Monday, September 28, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on the Supreme Court and Election 2020

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
September 27, 2020
 
Hello All – Military commanders describe war as taking place in "theaters."  There is the Middle East theater, the Pacific theater, and so on.  The civil war ravaging the USA over the past few decades has taken place in the theaters of Men v. Women, White v. Black, Bosses v. Workers, Fossil Fools v. The Climate, Rich v. Poor, My Country v. Everyone Else, and so on.  One thing these theaters have in common is that all roads soon lead to the Supreme Court.  Thus the appointment of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court will impact almost all areas of my/your life for years to come.  And if Trump is re-elected and gets to appoint yet another Justice, giving the Court a 7-2 reactionary majority, our children will reap the whirlwind.
 
Dozens of good articles have been published in the last days, and many more will appear in the days to come, explaining how Judge Barrett and a 6-3 Supreme Court will do great damage.  For example:
 
Is Amy Coney Barrett Joining a Supreme Court Built for the Wealthy?
By
---- With a 6-3 conservative court, the country is at risk of having the few remaining tools that permit some limits on the power of business — like labor unions and environmental legislation — weakened still further. The court's future decisions could give corporations even more weight and workers less, by blocking potential legislation that might mitigate the impact of unfettered capitalism and staggering inequality. [Read More]
 
Amy Coney Barrett Is an Extremist—Just Not the Kind You Think
By Elie Mystal, The Nation [September 25, 2020]
---- The problem with Trump's Supreme Court nominee has nothing to do with her strongly held religious beliefs and everything to do with her right-wing Republican ones. [Read More]
 
(Video) Planned Parenthood CEO: Trump's SCOTUS Pick Could Overturn Roe v. Wade & Kill Obamacare
From Democracy Now! [September 28, 2020] [See the Program]
 
Can the appointment of Judge Barrett be stopped?  It seems unlikely, given Republican control   of the Senate.  But Black Swans abound in this election season (witness The Times' report today on Trump's taxes), and so nothing is certain. – Circulating now is a "Memo" that lays out obstruction tactics to delay and perhaps derail Barrett's nomination. It is not a sure-fire formula, but suggests that there is a lot of hell that can be raised, and we should demand that Sen. Schumer and the Democrats fight hard.  To read about The Memo, check out  "Trump Taps Amy Coney Barrett — Memo Lays Out Tactics for Opposition" by Ryan Grim, The Intercept [September 24 2020] [Link].
 
NEWS NOTES
Today the New York Times published a lengthy article, "Long-Concealed Records Show Trump's Chronic Losses and Years of Tax Avoidance."  As many now know, Trump made hundreds of millions of dollars, lost even more, and paid virtually no taxes over the last 15 years.  The Times promises detailed revelations in the coming days.  What impact this will have on the election remains to be seen, but what is published so far suggests that Trump could face jail and/or heavy fines in the years ahead – if he is no longer President of the USA. The Nation magazine's Justice reporter Elie Mystal gave us a good overview on this morning's Democracy Now!
 
This week a Louisville, KY grand jury returned a verdict on the killing of Breonna Taylor.  In essence, no one was responsible for her death, though one officer (already fired) was indicted for shooting into a neighboring home!   Protests against this verdict immediately erupted in Louisville and around the country, and Sidiqa Reynolds, the head of Louisville's Urban League, gave a powerful presentation on Democracy Now!  This morning's edition of Democracy Now! featured a writer for Vice News who just broke the story that there was, contrary to police reports, body camera footage that raises questions about the basic police story. ("A Police Cover-Up? New Bodycam Video from Night of Breonna Taylor's Killing Undermines State Account.")  Finally, trying to keep some focus on the person whose life was snuffed out, reposted here is "The Life Breonna Taylor Lived, in the Words of Her Mother," based on interviews with Ta-Nehisi Coates, Vanity Fair [August 24, 2020] [Link].
 
Lydia Sargent died this week.  With her partner Michael Albert, Lydia initiated and guided ZMagazine, ZNet, and the Z Media Institute over several decades.  In a tender memorial essay, Mike writes about Lydia's long imprisonment in dementia, and about the many things she accomplished in her life before that. She was an educator par excellence, helping thousands to learn the nuts and bolts of living a meaningful, radical life. Lydia Sargent, Live Like Her!
 
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; if you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, Tuesday and Thursday at noon and/or Saturday at 2 pm, please send a return email. 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 test the hypothesis that the best political offensive is parody.  As Truth seems to have little impact on our political system, let's consider some alternatives.  First up is one of CFOW's favorite funnymen, Roy Zimmerman, with "The Liar Tweets Tonight."  We follow up with Randy Rainbow and "I Won't Vote Trump." Finally, a faux Frank Sinatra returns to Stephen Colbert's "Late Show" to say good-bye to the Orange One.  And for those who aren't sure where this is leading, Wreckless Eric and Amy Rigby break it down.  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
ELECTION 2020
[FB – The likely confirmation of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court doubles down on the dangers posed by the possibility that President Trump will not recognize an election outcome that appears to end his presidency.  Trending this week in the media are explanations of our archaic method of translating the popular vote into a choice for president.  Also trending are proposals for Resistance if Trump mounts a protracted legal defense or simply refuses to pack his bags.  And, of course, there is the vote….  Below are some useful essays addressing these and other problems.]
 
The Election
Our Most Vulnerable Election
By Pamela Karlan, New York Review of Books [October 8, 2020 Issue]
[FB – This is a review of Will He Go?: Trump and the Looming Election Meltdown in 2020, by Lawrence Douglas]
---- The central argument of Will He Go? is that Trump's pathologies intersect with some distinctive features of the US electoral system in a particularly dangerous way. So before we can think about the scenarios Douglas sketches to suggest just how he might not go, we need to understand the architecture of our presidential election system. … Will He Go? is focused "less [on] the possibility that Trump will steal victory than that he will reject defeat," perhaps because Douglas is particularly interested in describing the design defects in the architecture of the Twelfth Amendment and the Electoral Count Act. So the second half of Douglas's book offers three scenarios designed to show the kinds of electoral meltdowns that may occur this fall. Each of his scenarios begins on or after Election Day and involves electoral uncertainty. But we should not ignore the possibility that Douglas skips past: that Trump will create a crisis of democratic legitimacy by manipulating the election system to prevent his defeat. [Read More]
 
(Video) "The Election That Could Break America": Inside How Trump & GOP Could Steal the Vote
From Democracy Now! [September 25, 2020]
---- As President Trump refuses to commit to accepting the results of the upcoming election, we speak to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Barton Gellman, whose latest piece in The Atlantic looks at how Trump could subvert the election results and stay in power even if he loses to Joe Biden. "Trump's strategy is never to concede. He may win, he may lose, but under no circumstances will he concede this election," says Gellman. "That's a big problem, because we don't actually have a mechanism for forcing a candidate to concede, and concession is the way we have ended elections." [See the Program] For Gellman's article in The Atlantic [highly recommended], "The Election That Could Break America," go here.
 
