postal Service! My event is called "Save the Post Office" campaign. We'll be at Warburton & Spring St. (VFW Plaza, Hastings-on-Hudson) in Hastings-on-Hudson, NY.

RSVP here so I can know we can count on you!

http://act.moveon.org/event/save-the-post-office-attend/127577/?source=taf&aktmid=tm17049783.dgUBcI&t=1&referring_akid=.1578092.MAqOsP

Thanks,
Frank

Hope you can come!

Hi,

I'm hosting a "#SaveThePostOffice Saturday" event to reject Donald Trump's attack on the US Postal Service. Together, at post offices around the country, we'll demand Postmaster General DeJoy be fired and call on Congress to defend the Postal Service! My event is called "Save the Post Office" campaign. We'll be at Warburton & Spring St. (VFW Plaza, Hastings-on-Hudson) in Hastings-on-Hudson, NY.

RSVP here so I can know we can count on you!

http://act.moveon.org/event/save-the-post-office-attend/127577/?source=taf&aktmid=tm17049683.aANuU-&t=1&referring_akid=.1578092.MAqOsP

Thanks,
Frank

Hope you can come!

Hi,

I'm hosting a "#SaveThePostOffice Saturday" event to reject Donald Trump's attack on the US Postal Service. Together, at post offices around the country, we'll demand Postmaster General DeJoy be fired and call on Congress to defend the Postal Service! My event is called "Save the Post Office" campaign. We'll be at Warburton & Spring St. (VFW Plaza, Hastings-on-Hudson) in Hastings-on-Hudson, NY.

RSVP here so I can know we can count on you!

http://act.moveon.org/event/save-the-post-office-attend/127577/?source=taf&aktmid=tm17049581.QCzwOm&t=1&referring_akid=.1578092.MAqOsP

Thanks,
Frank

Sunday, August 16, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on beating Trump and then removing him from office

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 16, 2020
 
Hello All – Between now and November 3 – or January 20 – peace & justice stalwarts confront a trio of problems that are woven together.  Based on recent discussions within CFOW and among many others, I see these areas of debate/discussion as 1) how to ensure the defeat of Trump in November's election; 2) how to ensure that we have a peaceful transition of power, and that a defeated Trump leaves office on January 20th; and 3) how to assert peace & justice issues and values in the campaign supporting Biden and Harris when the official stance of the Democratic Party falls short or omits vital issues.
 
Preventing a second term for Trump is the Prime Directive.  Simply based on the climate crisis, the world can't afford to waste more time moving backwards.  Nor can we allow the rest of the Trump Agenda to rule us.  All efforts going forward need to be tested against the Prime Directive: will this help to defeat Trump?
 
But we also must assume that the chances are very high that even a clear electoral defeat of Trump will be disputed by the Republicans.  Competing sets of Presidential Electors may be presenting their credentials to Congress, and the disputes will end up in the Supreme Court.  In several articles linked below, the authors propose ways in which protest movements can contest an illegitimate election outcome.  Going forward, I think we need to think of protest activity as, in part, preparation or a "rehearsal" for effective action that may be needed after November 3rd.  As the 2000 presidential election showed so clearly, we certainly can't count on lawyers and the court system to save democracy by itself.
 
Finally, in Biden and Harris the great swathe of peace & justice advocates do not have the Democratic presidential team that we wanted. Biden greatly enabled the Iraq War, and has made clear that he is not with us on the climate crisis, or immigration/refugee reform, or Medicare for All, or police violence, or many other issues.  The Democratic Party platform is "advanced" in many respects, but draws back on Medicare for All, for example.  And it is telling that next week's Democratic Convention will feature and highlight the "Establishment" wing of the Party – the Clintons and Obamas, the leaders of yesterday – while shutting out the voices of Black Lives Matter and giving AOC only 60 seconds.
 