Also of interest – "Why is the nationalist right hallucinating a 'communist enemy'?" b, The Guardian [UK] [September 26, 2020] [Link]; "With Chamber of Commerce Defections, a GOP Mainstay Finds Allies Among Democrats" by Ryan Grim, The Intercept [September 24 2020] [Link]; and "What's the Plan if Trump Tweets That He's Won Re-election?" Editorial, New York Times [September 27, 2020] [Link].
 
Resisting a Coup
(Video) Bernie Sanders on How to Block Trump from Stealing Election & Preserve American Democracy
From Democracy Now! [September 25, 2020]
----- In an address to the country, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has issued a stark warning about the threat posed by President Trump's refusal to commit to a peaceful transfer of power after the November election. Trump, who has made spurious claims of voter fraud and election-rigging against Democrats for months, recently ramped up his efforts to discredit the election results by suggesting he will refuse to concede if he loses. "This is an election between Donald Trump and democracy. And democracy must win," Sanders said. We air excerpts from his speech.  [See the Program]  For some analysis, read "Bernie Sanders Has Given Us a Tool Kit for Defending Against Trump's Threat to Democracy" by John Nichols, The Nation [September 25, 2020] [Link].
 
(Video) What to do if there is a coup.  A useful and user-friendly 90-minute lecture/seminar by long-time peace activist George Lakey.  Recommended! [See the Video].
 
10 Things You Need to Know to Stop a Coup
From Choose Democracy [September 2020].  This site also advertises upcoming Zoom seminars with George Lakey on October 1st and 6th.  Many other resources linked. [Link].
 
(Video) The Paradox of Civil Resistance in the 21st Century
By Erica Chenoweth, Professor in Human Rights and International Affairs at Harvard [January 29, 2020]
---- Erica Chenoweth shares data and research on the effectiveness of non-violent movements to effect significant changes at the national level. Diligent collection and analysis of data spanning the period 1900-2006 changed her own views and examines factors for success along with pros and cons of the digital age as a component of non-violent movements. [See the Video]
 
And looking ahead
The GOP Reshaped America to Hold Onto Power, Can the Dems Do the Same Thing to Save It? [Court Packing]
---- Both demographics and popular political opinion are moving against the Republican Party, and Republican politicians know it. Democrats should use this moment—if we can succeed in fighting back the GOP fascist tide—to use historical precedent to reconfigure our government so it represents the will of a majority of Americans. No more Mx. Nice Guy. [Read More]
 
It's Not Just the Supreme Court That's at Stake
By Robert L. Borosage, The Nation [September 25, 2020]
---- There can be no illusions. This is who they are. A minority party, grounded in small, predominately white states and the South, championing a failed ideology, and committed to doing what it takes to retain power, or at least to thwart the will of the majority. … The question is much broader than that. Democrats—and particularly Joe Biden—must discard any illusions that once Trump is ousted, Republicans will have, in Biden's words, an "epiphany" and cooperate in bipartisan efforts to address the crises we face. [Read More]
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
Stephen F. Cohen, 1938–2020 - Мой Cтив (My Steve): A personal recollection
By Katrina vanden Heuvel, Editor, The Nation [September 21, 2020]
[FB – It was a coincidence that when Stephen Cohen died I was reading his magnum opus about the Russian revolutionary leader Nikolai Bukharin.  In this book and many to follow, Cohen illuminated the paths open to revolutionary Russia that Stalinism (and its aftermath) foreclosed.  In the 1980s, in Gorbachev, Cohen saw an alternative path re-emerging; but it too was cut short.  In his last years Cohen was one of the few/only Russian scholars who tried to open America's eyes to the dangers of Russia-phobia and the essentially defensive nature of Russian foreign policy, essays recently collected in his War with Russia? This memorial essay, by Cohen's wife and editor of The Nation Katrina vanden Heuvel, reveals what a scholar can do on behalf of peace and justice.]
---- While Steve liked to say it's healthy to rethink, to have more questions than answers, there was a wise consistency to his political analysis. For example, as is clear from his many articles in The Nation in these last decades, he unwaveringly opposed American Cold War thinking both during the Cold War and since the end of the Soviet Union. He was consistent in his refusal to sermonize, lecture, or moralize about what Russia should do. He preferred to listen rather than preach, to analyze rather than demonize. This stance was no recipe for popularity, which Steve professed to care little about. He was courageous and fearless in continuing to question the increasingly rigid orthodoxies about the Soviet Union and Russia. But in the last months, such criticism did take its toll on him. Along with others who sought to avert a new and more dangerous Cold War, Steve despaired that the public debate so desperately needed had become increasingly impossible in mainstream politics or media. [Read More]  Also of interest: "He Taught Gorbachev" by Nadezhda Azhgikhina, The Nation [September 25, 2020] [Link].
 