Many of us believe that the gap between what the Democrats propose for the Biden program and what Sanders offered during his campaign will work against the Prime Directive of removing Trump in November.  It appears that decisions have been made to, in effect, target middle-class white voters who supported Obama but then voted for Trump, rather than mobilize young voters swept up in BLM and anti-police protests, or Latinx voters who are angry at Trump's sadistic attacks on immigrants and refugees. While "outreach" and "mobilization" are not contradictory, they involve different allocations of election-campaign resources and organizers.  And a "mobilization" campaign strategy would have the additional benefit of preparing for mass movements to dislodge Trump if he is reluctant to admit defeat, while campaign appeals to "moderates" to switch from Trump to Biden are not addressing many potential protesters.
 
Finally, the official Democratic Party continues to regard its left wing as part of its problem, rather than part of the solution.  This is something that the left wing has to accept as a given and find ways to combat and work around; there is no sense in complaining or expecting the corporate wing of the Party to change its ways.  If/when Biden becomes President, the fight for the political direction of the Party will be resumed.  Thus between now and November 3 – or January 20 – the dilemmas described in the first paragraph above will entangle us in some difficult choices.
 
News Notes
New reports on the number of deaths due to Covid-19 often add, at the end of their report, that "the real numbers are probably much higher."  The current number of Covid-19 deaths in the USA is now officially reported at 165,000, by far the highest country number in the world. But a recent New York Times analysis suggests that this is an undercount by more than 50,000, and that the real number of Covid-19 deaths in the USA is more than 200,000.  The additional deaths were illuminated by using the methodology of "excess deaths"; crudely, how many more people died this year than last year, or were expected to die this year if the Virus had not existed.  Thus the number of deaths worldwide, officially reported as 772,000, is likely a similar undercount, with the real number of deaths more than one million. [Read More]
 
The civil rights movements of the 1960s gained national traction in part because of the work of courageous photo-journalists, somewhat analogous to the way that the murders of George Floyd and other victims of the police were brought to the nation's attention by the ubiquitous phone videos. Last week The Times noted the death of one such stalwart, Matt Herron, who described himself as a "propagandist" for civil rights organizations, including the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).  A protégé of the Dust Bowl documentary photographer, Herron's story is fascinating reading; but my attention lingers on the fact that he died while piloting his new "self-launching glider" at the age of 89. Check him out.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Taking the Covid Crisis into account, we meet (with safe distancing) for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 11 to 11:30 a.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Another vigil takes place on Mondays, from 6 to 6:30 pm, in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell.  In this time of coronavirus, we are meeting (by Zoom conference) each Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.  If you would like to join our meeting, please send a return email to get the meeting's access code. 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!
This week's Rewards come to us from Australian singer Emma Swift, who has a new album of Bob Dylan covers.  One that I like and can be heard for free is Queen Jane Approximately, here including a nice video.  Another of her songs that I think all will like is I Contain Multitudes, built around some thoughts by Walt Whitman.  There's more of her stuff on-line. Enjoy!

Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
WHAT IF TRUMP WON'T LEAVE?
What If Trump Won't Leave?
By Frances Fox Piven and Deepak Bhargava, The Intercept [August 11 2020]
---- To steal the election, we suspect he will adapt the standard playbook of authoritarians everywhere: cast doubt on the election results by filing numerous lawsuits and launching coordinated federal and state investigations, including into foreign interference; call on militia groups to intimidate election officials and instigate violence; rely on fringe social media to generate untraceable rumors, and on Fox News to amplify these messages as fact; and create a climate of confusion and chaos. He might ask the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security — which he has now weaponized against democracy — to deploy to big cities in swing states to stop the vote count or seize ballots. If he does all this right, he'll be able to put soldiers on the streets, inflame his base, and convince millions of people that the election is being stolen from him. This would create the predicate for overturning the will of the voters. … If Trump steals the election, a broad united front will have to make the country ungovernable and the reigning regime illegitimate, despite the risks involved. We can take lessons and heart from other countries around the world where autocrats have sought to steal elections. We can pull off a peaceful Orange Revolution of our own. To do so, we will need to encourage mass civil disobedience — and dare the authorities to arrest hundreds of thousands of people day after day. If an illegitimate election gives rise to civil disorder that cannot be easily suppressed, corporate and political elites will move to dump Trump to protect their interests. [Read More]
 
More anti-coup thinking – "Trump Is Quite Capable of an 'October Surprise'" by Noam Chomsky, Truthout [August 12, 2020 [Link]; "We need a plan to prevent a Trump takeover — and this anti-coup research shows the way" by George Lakey, Waging Nonviolence [August 11, 2020] [Link]; and "Preparing for a November Surprise" by Erica Chenoweth, Political Violence at a Glance [July 21, 2020] [Link]. Dr. Stephen Zunes has put together a useful extended essay/short book called Civil Resistance Against Coups A Comparative and Historical Perspective [December 2012] [Link].
 