Trump's Nuclear Threats reveal the long arm of the Enola Gay and Hiroshima
---- Whether you're reading this with your morning coffee, just after lunch, or on the late shift in the wee small hours of the morning, it's 100 seconds to midnight. That's just over a minute and a half. And that should be completely unnerving. It's the closest to that witching hour we've ever been. Since 1947, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has adjusted its Doomsday Clock to provide humanity with an expert estimate of just how close all of us are to an apocalyptic "midnight" — that is, nuclear annihilation. … We know about what happened at Hiroshima largely thanks to one man, John Hersey. … And we now know just how Hersey got the story of Hiroshima — a 30,000-word reportorial masterpiece that appeared in the August 1946 issue of the New Yorker magazine, describing the experiences of six survivors of that atomic blast — thanks to a meticulously researched and elegantly written new book by Lesley Blume, Fallout: The Hiroshima Cover-Up and the Reporter Who Revealed It to the World…. It's been 74 years since Hiroshima hit the newsstands. A Cold War and nuclear arms race followed as those weapons spread across the planet. And this January, as a devastating pandemic was beginning to follow suit, all of us found ourselves just 100 seconds away from total annihilation….   [Read More]
 
The Second Intifada, 20 Years On: Thousands Died in a Struggle That Failed
By Gideon Levy, Haaretz [Israel] [September 26, 2020]
---- Yom Kippur this year will mark the anniversaries of the outbreak of two of the most violent events in Israel's history, events that shaped its character for years. It will be 47 years since the start of the Yom Kippur War and 20 years since the second intifada erupted. Both took Israel by surprise – but neither should have surprised anyone. On September 28, 2000, Ariel Sharon visited the Temple Mount in Jerusalem's Old City and the powder keg exploded. A day later, an Israel Defense Forces soldier and seven Palestinians were killed. …The demon of violent resistance to the occupation and its violent suppression exploded forcefully from the bottle. Over four lethal years would pass before the fierce uprising would be quelled, with the use of massive force, and perhaps only temporarily, until the next insurgence, although no signs of it are visible at present on the horizon. For Israel, the second intifada morphed into the nightmare of exploding buses and suicide bombers, years of unremitting horror and dread for the country's citizens. For the Palestinians, these were years of brutal suppression, extensive bloodshed, sieges, closures, lockdowns, checkpoints, mass arrests, and also combat and sacrifices that got them nowhere. Twenty years later, their situation is worse, more desperate than it was before the eruption of the Al-Aqsa Intifada and grimmer than ever: Only in the Nakba, the calamity of 1948, was their situation even harsher and more hopeless. [Read More]
 
WAR & PEACE
U.S. War Crimes in Yemen: Stop Looking the Other Way
By Andrea Prasow, Foreign Policy in Focus [September 21, 2020]
---- The longstanding involvement of the United States in the conflict in Yemen is facing renewed scrutiny. On September 16, State Department officials testified before the House Foreign Affairs Committee about whether the State Department misled Congress — and the American people — by circumventing controls designed to limit arms sales and ensure congressional oversight. The crimes occurring in Yemen are serious — and the responsible parties demonstrably unwilling or unable to address them. The most recent report by the United Nations Group of Eminent and International Regional Experts on Yemen described "an acute accountability gap" and recommended that the UN Security Council refer the situation in Yemen to the International Criminal Court. … Media reports have detailed the suppression of an internal State Department analysis that U.S. personnel could be legally liable for war crimes in Yemen because of continued U.S. arms sales to Saudi Arabia. Some members of Congress raised this during the hearing. The State Department's acting legal adviser acknowledged civilian casualties were a concern, but refused to say whether he believed U.S. personnel could be held culpable for war crimes in Yemen. [Read More]  For more on these war crimes, recommended is "U.S. Rationale for Military Aid to Saudis in Yemen War Is Fraying" by Edward Wong, New York Times [September 23, 2020] [Link].
 
ISRAEL/PALESTINE
Israel Isn't Signing 'Peace' Deals
By Gregory Shupak, FAIR [Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting] [September 26, 2020]
---- Corporate media outlets such as Forbes, Bloomberg, CNN, and the Washington Post have described recent accords that normalize Israeli relations with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Bahrain as "peace" deals. This is a misleading label to apply to agreements that help cement a belligerent military alliance against Iran, and allow violence against Palestinians, Libyans and Yemenis to continue. … The Trump administration "do[es] not dispute that after years of American refusals to sell F-35s to the Emiratis, the change in position is linked to the diplomatic initiative," reported the New York Times. … Contrary to corporate media assertions, these US-managed agreements between three of its vassal states have little to do with "peace" and everything to do with enabling the smooth execution of despotism, war and a ruthless colonial enterprise. [Read More]
 

Sunday, September 20, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on the presidential election and the Supreme Court

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
September 20, 2020
 
Hello All – The death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg adds new uncertainties to an already chaotic presidential election.  This Newsletter, as well as Concerned Families of Westchester, shares the view of many that the re-election of President Trump would be a disaster for humankind.  While polls suggest that Democratic candidate Joe Biden has a clear popular majority of support, we know to our sorrow that the details of U.S. election law (e.g. the Electoral College) do not necessarily translate a majority of votes into electoral victory.  In the 2020 election, moreover, the Covid-19 pandemic has changed the dynamics of voting, greatly increasing the expected share of votes that will be cast by mail.  President Trump has made clear that a Democratic victory depending on mail-in votes would be considered by his camp to be illegitimate, and that he would not necessarily leave office in these circumstances.  While the path from post-election chaos to a Supreme Court case à la Bush v. Gore may not be taken, with Ginsburg's death we know that if taken it would lead to a Trump victory. It is therefore imperative that the Senate be prevented from approving Trump's nominee for the Court, expected to be announced by him this week.  It seems that this can only be done if at least four Republican Senators agree to postpone selecting a new Justice until after the election, or (in the case Biden wins) after January 20, 2021. All this seems like a long-shot.
 
A somewhat separate issue is the election itself.  The parts of the Republican Playbook now in play focus on reducing the Democratic electorate, especially in key states (e.g. ex-felons in Florida).  Voting rights expert Ari Berman gave a good overview of the voter suppression effort last Tuesday on Democracy Now!; and, writing in The Nation, John Nichols described the hundreds of Republican-initiated legal challenges to election procedures and voting rights now pending in lower courts.  (The progress of such cases can be followed here.) It is possible that some/many of these cases will end up in the Supreme Court before Election Day; this useful article describes how the Court is likely to handle cases working with only eight Justices.
 
Last month the Newsletter linked an article by Frances Fox Piven called "What if Trump Won't Leave?" In it she asserted that it would be a great mistake to rely on the Courts (of all levels) to produce justice in the case of a disputed presidential election, urging instead/as well the importance of grassroots protest and mobilization.  How might such a situation come about? Writing in Huffington Post today, Paul Blumenthal describes "The Nightmare Scenario That Keeps Election Lawyers Up At Night — And Could Hand Trump A Second Term":
 
Americans will almost certainly go to bed on Nov. 3 without knowing who won the presidential election. Since millions of people will vote by mail, constraints on time and resources will slow ballot counting into potentially a weeks-long process. Voting patterns suggest it's likely that President Donald Trump could end Election Day in the lead in certain key states, only to be overtaken by Democratic opponent Joe Biden when more votes are tallied. This could create a nightmare scenario during the three months stretching from Election Day to the Jan. 20 inauguration: a battle on the state and congressional level over who is the legitimate winner. This could include Congress reconvening on Jan. 6, presided over by Vice President Mike Pence, with no consensus over its potential role in choosing the next president. This is arguably the most likely of the contested-election narratives, and now the Supreme Court — which would likely have to rule on the legal arcana at issue in this epic battle — has been thrown into its own nightmare scenario with the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. 
 
The author continues, describing the complex paths through which a state governor and/or legislature could end up referring competing sets of Electors to Congress for certification, and how Congress could even end up with no winner of the Electoral Vote by January 20, 2021.  In which case – you guessed it – the outcome would again be decided by the Supreme Court, now stacked 5:3 and possibly by January 6:3 in favor of Trump.
 
Concluding, I fear only a landslide victory in the popular vote will enable the Biden forces to avoid a complex, hazardous road to defeat in November – January.  Of course, the landslide vote and the grassroots mobilization are in our hands, and so with great effort The People may yet save civilization from barbarism.
 
News Notes
The deportation hearing for Julian Assange has now concluded its second week. A useful introduction to the case was presented on Wednesday on the Jimmy Dore Show, featuring an in-depth conversation with the co-chairs of the Assange Defense Committee, Noam Chomsky, Alice Walker, and Daniel Elsberg.  For daily updates, check out Shadowproof, whose Kevin Gostzola is in the courtroom.  The Assange deportation case may set the boundaries for political and investigative reporting for decades to come, putting at risk any journalist or publisher anywhere in the world who displeases The Godfather.
 
Over at Code Pink, Medea Benjamin and Barry Summers alert us to a new generation of surveillance drones, made by General Atomics, which will be soon flying over our cities and collecting "data" about our every move.  Interested?  Go here.
 
President Trump gave a speech last week at the National Archives in which he complained about Marxist indoctrination of American school children, singling out Howard Zinn's classic book, A People's History of the United States. To illustrate the crimes of the Zinn followers, we can look at the Zinn Project's website for their lesson plans for Constitution Day, which was last Thursday.  Dear or dear, they pointed out that 40 percent of the Founding Fathers were slave owners.  Could there be A Lesson here?  As the late Howard Zinn told Democracy Now's Amy Goodman not long before he died, "We should be honest with young people; we should not deceive them. We should be honest about the history of our country."
 
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; if you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, Tuesday and Thursday at noon and/or Saturday at 2 pm, please send a return email. 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!
Feeling the pull towards Resistance, today's first reward for stalwart readers is Leonard Cohen's "The Partisan."  This song about the French resistance to German occupation in WWII was written by a French resistance leader, Emmanuel D'Astier de la Vigerie, codenamed "Bernard." and you can hear it in French here. The UK anarchist group Chumbawamba brings us a great song from the 17th century revolution in England, 'The Diggers' Song."  And for some local Resistance, here is Hudson Valley Sally (with Jenny Murphy!) singing the Hutchinson Family's abolitionist song of the 1850s, "Get Off the Track!"  ("Moderates out of the way!") Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
"The Fate of Humanity Hangs in the Balance"
By Noam Chomsky, a speech at the Inaugural Conference of the Progressive International [September 18, 2020]
---- Returning to the major crises we face at this historic moment, all are international, and two internationals are forming to confront them. One is opening today: the Progressive International. The other has been taking shape under the leadership of Trump's White House, a Reactionary International comprising the world's most reactionary states. In the Western Hemisphere, the International includes Bolsonaro's Brazil and a few others. In the Middle East, prime members are the family dictatorships of the Gulf; al-Sisi's Egyptian dictatorship, perhaps the harshest in Egypt's bitter history; and Israel, which long ago discarded its social democratic origins and shifted far to the right, the predicted effect of the prolonged and brutal occupation. [And more examples.] … The two internationals comprise a good part of the world, one at the level of states, the other popular movements. Each is a prominent representative of much broader social forces, which have sharply contending images of the world that should emerge from the current pandemic. One force is working relentlessly to construct a harsher version of the neoliberal global system from which they have greatly benefited, with more intensive surveillance and control. The other looks forward to a world of justice and peace, with energies and resources directed to serving human needs rather than the demands of a tiny minority. It is a kind of class struggle on a global scale, with many complex facets and interactions. It is no exaggeration to say that the fate of the human experiment depends on the outcome of this struggle. [Read More]
 
California's Apocalyptic 'Second Nature'
By Mike Davis, Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung ["Foundation"] [September 15, 2020]
---- A world set on fire by climate change has unleashed a dangerous transformation of plant ecology, and thus faunal populations, from the Arctic to Patagonia, Montana to Mongolia.  California is a paradigmatic example of such a vicious circle, where extreme heat leads to extreme fires that prevent natural rejuvenation and accelerate the conversion of iconic landscapes into depauperate grasslands and treeless mountain slopes. … Fire in the Anthropocene has become the physical equivalent of endless nuclear war. In the aftermath of Victoria's Black Saturday fires in early 2009, Australian scientists calculated that their released energy equaled the explosion of 1,500 Hiroshima-sized bombs. The current firestorms in the Pacific states are many times larger, and we should compare their destructive power to the mega-tonnage of hundreds of hydrogen bombs. A new, profoundly sinister nature is rapidly emerging from our fire rubble at the expense of landscapes we once considered sacred. Our imaginations can barely encompass the speed or scale of the catastrophe. Gone California, gone. [Read More] Also of great interest, imo, is "Climate Change Will Force a New American Migration," by Abrahm Lustgarten, ProPublica [September 17, 2020] [Read More]
 