(Video) Is Trump Sabotaging U.S. Postal Service Ahead of Election as Part of His Attack on Mail-in Voting?
From Democracy Now! [August 10, 2020]
---- Democratic lawmakers say the Trump administration is sabotaging the United States Postal Service ahead of the November election, when a record number of votes are expected to be cast by mail. Since taking office, U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy — a major Trump donor — has instituted a number of cost-cutting measures that have slowed down the delivery of mail, and overhauled the leadership of the agency in a move that critics say will give him more power. This comes as President Trump continues to attack mail-in voting, claiming the post office can't handle an increase in ballots. We speak with Mark Dimondstein, president of the American Postal Workers Union, and David Dayen, executive editor of The American Prospect and author of the new book, "Monopolized: Life in the Age of Corporate Power." [See the Program]
 
More on Trump sabotaging the post office – "Donald Trump and His Postmaster General Are Sabotaging Democracy in Plain Sight" by John Nichols, The Nation [August 12, 2020] [Link] and "The Post Office Is Deactivating Mail Sorting Machines Ahead of the Election" by Aaron Gordon, VICE [August 14, 2020 [Link]. A good demonstration took place yesterday at the home of the Postmaster General  [Link].
 
UPRISING AND CRISIS
After Charlottesville, Protesters Are Still in Danger
By Aubtin Heydari, The Nation [August 12, 2020]
[FBAubtin Heydari was injured three years ago in Charlottesville, VA when he was hit by a car that was driven by a young Nazi into a crowd of demonstrators.  Heather Heyer was killed in this attack.  Check out his story.]
---- Three years later, the wounds from Charlottesville still feel raw. After long, hot days of marching in the streets, my right leg will hurt more than usual. The flashbacks are still intense, particularly this time of year. After the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery, uprisings against racism and police violence have once again forced America to confront its demons. Yet it still feels unclear what has changed in America since August 12, 2017. Though Confederate statues are finally coming down in Virginia and around the country, the Robert E. Lee statue in Emancipation Park—the site and pretext of the deadly rally in which I was nearly killed—still stands, with no plans for removal. … The most traumatizing aspect of the past few months for me has been the car attacks. According to terrorism researcher Ari Weil, there have been at least 72 vehicular assaults throughout the George Floyd uprisings. Once described as "ISIS-style," car attacks have become a frighteningly common occurrence in America, perpetrated both by civilians and by law enforcement. … It took me months to regain the ability to walk. To this day, my leg aches, even after light exertion. But even when I was consigned to a wheelchair, and while the nation mourned Heather Heyer, the injustice that brought me to the streets continued unabated. I never knew Heyer when she was alive, but I must have been standing near her during the attack. Now, three years later, I'm still marching. During the first days of the uprisings here in Los Angeles, I stood on the front lines and felt the tear gas and the pepper spray burn my eyes all over again. [Read More]
 
Fighting the Great Depression From Below
By Jeremy Brecher, Labor4Sustainability [August 2020]
---- The United States has entered the deepest economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s. This commentary describes the grassroots movements of the early years of the Great Depression in order to learn something about the dynamics of popular response to depression conditions. These early unemployed, self-help, labor, and other movements helped lay the groundwork for the New Deal and the massive labor struggles of the later 1930s. The next commentaries in this series will portray the grassroots movements of the Coronavirus Depression and ask what they might contribute to the emergence of a Green New Deal and a new labor movement. Subsequent commentaries will compare local and state actions in the early years of the Great Depression to such activities today. These commentaries are part of a series on the Emergency Green New Deal. [FB – The several parts of this series include portraits of strikes, anti-eviction "riots," and efforts to organize the unemployed that by compare-and-contrast illuminate the grassroots responses to today's crises.] [Check out the whole series of essays]
 