Deportation Nation
By Julia Preston, New York Review of Books [October 8, 2020 Issue]
[FB – This is a review of "The Deportation Machine: America's Long History of Expelling Immigrants," by Adam Goodman and "The Battle to Stay in America: Immigration's Hidden Front Line," by Michael Kagan.]
---- The United States is in an age of mass deportation. This may not be surprising, given how consistently President Trump has denigrated, demonized, and threatened immigrants. His administration has waged an assault on the entire immigration system, shutting down access to asylum, pressuring the immigration courts to churn out removal orders, and adopting rules that narrowed the avenues to legal immigration and crippled US Citizenship and Immigration Services, which administers it. According to the most recent official figures, from the beginning of Trump's term through September 2019 his administration carried out more than 584,000 formal deportations. As of last October, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was monitoring more than 3.2 million cases of immigrants who were in active deportation proceedings. Yet despite Trump's repeated warnings that he planned to expel more than one million unauthorized immigrants, he has not reached the numbers achieved by President Obama, whose administration expelled over three million people and holds the record for formal deportations in a year—more than 432,000 in 2013. Trump has remained preoccupied with the Mexican border and constructing his wall. He has also been increasing ICE's funding and staff, which now numbers more than 20,000. In doing so, he has built on a steady expansion of immigration enforcement initiated two decades ago, in response to the September 11 attacks. [Read More]
 
Taking the Next Knee [Sports and Politics]
By Robert Lipsyte, Tom Dispatch [September 17, 2020]
---- As baseball and basketball, battered by the Covid-19 pandemic, cautiously continue their delayed and shortened seasons and the National Football League and some college football conferences finally launch their own belated starts, more and more questions arise: Will such physically dangerous playing conditions be sustainable? (Is there even such a thing as a socially distanced tackle?) Will fans accept rule changes meant to take the coronavirus into account and still keep watching (while their own lives threaten to go down the tubes)? Will former San Francisco 49er Super Bowl quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who sparked the current sports revolt by kneeling to the national anthem four years ago and was subsequently abused by the president and functionally banished from football, ever get to play again? And above all, what effect will the various protests of such athletes have, if any, on the election?  [Read More]
 
WAR & PEACE
This Soldier's Witness to the Iraq War Lie
By Frederic Wehrey, New York Review of Books [September 17, 2020]
---- A few weeks before I deployed to Iraq as a young US military officer, in the spring of 2003, my French-born father implored me to watch The Battle of Algiers, Gillo Pontecorvo's dramatic reenactment of the 1950s Algerian insurgency against French colonial rule. There are many political and aesthetic reasons to see this masterpiece of cinéma vérité, not least of which is its portrayal of the Algerian capital's evocative old city, or Casbah. … To this day, it is taught to West Point cadets as a cautionary tale. Still, the full weight of the film's lessons was not apparent to me in Iraq until one morning in the summer of 2003, when I received an urgent phone call about a captured Iraqi intelligence officer. My commander wanted me to go interview him at the Baghdad hospital where he was being treated for unspecified wounds. [Read More]
 
(Video) A Crisis Made in America: Yemen on Brink of Famine After U.S. Cuts Aid While Fueling War
From Democracy Now! [September 17, 2020]
---- The humanitarian crisis in Yemen is deepening amid the pandemic and cuts to international aid from the United States and its allies, leaving millions of Yemenis facing famine after years of a brutal U.S.-backed, Saudi-led bombing campaign that has devastated the country. CNN's senior international correspondent Nima Elbagir says what is happening in Yemen is not a natural disaster but a "man-made catastrophe" directly tied to U.S. policies. Elbagir says, "Not only is the U.S. profiting from the war by selling weapons to the UAE and Saudi Arabia," but it is also ignoring the impact on civilians. We also feature her exclusive CNN report, "Yemen: A Crisis Made in America." [See the Program]
 
For more on Yemen's disaster - Nima Elbagir's report for CNN, "Aid cuts by Trump and some US allies are costing lives in Yemen," can be read here.  Saudi Arabia's use of US-made weapons to kill thousands of people in Yemen may lead to war crimes charges for the Americans involved: read "War Crime Risk Grows for U.S. Over Saudi Strikes in Yemen," [Link]. Congress is beginning to push back; read "US lawmakers call on Trump administration to restore aid to Yemen," Middle East Eye [Link].
 
America's War on Terror is the True Cause of Europe's Refugee Crisis
By Patrick Cockburn, The Independent [UK] [September 16, 2020]
---- Desperate refugees crammed into cockle-shell boats landing on the shingle beaches of the south Kent coast are easily portrayed as invaders.  … But there is absurdly little interest in why they endure such hardships, risking detention or death. There is an instinctive assumption in the west that it is perfectly natural for people to flee their own failed states (the failure supposedly brought on by self-inflicted violence and corruption) to seek refuge in the better-run, safer and more prosperous countries. But what we are really seeing in those pathetic half-swamped rubber boats bobbing up and down in the Channel are the thin end of the wedge of a vast exodus of people brought about by military intervention by the US and its allies. As a result of their "global war on terror", launched following the al-Qaeda attacks in the US on 11 September 2001, no less than 37 million people have been displaced from their homes, according to a revelatory report published this week by Brown University. [Read More]
 
THE STATE OF THE UNION
As the West Burns, the Trump Administration Races to Demolish Environmental Protections
By Sharon Lerner, The Intercept [September 19, 2020[
---- As wildfires destroy millions of acres in California, Oregon, and Washington, and an unprecedented series of hurricanes cause historic flooding in the South, leaving parts of the region uninhabitable, the Trump administration has been racing to reverse rules designed to prevent exactly these kinds of climate disasters. Throughout his presidency, Donald Trump has presided over the rollback of more environmental rules and regulations than any other president. … In recent months, the pace of these assaults has quickened. The frenzied efforts of federal agencies during the last months before a presidential election are often referred to as "midnight regulation." But the work the Trump administration has recently been hurrying to complete would be more accurately described as "midnight deregulation." [Read More]
 