Federal Judge Sets Out to Bring Down Law Shielding Police From Legal Liability
By Marjorie Cohn, Truthout [August 11, 2020]
---- As the Massachusetts legislature debates whether to water down its qualified immunity defense, a federal judge in Mississippi filed a stunning 72-page opinion blasting the doctrine. Qualified immunity has entered the national discourse with the massive uprisings in the wake of the public lynching of George Floyd. It allows police and other government officials to escape liability for their law breaking. …. The Ending Qualified Immunity Act is pending in the House of Representatives and its companion bill has been introduced by three progressive Democrats in the Senate. A bill to reform, but not abolish, qualified immunity, introduced by Sen. Mike Braun (R-Indiana), is also pending in the Senate. As long as Republicans maintain control of the Senate, and Democrats — many of whom were architects of the current criminal legal system — continue their lukewarm opposition to qualified immunity, it is unlikely the doctrine will be watered down or abolished by Congress. Meanwhile, the state of Massachusetts is debating whether to weaken its qualified immunity defense. [Read More]
 
For more on our "Uprising and Crisis" – "Racism's Hidden Toll" [Health inequities] by Gus Wezerek, New York Times [August 11, 2020] [Link]; and "Why Black Workers Will Hurt the Most if Congress Doesn't Extend Jobless Benefits" by Emily Badger, et al., New York Times [August 7, 2020] [Link].
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
"Real politics is constant activism": A conversation with Noam Chomsky
By Anand Giridharadas, The.Ink [August 11, 2020]
---- In this interesting interview, Chomsky comments on the pandemic, the election, the word Bernie Sanders needs to stop using, the Harper's letter, the 1619 Project, patriotism, and the greatest social movement in U.S. history. [Read More]
 
Can Lebanon be Saved?
[FB – Journalist Robert Fisk has made his home in Beirut, Lebanon for several decades.  A reporter for the UK Independent, Fisk is the author of two wonderful books on Lebanon, its people, and its neighbors.  This in-depth essay puts Lebanon's post-explosion uprising of discontent in the context of a worldwide crisis of government legitimacy.]
---- The real story of this exquisitely tormented and brilliant nation, of course, goes far further and wider. It's a truism – as well as true – to say that corruption is the cancer of the Arab world (and not just the Arab bit, if recent events in Israel taken into account). But somehow, we find the Lebanese version of corruption more terrible, more shameful, more grotesque than that which is practised in every other Arab country. Is this because it is more obvious? Or because it exists in the only Arab nation that actually publicises its own decay? … The only conceivable vehicle would be the combination of a new international league attached to Marshall Plan largesse, a re-envisioning of the world's commitments – not just to little Lebanon but the whole Middle East tragedy, a multinational work of imagination which could embrace all the sectarian and expansionist wars that have afflicted the region over the past hundred years. … The Lebanese are not alone in seeking an end to corruption. We are all demanding the same thing across the globe. We are, to coin another cliché, all Lebanese now. That's why the cataclysm which swept through their capital was so powerful and so frightening. [Read More]
 
(Video) Israel & UAE Deal to Normalize Relations Is New Chapter in 100-Year War on Palestine: An Interview with Rashid Khalidi:
From Democracy Now! [August 14, 2020]
---- In a deal brokered by the United States, Israel and the United Arab Emirates have agreed to fully normalize relations after years of secretly working together on countering Iran and other issues. Under the deal, Israel has also agreed to temporarily halt plans to annex occupied Palestinian territories in the West Bank, which had already been on hold due to international condemnation. We speak with Rashid Khalidi, the Edward Said professor of modern Arab studies at Columbia University, who says the agreement is being falsely characterized as a peace deal. "I don't see that it has anything to do with peace," he says. "On the contrary, it makes the chance of a just, equitable and sustainable peace much, much, much harder."
[See the Program] Also very useful is "Don't be Hoodwinked by Trump's UAE-Israel "Peace Deal" by Medea Benjamin and Ariel Gold, Code Pink [August 14, 2020] [Link].
 