Cuomo's Choice: Tax the Rich or Starve the Schools
By Ross Barkan, The Nation [September 17, 2020]
---- New York City is facing its most tumultuous school reopening in recent memory. The city's Department of Education is the only major urban school system that is attempting to start the new school year with in-person learning, and the move will offer either a road map for districts everywhere or serve as a cautionary tale of what a city should not do. As of now, the DOE plans to reopen in-person instruction in staggered shifts, with the majority starting after September 29, delaying a start date from September 10 after pressure from concerned teachers and parents. The city's bumbling mayor, Bill de Blasio, has emerged as the usual villain of the narrative, with parents and teachers alike deeply frustrated over his Department of Education's confusing reopening plan. And de Blasio's sins are many... But it is America's most famous governor, Andrew Cuomo, who looms far larger over the future of public education in New York in the age of Covid-19. [Read More]
 
America's Eviction Epidemic
By Gabriel M. Schivone, New York Review of Books [September 17, 2020]
---- When Covid-19 arrived in the US this spring, it changed the housing landscape overnight. By late March, when the public health crisis engulfed the US, hundreds of grassroots mutual aid networks had emerged around the country, in virtually every state. They could hardly do enough, but they did help many vulnerable people. And it was many of these same aid networkers who also demanded a moratorium on evictions. In one sense, they appeared to be pushing an open door: numerous authorities at city, state, county, and federal level ordered halts on evictions, based in part on the pressing need for people to stay isolated at home to tamp down community transmission of the coronavirus. But some commentators saw fundamental flaws in these measures from the beginning. … Meanwhile, the rent strikes started spreading. By April 1, one third of Americans couldn't make rent. Rent strikes organized nationwide on May 1, International Workers' Day, were by some accounts the largest in US history. Communities have organized eviction resistance actions from Kansas City, Missouri, to New Orleans to New York City—the latter now "the epicenter of a growing tenants' rights movement," according to a Wired report.  [Read More]  For some context, read "Fighting Evictions: The 1930s and Now," by Michael R. McBrearty, Monthly Review [September 2, 2020]
 
Millions of Children Go Hungry as Mitch McConnell Blocks Stimulus Bill
By Mike Ludwig, Truthout [September 18, 2020]
---- Millions of children across the United States are already going hungry amid the economic recession spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic, and emergency food assistance is set to expire on September 30 as Congress remains at an impasse over stimulus legislation. The House has already passed legislation that would renew the emergency food assistance, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has refused to take it up in the Senate. During the last week of August, up to 14 percent of parents reported that they could not consistently afford to feed their children as millions of people remain without work due to efforts to contain the coronavirus…  Compare these numbers to figures from 2019, when only 3.7 percent of adults reported that their households had "not enough to eat" during the course of the year and about 1 percent of parents reported their children going hungry, according to CBPP's analysis. [Read More]
 
 

Monday, September 14, 2020

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on racism and conflict in the Rivertowns

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
September 14, 2020
 
Hello All – Newsletter readers not living in the Rivertowns may be unaware of the several shocks our comfortable lives received last week.  In a nutshell, a fake poster (featuring a bullet-hole) circulated advertising a non-existent Black Lives Matter rally scheduled for Dobbs in Saturday.  Also on Saturday, a "truck caravan" to "Back the Blue" was organized in Tarrytown.  And again in Dobbs, an incident centering on a T-shirt with a veiled "you're not welcome here" message was judged to be aimed at people of color, in part because it was placed on the doorstep of a few not-white families.  This last incident, thankfully, prompted a rally in favor of tolerance and inclusion at the Dobbs waterfront park, attended by imo 400 people.
 
Set against the background of Black Lives Matter protests across the country, and the emergence of armed militia movements and other gatherings of white supremacists, the Rivertowns events serve as a wake-up call that our quiet neighborhoods on the Hudson are not in a separate universe from the clashes stimulated by the police killings of unarmed African Americans, and more generally by fears that White Power may be solidified for another four years if Donald Trump is re-elected.
 
Last week's Newsletter developed some ideas/warnings about the way in which our coming presidential election may produce initially inconclusive results, resulting in a legal and political logjam, accompanied by mobilization of grassroots action from both the pro-Biden people and the pro-Trump people.  Some further thoughts on this topic are developed in the article by Sasha Abramsky, linked below.  Also important will be the political orientation of the police (also discussed in writing below), and whether/how civilian governors and mayors will use or restrain their police and National Guard to preserve the kind of order that they want.
 
While the events of last week were disturbing, and are an indicator of strife to come in the months ahead, I think that the anti-racists did well.  It seemed that hundreds of people collaborated on-line to track down just what was happening and who was doing what, and developed messaging that was explanatory and instructive, but not excessively alarmist.  And the team in Irvington that produced the Dobbs Ferry rally did an excellent job. I think that all progressive groups and individuals in the Rivertowns should take last week's white supremacy dust-up as a warning, and our responses as a first-draft rehearsal, and that we must be on our guard for more to come.
 
News Notes
The deportation hearing of Julian Assange in London is now entering its second week.  The United States wants to put him away for 175 years, and the UK legal system seems anxious to oblige.  For a good overview of the case, check out the Democracy Now! program from last Wednesday, in which one of Assange's legal time gave a cogent explanation about the charges against Julian and the dangers they pose to USA/world political reporting. The best way to follow the case is via the website Shadowproof, whose manager Kevin Gostzola is monitoring the courtroom. Gostzola's most recent report covered the testimony of Trevor Timm, executive director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, on the dangers that the prosecution of Assange poses to press freedom.
 
Last week federal police in Lacey, Washington murdered Michael Forest Reinoehl, who was wanted for the killing of a "Patriot Prayer" supporter in Portland, OR. According to this useful report, the police didn't seem interested in arresting Reinoehl, or even in identifying themselves, but killed him while he was unarmed and getting into his car.  Reinoehl seems to have been an interesting person; check out his story.
 
The sad and untimely death of David Graeber has brought forth many tributes to this remarkable and interesting man.  Last week the Newsletter included some tributes recognizing his role as an activist/intellectual; this week his comrades at Roar Magazine remember him as a "tireless organizer."
 
Forty-eight refugees from Cameroon have been languishing in a Louisiana prison for more than a year, and a month ago some of them went on hunger strike.  Two weeks ago Democracy Now! profiled their strike and broadcast pleas for help from the inmates. This past week an article on "The Hunger Strikers of Pine Prairie Protesting Indefinite Detention by ICE" was published in The New York Review of Books. Their plight highlights the pain of ICE prisoners everywhere. If you are a Netflix subscriber, recommended is the new documentary film "Immigration Nation," which has survived an attempt by the Trump people to suppress it.
 
Finally, Saturday was the 19th birthday of Concerned Families of Westchester.  We began with a discussion among three families the day after 9/11, and one thing led to another.  Our 20th year promises to be an intense one; please join us.
 
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!
Frederick "Toots" Hibbert, a pioneer of reggae music in Jamaica, died last week at the age of 77.  I first heard Toots and the Maytals in the 1972 Jimmy Cliff film "The Harder They Come," performing "Pressure Drop." Rolling Stone has put up a collection of "15 Essential Songs," including his last one, "Gotta Be Tough," about the realities of today's Jamaica.  Toots Hibbert, thank you for your great music and RIP.
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CRISIS AND UPRISING
(Video) Confluence of Crises
By Noam Chomsky, ZNet [September 14, 2020] [7 minutes]
[FB – In this short video, Chomsky describes the convergence of crises (the pandemic, climate, war & peace, etc) that have brought humanity to the edge of disaster and underlines the importance of putting Trump out of office asap.] [See the video].
 
Is Trump Planning a Coup d'État?
By Sasha Abramsky, The Nation [September 7, 2020]
---- Increasingly, election observers point to the possibility of Trump using the courts to contest so many states' ballot tallies that the Supreme Court ends up as the ultimate arbiter, as happened in the 2000 election. In some scenarios he loses, but his campaign refuses to accept state results, aiming to tie up the process so that states can't certify their results in time for the January inauguration. In others he dispenses with the legal niceties and simply refuses to cede power, banking on enough backing from quasi-military agencies supportive of his agenda, such as Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection as well as law enforcement agencies at the local level and militia groups, that it would take a military intervention to bounce him from the White House. … But relying on a conservative-dominated Supreme Court or a military that has been conditioned—for good reason—never to intervene in domestic political disputes is hardly a surefire path to protecting the country from Trump's dictatorial ambitions. Which brings us back to people power. [Read More]
 
Why Many Police Are Barely Distinguishable From Racist Vigilantes
---- Right-wing extremist armed vigilantes and police officers are cut from the same ideological cloth of American society that feels entitled to patrol the collective behavior of nonwhites, women, etc. While not entirely white and male, both police and armed vigilantes are largely white men. In urban areas in particular, research shows that law enforcement officers are far less racially diverse than the communities they police and are overwhelmingly male. They epitomize the white male authority that armed vigilante groups aspire to. When armed groups show up to protests, police embrace their presence and see them as allies. A new report published by the Brennan Center for Justice explores the overlap between these two groups at length. … In fact, the National Association of Police Organizations, which had previously endorsed Democratic vice-presidential nominee Joe Biden in 2008 and 2012, has now switched its support to Trump. [Read More]  Today the New York Times published an in-depth analysis of the leadership of the NYPD union.  Looking at the emerging Trump/election conflict, this is very important.  Checkout "How New York City's Police Unions Embraced Trump" by Alan Feuer, New York Times [September 14, 2020] [Link]. For an analogous look at California's police, here is "Reform the Police? Guess Who Funds My State's Officials" by [Link].
 
ELECTION 2020
Can the 'Instigator-in-Chief' Win on 'Law and Order'?
By
---- In light of these often unacknowledged attitudes, the question becomes: Can Trump eke out an Election Day victory by focusing attention and capitalizing politically on the looting and fire-setting associated with some of the Black Lives Matter protests spurred by the police killing of Floyd and other African-Americans? … There are still 55 days to go before Election Day, a lifetime in politics. Imponderables abound: turnout, lying to pollsters, accusations of voter fraud and double voting, active voter suppression, the fate of absentee ballots, the political and logistical status of the United States Postal Service, and that's before we even get to the three presidential debates. The biggest imponderable of all is whether Trump will attempt to subvert the election directly, whether he will accept results he does not like, what unfathomable lengths he might go to — and whether the Republican Party, the Senate and the Supreme Court will stand firm in support of democracy or abet Trump in his reach for unconstrained power. [Read More] And for some interesting thoughts on the Trump base (is it?), read "Regular People: Who Are They? Why Don't They Ever Speak for Themselves?" b  [Link]
 
Trump's Broken Promises to His Voters – He Didn't Deliver!
---- Trump voters are not inclined to change their minds. Some of them are forever Republicans and will only vote the GOP ticket; they are called hereditary voters. Others can't stand the Democratic Party nominees, won't vote for the Libertarian ticket, and will only vote for Trump. Some love Trump because of his anti-immigrant stance, deregulation of law enforcement on businesses, and nominations of anti-choice and right-wing corporatist federal judges. Yet, polls show that the one area of widespread disappointment among Trump voters (not the rich ones) is that he didn't deliver the improvements for their livelihoods that he promised in the 2016 campaign. … But Trump voters expected Trump to do a little bit more to further the legitimate self-interests of the families on Main Street. Now come two Pulitzer-Prize-winning, famously accurate reporters, Hedrick Smith, executive editor of reclaimtheamericandream.org, and Nicholas Kristoff of the New York Times with lists of Trump's broken promises. [Read More]
 
Can We Call It Fascism? Trump's Voter Suppression Project, 2020
---- I find it more than a little disturbing that the "debate" over Trump's politics has degenerated into a discussion of whether Trump is "an authoritarian" or "a fascist." As far as I'm concerned, once someone admits Trump is authoritarian in his politics, discussions of what type of authoritarian he is are largely academic. When the U.S. police state is systematically murdering people of color, and one of the two major parties is ramping up to engage in massive voter suppression, debating what brand of authoritarianism Trump ascribes to seems insensitive and disconnected from reality. Trump's "poll watching" initiative, coupled with his celebrations of vigilante violence against his political enemies, represents a ticking time bomb in its potential to provoke disaster come election day. This administration represents an existential threat to what little remains of American democratic institutions and the rule of law. Whether one calls it fascist, authoritarian, or dictatorial is ultimately secondary to the larger question of what can be done to combat this menace. [Read More]  And for a very different assessment of how/why the Trump people are moving towards fascism, read "The U.S. Is Borrowing Its Way to Fascism" by Richard D. Wolff, ZNet [September 12, 2020] [Link].
 