OUR HISTORY
The 'Wall of Vets' Continue Long Legacy of Veteran Activism
By Brian Trautman, ZNet [August 12, 2020]
---- Military veterans have long been resisting war, promoting positive peace, and defending human and civil rights against state violence and other forms of oppression. They have made significant contributions to the antiwar and peace and justice movements over many decades. Their participation in the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement is no different. Veterans have been highly visible in supporting the racial justice demands of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) communities. The disturbing truth, which a great number of veterans recognize, is that white supremacy, systemic racism and police brutality at home is profoundly connected to and fueled by U.S. imperialist militarism/war abroad. With this knowledge, veterans have taken on roles as nonviolent warriors to educate about those connections and help underrepresented and marginalized communities fight injustice. One of the most recent manifestations of this activism is the 'Wall of Vets' in Portland, OR, a group of veterans that assembled in response to the deployment of federal paramilitary units to that city and the violent attacks they perpetrated against antiracism protestors. [Read More]
 
Tearing Down Black America
By Brent Cebul, Boston Review  [July 22, 2020]
---- When James Baldwin visited San Francisco in 1963 to film a documentary about U.S. racism, he encountered neighborhoods in turmoil: the city was seizing properties through eminent domain, razing them, and turning them over to private developers. Part of a massive, federal urban renewal program, nearly 5,000 families—no fewer than 20,000 residents, the majority of them people of color—were being displaced from rental homes, private property, and businesses in the Western Addition neighborhoods. Baldwin spoke to a Black teenager who had just lost his home and watched as his neighborhood was destroyed. He told Baldwin: "I've got no country. I've got no flag." Soon after, Baldwin would say: "I couldn't say you do. I don't have any evidence to prove that he does." At the very moment when the civil rights movement secured voting rights and the desegregation of public and private spaces, the federal government unleashed a program that enabled local officials to simply clear out entire Black neighborhoods. That young man was one of millions of Americans, disproportionately of color, who lost homes and communities through the federal urban renewal program. In discussing its human costs—colossal in scope and yet profoundly intimate—Baldwin helped popularize a phrase common in Black neighborhoods: urban renewal meant "Negro removal." To steal people's homes, Baldwin understood, was to shred the meaning of their citizenship by destroying their communities. And "the federal government," he said, "is an accomplice to this fact." [Read More]

Sunday, August 9, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on New Threats to Low-Income People

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 9, 2020
 
Hello All – The multiple crises engulfing the USA are about to get worse.  To our crises of dysfunctional democracy, Covid-19, and the worst economic meltdown since the Great Depression of the 1930s, millions of low- and middle-income Americans are about to face eviction and lose the income supplement paid to those receiving unemployment benefits.  It is completely predictable that the ensuing suffering will provoke outrage and disruption, widening the protests against police and police violence to include strongholds of economic power.
 
When the extent of economic disaster caused by Covid-19 became apparent in early March, most states and the federal government passed laws instituting a moratorium on evictions.  But the federal moratorium, which applied to landlords taking part in federal programs and covered about one-third of renters, expired at the end of July; and the New York State program was narrowed on June 20 to require that tenants must show in eviction court that they are without income due to the Covid-19 crisis.  Courts resumed hearing eviction cases last week.  As the states with a moratorium in place have different rules, it is hard to tell just how many tenants are facing their day in court; but estimates put the number between 17 million and 28 million.
 
Even keeping current with rent, let alone dealing with an arrears sheltered by the moratorium, will be difficult for millions of people.  Employment/hiring last month was offset by an equal number of layoffs, and millions of low-income workers were kept afloat with the $600 weekly supplement to their unemployment compensation.  Now this supplement is in doubt, and additional millions will be facing homelessness and privation.
 
What can be done to alleviate this crisis and what will people do when no assistance arrives? The most practical measure is embodied in legislation introduced by Rep. Ilhan Omar list April that would cancel rent and mortgage payments while sending federal paypments directly to landlords and mortgage holders. Needless to say, it is unlikely that something so simple would get through Congress. While patchwork alternatives at the state and local level may reduce the disaster to millions, millions more will be facing homelessness and destitution next month.
 