FEATURED ESSAYS
The US Is a Failed State
By Tom Engelhardt, Tom Dispatch [September 10, 2020]
---- Humanity has so far (and I use that phrase advisedly) managed to create just two ways of destroying human life on this planet. In doing so, it has, of course, taken over tasks that it once left to the gods (Armageddon! Apocalypse!). On both counts, Donald Trump is proving himself a master of destruction. The first way, of course, would be by nuclear weapons, so far, despite close calls, used only twice, 75 years ago. However, the president and his crew have focused with striking intensity on tearing up nuclear arms pacts signed with the Soviet Union in the final years of the Cold War, backing out of the Iranian nuclear deal, pumping up the "modernization" of the US nuclear arsenal, and threatening other countries with the actual use of such weaponry. … In that second category when it comes to destroying human life as we've known it via the release of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, the president and his men (and they are basically men) have shown a particular flair. I'm still alone in doing so, but I continue to refer to the whole lot of them as pyromaniacs, because their simple denial of the reality of global warming is the least of it. [Read More]
 
America Is Trapped in a Pandemic Spiral
By Ed Yong, The Atlantic [September 2020]
---- The U.S. enters the ninth month of the pandemic with more than 6.3 million confirmed cases and more than 189,000 confirmed deaths. The toll has been enormous because the country presented the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus with a smorgasbord of vulnerabilities to exploit. But the toll continues to be enormous—every day, the case count rises by around 40,000 and the death toll by around 800—because the country has consistently thought about the pandemic in the same unproductive ways. Many Americans trusted intuition to help guide them through this disaster. … These conceptual errors were not egregious lies or conspiracy theories, but they were still dangerous. They manifested again and again, distorting the debate around whether to stay at home, wear masks, or open colleges. They prevented citizens from grasping the scope of the crisis and pushed leaders toward bad policies. And instead of overriding misleading intuitions with calm and considered communication, those leaders intensified them. [Read More] To amplify Ed Yong's report, read "How Did the 'Best-Prepared Country' Become a Horror Story?" by [Link].
 
National (In)Security and the Pentagon Budget
By
---- The inadequate response of both the federal and state governments to the Covid-19 pandemic has had a devastating impact on the United States, creating what could only be called a national security crisis. More than 190,000 Americans are dead, approximately half of them people of color. Yelp data show that more than 132,000 businesses have already closed and census data suggest that, thanks to lost wages, nearly 17% of Americans with children can't afford to feed them enough food. In this same period, a number of defense contractors have been doing remarkably well. … The spread of Covid-19 has created one of the most significant crises of our time, but it's also provided far greater clarity about just how misplaced the priorities of Washington have been all these years. [Read More]
 
(Audio) Surveillance in an Era of Pandemic and Protest
A live chat with Naomi Klein, Shoshana Zuboff, and Simone Browne on September 21 at From The Intercept [September 11 2020]
---- As this summer of pandemic and racial justice protests draws to a close, Naomi Klein will host a landmark conversation between Shoshana Zuboff, author of "The Age of Surveillance Capitalism," and Simone Browne, author of "Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness." The three authors will discuss how both governments and tech giants are using our moment of overlapping crises to push through discredited surveillance technologies that threaten privacy, democracy, and any hope of equality. Early in the pandemic, Klein wrote that these forces have aligned to "advance a vision of a future in which our every move, our every word, our every relationship is trackable, traceable, and data-mineable." [Hear the Program]
 
(Video) "This Is Climate Change": West Coast Fires Scorch Millions of Acres & Blot Out the Sun
From Democracy Now! [September 10, 2020]
--- The skies of the Bay Area and Northern California turned a dark orange as 90 major fires burn in the western United States, from San Diego to the Canadian border. At least seven people have died as a result of the fires, which have already burned 2.5 million acres in California alone. Despite heavy coverage in the mainstream media, however, few outlets are highlighting the link between the blazes and the accelerating climate crisis. "The fact is that TV news is completely abdicating its responsibility when it comes to telling the truth of what the West is dealing with right now," says Leah Stokes, assistant professor of political science at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and a researcher on climate and energy policy. "This is climate change. It's not rocket science. And when will the media start calling it that?" [See the Program]  Another very good Democracy Now! segment profiles "Pandemic, Wildfires & Heat Wave: Undocumented Farmworkers Face "Triple Threat" as West Coast Burns" [September 14, 2020] [Link].
 
OUR HISTORY
(Video) Costs of War: After 9/11 Attacks, U.S. Wars Displaced at Least 37 Million People Around the World
From Democracy Now! [September 11, 2020]
---- As the United States marks 19 years since the September 11 terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people, a new report finds at least 37 million people in eight countries have been displaced since the start of the so-called global war on terrorism since 2001. The Costs of War Project at Brown University also found more than 800,000 people have been killed since U.S. forces began fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Pakistan and Yemen, at a cost of $6.4 trillion to U.S. taxpayers. "The U.S. has played a disproportionate role in waging war, in launching war and in perpetuating war over the last 19 years," says report co-author David Vine, a professor of anthropology at American University. [See the Program]
 
The Forgotten History of the Radical 'Elders of the Tribe' [The Gray Panthers]
By
---- By the mid-1970s, she was a national celebrity. She had speaking engagements all over the country; she traveled 100,000 miles annually, giving at least 200 talks a year. She was all over the TV: "The Phil Donahue Show," the "Today" show and "The Tonight Show" with Johnny Carson, multiple times. … She was Maggie Kuhn, the woman who, 50 years ago, founded the Gray Panthers, a movement to encourage activism — sometimes radical activism — among the country's older people. Today, both Kuhn and her movement have been all but forgotten. But their mission is worth remembering, commemorating and perhaps even resurrecting, especially in the present moment. [Read More]