I expect that in cities and other places where Black Lives Matter has been strong, people of color and their allies will make concerted efforts to block or disrupt eviction courts, block sheriffs attempting evictions, and demand of municipalities that they take responsibility for defending those who are not responsible for the crisis overturning their lives.  As "Portland" has shown, people facing oppression or desperate circumstances can be very creative.  As with Black Lives Matter, we must use all our resources and skill to ensure that a roof over your head and basic subsistence is a human right that can be denied to none.  This fight is too important to lose.
 
News Notes
This week Joe Biden will finally announce his choice for his Vice President running mate. He has stated that he will choose a woman. Media favorites now trending include Sen. Kamala Harris and former National Security Adviser Susan Rice.  Both would tilt the campaign towards its conservative side on many issues important to the progressive wing (peace, Black Lives Matter, etc.).  Now more than 300 Democratic National Convention delegates (the Sanders people, etc.) are pushing for Karen Bass, the head of the Congressional Black Caucus.  Read a useful analysis by John Nichols of The Nation here.
 
The protests around the murder of George Floyd and the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement have highlighted the successful campaigns of progressive candidates for big-city District Attorneys. Last November Chessa Boudin was elected DA in San Francisco, and three years ago civil rights attorney Larry Krassner became DA in Philadelphia.  This trend continued last Tuesday, when reformers in Arizona, Michigan, Missouri, and New Mexico won their primary races to be the Democratic DA candidates in their cities. [Read More] 
 
The death penalty has been abolished in 30 states and is active in 20.  Though the federal government has passed laws enabling capital punishment, until a few weeks ago federal capital punishment had not been used for 17 years.  Then, suddenly, three death row prisoners were executed in states that had abolished the death penalty.  And more federal executions are scheduled.  Why are Trump and Barr doing this? Read "Blood in the Water: Disregarding the Virus and Victims' Families, Trump Rushes to Execute as Many People as Possible" by Liliana Segura, The Intercept [August 2 2020] [Link].
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Taking the Covid Crisis into account, we meet (with safe distancing) for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, from 11 to 11:30 a.m., at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  Another vigil takes place on Mondays, from 6 to 6:30 pm, in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell.  In this time of coronavirus, we are meeting (by Zoom conference) each Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.  If you would like to join our meeting, please send a return email to get the meeting's access code. 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
 
HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI
Today is the 75th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, as last Thursday was the anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima.  Both in 1945 and today, the bombing of Hiroshima is at the center of attention: Why was the bomb used?  Was it "necessary" to end the war? But similar questions are rarely asked about the atomic bombing of Nagasaki. This week a German version of PBS posted an informative 40-minute documentary film, "Nagasaki and the Second Bomb."  Like much of the material about the impact of the Bomb on Hiroshima civilians, the survivors of the Nakasaki bombing – the Hibakusha – tell much of the story. Unlike the canonical narrative of US commentators that using the Bombs saved a million American lives, the German film adopts the view of recent scholars that Japan would have surrendered in mid-August without using either Bomb, as Japan's surrender was primarily driven by the intervention of Russia into the war on August 8th.  The Bombs were used for other reasons: what were they?
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Over 1,100 Policing Agencies in the U.S. Have Bought Drones Capable of Recording
By Nick Mottern, Truthout [August 6, 2020]
[FB – Nick Mottern lives in Hastings, is a member of CFOW, and maintains the website www.knowdrones.com.]
---- In early June, Julie Weiner was at a Black Lives Matter rally in downtown Yonkers, New York, when she spotted a small drone in the sky, monitoring the protest. Weiner, a long-time Yonkers resident, immediately asked her city councilperson, Shanae Williams, who had organized the rally, whether the drone was being operated by the Yonkers police. Williams went over to talk to a group of police and returned to report that, yes, the drone belonged to the Yonkers Police Department. … The Yonkers case illustrates how local police can be swept up in the surge of entering surveillance data into massive, unregulated computer cloud systems and artificial intelligence programs that present a threat of intensified police and military vigilantism, particularly to people of color. … A March 2020 study by the Bard College Center for the Study of the Drone finds that at least 1,103 law enforcement agencies across the United States have purchased drones and that there has been a dramatic increase in their use since 2014. The report says, however, that the number of police drones in use is likely higher because the study did not include "agencies with undisclosed drone programs or federal agencies." Increasing pressure for police to engage in surveillance with Evidence.com (and similar systems) self-generates simply through the almost inevitable use of digitized police data and the adding of piece after piece of data-gathering gear.  [Read More]
 
A Virus Has Brought the World's Most Powerful Country to Its Knees
By Ed Yong, The Atlantic [August 9, 2020]
---- How did it come to this? A virus a thousand times smaller than a dust mote has humbled and humiliated the planet's most powerful nation. America has failed to protect its people, leaving them with illness and financial ruin. It has lost its status as a global leader. It has careened between inaction and ineptitude. The breadth and magnitude of its errors are difficult, in the moment, to truly fathom. In the first half of 2020, SARS‑CoV‑2—the new coronavirus behind the disease COVID‑19—infected 10 million people around the world and killed about half a million. But few countries have been as severely hit as the United States, which has just 4 percent of the world's population but a quarter of its confirmed COVID‑19 cases and deaths. These numbers are estimates. The actual toll, though undoubtedly higher, is unknown, because the richest country in the world still lacks sufficient testing to accurately count its sick citizens. Despite ample warning, the U.S. squandered every possible opportunity to control the coronavirus. And despite its considerable advantages—immense resources, biomedical might, scientific expertise—it floundered. … Since the pandemic began, I have spoken with more than 100 experts in a variety of fields. I've learned that almost everything that went wrong with America's response to the pandemic was predictable and preventable. [Read More]
 
130 Degrees [Climate Crisis]
By Bill McKibben, New York Review of Books [August 20, 2020 Issue]
[FB – This is a review of Our Final Warning: Six Degrees of Climate Emergency by Mark Lynas.]
---- So now we have some sense of what it's like: a full-on global-scale crisis, one that disrupts everything. Normal life—shopping for food, holding a wedding, going to work, seeing your parents—shifts dramatically. The world feels different, with every assumption about safety and predictability upended. Will you have a job? Will you die? Will you ever ride a subway again, or take a plane? It's unlike anything we've ever seen. The upheaval that has been caused by Covid-19 is also very much a harbinger of global warming. Because humans have fundamentally altered the physical workings of planet Earth, this is going to be a century of crises, many of them more dangerous than what we're living through now. The main question is whether we'll be able to hold the rise in temperature to a point where we can, at great expense and suffering, deal with those crises coherently, or whether they will overwhelm the coping abilities of our civilization. The latter is a distinct possibility, as Mark Lynas's new book, Our Final Warning, makes painfully clear. … The pandemic provides some useful sense of scale—some sense of how much we're going to have to change to meet the climate challenge. We ended business as usual for a time this spring, pretty much across the planet—changed our lifestyles far more than we'd imagined possible. We stopped flying, stopped commuting, stopped many factories. The bottom line was that emissions fell, but not by as much as you might expect: by many calculations little more than 10 or 15 percent. What that seems to indicate is that most of the momentum destroying our Earth is hardwired into the systems that run it. Only by attacking those systems—ripping out the fossil-fueled guts and replacing them with renewable energy, even as we make them far more efficient—can we push emissions down to where we stand a chance. Not, as Lynas sadly makes clear, a chance at stopping global warming. A chance at surviving.  [Read More]
 
How New Voting Machines Could Hack Our Democracy
By Jennifer Cohn, New York Review of Books [December 17, 2019]
---- The United States has a disturbing habit of investing in unvetted new touchscreen voting machines that later prove disastrous. As we barrel toward what is set to be the most important election in a generation, Congress appears poised to fund another generation of risky touchscreen voting machines called universal use Ballot Marking Devices (or BMDs), which function as electronic pens, marking your selections on paper on your behalf. Although vendors, election officials, and others often refer to this paper as a "paper ballot," it differs from a traditional hand-marked paper ballot in that it is marked by a machine, which can be hacked without detection in a manual recount or audit. These pricey and unnecessary systems are sold by opaquely financed vendors who use donations and other gifts to entice election officials to buy them. Most leading election security experts instead recommend hand-marked paper ballots as a primary voting system, with an exception for voters with disabilities. … For this reason, many analysts have cautioned against acquiring these new ballot-marking machines for universal use, but election officials in at least 250 jurisdictions across the country have ignored their advice. [Read More]  To keep up to date on the voting machine/election issue, sign up at       Citizens for Voting Integrity.
 
(Video) Beirut Explosion Follows Years of Lebanese Gov't Incompetence & Corruption
Democracy Now! interviews journalist Rami Khouri [August 5, 2020]
[FB – The protests in Lebanon set off by this week's massive explosion could destabilize much of the region.  This program and the article below serve as a primer for what's going on, and an antidote to what we can expect from the mainstream media.]
---- The explosion in the Port of Beirut, which killed at least 100 people and injured about 4,000 others, is the latest blow to Lebanon, which already faces an economic, political and public health crisis amid the coronavirus pandemic. The blast is believed to have been triggered by 2,700 tons of highly explosive ammonium nitrate inexplicably left unattended in a warehouse for six years. Journalist Rami Khouri says it's further proof of "the cumulative incompetence, corruption, lassitude, amateurism and uncaring attitude by successive Lebanese governments" that have failed the country. "It's the ruling political elite that is responsible for this," he says. [See the Program]  Also insightful is a post today by Middle East historian Juan Cole, "Beirut: 'Day of Judgment' Protesters Occupy Gov't Buildings, Banking Assn., Forcing New Elections,"
[Link].
 
OUR HISTORY
How Not to Lose the Lockdown Generation [The New Deal v. today]
By Naomi Klein, The Intercept [August 6 2020]
[FB – What if government policies worked to make people's lives better?  No, can't be done, not here in the USA.  But it has been done, here in the USA.  Read on….]
---- … It's worth letting that sink in, given the learned helplessness that pervades the U.S. today. For months, the White House hasn't been able to figure out how to roll out free Covid-19 tests at anything like the scale required, let alone contact tracing, never mind quarantine support for poor families. Yet in the 1930s, during a much more desperate economic time for the country, state and federal agencies cooperated to deliver not just free tests but free houses. … The National Youth Administration [The NYA] served as a kind of urban complement to FDR's better-known youth program, the Civilian Conservation Corps, launched two years earlier. The CCC employed some 3 million young men from poor families to work in forests and farms: planting more than 2 billion trees, shoring up rivers from erosion, and building the infrastructure for hundreds of state parks. They lived together in a network of camps, sent money home to their families, and put on weight at a time when malnutrition was epidemic. Both the NYA and the CCC served a dual purpose: directly helping the young people involved, who found themselves in desperate straights, and meeting the country's most pressing needs, whether for reforested lands or more hands in hospitals. [Read More]
 
The Radical James Baldwin
By Laura Tanenbaum, Jacobin Magazine [August 2020]
[FB – A useful review of the recent book by Bill Mullen, James Baldwin: Living in Fire]
---- Baldwin saw things through an anticolonial lens early on, shaped by an interest in the nonaligned movement and the years he spent witnessing the impact of the Algerian War on France during his formative years there. When he condemned the Vietnam War, he did so in terms similar to Martin Luther King's "Beyond Vietnam" speech: as a participant in Bertrand Russell's tribunal which sought to document and condemn war crimes. The Fire Next Time, Baldwin's 1963 book, came out of his sympathetic engagement with Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam; the leader's religious struggles resonated with him deeply. And while Baldwin's relationship to the Black Panthers was complicated by Eldridge Cleaver's homophobic attacks against him, he formed deep relationships with others in the party, and the vitality of black nationalist culture was central to Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone and other works of the period. For Baldwin, black nationalism was never a question of "separatism" or a departure from the struggle for civil rights; it was an expansion to an internationalist and, increasingly, a socialist vision. [Read More]